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Nonviolence

Nonviolence is the personal practice of not causing harm to others under any condition. It may come from the belief that hurting people, animals and/or the environment is unnecessary to achieve an outcome and it may refer to a general philosophy of abstention from violence. It may be based on moral, religious or spiritual principles, or the reasons for it may be strategic or pragmatic.[1] Failure to distinguish between the two types of nonviolent approaches can lead to distortion in the concept's meaning and effectiveness, which can subsequently result in confusion among the audience.[2] Although both principled and pragmatic nonviolent approaches preach for nonviolence, they may have distinct motives, goals, philosophies, and techniques.[3] However, rather than debating the best practice between the two approaches, both can indicate alternative paths for those who do not want to use violence.[2] These forms of nonviolence approaches (pragmatic and principled) will be discussed in the later section of this article.

Mahatma Gandhi, often considered a founder of the modern nonviolence movement, spread the concept of ahimsa through his movements and writings, which then inspired other nonviolent activists.

Nonviolence has "active" or "activist" elements, in that believers generally accept the need for nonviolence as a means to achieve political and social change. Thus, for example, Tolstoyan and Gandhism nonviolence is both a philosophy and strategy for social change that rejects the use of violence, but at the same time it sees nonviolent action (also called civil resistance) as an alternative to passive acceptance of oppression or armed struggle against it. In general, advocates of an activist philosophy of nonviolence use diverse methods in their campaigns for social change, including critical forms of education and persuasion, mass noncooperation, civil disobedience, nonviolent direct action, constructive program, and social, political, cultural and economic forms of intervention.

Petra Kelly founded the German Green Party on nonviolence

In modern times, nonviolent methods have been a powerful tool for social protest and revolutionary social and political change.[4][5] There are many examples of their use. Fuller surveys may be found in the entries on civil resistance, nonviolent resistance and nonviolent revolution. Certain movements which were particularly influenced by a philosophy of nonviolence have included Mahatma Gandhi's leadership of a successful decades-long nonviolent struggle for Indian independence, Martin Luther King Jr.'s and James Bevel's adoption of Gandhi's nonviolent methods in their campaigns to win civil rights for African Americans,[6][7] and César Chávez's campaigns of nonviolence in the 1960s to protest the treatment of Mexican farm workers in California.[8] The 1989 "Velvet Revolution" in Czechoslovakia that saw the overthrow of the Communist government[9] is considered one of the most important of the largely nonviolent Revolutions of 1989.[10] Most recently the nonviolent campaigns of Leymah Gbowee and the women of Liberia were able to achieve peace after a 14-year civil war.[11] This story is captured in a 2008 documentary film Pray the Devil Back to Hell.

The term "nonviolence" is often linked with peace or it is used as a synonym for it, and despite the fact that it is frequently equated with pacifism, this equation is rejected by nonviolent advocates and activists.[12] Nonviolence specifically refers to the absence of violence and it is always the choice to do no harm or the choice to do the least amount of harm, and passivity is the choice to do nothing. Sometimes nonviolence is passive, and other times it isn't. For example, if a house is burning down with mice or insects in it, the most harmless appropriate action is to put the fire out, not to sit by and passively let the fire burn. At times there is confusion and contradiction about nonviolence, harmlessness and passivity. A confused person may advocate nonviolence in a specific context while advocating violence in other contexts. For example, someone who passionately opposes abortion or meat eating may concurrently advocate violence to kill an abortion care provider or attack a slaughterhouse, which makes that person a violent person.[13]

"Nonviolence is a powerful and just weapon. Indeed, it is a weapon unique in history, which cuts without wounding and ennobles the man who wields it."

— Martin Luther King Jr., The Quest for Peace and Justice (1964) Martin Luther King's Nobel Lecture, delivered in the Auditorium of the University of Oslo at December 11, 1964

Mahatma Gandhi was of the view:

No religion in the World has explained the principle of Ahimsa so deeply and systematically as is discussed with its applicability in every human life in Jainism. As and when the benevolent principle of Ahimsa or non-violence will be ascribed for practice by the people of the world to achieve their end of life in this world and beyond. Jainism is sure to have the uppermost status and Lord Mahavira is sure to be respected as the greatest authority on Ahimsa.[14]

Origins

Nonviolence or ahimsa is one of the cardinal virtues[15] and an important tenet of Jainism, Hinduism and Buddhism. It is a multidimensional concept,[16] inspired by the premise that all living beings have the spark of the divine spiritual energy; therefore, to hurt another being is to hurt oneself. It has also been related to the notion that any violence has karmic consequences. While ancient scholars of Hinduism pioneered and over time perfected the principles of ahimsa, the concept reached an extraordinary status in the ethical philosophy of Jainism.[15][17]

Forms of nonviolence

Advocates of nonviolent action believe cooperation and consent are the roots of civil or political power: all regimes, including bureaucratic institutions, financial institutions, and the armed segments of society (such as the military and police); depend on compliance from citizens.[18] On a national level, the strategy of nonviolent action seeks to undermine the power of rulers by encouraging people to withdraw their consent and cooperation. The forms of nonviolence draw inspiration from both religious or ethical beliefs and political analysis. Religious or ethically based nonviolence is sometimes referred to as principled, philosophical, or ethical nonviolence, while nonviolence based on political analysis is often referred to as tactical, strategic, or pragmatic nonviolent action. Commonly, both of these dimensions may be present within the thinking of particular movements or individuals.[19]

Pragmatic

The fundamental concept of pragmatic (tactical or strategic) nonviolent action is to create a social dynamic or political movement that can project a national or international dialogue that affects social change without necessarily winning over those who wish to maintain the status quo.[20] Gene Sharp promoted the pragmatic nonviolence approach. Sharp was an American political scientist known for his nonviolent struggle work. Those who follow Sharp's pragmatic nonviolence approach believe in practicality rather than the moral aspect of the struggle. They believe that violence is too costly to engage in. The goals are to change their opponent's behavior; end a specific injustice or violent situation; and seek a win for themselves, while opponents they perceive as enemies with conflicting interests should lose.[3] Conflict is seen as inevitable, and the rejection of violence is an effective way to challenge power.[2] Those who follow pragmatic nonviolence ideology are willing to engage in nonviolent coercion, and they try to avoid suffering.[3]

Nicolas Walter noted the idea that nonviolence might work "runs under the surface of Western political thought without ever quite disappearing".[21] Walter noted Étienne de La Boétie's Discourse on Voluntary Servitude (sixteenth century) and P.B. Shelley's The Masque of Anarchy (1819) contain arguments for resisting tyranny without using violence.[21] In 1838, William Lloyd Garrison helped found the New England Non-Resistance Society, a society devoted to achieving racial and gender equality through the rejection of all violent actions.[21]

In modern industrial democracies, nonviolent action has been used extensively by political sectors without mainstream political power such as labor, peace, environment and women's movements. Lesser known is the role that nonviolent action has played and continues to play in undermining the power of repressive political regimes in the developing world and the former eastern bloc. Susan Ives emphasizes this point by quoting Walter Wink:

"In 1989, thirteen nations comprising 1,695,000,000 people experienced nonviolent revolutions that succeeded beyond anyone's wildest expectations ... If we add all the countries touched by major nonviolent actions in our century (the Philippines, South Africa ... the independence movement in India ...), the figure reaches 3,337,400,000, a staggering 65% of humanity! All this in the teeth of the assertion, endlessly repeated, that nonviolence doesn't work in the 'real' world."

— Walter Wink, Christian theologian[10]

As a technique for social struggle, nonviolent action has been described as "the politics of ordinary people", reflecting its historically mass-based use by populations throughout the world and history.

Movements most often associated with nonviolence are the non-cooperation campaign for Indian independence led by Mahatma Gandhi, the Civil Rights Movement in the United States, and the People Power Revolution in the Philippines.

Also of primary significance is the notion that just means are the most likely to lead to just ends. When Gandhi said that "the means may be likened to the seed, the end to a tree," he expressed the philosophical kernel of what some refer to as prefigurative politics. Martin Luther King Jr., a student of Gandhian nonviolent resistance, concurred with this tenet, concluding that "nonviolence demands that the means we use must be as pure as the ends we seek." Proponents of nonviolence reason that the actions taken in the present inevitably re-shape the social order in like form. They would argue, for instance, that it is fundamentally irrational to use violence to achieve a peaceful society.

 
Gandhi famously advocated for the Indian independence movement to strictly adhere to the principles of nonviolence.

