This book marks the centenary of the 1913 Satyagraha Passive Resistance movement in South Africa, with the various contributors critically examining the significance and relevance of satyagraha from different vantage points. Satyagraha, first coined, developed, and practiced in South Africa continues to challenge and inspire n individuals and peoples far and wide. With unrelenting conflicts across the world, leading to deaths, violence, and displacements of families and communities, the need for social and political transformation and the moral quest for the harmony of all humanity is as pressing today as it ever was.
The volume is significant as it forces us to not only deepen our critical understanding of the past but also to know this past as the legacy from which we draw for the present and future. The essays here show that there has been a continual attempt to understand and grapple with the term `Satyagraha'. Some have been at pains to remind adherents of the essence of Satyagraha. At the same time, there were those who modified and adapt Satyagraha according to their own understandings and objectives or who used the idea as a strategy rather than as an ideal. While some clung to the deal of Satyagraha, others did not violate its principles through a lack of understanding but felt that a purist interpretation was not feasible on the ground. The shifting and fluid differences on a wide spectrum among many who worked with Gandhi or with his concept of Satyagraha are reflected in the essays in this collection.
Devarakshanam (Betty) Govinden is a Senior Research Associate in the School of Education, University of Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa. She was Dean of the School of Education, at the former University of Durban-Westville. Her recent publications include A Time of Memory: Reflections on Recent South African Writing (2008); Sister Outsiders: Representations of Identity and Difference in Selected Writings by South African Indian Women (2008) and Words on Water: Reflections on Recent Writing (2010).
Kalpanan Hiralal is an Associate Professor of History at the University of Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa. She teaches both undergraduate and graduate-level modules on global history, women, gender and politics, and culture and tourism. Her Ph.D. focused on the South Asian Diaspora to Africa in the context of settlement, trade, and identity formation. Her current research focus is on African and South Asian Diaspora, Gender and Empowerment and women struggle in Apartheid South Africa. She has published in several local and international academic journals in the context of gender, identity, and agency.
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