Young India, Viking Press, 1924-1926


CONTENTS

Page
Publish's note xiv
For the readers past and present of Young India 1
Young India and Navajivan 3

I. NATIONAL UNITY
Campaign of misrepresentation 9
What is Hinduism? 12
A full stop 14
The starving Moplah 17
Pandit Malaviyaji on Moplah relief 19
Hindu Moslem tension: its cause and cure 21
What may Hindus do 33
The Arya Samajists 41
Arya Samajists again 43
The Bhopal apostacy circular 52
Apostacy after embracing Islam 52
Bolshevism or discipline 61
Gulbarga gone mad 63
The question of questions 67
Hindu Muslim unity 73
All about the fast 77
Notice to readers 83
Change of heart 84
Mahatma Gandhi’s fast 84
Maulana Mahomed Ali’s statement 86
Maulana Shaukat Ali’s statement 88
Our duty 89
A christian’s blessing 90
Barodada’s message 91
Swami Shraddanand statement 92
My refuge 92
The fast the God has chosen 93
How the fast was broken 96
A welcome message from the West 100
The inner meaning of the fast 101
Hymns on Mahatmaji’s fast 109
An interesting conversation 114
The latest fast 123
The breaking of the fast 126
The lesson of the fast 127
The physical effects of fasting 129
After the fast 134
The Unity Conference 138
Where it was wanting 140
Beneath the ridge 142
The edict of toleration 143
The Metropolitan’s contribution 146
Pt. Gokarannath Misra 146
An impression of the conference 147
The conference at Delhi 150
Mr. Asaf Ali 151
Pt. Dina Nath 152
Mr. Shaidva 153
Three welcome paragraphs 153
The conference and after 155
The Hindu Moslem conference 158
Dr. S. K. Datta 159
Sjt. Satischanadra Mukerjee 161
Barodada’s dream 162
The trumpet of a prophecy 163
The unity problem 164
An importanat letter 166
Towards unity 168
Resolutions passed at the unity conference 169
The Kohat visit 174
The Kohat tragedy 177
Kohat refugees 180
Kohat Hindus 181
Still at it 183
My Punjab diary 185
On another’s land 195
Hindu Moslem question 197
The embargo 202
My crime 205
Conundrums 207
Interdining again 211
The science of surrender 213
That eternal question 216
The order of Hindu Moslem unity 219

II. NON-CO-OPERATION CONGRESS AND SWARAJ
School masters and lawyers 225
Is it non-co-operation 231
Non-inconsistent 231
Parody of religion 235
Empire goods boycott 236
Boycott foreign cloth 240
The plight of teachers 245
Below the belt 248
Wanted excitement 250
The students and Malabar 255
Suspension or repeal 259
King can do no wrong 260
Heart unity 262
Suspend or abandon 263
What is seditious 265
National education 268
The national week 272
No sign yet 274
Sentimental nonsense 276
To Gandhiji 278
Is it inconsistancy? 285
Teacher’s condition 288
Fate of non-co-operators 293
National education 296
A hotch-pot of questions 298
Councils entry 303
Malaviyaji and Lalaji 303
To what state fallen? 305
Not despondent 306
Objections considered 307
Its meaning 310
The position of non-co-operators 314
Message to the students 315
Students and non-co-operation 318
Congress organisation 321
Digging my own grave 325
All-India Congress Committee 326
An appropriate querry 328
The acid test 330
To the members of the All-India Congress Committee 334
Defeated and humbled 339
The All-India Congress Committee 347
Quick response 352
Councils entry 355
My position 357
Rules to be observed 358
Bara Bazar congressmen 359
An appeal to the nation 361
Who shall be President? 366
The Lokamanya anniversary 369
What about the President? 372
Lowest common measure 373
When will it end? 374
Fraud by congressmen 375
The realities 376
Dr. Annie Besant’s declaration 383
For unity 384
Spinning franchise 387
An important letter 388
How to work? 391
The forthcoming meeting 392
Our helplessness 392
Is it compulsion 393
Public debts 394
The joint statement 395
An interview 397
The agreement 398
On trial 403
Shall we unite 407
The no-changers plight 411
May god help 413
At Belgaum 416
Breach of faith 417
An important omission 418
Not even half-mast 419
Congress Presidential Address 424
Ormuzd and Ahriman 448
Two addresses 450
Typical 451
Belgaum impressions 453
How to do it 460
Kathiawad conference address 462
The Working Committee 479
A notice 481
Confession of Faith 484
Interrogatories answered 487
In case of misappropriation 491
A. I. K. B.’s resolutions 492
Is a Swarajist a congressman? 493
God and congress 494
My position 498
Quantity v. quality 503
Illuminating documents 505
Splitting hairs 511
A remarkable address 512
A baseless charge 515
Corruption 516
Are we ready 519
Humbled pride 522
At Darjeeling 523
Calcutta’s Mayor 531
Reply to Lord Birkenhead 536
A deceptive speech 537
The spinning franchise 540
Congress and political parties 542
The Congress unemployed 546
Congress corruption 549
Do I hate Englishmen? 549
Why not surrender completely? 552
Swaraj or death 555
A string of questions 561
Is it over confidence 563
The All-India Congress Committee 564
A. I. C. C. resolutions 568
Interrogatories 571
A true congressman 574
On the eve 577
The annual demonstration 578
My political programme 581