Respect or love for opponents also has a pragmatic justification, in that the technique of separating the deeds from the doers allows for the possibility of the doers changing their behaviour, and perhaps their beliefs. Martin Luther King Jr. wrote, "Nonviolent resistance... avoids not only external physical violence but also internal violence of spirit. The nonviolent resister not only refuses to shoot his opponent, but he also refuses to hate him."[22]

Finally, the notion of Satya, or Truth, is central to the Gandhian conception of nonviolence. Gandhi saw Truth as something that is multifaceted and unable to be grasped in its entirety by any one individual. All carry pieces of the Truth, he believed, but all need the pieces of others' truths in order to pursue the greater Truth. This led him to believe in the inherent worth of dialogue with opponents, in order to understand motivations. On a practical level, the willingness to listen to another's point of view is largely dependent on reciprocity. In order to be heard by one's opponents, one must also be prepared to listen.[citation needed]

Nonviolence has obtained a level of institutional recognition and endorsement at the global level. On November 10, 1998, the United Nations General Assembly proclaimed the first decade of the 21st century and the third millennium, the years 2001 to 2010, as the International Decade for the Promotion of a Culture of Peace and Non-Violence for the Children of the World.

Principled

 
The Semai have principle called punan, which includes nonviolence

The nonviolence approach involves accepting that violence is wrong and nonviolence is the best ethical response to any conflict.[3] The followers of this approach believe in human harmony and a moral rejection of violence and coercion.[2] They accept the total commitment to nonviolence and encourage those who want to use nonviolent actions to reject all forms of violence and coercion. Principled nonviolence has a religious or ideological basis. This type of nonviolence aims to change the opponent's heart and mind by showing love to them rather than hatred, partnering with the opponents to bring about social change by ending all violence and social injustices, and seeking a solution whereby all parties win.[3] The techniques they use include persuasion while trying to avoid coercion, and they accept that suffering is part of the means to transform themselves and others.[3]

For many, practicing nonviolence goes deeper than abstaining from violent behavior or words. It means overriding the impulse to be hateful and holding love for everyone, even those with whom one strongly disagrees. In this view, because violence is learned, it is necessary to unlearn violence by practicing love and compassion at every possible opportunity. For some, the commitment to non-violence entails a belief in restorative or transformative justice, an abolition of the death penalty and other harsh punishments. This may involve the necessity of caring for those who are violent.

Nonviolence, for many, involves a respect and reverence for all sentient, and perhaps even non-sentient, beings. This might include abolitionism against animals as property, the practice of not eating animal products or by-products (vegetarianism or veganism), spiritual practices of non-harm to all beings, and caring for the rights of all beings. Mahatma Gandhi, James Bevel, and other nonviolent proponents advocated vegetarianism as part of their nonviolent philosophy. Buddhists extend this respect for life to animals and plants, while Jainism extend this respect for life to animals, plants and even small organisms such as insects.[23][24] The classical Indian text of the Tirukkuṛaḷ, which is believed to be of Hindu or Jain origin, decrees ahimsa and moral vegetarianism as the most fundamental of all personal virtues.[25] These ideas can also be found in Western mystical and Neoplatonic traditions.[26]

Mahatma Gandhi was one of the most well-known advocates for and practitioners of principled nonviolence.

Semai people

The Semai ethnic group living in the center of the Malay Peninsula in Southeast Asia are known for their nonviolence.[27] The Semai punan ethical or religious principle[28] strongly pressures members of the culture towards nonviolent, non-coercive, and non-competitive behaviour. It has been suggested that the Semai's non-violence is a response to historic threats from slaving states; as the Semai were constantly defeated by slavers and Malaysian immigrants, they preferred to flee rather than fight and thus evolved into a general norm of non-violence.[29] This does not mean the Semai are incapable of violence however; during the Malayan Emergency, the British enlisted some Semai to fight against MNLA insurgents and according to Robert Knox Dentan the Semai believe that as Malaysia industrialises, it will be harder for the Semai to use their strategy of fleeing and they will have to fight instead.[30][31]

Religious

Hinduism

Ancient Vedic texts

Ahimsa as an ethical concept evolved in Vedic texts.[17][32] The oldest scripts, along with discussing ritual animal sacrifices, indirectly mention Ahimsa, but do not emphasise it. Over time, the Hindu scripts revise ritual practices and the concept of Ahimsa is increasingly refined and emphasised, ultimately Ahimsa becomes the highest virtue by the late Vedic era (about 500 BC). For example, hymn 10.22.25 in the Rig Veda uses the words Satya (truthfulness) and Ahimsa in a prayer to deity Indra;[33] later, the Yajur Veda dated to be between 1000 BC and 600 BC, states, "may all beings look at me with a friendly eye, may I do likewise, and may we look at each other with the eyes of a friend".[17][34]

The term Ahimsa appears in the text Taittiriya Shakha of the Yajurveda (TS 5.2.8.7), where it refers to non-injury to the sacrificer himself.[35] It occurs several times in the Shatapatha Brahmana in the sense of "non-injury".[36] The Ahimsa doctrine is a late Vedic era development in Brahmanical culture.[37] The earliest reference to the idea of non-violence to animals ("pashu-Ahimsa"), apparently in a moral sense, is in the Kapisthala Katha Samhita of the Yajurveda (KapS 31.11), which may have been written in about the 8th century BCE.[38]

Bowker states the word appears but is uncommon in the principal Upanishads.[39] Kaneda gives examples of the word Ahimsa in these Upanishads.[40] Other scholars[16][41] suggest Ahimsa as an ethical concept that started evolving in the Vedas, becoming an increasingly central concept in Upanishads.

The Chāndogya Upaniṣad, dated to the 8th or 7th century BCE, one of the oldest Upanishads, has the earliest evidence for the Vedic era use of the word Ahimsa in the sense familiar in Hinduism (a code of conduct). It bars violence against "all creatures" (sarvabhuta) and the practitioner of Ahimsa is said to escape from the cycle of rebirths (CU 8.15.1).[42] Some scholars state that this 8th or 7th-century BCE mention may have been an influence of Jainism on Vedic Hinduism.[43] Others scholar state that this relationship is speculative, and though Jainism is an ancient tradition the oldest traceable texts of Jainism tradition are from many centuries after the Vedic era ended.[44][45]

Chāndogya Upaniṣad also names Ahimsa, along with Satyavacanam (truthfulness), Arjavam (sincerity), Danam (charity), Tapo (penance/meditation), as one of five essential virtues (CU 3.17.4).[16][46]

The Sandilya Upanishad lists ten forbearances: Ahimsa, Satya, Asteya, Brahmacharya, Daya, Arjava, Kshama, Dhriti, Mitahara and Saucha.[47][48] According to Kaneda,[40] the term Ahimsa is an important spiritual doctrine shared by Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism. It literally means 'non-injury' and 'non-killing'. It implies the total avoidance of harming of any kind of living creatures not only by deeds, but also by words and in thoughts.

The Epics

The Mahabharata, one of the epics of Hinduism, has multiple mentions of the phrase Ahimsa Paramo Dharma (अहिंसा परमॊ धर्मः), which literally means: non-violence is the highest moral virtue. For example, Mahaprasthanika Parva has the verse:[49]

अहिंसा परमो धर्मस् तथाहिंसा परो दमः।
अहिंसा परमं दानम् अहिंसा परमस् तपः।
अहिंसा परमो यज्ञस् तथाहिंसा परं बलम्।
अहिंसा परमं मित्रम् अहिंसा परमं सुखम्।
अहिंसा परमं सत्यम् अहिंसा परमं श्रुतम्॥

The above passage from Mahabharata emphasises the cardinal importance of Ahimsa in Hinduism, and literally means: Ahimsa is the highest virtue, Ahimsa is the highest self-control, Ahimsa is the greatest gift, Ahimsa is the best suffering, Ahimsa is the highest sacrifice, Ahimsa is the finest strength, Ahimsa is the greatest friend, Ahimsa is the greatest happiness, Ahimsa is the highest truth, and Ahimsa is the greatest teaching.[50][51] Some other examples where the phrase Ahimsa Paramo Dharma are discussed include Adi Parva, Vana Parva and Anushasana Parva. The Bhagavad Gita, among other things, discusses the doubts and questions about appropriate response when one faces systematic violence or war. These verses develop the concepts of lawful violence in self-defence and the theories of just war. However, there is no consensus on this interpretation. Gandhi, for example, considers this debate about nonviolence and lawful violence as a mere metaphor for the internal war within each human being, when he or she faces moral questions.[52]

Self-defence, criminal law, and war

The classical texts of Hinduism devote numerous chapters discussing what people who practice the virtue of Ahimsa, can and must do when they are faced with war, violent threat or need to sentence someone convicted of a crime. These discussions have led to theories of just war, theories of reasonable self-defence and theories of proportionate punishment.[53][54] Arthashastra discusses, among other things, why and what constitutes proportionate response and punishment.[55][56]

War

The precepts of Ahimsa under Hinduism require that war must be avoided, with sincere and truthful dialogue. Force must be the last resort. If war becomes necessary, its cause must be just, its purpose virtuous, its objective to restrain the wicked, its aim peace, its method lawful.[53][55] War can only be started and stopped by a legitimate authority. Weapons used must be proportionate to the opponent and the aim of war, not indiscriminate tools of destruction.[57] All strategies and weapons used in the war must be to defeat the opponent, not designed to cause misery to the opponent; for example, use of arrows is allowed, but use of arrows smeared with painful poison is not allowed. Warriors must use judgment in the battlefield. Cruelty to the opponent during war is forbidden. Wounded, unarmed opponent warriors must not be attacked or killed, they must be brought to your realm and given medical treatment.[55] Children, women and civilians must not be injured. While the war is in progress, sincere dialogue for peace must continue.[53][54]

