Gopal Krishna Gokhale
Gopal Krishna Gokhale
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Born
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Died
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Organization
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Indian National Congress, Deccan
Education Society
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Political movement
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Gopal Krishna Gokhale, CIE pronunciation (help·info)
(9 May 1866 – 19 February 1915) was one of the founding social and political
leaders during the Indian
Independence Movement against the British Empire in India. Gokhale was a senior leader of the Indian
National Congress and founder of the Servants
of India Society. Through the Society as well as the
Congress and other legislative bodies he served in, Gokhale promoted not only
primarily independence from the British Empire but also social reform. To achieve his goals, Gokhale
followed two overarching principles: non-violence and reform within existing
government institutions.
Background
and education
Gopal Krishna Gokhale was born on
May 9, 1866 in Kothluk village of Guhagar
taluka in Ratnagiri district, in present-day Maharashtra
(then part of the Bombay Presidency). Although they were Chitpavan Brahmins, Gokhale’s family was relatively poor. Even so, they
ensured that Gokhale received an English education, which would place Gokhale
in a position to obtain employment as a clerk or minor official in the British Raj.
Being one of the first generations of Indians to receive a university
education,
Gokhale graduated from Elphinstone College in 1884. Gokhale’s education tremendously influenced the
course of his future career – in addition to learning English, he was exposed
to western political thought and became a great admirer of theorists such as John Stuart Mill and Edmund Burke. Although he would come to criticize unhesitatingly many
aspects of the English colonial regime, the respect for English political
theory and institutions that Gokhale acquired in his college years would remain
with him for the rest of his life. Gopal Krishna Gokhale, was one of the
founding social and political leaders during the Indian Independence Movement
against the British Empire in India. Gokhale was a senior leader of the Indian
National Congress and founder of the Servants of India Society. Through the
Society as well as the Congress and other legislative bodies he served in,
Gokhale promoted not only primarily independence from the British Empire but
also social reform. To achieve his goals, Gokhale followed two overarching
principles: non-violence and reform within existing government institutions..
Gopal Krishna Gokhale had one child-
Kashi(Anandibai) who was married to Justice S.B.Dhavle ICS. She had three
children: Gopal Shankar Dhavle, Balwant Shankar Dhavle IAS and Meena Rajwade.
Balwant Shankar Dhavle and Nalini Dhavle (née Sathe) have three children:
Shridhar Balwant Dhavle FCA, Vidyadhar Balwant Dhavle IFS and Jyotsna Balwant
Dhavle. Vidyadhar Balwant Dhavle and Aabha Dixit have 2 sons Abhishek Vidyadhar
Dhavle and Jaidev Vidyadhar Dhavle who are the most recent direct descendants
of Gopal Krishana Gokhale. The ancestral house constructed by Gopal Krisha Gokhale
for his family in Pune continues to be the residence of the Gokhale-Dhavle
descendants.
Indian
National Congress and Rivalry with Bal Gangadhar Tilak
Gokhale became a member of the Indian
National Congress in 1889, as a protégé of social
reformer Mahadev Govind Ranade. Along with other contemporary leaders like Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Dadabhai Naoroji, Bipin Chandra Pal, Lala Lajpat Rai
and Annie Besant, Gokhale fought for decades to obtain greater political
representation and power over public affairs for common Indians. He was
moderate in his views and attitudes, and sought to petition the British authorities
by cultivating a process of dialogue and discussion which would yield greater
British respect for Indian rights. Gokhale had visited Ireland and had arranged for an Irish nationalist, Alfred Webb,
to serve as President of the Indian National Congress in 1894. The following
year, Gokhale became the Congress’s joint secretary along with Tilak. In many
ways, Tilak and Gokhale’s early careers paralleled – both were Chitpavan Brahmin (though unlike Gokhale, Tilak was wealthy), both attended Elphinstone College, both became mathematics professors, and both were
important members of the Deccan
Education Society. When both became active in the
Congress, however, the divergence of their views concerning how best to improve
the lives of Indians became increasingly apparent.
Gokhale’s first major confrontation
with Tilak centered around one of his pet projects, the Age of Consent Bill
introduced by the British Imperial Government, in 1891-92. Gokhale and his
fellow liberal reformers, wishing to purge what they saw as superstitions and
abuses from their native Hinduism, wished through the Consent Bill to curb child marriage
abuses. Though the Bill was not extreme, only raising the age of consent from
ten to twelve, Tilak took issue with it; he did not object per se to the idea
of moving towards the elimination of child marriage, but rather to the idea of
British interference with Hindu tradition. For Tilak, such reform movements
were not to be sought after under imperial rule when they would be enforced by
the British, but rather after independence was achieved when Indians would
enforce it on themselves. The bill however became law in the Bombay Presidency. In 1905, Gokhale became president of the Indian National
Congress. Gokhale used his now considerable influence to undermine his longtime
rival, Tilak, refusing to support Tilak as candidate for president of the
Congress in 1906. By now, Congress was split: Gokhale and Tilak were the
respective leaders of the moderates and the "extremists" (the latter
now known by the more term, 'aggressive nationalists') in the Congress. Tilak
was an advocate of civil agitation and direct revolution to overthrow the
British Empire, whereas Gokhale was a moderate reformist.
