I can give only my impressions of them, for what they are worth.
The first thing that strikes me is that it would be difficult to find
two persons who would rival them for their colossal egotism, to whom
personal ascendancy is everything and the cause of the country a mere
counter on the table. They have made Indian politics a matter of
personal feud. Consequences have no terror for them ; indeed they do not
occur to them until they happen. When they do happen they either forget
the cause, or if they remember it, they overlook it with a complacency
which saves them from any remorse. They choose to stand on a pedestal of
splendid isolation. They wall themselves off from their equals. They
prefer to open themselves to their inferiors. They are very unhappy at
and impatient of criticism, but are very happy to be fawned upon by
flunkeys. Both have developed a wonderful stagecraft and arrange things
in such a way that they are always in the limelight wherever they go.
Each of course claims to be supreme. If supremacy was their only claim,
it would be a small wonder. In addition to supremacy each claims
infallibility for himself. Pius IX during whose sacred regime as Pope
the issue of infallibility was raging said— ” Before I was Pope I
believed in Papal infallibility, now I feel it.” This is exactly the
attitude of the two leaders whom Providence—may I say in his unguarded
moments—has appointed to lead us.
SECTION VIII, Ranade, Gandhi and Jinnah. Vol-I, Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Writing and Speeches
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