Self-defence

In matters of self-defence, different interpretations of ancient Hindu texts have been offered. For example, Tähtinen suggests self-defence is appropriate, criminals are not protected by the rule of Ahimsa, and Hindu scriptures support the use of violence against an armed attacker.[58][59] Ahimsa is not meant to imply pacifism.[60]

Alternate theories of self-defence, inspired by Ahimsa, build principles similar to theories of just war. Aikido, pioneered in Japan, illustrates one such principles of self-defence. Morihei Ueshiba, the founder of Aikido, described his inspiration as Ahimsa.[61] According to this interpretation of Ahimsa in self-defence, one must not assume that the world is free of aggression. One must presume that some people will, out of ignorance, error or fear, attack other persons or intrude into their space, physically or verbally. The aim of self-defence, suggested Ueshiba, must be to neutralise the aggression of the attacker, and avoid the conflict. The best defence is one where the victim is protected, as well as the attacker is respected and not injured if possible. Under Ahimsa and Aikido, there are no enemies, and appropriate self-defence focuses on neutralising the immaturity, assumptions and aggressive strivings of the attacker.[62][63]

Criminal law

Tähtinen concludes that Hindus have no misgivings about death penalty; their position is that evil-doers who deserve death should be killed, and that a king in particular is obliged to punish criminals and should not hesitate to kill them, even if they happen to be his own brothers and sons.[64]

Other scholars[54][55] conclude that the scriptures of Hinduism suggest sentences for any crime must be fair, proportional and not cruel.

Non-human life

The Hindu precept of 'cause no injury' applies to animals and all life forms. This precept isn't found in the oldest verses of Vedas, but increasingly becomes one of the central ideas between 500 BC and 400 AD.[65][66] In the oldest texts, numerous ritual sacrifices of animals, including cows and horses, are highlighted and hardly any mention is made of Ahimsa to non-human life.[67][68]

Hindu scriptures, dated to between 5th century and 1st century BC, while discussing human diet, initially suggest kosher meat may be eaten, evolving it with the suggestion that only meat obtained through ritual sacrifice can be eaten, then that one should eat no meat because it hurts animals, with verses describing the noble life as one that lives on flowers, roots and fruits alone.[65][69]

Later texts of Hinduism declare Ahimsa one of the primary virtues, declare any killing or harming any life as against dharma (moral life). Finally, the discussion in Upanishads and Hindu Epics[70] shifts to whether a human being can ever live his or her life without harming animal and plant life in some way; which and when plants or animal meat may be eaten, whether violence against animals causes human beings to become less compassionate, and if and how one may exert least harm to non-human life consistent with ahimsa precept, given the constraints of life and human needs.[71][72] The Mahabharata permits hunting by warriors, but opposes it in the case of hermits who must be strictly non-violent. Sushruta Samhita, a Hindu text written in the 3rd or 4th century, in Chapter XLVI suggests proper diet as a means of treating certain illnesses, and recommends various fishes and meats for different ailments and for pregnant women,[73][74] and the Charaka Samhita describes meat as superior to all other kinds of food for convalescents.[75]

Across the texts of Hinduism, there is a profusion of ideas about the virtue of Ahimsa when applied to non-human life, but without a universal consensus.[76] Alsdorf claims the debate and disagreements between supporters of vegetarian lifestyle and meat eaters was significant. Even suggested exceptions – ritual slaughter and hunting – were challenged by advocates of Ahimsa.[77][78][79] In the Mahabharata both sides present various arguments to substantiate their viewpoints. Moreover, a hunter defends his profession in a long discourse.[80]

Many of the arguments proposed in favor of non-violence to animals refer to the bliss one feels, the rewards it entails before or after death, the danger and harm it prevents, as well as to the karmic consequences of violence.[81][82]

The ancient Hindu texts discuss Ahimsa and non-animal life. They discourage wanton destruction of nature including of wild and cultivated plants. Hermits (sannyasins) were urged to live on a fruitarian diet so as to avoid the destruction of plants.[83][84] Scholars[85][86] claim the principles of ecological non-violence is innate in the Hindu tradition, and its conceptual fountain has been Ahimsa as their cardinal virtue.

The dharmic philosophy of ancient India exists in all Indian languages and culture. For example, the Tirukkuṛaḷ, written between 200 BCE and 500 CE, and sometimes called the Tamil Veda, is one of the most cherished classics written in a South Indian language. The Tirukkuṛaḷ dedicates Chapters 26, 32 and 33 of Book 1 to the virtue of ahimsa, namely, moral vegetarianism, non-harming, and non-killing, respectively. The Tirukkuṛaḷ says that ahimsa applies to all life forms.[25][87][88]

Jainism

 
The hand with a wheel on the palm symbolizes the Jain Vow of Ahimsa. The word in the middle is "Ahimsa". The wheel represents the dharmacakra which stands for the resolve to halt the cycle of reincarnation through relentless pursuit of truth and non-violence.

In Jainism, the understanding and implementation of Ahimsā is more radical, scrupulous, and comprehensive than in any other religion.[89] Killing any living being out of passions is considered hiṃsā (to injure) and abstaining from such an act is ahimsā (noninjury).[90] The vow of ahimsā is considered the foremost among the 'five vows of Jainism'. Other vows like truth (Satya) are meant for safeguarding the vow of ahimsā.[91] In the practice of Ahimsa, the requirements are less strict for the lay persons (sravakas) who have undertaken anuvrata (Smaller Vows) than for the Jain monastics who are bound by the Mahavrata "Great Vows".[92] The statement ahimsā paramo dharmaḥ is often found inscribed on the walls of the Jain temples.[93] Like in Hinduism, the aim is to prevent the accumulation of harmful karma.[94] When lord Mahaviraswami revived and reorganized the Jain faith in the 6th or 5th century BCE,[95] Rishabhanatha (Ādinātha), the first Jain Tirthankara, whom modern Western historians consider to be a historical figure, followed by Parshvanatha (Pārśvanātha)[96] the twenty-third Tirthankara lived in about the 8th century BCE.[97] He founded the community to which Mahavira's parents belonged.[98] Ahimsa was already part of the "Fourfold Restraint" (Caujjama), the vows taken by Parshva's followers.[99] In the times of Mahavira and in the following centuries, Jains were at odds with both Buddhists and followers of the Vedic religion or Hindus, whom they accused of negligence and inconsistency in the implementation of Ahimsa.[100] According to the Jain tradition either lacto vegetarianism or veganism is mandatory.[101]

The Jain concept of Ahimsa is characterised by several aspects. It does not make any exception for ritual sacrificers and professional warrior-hunters. Killing of animals for food is absolutely ruled out.[102] Jains also make considerable efforts not to injure plants in everyday life as far as possible. Though they admit that plants must be destroyed for the sake of food, they accept such violence only inasmuch as it is indispensable for human survival, and there are special instructions for preventing unnecessary violence against plants.[103] Jains go out of their way so as not to hurt even small insects and other minuscule animals.[104] For example, Jains often do not go out at night, when they are more likely to step upon an insect. In their view, injury caused by carelessness is like injury caused by deliberate action.[105] Eating honey is strictly outlawed, as it would amount to violence against the bees.[106] Some Jains abstain from farming because it inevitably entails unintentional killing or injuring of many small animals, such as worms and insects,[107] but agriculture is not forbidden in general and there are Jain farmers.[108]

Theoretically, all life forms are said to deserve full protection from all kinds of injury, but Jains recognise a hierarchy of life. Mobile beings are given higher protection than immobile ones. For the mobile beings, they distinguish between one-sensed, two-sensed, three-sensed, four-sensed and five-sensed ones; a one-sensed animal has touch as its only sensory modality. The more senses a being has, the more they care about non-injuring it. Among the five-sensed beings, the precept of non-injury and non-violence to the rational ones (humans) is strongest in Jain Ahimsa.[109]

Jains agree with Hindus that violence in self-defence can be justified,[110] and they agree that a soldier who kills enemies in combat is performing a legitimate duty.[111] Jain communities accepted the use of military power for their defence, there were Jain monarchs, military commanders, and soldiers.[112]

Buddhism

In Buddhist texts Ahimsa (or its Pāli cognate avihiṃsā) is part of the Five Precepts (Pañcasīla), the first of which has been to abstain from killing. This precept of Ahimsa is applicable to both the Buddhist layperson and the monk community.[113][114][115]

The Ahimsa precept is not a commandment and transgressions did not invite religious sanctions for layperson, but their power has been in the Buddhist belief in karmic consequences and their impact in afterlife during rebirth.[116] Killing, in Buddhist belief, could lead to rebirth in the hellish realm, and for a longer time in more severe conditions if the murder victim was a monk.[116] Saving animals from slaughter for meat, is believed to be a way to acquire merit for better rebirth. These moral precepts have been voluntarily self-enforced in lay Buddhist culture through the associated belief in karma and rebirth.[117] The Buddhist texts not only recommended Ahimsa, but suggest avoiding trading goods that contribute to or are a result of violence:

These five trades, O monks, should not be taken up by a lay follower: trading with weapons, trading in living beings, trading in meat, trading in intoxicants, trading in poison.

