 
	 GANDHI 
	SEVAGRAM 
		ASHRAM
	GANDHI 
	SEVAGRAM 
		ASHRAM
Written by :  M. K. Gandhi
Compiled and Edited by : Sailesh Kumar Bandopadhyaya
First Edition : 3,000 copies, November 1960
ISBN : 81-7229-223-6
Printed and Published by : Navajivan Mudranalaya, 
Ahemadabad-380014 
India
© Navajivan Trust, 1960
It has been suggested by American friends that the atom bomb will 
bring in Ahimsa as nothing else can. It will, if it is meant that 
its destructive power will so disgust the world that it will turn it 
away from violence for the time being. This is very like a man 
glutting himself with dainties to the point of nausea and turning 
away from them only to return with redoubled zeal after the effect 
of nausea is well over. Precisely in the same manner will the world 
return to violence with renewed zeal after the effect of disgust is 
worn out.
Often does good come out of evil. But that is God's, not man's plan. 
Man knows that only evil can come out of evil, as good out of good.
That atomic energy though harnessed by American scientists and army 
men for destructive purposes may be utilized by other scientists for 
humanitarian purposes is undoubtedly within the realm of 
possibility. But that is not what was meant by my American friends. 
They were not so simple as to put a question which connoted an 
obvious truth. An incendiary uses fire for his destructive and 
nefarious purposes, a housewife makes daily use of it in preparing 
nourishing food for mankind.
So far as I can see, the atomic bomb has deadened the finest feeling 
that has sustained mankind for ages. There used to be the so-called 
laws of war which made it tolerable. Now we know the naked truth. 
War knows no law except that of might. The atom bomb brought an 
empty victory to the allied arms but it resulted for the time being 
in destroying the soul of Japan. What has happened to the soul of 
the destroying nation is yet too early to see. Forces of nature act 
in a mysterious manner. We can but solve the mystery by deducing the 
unknown result from the known results of similar event. A 
slave-holder cannot hold a slave without putting himself or his 
deputy in the cage holding the slave. Let no one run away with the 
idea that I wish to put in a defence of Japanese misdeeds in 
pursuance of Japan's unworthy ambition. The difference was only one 
of degree. I assume that Japan's greed was more unworthy. But the 
greater unworthiness conferred no right on the less unworthy of 
destroying without mercy men, women and children of Japan in a 
particular area.
The moral to be legitimately drawn from the supreme tragedy of the 
bomb is that it will not be destroyed by counter-bombs even as 
violence cannot be by counter-violence. Mankind has to get out of 
violence only through non-violence. Hatred can be overcome only by 
love. Counter-hatred only increases the surface as well as the depth 
of hatred. I am aware that I am repeating what I have many times 
stated before and practised to the best of my ability and capacity. 
What I first stated was itself nothing new. It was as old as the 
hills. Only I recited no copy-book maxim but definitely announced 
what I believed in every fibre of my being. Sixty years of practice 
in various walks of life has only enriched the belief which 
experience of friends has fortified. It is however the central truth 
by which one can stand alone without flinching. I believe in what 
Max Muller said years ago, namely that truth needed to be repeated 
as long as there were men who disbelieved it.
Poona, 
1-7-'46
Harijan, 7-7-1946