Page:Speeches And Writings MKGandhi.djvu/154

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

64 THE SOUTH AFRICAN INDIAN QUESTION not be possible for him to give any assurance that legis- lation on the lines indicated by him would be introduced at the next session Mr. Gandhi thereupon replied on 28th September:-— Dear Mr Gorges,--1 do not know that I am justihed in writing this letter to you, but, as you have been personally solicitous about the non·revival of passive~ resistance, and as, in the course of my conversations with you, I have so often told you that I have nothing to withhold from the Government, I may as well in- form you of what is now going on. I wrote to you from Phoenix in reply to your last letter, and if you have not yet replied to my com- munication but intend to do so, I would suggest your sending your reply to my Johannesburg address, as I shall be here for some time atleast. The campaign has started in earnest. As you know, sixteen passive resistors, including four women, are already serving threifmonths ’ imprisonment with hard. labour. The resistors here were awaiting my arrival and the activity here will commence almost immediately I cannot help saying that the points on which the struggle has re-started are such that the Government might gracefully grant them to the community. But what I would like to impress upon the Government is the gravity of the step we are about to take. I know that it is fraught with danger. I know also that. once taken, it may be difficult to control the spread of the movement beyond the limits one may set. I know also what responsibility lies on my shoulders in advising such a momentous stop, but I feel that it is not possible for me to refrain from advising a step which I consider