A Tragedy
Amongst my few friends at the high school I had, at different times, two who might be called
intimate. One of these friendships did not last long, though I never forsook my friend. He forsook
me, because I made friends with the other. This latter friendship I regard as a tragedy in my life. It
lasted long. I formed it in spirit of a reformer.
This companion was originally my elder brother's friend. They were classmates. I knew his
weaknesses, but I regarded him as a faithful friend. My mother, my eldest brother, and my wife
warned me that I was in bad company. I was too proud to heed my wife's warning. But I dared not
go against the opinion of my mother and my eldest brother. Nevertheless I pleaded with them
saying, 'I know he has the weaknesses you attribute to him, but you do not know his virtues. He
cannot lead me astray, as my association with him is meant to reform him. For I am sure that if he
reforms his ways, he will be a splendid man. I beg you not to be anxious on my account.'
I do not think this satisfied them, but they accepted my explanation and let me go my way.
I have seen since that I had calculated wrongly. A reformer cannot afford to have close intimacy
with him whom he seeks to reform. True friendship is an identity of souls rarely to be found in this
world. Only between like natures can friendship be altogether worthy and enduring. Friends react
on one another. Hence in friendship there is very little scope for reform. I am of opinion that all
exclusive intimacies are to be avoided; for man takes in vice far more readily than virtue. And he
who would be friends with God must remain alone, or make the whole world his friend. I may be
wrong, but my effort to cultivate an intimate friendship proved a failure.
A wave of 'reform' was sweeping over Rajkot at the time when I first came across this friend. He
informed me that many of our teachers were secretly taking meat and wine. He also named many
well-known people of Rajkot as belonging to the same company. There were also, I was told,
some high-school boys among them.
I was surprised and pained. I asked my friend the reason and he explained it thus: 'We are a
weak people because we do not eat meat. The English are able to rule over us, because they are
meat-eaters. You know how hardy I am, and how great a runner too. It is because I am a meat eater. Meat-eaters do not have boils or tumours, and even if they sometimes happen to have any,
these heal quickly. Our teachers and other distinguished people who eat meat are no fools. They
know its virtues. You should do likewise. There is nothing like trying. Try, and see what strength it
gives.'
All these pleas on behalf of meat-eating were not advanced at a single sitting. They represent the
substance of a long and elaborate argument which my friend was trying to impress upon me from
time to time. My elder brother had already fallen. He therefore supported my friend's argument. I
certainly looked feeble-bodied by the side of my brother and this friend. They were both hardier,
physically stronger, and more daring. This friend's exploits cast a spell over me. He could run
long distances and extraordinarily fast. He was an adept in high and long jumping. He could put
up with any amount of corporal punishment. He would often display his exploits to me and, as
one is always dazzled when he sees in others the qualities that he lacks himself, I was dazzled by
this friend's exploits. This was followed by a strong desire to be like him. I could hardly jump or
run. Why should not I also be as strong as he?
Moreover, I was a coward. I used to be haunted by the fear of thieves, ghosts, and serpents. I did
not dare to stir out of doors at night. Darkness was a terror to me. It was almost impossible for me
to sleep in the dark, as I would imagine ghosts coming from one direction, thieves from another
and serpents from a third. I could not therefore bear to sleep without a light in the room. How
could I disclose my fears to my wife, no child, but already at the threshold of youth, sleeping by
my side? I knew that she had more courage than I, and I felt ashamed of myself. She knew no
fear of serpents and ghosts. She could go out anywhere in the dark. My friend knew all these
weaknesses of mine. He would tell me that he could hold in his hand live serpents, could defy
thieves and did not believe in ghosts. And all this was, of course, the result of eating meat.
A doggerel of the Gujarati poet Narmad was in vogue amongst us schoolboys, as follows: Behold
the mighty Englishman He rules the Indian small, Because being a meat-eater He is five cubits
tall.
All this had its due effect on me. I was beaten. It began to grow on me that meat-eating was
good, that it would make me strong and daring, and that, if the whole county took to meat-eating,
the English could be overcome.
A day was thereupon fixed for beginning the experiment. It had to be conducted in secret. The Gandhi's were Vaishnavas. My parents were particularly staunch Vaishnavas. They would
regularly visit the Haveli. The family had even its own temples. Jainism was strong in Gujarat, and
its influence was felt everywhere and on all occasions. The opposition to and abhorrence of meat eating that existed in Gujarat among the Jains and Vaishnavas were to be seen nowhere else in
India or outside in such strength. These were the traditions in which I was born and bred. And I
was extremely devoted to my parents. I knew that the moment they came to know of my having
eaten meat, they would be shocked to death. Moreover, my love of truth made me extra cautious.
I cannot say that I did not know then that I should have to deceive my parents if I began eating
meat. But my mind was bent on the 'reform'. It was not a question of pleasing the palate. I did not
know that it had a particularly good relish. I wished to be strong and daring and wanted my
countrymen also to be such, so that we might defeat the English and make India free. The word
'Swaraj' I had not yet heard. But I knew what freedom meant. The frenzy of the 'reform' blinded
me. And having ensured secrecy, I persuaded myself that mere hiding the deed from parents was
no departure from truth.
-by my experiments with truth
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