— Anguttara Nikaya V.177, Translated by Martine Batchelor[118]

Unlike lay Buddhists, transgressions by monks do invite sanctions.[119] Full expulsion of a monk from sangha follows instances of killing, just like any other serious offense against the monastic nikaya code of conduct.[119]

War

Violent ways of punishing criminals and prisoners of war was not explicitly condemned in Buddhism,[120] but peaceful ways of conflict resolution and punishment with the least amount of injury were encouraged.[121][122] The early texts condemn the mental states that lead to violent behavior.[123]

Nonviolence is an overriding theme within the Pali Canon.[124] While the early texts condemn killing in the strongest terms, and portray the ideal king as a pacifist, such a king is nonetheless flanked by an army.[125] It seems that the Buddha's teaching on nonviolence was not interpreted or put into practice in an uncompromisingly pacifist or anti-military-service way by early Buddhists.[125] The early texts assume war to be a fact of life, and well-skilled warriors are viewed as necessary for defensive warfare.[126] In Pali texts, injunctions to abstain from violence and involvement with military affairs are directed at members of the sangha; later Mahayana texts, which often generalise monastic norms to laity, require this of lay people as well.[127]

The early texts do not contain just-war ideology as such.[128] Some argue that a sutta in the Gamani Samyuttam rules out all military service. In this passage, a soldier asks the Buddha if it is true that, as he has been told, soldiers slain in battle are reborn in a heavenly realm. The Buddha reluctantly replies that if he is killed in battle while his mind is seized with the intention to kill, he will undergo an unpleasant rebirth.[129] In the early texts, a person's mental state at the time of death is generally viewed as having a great impact on the next birth.[130]

Some Buddhists point to other early texts as justifying defensive war.[131] One example is the Kosala Samyutta, in which King Pasenadi, a righteous king favored by the Buddha, learns of an impending attack on his kingdom. He arms himself in defence, and leads his army into battle to protect his kingdom from attack. He lost this battle but won the war. King Pasenadi eventually defeated King Ajatashatru and captured him alive. He thought that, although this King of Magadha has transgressed against his kingdom, he had not transgressed against him personally, and Ajatashatru was still his nephew. He released Ajatashatru and did not harm him.[132] Upon his return, the Buddha said (among other things) that Pasenadi "is a friend of virtue, acquainted with virtue, intimate with virtue", while the opposite is said of the aggressor, King Ajatashatru.[133]

According to Theravada commentaries, there are five requisite factors that must all be fulfilled for an act to be both an act of killing and to be karmically negative. These are: (1) the presence of a living being, human or animal; (2) the knowledge that the being is a living being; (3) the intent to kill; (4) the act of killing by some means; and (5) the resulting death.[134] Some Buddhists have argued on this basis that the act of killing is complicated, and its ethicization is predicated upon intent.[135] Some have argued that in defensive postures, for example, the primary intention of a soldier is not to kill, but to defend against aggression, and the act of killing in that situation would have minimal negative karmic repercussions.[136]

According to Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar, there is circumstantial evidence encouraging Ahimsa, from the Buddha's doctrine, "Love all, so that you may not wish to kill any." Gautama Buddha distinguished between a principle and a rule. He did not make Ahimsa a matter of rule, but suggested it as a matter of principle. This gives Buddhists freedom to act.[137]

Laws

The emperors of Sui dynasty, Tang dynasty and early Song dynasty banned killing in Lunar calendar 1st, 5th, and 9th month.[138][139] Empress Wu Tse-Tien banned killing for more than half a year in 692.[140] Some also banned fishing for some time each year.[141]

There were bans after death of emperors,[142] Buddhist and Taoist prayers,[143] and natural disasters such as after a drought in 1926 summer Shanghai and an 8 days ban from August 12, 1959, after the August 7 flood (八七水災), the last big flood before the 88 Taiwan Flood.[144]

People avoid killing during some festivals, like the Taoist Ghost Festival,[145] the Nine Emperor Gods Festival, the Vegetarian Festival and many others.[146][147]

Methods

 
Martin Luther King Jr. speaking at the 1963 "March on Washington".
 
Even when the bridge was closed the demonstrators on the initial 1965 Selma to Montgomery march stayed on the sidewalk in compliance with nonviolent tactics and strategies.

Nonviolent action generally comprises three categories: Acts of Protest and Persuasion, Noncooperation, and Nonviolent Intervention.[148]

Acts of protest

Nonviolent acts of protest and persuasion are symbolic actions performed by a group of people to show their support or disapproval of something. The goal of this kind of action is to bring public awareness to an issue, persuade or influence a particular group of people, or to facilitate future nonviolent action. The message can be directed toward the public, opponents, or people affected by the issue. Methods of protest and persuasion include speeches, public communications, petitions, symbolic acts, art, processions (marches), and other public assemblies.[149]

Noncooperation

Noncooperation involves the purposeful withholding of cooperation or the unwillingness to initiate in cooperation with an opponent. The goal of noncooperation is to halt or hinder an industry, political system, or economic process. Methods of noncooperation include labour strikes, economic boycotts, civil disobedience, sex strike, tax refusal, and general disobedience.[149]

Nonviolent intervention

Compared with protest and noncooperation, nonviolent intervention is a more direct method of nonviolent action. Nonviolent intervention can be used defensively—for example to maintain an institution or independent initiative—or offensively- for example, to drastically forward a nonviolent cause into the "territory" of those who oppose it. Intervention is often more immediate and initially effective than the other two methods, but is also harder to maintain and more taxing to the participants involved.

Gene Sharp, a political scientist who sought to advance the worldwide study and use of strategic nonviolent action in conflict, wrote extensively about the methods of nonviolent action. In his 1973 book Waging Nonviolent Struggle he described 198 methods of nonviolent action, and in it places several examples of constructive program in this category.[150] In early Greece, Aristophanes' Lysistrata gives the fictional example of women withholding sexual favors from their husbands until war was abandoned (a sex strike). A modern work of fiction inspired by Gene Sharp and by Aristophanes is the 1986 novel A Door into Ocean by Joan Slonczewski, depicting an ocean world inhabited by women who use nonviolent means to repel armed space invaders. Other methods of nonviolent intervention include occupations (sit-ins), fasting (hunger strikes), truck cavalcades, and dual sovereignty/parallel government.[149]

Tactics must be carefully chosen, taking into account political and cultural circumstances, and form part of a larger plan or strategy.

Successful nonviolent cross-border intervention projects include the Guatemala Accompaniment Project,[151] Peace Brigades International and Christian Peacemaker Teams. Developed in the early 1980s, and originally inspired by the Gandhian Shanti Sena, the primary tools of these organisations have been nonviolent protective accompaniment, backed up by a global support network which can respond to threats, local and regional grassroots diplomatic and peacebuilding efforts, human rights observation and witnessing, and reporting.[152][153] In extreme cases, most of these groups are also prepared to do interpositioning: placing themselves between parties who are engaged or threatening to engage in outright attacks in one or both directions. Individual and large group cases of interpositioning, when called for, have been remarkably effective in dampening conflict and saving lives.

Another powerful tactic of nonviolent intervention invokes public scrutiny of the perceived oppressors as a result of the resisters remaining nonviolent in the face of violent repression. If the military or police attempt to repress nonviolent resisters violently, the power to act shifts from the hands of the oppressors to those of the resisters. If the resisters are persistent, the military or police will be forced to accept the fact that they no longer have any power over the resisters. Often, the willingness of the resisters to suffer has a profound effect on the mind and emotions of the oppressor, leaving them unable to commit such a violent act again.[154][155]

Revolution

Certain individuals (Barbara Deming, Danilo Dolci, Devere Allen etc.) and party groups (e.g. Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism, Pacifist Socialist Party or War Resisters League) have advocated nonviolent revolution as an alternative to violence as well as elitist reformism. This perspective is usually connected to militant anti-capitalism.[citation needed]

Many leftist and socialist movements have hoped to mount a "peaceful revolution" by organising enough strikers to completely paralyse the state and corporate apparatus, allowing workers to re-organise society along radically different lines.[citation needed] Some have argued that a relatively nonviolent revolution would require fraternisation with military forces.[156]

Criticism

Ernesto Che Guevara, Leon Trotsky, Frantz Fanon and Subhas Chandra Bose were fervent critics of nonviolence, arguing variously that nonviolence and pacifism are an attempt to impose the morals of the bourgeoisie upon the proletariat, that violence is a necessary accompaniment to revolutionary change or that the right to self-defense is fundamental.[citation needed]