III. CONSTRUCTIVE PROGRAMME
The whisper of the wheel 587
Living on spinning and weaving 589
Khadi umbrellas 590
The wheel to the rescue 591
Luxury not power 594
Luxury and laziness 595
What is a spinner? 597
Untouchability and Swaraj 600
Chhop or spinning competition 602
Liberals and khaddar 603
Machine spinning v. Hand spinning 604
Charkha at 86 605
False pride 606
Spinning resolution 607
One programme 610
A plea for mills 613
Cloth or steel? 615
To P. B. 616
Waste of energy 617
Difficulties in the way 621
Two sides 623
Wheelless spinning 625
A badge of subservience 628
Mill khadi 629
For fallen humanity 629
Two scenes 631
Handspinning at Adyar 633
Eleven days in Madras 635
Sir Prabhashankar to spin 642
Cotton collection 643
The revolving wheel 643
Non-brahmins 644
An appeal 645
Untouchability and its implications 648
Pertinent questions 653
On another’s land 657
Well done 660
Waste of yarn 660
Towards unity 661
A silent worker 662
Swadeshi and nationalism 663
The handloom 665
Ryot’s cry 668
National service and pay 671
Khadi Prathisthan 673
Not man’s work 676
Spinning in schools 678
Spinning in Darjeeling 679
All-India Spinners Association 681
Snares of Satan 681
Hookworm and charkha 684
Spinning at a government institute 686
A village experiment 688
The constitution of the All India Spinner’s Association 694 694
All-India Spinner’s Association 699
Debts of honour 703
Subsidiary industry par excellence 704
Boycott v. construction 705
A dilemma 708
The Poet and the charkha 709
The naked truth 714
Government servants and A. I. S. A. 716
National education 717
A student’s questions 719
A year’s work 722
In the grip of untouchability 725
The Congress Khadi exhibition 727
Spinning in Municipal schools 730
The spinning’ wheel in Mysore 733
Spinning at Sabarmati Ashram 734
961 yards per hour 736
For juveniles 737
A repudiation 738
Still shirking the issue 741
The Poet and the wheel 743
Sacrificial spinning 745
The national week 745
Spinning in municipal schools 747
He wont spin 748
Does India want prohibition 751
Hinduism of to-day 753
Pandit Nehru and khaddar 757
The morals of machinery 760
The national week at Satyagraha Ashram 762
Drugs, drink and devil 765
For and against Khadi 768
Total prohibition 772
Prohibition and Madras government 773
A diehard 775
My Kamadhenu 777
The cobwebs of ignorance 781
Spinning an art 788
National education 789
Resourcefulness 791
A clever cotton spinner 792
Co-operation in spinning 793
Some knotty points 795
From the frying pan 798
The hydra-headed monster 799
The wheel of life 802
Artificial silk 807
Student’s khadi unions 807
Khadi service 808
Hand-weaving among Parsis 810
Khadi service rules 811

IV. SATYAGRAHA AND NON-VIOLENCE
Vykom Satyagraha 819
Case of Chirala Perala 822
Vykom Satyagraha 822
Vykom Satyagraha 828
Are Sikhs Hindus 829
Vykom Satyagraha 831
The Akhali struggle 832
A repudiation 835
Orthodox protest 837
Quiet work 837
It melts stones 838
A disturbing item 839
Negro’s sympathy 839
Vykom Satyagraha 840
Vykom Satyagraha 841
Patriotism run mad 842
Vykom Satyagraha 844
From Vykom 847
More about Vykom 848
Vykom Satyagraha 851
Entry into temples 853
Vykom 854
True Satyagraha 856
From Europe 858
When crime not immoral 865
Vykom Satyagraha 866
From far off America 867
What it is not 870
Mr. Pennington on the war path 873
What is violence? 874
Hindu-Muslim tension in Sindla 875
Letter from Lalaji 876
Punishment or reward 877
The wrong way 878
Am tired of Mahatma 879
Meaning of untruthful 880
Value of silent work 880
News to me 882
Well done Delhi 882
The law of love 883
My path 886
Implication of non-violence 888
A practical experiment in non-violence 894
A revolutionary’s defence 897
To another revolutionary 906
To R. S. S. R. 907
My friend the revolutionary 907
To revolutionary in making 915
Seeker after truth 917
At it again 919
On the verge of it 925
Violence in agriculture 930
The meaning of the Gita 933
Low moral tone 940
Sacrifice 942
What is natural 944
More animal than human 947
Conditions of pacific strikes 952
The greatest good of all 954
Is this humanity? 957

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published before January 1, 1929.


This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.

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