As a result, the Congress Party split into two wings and was largely robbed of
its effectiveness for a decade. The two sides would later patch up in 1916
after Gokhale died.
Servants
of India Society
In 1905, when Gokhale was elected
president of the Indian
National Congress and was at the height of his
political power, he founded the Servants
of India Society to specifically further one of the
causes dearest to his heart: the expansion of Indian education. For Gokhale,
true political change in India would only be possible when a new generation of
Indians became educated as to their civil and patriotic duty to their country
and to each other. Believing existing educational institutions and the Indian Civil Service did not do enough to provide Indians with opportunities to
gain this political education, Gokhale hoped the Servants of India Society
would fill this need. In his preamble to the SIS’s constitution, Gokhale wrote
that “The Servants of India Society will train men prepared to devote their
lives to the cause of country in a religious spirit, and will seek to promote,
by all constitutional means, the national interests of the Indian people.” The Society took up
the cause of promoting Indian education in earnest, and among its many projects
organized mobile libraries, founded schools, and provided night classes for
factory workers. Although the Society lost much of its vigor following
Gokhale’s death, it still exists to this day, though its membership is small.
Involvement
with British Imperial Government
Gokhale, though an earlier leader of
the Indian nationalist movement, was not primarily concerned with independence
but rather with social reform; he believed such reform would be best achieved
by working within existing British government institutions, a position which
earned him the enmity of more aggressive nationalists such as Tilak. Undeterred
by such opposition, Gokhale would work directly with the British throughout his
political career in order to further his reform goals.
In 1899, Gokhale was elected to the
Bombay Legislative Council. He was elected to the Council of India of Governor-General
of India on 22 May 1903 as non-officiating
member representing Bombay Province. He later served to Imperial
Legislative Council after its expansion in 1909. He
there obtained a reputation as extremely knowledgeable and contributed
significantly to the annual budget debates. Gokhale developed so great a
reputation among the British that he was invited to London to meet with
secretary of state Lord John Morley,
with whom he established a rapport. Gokhale would help during his visit to
shape the Morley-Mentos Reforms
introduced in1909. Gokhale was appointed a CIE (Companion of the Order
of the Indian Empire) in the 1904 New Year's Honours
List, a formal recognition by the Empire of his service.
Mentor
to both Jinnah and Gandhi
Gokhale was famously a mentor to Mahatma Gandhi
in his formative years. In 1912, Gokhale visited South Africa at Gandhi's
invitation. As a young barrister, Gandhi returned from his struggles against the Empire in South Africa
and received personal guidance from Gokhale, including a knowledge and
understanding of India and the issues confronting common Indians. By 1920,
Gandhi emerged as the leader of the Indian Independence Movement. In his autobiography, Gandhi
calls Gokhale his mentor and guide. Gandhi also recognised Gokhale as an
admirable leader and master politician, describing him as 'pure as crystal,
gentle as a lamb, brave as a lion and chivalrous to a fault and the most
perfect man in the political field'. Despite his deep respect for Gokhale, however, Gandhi would
reject Gokhale's faith in western institutions as a means of achieving
political reform and ultimately chose not to become a member of Gokhale's
Servants of India Society. Gokhale was also the role model and mentor of Mohammed Ali Jinnah, the future founder of Pakistan,
who in 1912, aspired to become the "Muslim Gokhale". Even the Aga
Khan ( the Spiritual Head of the Islamic sect of Ismaili Khojas &
grandfather of the present Aga Khan) has stated in his autobiography that
Gokhale's influence on his thinking was probably considerable.
Death
Gokhale continued to be politically
active through the last years of his life. This included extensive traveling
abroad: in addition to his 1908 trip to England, he also visited South Africa
in 1912, where his protégé Gandhi was working to improve conditions for the
Indian minority living there. Meanwhile, he continued to be involved in the
Servants of India Society, the Congress, and the Legislative Council while
constantly advocating the advancement of Indian education. All these stresses
took their toll, however, and Gokhale died on Feb 19, 1915 at an early age of
forty-nine. Bal Gangadhar Tilak, his lifelong political opponent, said at his funeral:
"This diamond of India, this jewel of Maharashtra,
this prince of workers is taking eternal rest on funeral ground. Look at him
and try to emulate him".
Impact
on Indian Nationalist Movement
Gokhale's impact on the course of
the Indian nationalist movement was considerable. Through his close
relationship with the highest levels of British imperial government, Gokhale
forced India's colonial masters to recognize the capabilities of a new
generation of educated Indians and to include them more than ever before in the
governing process. Gokhale’s firm belief in the need for universal education
deeply inspired the next great man on the Indian political stage, Mohandas K.
Gandhi; his faith in western political institutions though rejected by Gandhi,
was adopted by an independent India in 1950.
Commemoration
His name is commemorated in the
names of the Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics in Pune, the Gokhale Memorial Girls' College
in Kolkata, the Gokhale Hall in Chennai, the Gokhale
Centenary College in Ankola, the Gopal Krishna Gokhale College in Kolhapur, Gokhale Road in Mumbai, and the Gokhale Institute of Public Affairs in Bangalore.
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