In the essay "Reflections on Gandhi", George Orwell argued that the nonviolent resistance strategy of Gandhi could be effective in countries with "a free press and the right of assembly", which could make it possible "not merely to appeal to outside opinion, but to bring a mass movement into being, or even to make your intentions known to your adversary"; but he was skeptical of Gandhi's approach being effective in the opposite sort of circumstances.[157]

Reinhold Niebuhr similarly affirmed Gandhi's approach while criticising aspects of it. He argued, "The advantage of non-violence as a method of expressing moral goodwill lies in the fact that it protects the agent against the resentments which violent conflict always creates in both parties to a conflict, and it proves this freedom of resentment and ill-will to the contending party in the dispute by enduring more suffering than it causes." However, Niebuhr also held, "The differences between violent and non-violent methods of coercion and resistance are not so absolute that it would be possible to regard violence as a morally impossible instrument of social change."[158]

In the midst of repression of radical African American groups in the United States during the 1960s, Black Panther member George Jackson said of the nonviolent tactics of Martin Luther King Jr.:

The concept of nonviolence is a false ideal. It presupposes the existence of compassion and a sense of justice on the part of one's adversary. When this adversary has everything to lose and nothing to gain by exercising justice and compassion, his reaction can only be negative.[159][160]

Malcolm X also clashed with civil rights leaders over the issue of nonviolence, arguing that violence should not be ruled out if no option remained. He noted that: "I believe it's a crime for anyone being brutalized to continue to accept that brutality without doing something to defend himself."[161]

In his book How Nonviolence Protects the State, anarchist Peter Gelderloos criticises nonviolence as being ineffective, racist, statist, patriarchal, tactically and strategically inferior to militant activism, and deluded.[162] Gelderloos claims that traditional histories whitewash the impact of nonviolence, ignoring the involvement of militants in such movements as the Indian independence movement and the Civil Rights Movement and falsely showing Gandhi and King as being their respective movement's most successful activists.[162]: 7–12  He further argues that nonviolence is generally advocated by privileged white people who expect "oppressed people, many of whom are people of color, to suffer patiently under an inconceivably greater violence, until such time as the Great White Father is swayed by the movement's demands or the pacifists achieve that legendary 'critical mass.'"[162]: 23  On the other hand, anarchism also includes a section committed to nonviolence called anarcho-pacifism.[163][164] The main early influences were the thought of Henry David Thoreau[164] and Leo Tolstoy while later the ideas of Mahatma Gandhi gained importance.[163][164] It developed "mostly in Holland, Britain, and the United States, before and during the Second World War".[165]

The efficacy of nonviolence was also challenged by some anti-capitalist protesters advocating a "diversity of tactics" during street demonstrations across Europe and the US following the anti-World Trade Organization protests in Seattle, Washington in 1999. American feminist writer D. A. Clarke, in her essay "A Woman With A Sword," suggests that for nonviolence to be effective, it must be "practiced by those who could easily resort to force if they chose."[citation needed]

Nonviolence advocates see some truth in this argument: Gandhi himself said often that he could teach nonviolence to a violent person but not to a coward and that true nonviolence came from renouncing violence, not by not having any to renounce. This is the meaning of his quote "It is better to be violent, if there is violence in our hearts, than to put on the cloak of nonviolence to cover impotence."[166]

Advocates responding to criticisms of the efficacy of nonviolence point to the limited success of non-violent struggles even against the Nazi regimes in Denmark and even in Berlin.[167] A study by Erica Chenoweth and Maria Stephan found that nonviolent revolutions are twice as effective as violent ones and lead to much greater degrees of democratic freedom.[168]

Research

A 2016 study finds that "increasing levels of globalization are positively associated with the emergence of nonviolent campaigns, while negatively influencing the probability of violent campaigns. Integration into the world increases the popularity of peaceful alternatives to achieve political goals."[169] A 2020 study found that nonviolent campaigns were more likely to succeed when there was not an ethnic division between actors in the campaign and in the government.[170] According to a 2020 study in the American Political Science Review, nonviolent civil rights protests boosted vote shares for the Democratic party in presidential elections in nearby counties, but violent protests substantially boosted white support for Republicans in counties near to the violent protests.[171]

Notable nonviolence theorists and practitioners

Main Article: List of peace activists

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ A clarification of this and related terms appears in Gene Sharp, Sharp's Dictionary of Power and Struggle: Language of Civil Resistance in Conflicts, Oxford University Press, New York, 2012.
  2. ^ a b c d Weber, Thomas (2003). "Nonviolence is who? Gene sharp and Gandhi". Peace & Change. 28 (2): 250–270. doi:10.1111/1468-0130.00261.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Nepstad, Sharon Erickson (2015). Nonviolent struggle : theories, strategies, and dynamics. New York. ISBN 978-0-19-997599-0. OCLC 903248163.
  4. ^ Lester R. Kurtz, Jennifer E. Turpin, Encyclopedia of Violence, Peace, and Conflict, p.557, 1999. "In the West, nonviolence is well recognized for its tactical, strategic, or political aspects. It is seen as a powerful tool for redressing social inequality."
  5. ^ Mark Kurlansky, Nonviolence: The History of a Dangerous Idea, Foreword by Dalai Lama, p. 5-6 2023-04-30 at the Wayback Machine, Modern Library (April 8, 2008), ISBN 0-8129-7447-6 "Advocates of nonviolence — dangerous people — have been there throughout history, questioning the greatness of Caesar and Napoleon and the Founding Fathers and Roosevelt and Churchill."
  6. ^ "James L. Bevel The Strategist of the 1960s Civil Rights Movement" by Randall L. Kryn, a paper in David Garrow's 1989 book We Shall Overcome Volume II, Carlson Publishing Company
  7. ^ "Movement Revision Research Summary Regarding James Bevel" by Randy Kryn, October 2005 2010-07-26 at the Wayback Machine, published by Middlebury College
  8. ^ Stanley M. Burstein and Richard Shek: "World History Ancient Civilizations ", page 154. Holt, Rinhart and Winston, 2005. As Chavez once explained, "Nonviolence is not inaction. It is not for the timid or the weak. It is hard work, it is the patience to win."
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  12. ^ Ackerman, Peter and Jack DuVall (2001) A Force More Powerful: A Century of Non-Violent Conflict (Palgrave Macmillan)
  13. ^ Adam Roberts, Introduction, in Adam Roberts and Timothy Garton Ash (eds.), Civil Resistance and Power Politics: The Experience of Non-violent Action from Gandhi to the Present, Oxford University Press, 2009 pp. 3 and 13-20.
  14. ^ Pandey, Janardan (1998), Gandhi and 21st Century, p. 50, ISBN 978-81-7022-672-7
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  27. ^ Dallos, Csilla (2011). From Equality to Inequality: Social Change Among Newly Sedentary Lanoh Hunter-Gatherer Traders of Peninsular Malaysia. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-144-2661-71-4.
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  29. ^ Leary, John. Violence and the Dream People: The Orang Asli in the Malayan Emergency, 1948-1960. No. 95. Ohio University Press, 1995, p.262
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  31. ^ Robarchek, Clayton A., and Robert Knox Dentan. "Blood drunkenness and the bloodthirsty Semai: Unmaking another anthropological myth." American Anthropologist 89, no. 2 (1987): 356-365
  32. ^ Walli, Koshelya: The Conception of Ahimsa in Indian Thought, Varanasi 1974, p. 113–145.
  33. ^ Sanskrit: अस्मे ता त इन्द्र सन्तु सत्याहिंसन्तीरुपस्पृशः । विद्याम यासां भुजो धेनूनां न वज्रिवः ॥१३॥ Rigveda 10.22 Archived 2020-09-24 at the Wayback Machine Wikisource;
    English: Unto Tähtinen (1964), Non-violence as an Ethical Principle, Turun Yliopisto, Finland, PhD Thesis, pages 23–25; OCLC 4288274;
    For other occurrence of Ahimsa in Rigveda, see Rigveda 5.64.3 Archived 2020-09-24 at the Wayback Machine, Rigveda 1.141.5 Archived 2018-11-06 at the Wayback Machine;
  34. ^ To do no harm 2013-10-17 at the Wayback Machine Project Gutenberg, see translation for Yajurveda 36.18 VE;
    For other occurrences of Ahimsa in Vedic literature, see A Vedic Concordance Maurice Bloomfield, Harvard University Press, page 151
  35. ^ Tähtinen p. 2.
  36. ^ Shatapatha Brahmana 2.3.4.30; 2.5.1.14; 6.3.1.26; 6.3.1.39.
  37. ^ Henk M. Bodewitz in Jan E. M. Houben, K. R. van Kooij, ed., Violence denied: violence, non-violence and the rationalisation of violence in "South Asian" cultural history. BRILL, 1999 page 30.
  38. ^ Tähtinen pp. 2–3.
  39. ^ John Bowker, Problems of suffering in religions of the world. Cambridge University Press, 1975, page 233.
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  41. ^ Izawa, A. (2008). Empathy for Pain in Vedic Ritual. Journal of the International College for Advanced Buddhist Studies, 12, 78
  42. ^ Tähtinen pp. 2–5; English translation: Schmidt p. 631.
  43. ^ M.K Sridhar and Puruṣottama Bilimoria (2007), Indian Ethics: Classical traditions and contemporary challenges, Editors: Puruṣottama Bilimoria, Joseph Prabhu, Renuka M. Sharma, Ashgate Publishing, ISBN 978-0-7546-3301-3, page 315
  44. ^ Long, Jeffery D. (2009). Jainism: An Introduction. I. B. Tauris. pp. 31–33. ISBN 978-1-84511-625-5.
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  59. ^ Mahabharata 12.15.55; Manu Smriti 8.349–350; Matsya Purana 226.116.
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  61. ^ The Role of Teachers in Martial Arts 2019-04-12 at the Wayback Machine Nebojša Vasic, University of Zenica (2011); Sport SPA Vol. 8, Issue 2: 47–51; see page 46, 2nd column
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  72. ^ Mahabharata 13.115.59–60; 13.116.15–18.
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  75. ^ Sutrasthana 27.87.
  76. ^ Mahabharata 3.199.11–12 (3.199 is 3.207 elsewhere); 13.115; 13.116.26; 13.148.17; Bhagavata Purana (11.5.13–14), and the Chandogya Upanishad (8.15.1).
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  97. ^ Dundas p. 30 suggests the 8th or 7th century; the traditional chronology places him in the late 9th or early 8th century.
  98. ^ Acaranga Sutra 2.15.
  99. ^ Sthananga Sutra 266; Tähtinen p. 132; Goyal p. 83–84, 103.
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  105. ^ Sutrakrtangasutram 1.8.3; Uttaradhyayanasutra 10; Tattvarthasutra 7.8; Dundas pp. 161–162.
  106. ^ Hemacandra: Yogashastra 3.37; Laidlaw pp. 166–167.
  107. ^ Laidlaw p. 180.
  108. ^ Sangave, Vilas Adinath: Jaina Community. A Social Survey, second edition, Bombay 1980, p. 259; Dundas p. 191.
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  •   Quotations related to Nonviolence at Wikiquote

