The Ridiculous Suggestion That Ghandi Was Pro-Gun
Posted on the 07 February 2013 by Mikeb302000
Waging Nonviolence
Those familiar with pro-gun activists know that they love a good
quote. Do some surfing on pro-gun websites and you will find a cottage
industry of quotations from American leaders and other voices of wisdom
from throughout history. Some are legitimate, and some are completely
bogus, but all are cherry-picked and presented entirely without context
to suggest that their subjects hold the same pro-gun beliefs as Ted Nugent.
Even history’s greatest proponents of nonviolence are not immune from
such treatment. This includes Mohandas Gandhi himself, whose words
appear on countless pro-gun websites as follows:
“Among the many misdeeds of the British rule in India, history will
look upon the Act depriving a whole nation of arms as the blackest.”
Pro-gun activists frequently use those words to suggest
that Gandhi supported individual gun ownership both as a means of
defending oneself and as a tool to violently resist government tyranny.
But are these assertions true?
In that passage, Gandhi references India’s Arms Act of 1878,
which gave Europeans in India the right to carry firearms but prevented
Indians from doing so, unless they were granted a license by the
British colonial government. The full text of what he wrote is: “Among
the many misdeeds of the British rule in India, history will look upon
the Act depriving a whole nation of arms as the blackest. If we want the
Arms Act to be repealed, if we want to learn the use of arms, here is a
golden opportunity. If the middle classes render voluntary help to
Government in the hour of its trial, distrust will disappear, and the
ban on possessing arms will be withdrawn.”
These words come from a World War I recruitment pamphlet that Gandhi
published in 1918, urging Indians to fight with their British colonial
oppressors in the war, not against them.