Sign In / Register
Make This My Home Page | Feedback |RSS
You are here: IE »   Story

Clash of Titans

  • Print
  • Mail This Article
  • Comments
  • Add to favorites
  • Gandhi & Churchill: The Epic Rivalry that Destroyed an Empire and Forged Our Age
    Arthur Herman,
    Hutchinson, Rs 585

    How Gandhi became a threat to everything Churchill believed inWinston churchill, arguably Britain’s greatest prime minister, spent many years in India, vegetating in Bangalore in between rushing around the subcontinent and outside in pursuit of battle glory. It is, therefore, amazing how little interest he showed in India itself during his stay. This myopia was probably the genesis of his battle to keep the empire intact against that gentle intruder, M.K. Gandhi, the neophyte lawyer who picked up many fads, aside from law, during his stay in London, and saw enough of the heart of the imperial beast to know that he wanted his country to have nothing to do with it.

    Given that the standoff between Churchill and Gandhi is one of the set pieces of the Indian freedom movement, it is with a start that one realises that American historian Arthur Herman is the first to study this relationship (if one can call it that) in depth. A dual biography, Gandhi & Churchill traces the two contemporaries’ rise through life to immortality, focusing on their single meeting in 1906 to their almost direct clash from the 1930s onwards.

    Ads by Google

    Why did Churchill so hate (his own word) Gandhi? Churchill, of course, once famously said that he had not become the head of the British government in order to liquidate the British Empire. Herman confirms this was definitely the cause, but it had deeper roots. Reading Edward Gibbon’s account of the fall of the Roman Empire, Churchill was deeply affected by Gibbon’s contention that Christianity and the emergence of the monks contributed to the collapse. He feared that Gandhi, with his heavy reliance on spiritual imagery would do the same to the British Empire. As Herman notes, “No wonder Churchill’s favorite epithet for Gandhi would be ‘fakir’ and ‘fanatic’. Gandhi was more than just a threat to British rule in India. He became a threat to everything that Churchill believed in, and in the end Churchill would fight him with everything he had.”

    ... contd.

    Next12
    Comments
    Post comment

    Be the first to comment.

    Post a Comment
    Name:
    Email:
    Title:
    Maximum characters allowed     
    Comment:
    TERMS OF USE:
    The views, opinions and comments posted are your, and are not endorsed by this website. You shall be solely responsible for the comment posted here. The website reserves the right to delete, reject, or otherwise remove any views, opinions and comments posted or part thereof. You shall ensure that the comment is not inflammatory, abusive, derogatory, defamatory &/or obscene, or contain pornographic matter and/or does not constitute hate mail, or violate privacy of any person (s) or breach confidentiality or otherwise is illegal, immoral or contrary to public policy. Nor should it contain anything infringing copyright &/or intellectual property rights of any person(s).
    I agree to the terms of use.