nonviolence, other, uses, violence, sculpture, nonviolent, resistance, personal, practice, causing, harm, others, under, condition, come, from, belief, that, hurting, people, animals, environment, unnecessary, achieve, outcome, refer, general, philosophy, abst. For other uses see Non Violence sculpture and Nonviolent resistance Nonviolence is the personal practice of not causing harm to others under any condition It may come from the belief that hurting people animals and or the environment is unnecessary to achieve an outcome and it may refer to a general philosophy of abstention from violence It may be based on moral religious or spiritual principles or the reasons for it may be strategic or pragmatic 1 Failure to distinguish between the two types of nonviolent approaches can lead to distortion in the concept s meaning and effectiveness which can subsequently result in confusion among the audience 2 Although both principled and pragmatic nonviolent approaches preach for nonviolence they may have distinct motives goals philosophies and techniques 3 However rather than debating the best practice between the two approaches both can indicate alternative paths for those who do not want to use violence 2 These forms of nonviolence approaches pragmatic and principled will be discussed in the later section of this article Mahatma Gandhi often considered a founder of the modern nonviolence movement spread the concept of ahimsa through his movements and writings which then inspired other nonviolent activists Nonviolence has active or activist elements in that believers generally accept the need for nonviolence as a means to achieve political and social change Thus for example Tolstoyan and Gandhism nonviolence is both a philosophy and strategy for social change that rejects the use of violence but at the same time it sees nonviolent action also called civil resistance as an alternative to passive acceptance of oppression or armed struggle against it In general advocates of an activist philosophy of nonviolence use diverse methods in their campaigns for social change including critical forms of education and persuasion mass noncooperation civil disobedience nonviolent direct action constructive program and social political cultural and economic forms of intervention Petra Kelly founded the German Green Party on nonviolenceIn modern times nonviolent methods have been a powerful tool for social protest and revolutionary social and political change 4 5 There are many examples of their use Fuller surveys may be found in the entries on civil resistance nonviolent resistance and nonviolent revolution Certain movements which were particularly influenced by a philosophy of nonviolence have included Mahatma Gandhi s leadership of a successful decades long nonviolent struggle for Indian independence Martin Luther King Jr s and James Bevel s adoption of Gandhi s nonviolent methods in their campaigns to win civil rights for African Americans 6 7 and Cesar Chavez s campaigns of nonviolence in the 1960s to protest the treatment of Mexican farm workers in California 8 The 1989 Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia that saw the overthrow of the Communist government 9 is considered one of the most important of the largely nonviolent Revolutions of 1989 10 Most recently the nonviolent campaigns of Leymah Gbowee and the women of Liberia were able to achieve peace after a 14 year civil war 11 This story is captured in a 2008 documentary film Pray the Devil Back to Hell The term nonviolence is often linked with peace or it is used as a synonym for it and despite the fact that it is frequently equated with pacifism this equation is rejected by nonviolent advocates and activists 12 Nonviolence specifically refers to the absence of violence and it is always the choice to do no harm or the choice to do the least amount of harm and passivity is the choice to do nothing Sometimes nonviolence is passive and other times it isn t For example if a house is burning down with mice or insects in it the most harmless appropriate action is to put the fire out not to sit by and passively let the fire burn At times there is confusion and contradiction about nonviolence harmlessness and passivity A confused person may advocate nonviolence in a specific context while advocating violence in other contexts For example someone who passionately opposes abortion or meat eating may concurrently advocate violence to kill an abortion care provider or attack a slaughterhouse which makes that person a violent person 13 Nonviolence is a powerful and just weapon Indeed it is a weapon unique in history which cuts without wounding and ennobles the man who wields it Martin Luther King Jr The Quest for Peace and Justice 1964 Martin Luther King s Nobel Lecture delivered in the Auditorium of the University of Oslo at December 11 1964Mahatma Gandhi was of the view No religion in the World has explained the principle of Ahimsa so deeply and systematically as is discussed with its applicability in every human life in Jainism As and when the benevolent principle of Ahimsa or non violence will be ascribed for practice by the people of the world to achieve their end of life in this world and beyond Jainism is sure to have the uppermost status and Lord Mahavira is sure to be respected as the greatest authority on Ahimsa 14 Contents 1 Origins 2 Forms of nonviolence 2 1 Pragmatic 2 2 Principled 2 2 1 Semai people 2 3 Religious 2 3 1 Hinduism 2 3 1 1 Ancient Vedic texts 2 3 1 2 The Epics 2 3 1 3 Self defence criminal law and war 2 3 1 4 Non human life 2 3 2 Jainism 2 3 3 Buddhism 2 3 3 1 War 2 3 3 2 Laws 3 Methods 3 1 Acts of protest 3 2 Noncooperation 3 3 Nonviolent intervention 4 Revolution 5 Criticism 6 Research 7 Notable nonviolence theorists and practitioners 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksOrigins EditNonviolence or ahimsa is one of the cardinal virtues 15 and an important tenet of Jainism Hinduism and Buddhism It is a multidimensional concept 16 inspired by the premise that all living beings have the spark of the divine spiritual energy therefore to hurt another being is to hurt oneself It has also been related to the notion that any violence has karmic consequences While ancient scholars of Hinduism pioneered and over time perfected the principles of ahimsa the concept reached an extraordinary status in the ethical philosophy of Jainism 15 17 Forms of nonviolence EditAdvocates of nonviolent action believe cooperation and consent are the roots of civil or political power all regimes including bureaucratic institutions financial institutions and the armed segments of society such as the military and police depend on compliance from citizens 18 On a national level the strategy of nonviolent action seeks to undermine the power of rulers by encouraging people to withdraw their consent and cooperation The forms of nonviolence draw inspiration from both religious or ethical beliefs and political analysis Religious or ethically based nonviolence is sometimes referred to as principled philosophical or ethical nonviolence while nonviolence based on political analysis is often referred to as tactical strategic or pragmatic nonviolent action Commonly both of these dimensions may be present within the thinking of particular movements or individuals 19 Pragmatic Edit The fundamental concept of pragmatic tactical or strategic nonviolent action is to create a social dynamic or political movement that can project a national or international dialogue that affects social change without necessarily winning over those who wish to maintain the status quo 20 Gene Sharp promoted the pragmatic nonviolence approach Sharp was an American political scientist known for his nonviolent struggle work Those who follow Sharp s pragmatic nonviolence approach believe in practicality rather than the moral aspect of the struggle They believe that violence is too costly to engage in The goals are to change their opponent s behavior end a specific injustice or violent situation and seek a win for themselves while opponents they perceive as enemies with conflicting interests should lose 3 Conflict is seen as inevitable and the rejection of violence is an effective way to challenge power 2 Those who follow pragmatic nonviolence ideology are willing to engage in nonviolent coercion and they try to avoid suffering 3 Nicolas Walter noted the idea that nonviolence might work runs under the surface of Western political thought without ever quite disappearing 21 Walter noted Etienne de La Boetie s Discourse on Voluntary Servitude sixteenth century and P B Shelley s The Masque of Anarchy 1819 contain arguments for resisting tyranny without using violence 21 In 1838 William Lloyd Garrison helped found the New England Non Resistance Society a society devoted to achieving racial and gender equality through the rejection of all violent actions 21 In modern industrial democracies nonviolent action has been used extensively by political sectors without mainstream political power such as labor peace environment and women s movements Lesser known is the role that nonviolent action has played and continues to play in undermining the power of repressive political regimes in the developing world and the former eastern bloc Susan Ives emphasizes this point by quoting Walter Wink In 1989 thirteen nations comprising 1 695 000 000 people experienced nonviolent revolutions that succeeded beyond anyone s wildest expectations If we add all the countries touched by major nonviolent actions in our century the Philippines South Africa the independence movement in India the figure reaches 3 337 400 000 a staggering 65 of humanity All this in the teeth of the assertion endlessly repeated that nonviolence doesn t work in the real world Walter Wink Christian theologian 10 As a technique for social struggle nonviolent action has been described as the politics of ordinary