Why non-violence is still a winning strategy
Exactly one century ago, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi made a decision. He had decided that the British would not loosen control of India unless Indians themselves took direct and decisive action.
The manner of that action is what set Gandhi, and the movement he subsequently led, apart. He chose to stop cooperating with an unjust state, to disobey unjust laws and throughout to pursue only non-violent means of protest.
Plenty of Indians who agreed with his goals disagreed with his ideas and his tactics. Some of them resorted to violence. The debate that has today broken out in the United States over whether violence is ever acceptable in the fight for change is hardly a new one.
When you see police officers kneeling beside protesters, police chiefs apologising and even telling the president to keep his mouth shut, you may choose to describe it as tokenism or hypocrisy
Many justifiably angry Americans point out that multiple forms of non-violent protest — from earlier marches to Colin Kaepernick’s kneeling — have been tried.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. talked about non-violence, but wasn’t he murdered? For that matter, wasn’t Gandhi? With truth and video evidence on their side, they ask: “When we are non-violent, they hit us anyway, so what’s the point?”
Gandhian protest
That is, in fact, exactly the point. Gandhian protest was not about stopping your oppressors from hitting you: It was about provoking them into doing so publicly and repellently. Non-violent protest could not be chosen by the weak; it was, in Dr. King’s own estimation, the only effective alternative to “cringing and submission.”
When Americans debate non-violent protest in moral terms, they miss the point. It is not a purely moral question; it is about both morality and tactics.
Gandhi and King were politicians who recognised that they needed to create demonstrations of will and also of moral superiority if they wanted to change minds. Choosing violence instead, they argued, would only justify — in the oppressors’ minds “- further repression.
Language of the unheard
Of course, they understood the anger and desperation that leads to violence: As innumerable Instagram accounts reminded us over the past week, Dr. King famously said that “a riot is the language of the unheard.”
Yet that same speech included also a defence of “militant, powerful, massive non-violence” as the most effective agent of change. Violence “merely intensifies the fears of the white community while relieving the guilt.”
This is precisely the process that is playing out in the US right now, which is why real civil rights icons are speaking out. Rep. John Lewis posted on his web site: “Rioting, looting, and burning is not the way. Organise. Demonstrate. Sit-in. Stand-up. Vote.”
Morally and tactically, non-violence forces the perpetrators of violence — particularly "legitimate", "state-backed violence" - onto the defensive. Drama is key: It is through an obvious, dramatised contrast that the violence of the oppressor is delegitimized.
True, this only works if there is an audience for such drama — if there are still minds that can be changed. But here, the US is fortunate. We have enough evidence to suggest there is still an audience to be won over through non-violent protest. We know because the opinion polls show it.
Monmouth University’s polling institute discovered this week that “49% of white Americans say that police are more likely to use excessive force against a black culprit, which is nearly double the number (25%) who said the same in 2016.
When you see police officers kneeling beside protesters, police chiefs apologising and even telling the president to keep his mouth shut, you may choose to describe it as tokenism or hypocrisy. But we in India know better: We know that it means there is still a chance to win the argument.
Americans shouldn’t lose that opportunity because, when that audience disappears, things get rapidly worse. The country that pioneered non-violent protest was stunned by massive crowds earlier this year protesting the government’s treatment of Muslims.
But eventually riots broke out while US President Donald Trump was visiting, no less — and the government used the violence to swiftly delegitimize all that had gone before. Police brutality against protesters was common. Nobody has been held responsible.
The difference from the US was brought home to us this week: Twitter was awash with Indians laughing ruefully at the thought that an Indian policeman could be dismissed or tried, or might even apologise for brutality against a protester.
Many Indians have willingly forgotten the non-violent crowds and chosen to focus on the fact that, over the course of months, protesters burnt a bus or two.
The angriest Americans may not accept it, but this is not where the US is. There, minds are being changed and still can be changed.
Mihir Sharma is a columnist. He is the author of “Restart: The Last Chance for the Indian Economy.”
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