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Khadi |
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Khadi is a controversial subject. Many people think that in advocating Khadi I am sailing against a headwind and am sure to sink the ship of Swaraj and that I am taking the country to the dark ages. I do not propose to argue the case for Khadi in this brief survey. I have agreed it sufficiently elsewhere. Here I want to show what every congressman and for that matter every Indian can do to advance the cause of Khadi. It connotes the beginning of economic freedom and equality of all in the country. The proof of the pudding is in the eating. Let everyone try and she or he will find out for himself or herself the truth of what I am saying. Khadi must be taken with all its implications. It means a wholesale Swadeshi mentality a determination to find all the necessaries of the life in India and that to through the labor and intellect of the villagers. That means a reversal of the existing process. That is to say instead of half a dozen cities of India & Great Britain living on the exploitation and the ruin of the 700000 villages of India and the latter will be largely self contained and will voluntarily serve the cities of India and even the outside world in so far as it benefits both the Parties. This needs a revolutionary change in the mentality and the states of many. Easy though the non violent ways in my respects it is very difficult in many others. It vitally touches the life of every single Indian makes him feel aglow with the possession of the power that has laid hidden within himself and makes him proud of his identity with every drop of the ocean of Indian humanity. This non-violence is not the inanity for which we have mistaken it through all these long ages; it is the most potent force as yet known to man kind and on which its very existence is dependant. It is that force which I have tried to present to the Congress and though to the world. Khadi to me is the symbol of unity of Indian humanity of its economic freedom and equality and therefore ultimately in the poetic expression of Jawaharlal Nehru " the livary of India's Freedom". Moreover Khadi mentality means decentralization of the production & distribution of the necessaries of life. Therefore the formula so far evolved is every village to produce all the necessaries and a certain percentage in addition for the requirements of the cities. Heavy industries will needs be centralized and nationalized. But they will occupy the least part of the vast national activity which will be mainly in the villages. Having explained the implications of Khadi I must indicate what congressmen can and should do towards its promotion. Production of Khadi includes cotton growing picking ginning cleaning carding silvering spinning sizing dyeing preparing the warp and the woof weaving and washing. These with the exception of dyeing are essential processes. Everyone of them can be effectively handled in the villages and is being so handled in many villages throughout India which the A. I. S. A. is covering. According to the latest report the following are the interesting figures: 2,75,146 villagers including 19,645 Harijans and 57,378 Muslims, scattered in at least 13,645 villages received are spinners, weavers, etc. Rs. 34,85,609 in 1940. The spinners were largely women. Yet the work done only is one hundredth part of what could be done if Congressmen honestly took up the Khadi Programme. Since the wanton destruction of this central village industry and the allied handicrafts, intelligence and brightness have filed from the villages leaving them inane lusterless and reduced almost to the state of their ill-kept cattle. If congressman will be true to their congress call in the respect of Khadi, they will carry out the instructions of the A. I. S. A. issued from time to time as to the part they can play in Khadi planning. Only a few broad rules can be laid down here: 1. Every family with a plot of ground can grow cotton at least for family use. Cotton growing is an easy process. In Bihar the cultivators were by law compelled to grow indigo planter. Why cannot we grow cotton voluntarily for the nation on a certain portion of our land. This was in the interest of the foreign indigo planter. Why cannot we grow cotton voluntarily for the nation on a certain portion of our land? The reader will note that decentralization commences from the beginning of the Khadi processes. Today cotton crop is centralized and has to be sent to distant parts of India. Before the war it used to be sent principally to Britain & Japan. It was and still is a money crop & therefore subject to the fluctuations of the market. Under the Khadi scheme cotton growing becomes free from this uncertainty and gamble. The grower grows what he needs. The farmer needs to know that his first business is to grow for his own needs. When he does that he will reduce the chance of a low market ruining him. 2. Every spinner would buy if he has not his own enough cotton for ginning which he can easily do without the hand ginning roller frame. He can gin his own portion with a board and an iron rolling ginned cotton should be bought and carded. Carding for self can be done well on a tiny bow without much effort. The greater the decentralization of labour, the simpler the cheaper the tools. The silvers made the process of spinning commences. I strongly recommend the dhanush takli. I have used it frequently. My speed on it is almost the same on the wheel. I draw a finer thread and the evenness of the yarn are greater on the dhanush takli than on the wheel. This may not however hold good for all. My emphasis on the dhanush takli is based on the fact that it is more easily made is cheaper than and does not require frequent repairs like a wheel. Unless one knows how to make the two mals and to adjust them when they slip or to put the wheel. Unless one knows how to make the two mals and to adjust them when they slip or to put the wheel right when it refuses to work, the wheel has often to lie idle. Moreover if the millions take to spinning at once, as they well may have to spinning at once, as they well may have to the dhanush takli, being the instrument most easily made and handled, is the only tool that can meet the demand. It is more easily made that can meet the demand. It is more easily made even than the simple takli. The best, easiest and cheapest way is to make oneself. Indeed one ought to learn how to handle and make simple tools. Imagine the unifying and the educative effect of the whole nation simultaneously taking part in the process up to spinning! Consider the leveling effect of the bond of common labor between the rich and the poor.
Yarn thus produced may be used in three ways: In this scheme of nation wide spinning as a sacrifice I do not expect the average man or woman to give more than one hour daily to this work. |