Gandhi and the World of the Hebrew Bible: The Case of Daniel as Satyagrahi

Among the biblical characters used as examples in developing and explaining <i>satyagraha</i>, Daniel is the most important after Jesus. In Gandhi’s speeches and writings from 1909 to 1946, Daniel served as the ideal <i>satyagrahi</i> both in South Africa and in India. Over t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ed Noort
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2022-09-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/13/9/859
_version_ 1797482954026385408
author Ed Noort
author_facet Ed Noort
author_sort Ed Noort
collection DOAJ
description Among the biblical characters used as examples in developing and explaining <i>satyagraha</i>, Daniel is the most important after Jesus. In Gandhi’s speeches and writings from 1909 to 1946, Daniel served as the ideal <i>satyagrahi</i> both in South Africa and in India. Over time, Daniel received company in the gallery of examples in which Socrates occupied a prominent place. Depending on theme, place, and audience, past and present characters from different traditions and scriptures accompanied Daniel. They represented the development of aspects of <i>satyagraha</i>: nonviolent active resistance as a weapon of the strong, courageous actions as a deliberate choice without excitement, love for the antagonist, preparedness to suffer, and no fear of death. All these aspects are embodied by the Gandhian Daniel. Gandhi emphasized the active role of Daniel as a resister, not the traditional view of the victim of court intrigues. In this paper, I argue that the image of the ideal <i>satyagrahi</i> Daniel could be strengthened by combining the court narratives from the first half and the apocalypses from the second one of the biblical book. The article provides context both for Gandhi’s political and religious practice and for the book of Daniel. The strange world of apocalypses seems to contradict the model of the Gandhian figure Daniel. However, they are crisis literature, and it makes sense to observe how the protagonist and his audience in times of occupation, persecutions, and war ask for guidance. Apocalypses show how Jewish resistance to foreign rule was conceived. The result of the survey is a complex image of competing literatures from roughly the same period and the hands, heads, beliefs, and sufferings behind them. The view of the end of history, a program of nonviolence, and hope in the Daniel apocalypse serve as contrast propaganda to contemporary visions on the violent Maccabean revolt and the Seleucid persecutions. They offer a nonviolent counterweight to the ideology of the state propaganda of the Seleucids. They contradict the historiographic idealization of the Maccabean revolt and its armed resistance.
first_indexed 2024-03-09T22:39:58Z
format Article
id doaj.art-ae9286a3e9864a249016279d57c987f2
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2077-1444
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-09T22:39:58Z
publishDate 2022-09-01
publisher MDPI AG
record_format Article
series Religions
spelling doaj.art-ae9286a3e9864a249016279d57c987f22023-11-23T18:42:10ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442022-09-0113985910.3390/rel13090859Gandhi and the World of the Hebrew Bible: The Case of Daniel as SatyagrahiEd Noort0Faculty of Theology and Religious Studies, University of Groningen, 9712GK Groningen, The NetherlandsAmong the biblical characters used as examples in developing and explaining <i>satyagraha</i>, Daniel is the most important after Jesus. In Gandhi’s speeches and writings from 1909 to 1946, Daniel served as the ideal <i>satyagrahi</i> both in South Africa and in India. Over time, Daniel received company in the gallery of examples in which Socrates occupied a prominent place. Depending on theme, place, and audience, past and present characters from different traditions and scriptures accompanied Daniel. They represented the development of aspects of <i>satyagraha</i>: nonviolent active resistance as a weapon of the strong, courageous actions as a deliberate choice without excitement, love for the antagonist, preparedness to suffer, and no fear of death. All these aspects are embodied by the Gandhian Daniel. Gandhi emphasized the active role of Daniel as a resister, not the traditional view of the victim of court intrigues. In this paper, I argue that the image of the ideal <i>satyagrahi</i> Daniel could be strengthened by combining the court narratives from the first half and the apocalypses from the second one of the biblical book. The article provides context both for Gandhi’s political and religious practice and for the book of Daniel. The strange world of apocalypses seems to contradict the model of the Gandhian figure Daniel. However, they are crisis literature, and it makes sense to observe how the protagonist and his audience in times of occupation, persecutions, and war ask for guidance. Apocalypses show how Jewish resistance to foreign rule was conceived. The result of the survey is a complex image of competing literatures from roughly the same period and the hands, heads, beliefs, and sufferings behind them. The view of the end of history, a program of nonviolence, and hope in the Daniel apocalypse serve as contrast propaganda to contemporary visions on the violent Maccabean revolt and the Seleucid persecutions. They offer a nonviolent counterweight to the ideology of the state propaganda of the Seleucids. They contradict the historiographic idealization of the Maccabean revolt and its armed resistance.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/13/9/859GandhiOld Testament/Hebrew BibleDanielSocrates<i>satyagraha</i>hermeneutics
spellingShingle Ed Noort
Gandhi and the World of the Hebrew Bible: The Case of Daniel as Satyagrahi
Religions
Gandhi
Old Testament/Hebrew Bible
Daniel
Socrates
<i>satyagraha</i>
hermeneutics
title Gandhi and the World of the Hebrew Bible: The Case of Daniel as Satyagrahi
title_full Gandhi and the World of the Hebrew Bible: The Case of Daniel as Satyagrahi
title_fullStr Gandhi and the World of the Hebrew Bible: The Case of Daniel as Satyagrahi
title_full_unstemmed Gandhi and the World of the Hebrew Bible: The Case of Daniel as Satyagrahi
title_short Gandhi and the World of the Hebrew Bible: The Case of Daniel as Satyagrahi
title_sort gandhi and the world of the hebrew bible the case of daniel as satyagrahi
topic Gandhi
Old Testament/Hebrew Bible
Daniel
Socrates
<i>satyagraha</i>
hermeneutics
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/13/9/859
work_keys_str_mv AT ednoort gandhiandtheworldofthehebrewbiblethecaseofdanielassatyagrahi