people reflecting its historically mass based use by populations throughout the world and history Movements most often associated with nonviolence are the non cooperation campaign for Indian independence led by Mahatma Gandhi the Civil Rights Movement in the United States and the People Power Revolution in the Philippines Also of primary significance is the notion that just means are the most likely to lead to just ends When Gandhi said that the means may be likened to the seed the end to a tree he expressed the philosophical kernel of what some refer to as prefigurative politics Martin Luther King Jr a student of Gandhian nonviolent resistance concurred with this tenet concluding that nonviolence demands that the means we use must be as pure as the ends we seek Proponents of nonviolence reason that the actions taken in the present inevitably re shape the social order in like form They would argue for instance that it is fundamentally irrational to use violence to achieve a peaceful society Gandhi famously advocated for the Indian independence movement to strictly adhere to the principles of nonviolence Respect or love for opponents also has a pragmatic justification in that the technique of separating the deeds from the doers allows for the possibility of the doers changing their behaviour and perhaps their beliefs Martin Luther King Jr wrote Nonviolent resistance avoids not only external physical violence but also internal violence of spirit The nonviolent resister not only refuses to shoot his opponent but he also refuses to hate him 22 Finally the notion of Satya or Truth is central to the Gandhian conception of nonviolence Gandhi saw Truth as something that is multifaceted and unable to be grasped in its entirety by any one individual All carry pieces of the Truth he believed but all need the pieces of others truths in order to pursue the greater Truth This led him to believe in the inherent worth of dialogue with opponents in order to understand motivations On a practical level the willingness to listen to another s point of view is largely dependent on reciprocity In order to be heard by one s opponents one must also be prepared to listen citation needed Nonviolence has obtained a level of institutional recognition and endorsement at the global level On November 10 1998 the United Nations General Assembly proclaimed the first decade of the 21st century and the third millennium the years 2001 to 2010 as the International Decade for the Promotion of a Culture of Peace and Non Violence for the Children of the World Principled Edit The Semai have principle called punan which includes nonviolenceThe nonviolence approach involves accepting that violence is wrong and nonviolence is the best ethical response to any conflict 3 The followers of this approach believe in human harmony and a moral rejection of violence and coercion 2 They accept the total commitment to nonviolence and encourage those who want to use nonviolent actions to reject all forms of violence and coercion Principled nonviolence has a religious or ideological basis This type of nonviolence aims to change the opponent s heart and mind by showing love to them rather than hatred partnering with the opponents to bring about social change by ending all violence and social injustices and seeking a solution whereby all parties win 3 The techniques they use include persuasion while trying to avoid coercion and they accept that suffering is part of the means to transform themselves and others 3 For many practicing nonviolence goes deeper than abstaining from violent behavior or words It means overriding the impulse to be hateful and holding love for everyone even those with whom one strongly disagrees In this view because violence is learned it is necessary to unlearn violence by practicing love and compassion at every possible opportunity For some the commitment to non violence entails a belief in restorative or transformative justice an abolition of the death penalty and other harsh punishments This may involve the necessity of caring for those who are violent Nonviolence for many involves a respect and reverence for all sentient and perhaps even non sentient beings This might include abolitionism against animals as property the practice of not eating animal products or by products vegetarianism or veganism spiritual practices of non harm to all beings and caring for the rights of all beings Mahatma Gandhi James Bevel and other nonviolent proponents advocated vegetarianism as part of their nonviolent philosophy Buddhists extend this respect for life to animals and plants while Jainism extend this respect for life to animals plants and even small organisms such as insects 23 24 The classical Indian text of the Tirukkuṛaḷ which is believed to be of Hindu or Jain origin decrees ahimsa and moral vegetarianism as the most fundamental of all personal virtues 25 These ideas can also be found in Western mystical and Neoplatonic traditions 26 Mahatma Gandhi was one of the most well known advocates for and practitioners of principled nonviolence Semai people Edit The Semai ethnic group living in the center of the Malay Peninsula in Southeast Asia are known for their nonviolence 27 The Semai punan ethical or religious principle 28 strongly pressures members of the culture towards nonviolent non coercive and non competitive behaviour It has been suggested that the Semai s non violence is a response to historic threats from slaving states as the Semai were constantly defeated by slavers and Malaysian immigrants they preferred to flee rather than fight and thus evolved into a general norm of non violence 29 This does not mean the Semai are incapable of violence however during the Malayan Emergency the British enlisted some Semai to fight against MNLA insurgents and according to Robert Knox Dentan the Semai believe that as Malaysia industrialises it will be harder for the Semai to use their strategy of fleeing and they will have to fight instead 30 31 Religious Edit Hinduism Edit Ancient Vedic texts Edit Ahimsa as an ethical concept evolved in Vedic texts 17 32 The oldest scripts along with discussing ritual animal sacrifices indirectly mention Ahimsa but do not emphasise it Over time the Hindu scripts revise ritual practices and the concept of Ahimsa is increasingly refined and emphasised ultimately Ahimsa becomes the highest virtue by the late Vedic era about 500 BC For example hymn 10 22 25 in the Rig Veda uses the words Satya truthfulness and Ahimsa in a prayer to deity Indra 33 later the Yajur Veda dated to be between 1000 BC and 600 BC states may all beings look at me with a friendly eye may I do likewise and may we look at each other with the eyes of a friend 17 34 The term Ahimsa appears in the text Taittiriya Shakha of the Yajurveda TS 5 2 8 7 where it refers to non injury to the sacrificer himself 35 It occurs several times in the Shatapatha Brahmana in the sense of non injury 36 The Ahimsa doctrine is a late Vedic era development in Brahmanical culture 37 The earliest reference to the idea of non violence to animals pashu Ahimsa apparently in a moral sense is in the Kapisthala Katha Samhita of the Yajurveda KapS 31 11 which may have been written in about the 8th century BCE 38 Bowker states the word appears but is uncommon in the principal Upanishads 39 Kaneda gives examples of the word Ahimsa in these Upanishads 40 Other scholars 16 41 suggest Ahimsa as an ethical concept that started evolving in the Vedas becoming an increasingly central concept in Upanishads The Chandogya Upaniṣad dated to the 8th or 7th century BCE one of the oldest Upanishads has the earliest evidence for the Vedic era use of the word Ahimsa in the sense familiar in Hinduism a code of conduct It bars violence against all creatures sarvabhuta and the practitioner of Ahimsa is said to escape from the cycle of rebirths CU 8 15 1 42 Some scholars state that this 8th or 7th century BCE mention may have been an influence of Jainism on Vedic Hinduism 43 Others scholar state that this relationship is speculative and though Jainism is an ancient tradition the oldest traceable texts of Jainism tradition are from many centuries after the Vedic era ended 44 45 Chandogya Upaniṣad also names Ahimsa along with Satyavacanam truthfulness Arjavam sincerity Danam charity Tapo penance meditation as one of five essential virtues CU 3 17 4 16 46 The Sandilya Upanishad lists ten forbearances Ahimsa Satya Asteya Brahmacharya Daya Arjava Kshama Dhriti Mitahara and Saucha 47 48 According to Kaneda 40 the term Ahimsa is an important spiritual doctrine shared by Hinduism Buddhism and Jainism It literally means non injury and non killing It implies the total avoidance of harming of any kind of living creatures not only by deeds but also by words and in thoughts The Epics Edit The Mahabharata one of the epics of Hinduism has multiple mentions of the phrase Ahimsa Paramo Dharma अह स परम धर म which literally means non violence is the highest moral virtue For example Mahaprasthanika Parva has the verse 49 अह स परम धर मस तथ ह स पर दम अह स परम द नम अह स परमस तप अह स परम यज ञस तथ ह स पर बलम अह स परम म त रम अह स परम स खम अह स परम सत यम अह स परम श र तम The above passage from Mahabharata emphasises the cardinal importance of Ahimsa in Hinduism and literally means Ahimsa is the highest virtue Ahimsa is the highest self control Ahimsa is the greatest gift Ahimsa is the best suffering Ahimsa is the highest sacrifice Ahimsa is the finest strength Ahimsa is the greatest friend Ahimsa is the greatest happiness Ahimsa is the highest truth and Ahimsa is the greatest teaching 50 51 Some other examples where the phrase Ahimsa Paramo Dharma are discussed include Adi Parva Vana Parva and Anushasana Parva The Bhagavad Gita among other things discusses the doubts and questions about appropriate response when one faces systematic violence or war These verses develop the concepts of lawful