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Constructive Program
by Janet Chisholm
Printable Version
Constructive
Program was Gandhi’s main hope for India. It meant
confronting Indians’ own acceptance of their dependency,
powerlessness and exploitation under British rule. Helping
them envision and implement instead a just society of
their own creation. Reweaving the strands of Indian culture
and restoring relationships between Muslims and Hindus
and the Hindu castes. In the campaign for Indian independence,
these were his priorities. This was his vision. It is
a historically-neglected side of Gandhi’s work,
perhaps because it seems less dramatic and powerful than
organized public resistance. Yet Gandhi himself considered
Constructive Program far more important, more foundational,
more sustaining and deserving a greater share of time
and energy than resistance.
Constructive
Program in India clearly benefited from Gandhi’s
ability to articulate an overarching vision for cultural
change that could link a variety of efforts and from his
promotion of a unifying symbol and action. The spinning
wheel was already a cultural symbol of creative life energy,
but under Gandhi came to represent the work involved in
Constructive Program: developing economic independence
through meaningful local work, providing basic necessities
like clothing for everyone, building solidarity with the
poor, and “simple living so that all might simply
live.” The mere act of spinning cotton offered
a concrete way for every person, no matter the circumstances,
to contribute on a daily basis and feel united with others
in the struggle. It signified the reward of persistence
and provided an almost spiritual, meditative discipline.
As a powerful declaration of self-help and of independence
already-in-the-making, spinning confronted the lie of
Indian dependence with actions of Truth.
Peace scholar
and activist Michael Nagler, Ken Preston from Pace e Bene,
and I from the FOR have all spent time reflecting on what
the lessons of Gandhi’s Constructive Program may
be for us today. By nature it is preventive, designed
to reintegrate into the community those who are marginalized
or rejected. As a result, it helps a movement gain and
sustain momentum and unity, positively influences others,
contributes to the intended new social order, reduces
the sense of powerlessness and increases self reliance.
Near the conclusion of a resistance campaign, when the
crisis is past and activists tend to fall away, Constructive
Program carries on to solidify and implement changes.
Nagler cautions that we should not be fooled into thinking
Constructive Program is less effective than a campaign
of resistance. It is a valuable complement to and preparatory
training for a confrontational struggle involving resistance
and direct action.
Constructive Program should not be confused with soup
kitchens, shelters, prisons and other efforts that are
like bandages patching up an unjust society. It is not
about charity. It does not try to perpetuate the status
quo. On the contrary, Constructive Program challenges
systemic and structural violence by finding and applying
solutions. Some of Gandhi’s projects addressed needs
related to job creation, land reform, health services,
sanitation, substance abuse, education, the role of women,
and discrimination.
Personal
transformation is required, as well as social transformation.
Participants are expected to evaluate and work to correct
their own weaknesses, particularly passive acceptance
of exploitation. The community, too, must identify and
make improvements where there is tension, disunity or
injustice. Through spiritual practices and purification,
personal discipline, education and training, and community
building, individuals are encouraged to seize the power
which they already control over their own behavior and
to achieve “self-rule.” According to Gandhi,
the energy of nonviolence had to fill individuals first
in order to bring about positive social change.
What would
Constructive Program look like today? There are many
existing constructive projects that represent personal
and social transformation, that present alternatives to
the status quo and are likely building blocks for a new
culture. Participants in FOR training have planned community
bicycling, counter recruitment/job counseling, Spanish
books for Spanish-speaking families, a food co-op, a nonviolence
resource center, nonviolence training, and a U.S. Department
of Peace. Other constructive projects include fair trade
goods, joint Israeli-Palestinian youth camps, co-op housing
and preschools, restorative justice, Emily’s list
to elect women to Congress, desert landscaping, creating
pocket parks and community playgrounds, Habitat for Humanity,
organic gardening, complementary medicine, sister cities
projects, independent media and bookstores, consensus
decision-making and shared leadership, water and energy
conservation, community arts and events, community meals,
block watch, spiritual practice and meditation, peace
education and training in conflict transformation.
The overarching
vision for a Constructive Program that could link these
projects is less obvious. Can we articulate a broad vision
that incorporates our shared values and help us feel that
we are all working for the same end, even if not on the
same projects or in the same location? Are there symbols
that might call us to common daily actions that would
create a sense of solidarity? Or do we already have these
and we just need to raise them up? Any suggestions?
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“Gandhi
was fully committed to the belief that while nonviolence
had an impressive power to protest and disrupt, its real
power was to create and reconstruct.” Nagler,
Is There No other Way?
Sept-Oct 2004
©2004 Fellowship of Reconciliation
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