Months after Ghana kicked out Gandhi’s statue from its university, South Africa is set to unveil another in October

Michael Eli Dokosi September 25, 2019
Mahatma Ghandi via Mark Fitzgibbons/Flickr

In Ghana, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, better known as Mahatma Gandhi, had his statue erected at the main quadrangle of the University of Ghana campus in 2016, donated by the Indian government.

Thanks to intense protests by a group of academics and Pan-Africanists, the statue fell in 2018.

Gandhi, born in Gujarat, Western India, in 1869, is promoted as a man who contributed to the fall of the British Empire when he led his people to gain independence using nonviolent means.

However, others point out that while Gandhi indeed suffered abuse at the hands of the British colonial government, he also discriminated against people of African stock.

Months after Ghana kicked out Gandhi’s statue from its university, South Africa is set to unveil another in October

Gandhi’s life in South Africa, where he spent over two decades serving as an expatriate lawyer, representing resident Indian communities in their struggle for civil rights, comes under sharp focus when his contact with Black South Africans is examined.

His detailed writings and speeches, which have been described as racist, as well as, his staunch belief in India’s caste system which relegated Blacks to the bottom of the social ladder, do not endear him to melanated people.

In October 2018, a Malawi court halted the erection of another Gandhi statue in the commercial capital, Blantyre, citing his hatred of Black people.

At the moment, Cape Town residents are also opposed to an erection of a Gandhi state at Heerengracht, in the Cape Town central business district, next to the International Convention Centre.

Months after Ghana kicked out Gandhi’s statue from its university, South Africa is set to unveil another in October
Members of the Pietermaritzburg Gandhi Committee lay flowers on the Gandhi statue in the KwaZulu-Natal city to commemorate the Gandhi’s 145th birthday in 2014.

India’s Government wishes for a life-size statue of Gandhi to be erected in Cape Town and unveiled on October 2 which marks his 150th birthday but the locals are holding authorities to their words of factoring in their input before arriving at a decision.

And despite two-thirds of respondents (40) expressing their wish of not having the statue in the town, the city council is going ahead anyway.

Gandhi’s well-documented reference to Black South African citizens as Kaffir – a derogatory term for Africans – and early writings claiming Black people were inferior to Indians, has constituted the opposition to his statues.

This is in spite of the sanitized version of history the India government pushes.

It remains to be seen how the battle for and against the Gandhi statue will pan out.

Last Edited by:Mildred Europa Taylor Updated: September 26, 2019

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