violence in self defence and the theories of just war However there is no consensus on this interpretation Gandhi for example considers this debate about nonviolence and lawful violence as a mere metaphor for the internal war within each human being when he or she faces moral questions 52 Self defence criminal law and war Edit The classical texts of Hinduism devote numerous chapters discussing what people who practice the virtue of Ahimsa can and must do when they are faced with war violent threat or need to sentence someone convicted of a crime These discussions have led to theories of just war theories of reasonable self defence and theories of proportionate punishment 53 54 Arthashastra discusses among other things why and what constitutes proportionate response and punishment 55 56 WarThe precepts of Ahimsa under Hinduism require that war must be avoided with sincere and truthful dialogue Force must be the last resort If war becomes necessary its cause must be just its purpose virtuous its objective to restrain the wicked its aim peace its method lawful 53 55 War can only be started and stopped by a legitimate authority Weapons used must be proportionate to the opponent and the aim of war not indiscriminate tools of destruction 57 All strategies and weapons used in the war must be to defeat the opponent not designed to cause misery to the opponent for example use of arrows is allowed but use of arrows smeared with painful poison is not allowed Warriors must use judgment in the battlefield Cruelty to the opponent during war is forbidden Wounded unarmed opponent warriors must not be attacked or killed they must be brought to your realm and given medical treatment 55 Children women and civilians must not be injured While the war is in progress sincere dialogue for peace must continue 53 54 Self defenceIn matters of self defence different interpretations of ancient Hindu texts have been offered For example Tahtinen suggests self defence is appropriate criminals are not protected by the rule of Ahimsa and Hindu scriptures support the use of violence against an armed attacker 58 59 Ahimsa is not meant to imply pacifism 60 Alternate theories of self defence inspired by Ahimsa build principles similar to theories of just war Aikido pioneered in Japan illustrates one such principles of self defence Morihei Ueshiba the founder of Aikido described his inspiration as Ahimsa 61 According to this interpretation of Ahimsa in self defence one must not assume that the world is free of aggression One must presume that some people will out of ignorance error or fear attack other persons or intrude into their space physically or verbally The aim of self defence suggested Ueshiba must be to neutralise the aggression of the attacker and avoid the conflict The best defence is one where the victim is protected as well as the attacker is respected and not injured if possible Under Ahimsa and Aikido there are no enemies and appropriate self defence focuses on neutralising the immaturity assumptions and aggressive strivings of the attacker 62 63 Criminal lawTahtinen concludes that Hindus have no misgivings about death penalty their position is that evil doers who deserve death should be killed and that a king in particular is obliged to punish criminals and should not hesitate to kill them even if they happen to be his own brothers and sons 64 Other scholars 54 55 conclude that the scriptures of Hinduism suggest sentences for any crime must be fair proportional and not cruel Non human life Edit The Hindu precept of cause no injury applies to animals and all life forms This precept isn t found in the oldest verses of Vedas but increasingly becomes one of the central ideas between 500 BC and 400 AD 65 66 In the oldest texts numerous ritual sacrifices of animals including cows and horses are highlighted and hardly any mention is made of Ahimsa to non human life 67 68 Hindu scriptures dated to between 5th century and 1st century BC while discussing human diet initially suggest kosher meat may be eaten evolving it with the suggestion that only meat obtained through ritual sacrifice can be eaten then that one should eat no meat because it hurts animals with verses describing the noble life as one that lives on flowers roots and fruits alone 65 69 Later texts of Hinduism declare Ahimsa one of the primary virtues declare any killing or harming any life as against dharma moral life Finally the discussion in Upanishads and Hindu Epics 70 shifts to whether a human being can ever live his or her life without harming animal and plant life in some way which and when plants or animal meat may be eaten whether violence against animals causes human beings to become less compassionate and if and how one may exert least harm to non human life consistent with ahimsa precept given the constraints of life and human needs 71 72 The Mahabharata permits hunting by warriors but opposes it in the case of hermits who must be strictly non violent Sushruta Samhita a Hindu text written in the 3rd or 4th century in Chapter XLVI suggests proper diet as a means of treating certain illnesses and recommends various fishes and meats for different ailments and for pregnant women 73 74 and the Charaka Samhita describes meat as superior to all other kinds of food for convalescents 75 Across the texts of Hinduism there is a profusion of ideas about the virtue of Ahimsa when applied to non human life but without a universal consensus 76 Alsdorf claims the debate and disagreements between supporters of vegetarian lifestyle and meat eaters was significant Even suggested exceptions ritual slaughter and hunting were challenged by advocates of Ahimsa 77 78 79 In the Mahabharata both sides present various arguments to substantiate their viewpoints Moreover a hunter defends his profession in a long discourse 80 Many of the arguments proposed in favor of non violence to animals refer to the bliss one feels the rewards it entails before or after death the danger and harm it prevents as well as to the karmic consequences of violence 81 82 The ancient Hindu texts discuss Ahimsa and non animal life They discourage wanton destruction of nature including of wild and cultivated plants Hermits sannyasins were urged to live on a fruitarian diet so as to avoid the destruction of plants 83 84 Scholars 85 86 claim the principles of ecological non violence is innate in the Hindu tradition and its conceptual fountain has been Ahimsa as their cardinal virtue The dharmic philosophy of ancient India exists in all Indian languages and culture For example the Tirukkuṛaḷ written between 200 BCE and 500 CE and sometimes called the Tamil Veda is one of the most cherished classics written in a South Indian language The Tirukkuṛaḷ dedicates Chapters 26 32 and 33 of Book 1 to the virtue of ahimsa namely moral vegetarianism non harming and non killing respectively The Tirukkuṛaḷ says that ahimsa applies to all life forms 25 87 88 Jainism Edit Main article Ahimsa in Jainism See also Jain vegetarianism The hand with a wheel on the palm symbolizes the Jain Vow of Ahimsa The word in the middle is Ahimsa The wheel represents the dharmacakra which stands for the resolve to halt the cycle of reincarnation through relentless pursuit of truth and non violence In Jainism the understanding and implementation of Ahimsa is more radical scrupulous and comprehensive than in any other religion 89 Killing any living being out of passions is considered hiṃsa to injure and abstaining from such an act is ahimsa noninjury 90 The vow of ahimsa is considered the foremost among the five vows of Jainism Other vows like truth Satya are meant for safeguarding the vow of ahimsa 91 In the practice of Ahimsa the requirements are less strict for the lay persons sravakas who have undertaken anuvrata Smaller Vows than for the Jain monastics who are bound by the Mahavrata Great Vows 92 The statement ahimsa paramo dharmaḥ is often found inscribed on the walls of the Jain temples 93 Like in Hinduism the aim is to prevent the accumulation of harmful karma 94 When lord Mahaviraswami revived and reorganized the Jain faith in the 6th or 5th century BCE 95 Rishabhanatha Adinatha the first Jain Tirthankara whom modern Western historians consider to be a historical figure followed by Parshvanatha Parsvanatha 96 the twenty third Tirthankara lived in about the 8th century BCE 97 He founded the community to which Mahavira s parents belonged 98 Ahimsa was already part of the Fourfold Restraint Caujjama the vows taken by Parshva s followers 99 In the times of Mahavira and in the following centuries Jains were at odds with both Buddhists and followers of the Vedic religion or Hindus whom they accused of negligence and inconsistency in the implementation of Ahimsa 100 According to the Jain tradition either lacto vegetarianism or veganism is mandatory 101 The Jain concept of Ahimsa is characterised by several aspects It does not make any exception for ritual sacrificers and professional warrior hunters Killing of animals for food is absolutely ruled out 102 Jains also make considerable efforts not to injure plants in everyday life as far as possible Though they admit that plants must be destroyed for the sake of food they accept such violence only inasmuch as it is indispensable for human survival and there are special instructions for preventing unnecessary violence against plants 103 Jains go out of their way so as not to hurt even small insects and other minuscule animals 104 For example Jains often do not go out at night when they are more likely to step upon an insect In their view injury caused by carelessness is like injury caused by deliberate action 105 Eating honey is strictly outlawed as it would amount to violence against the bees 106 Some Jains abstain from farming because it inevitably entails unintentional killing or injuring of many small animals such as worms and insects 107 but agriculture is not forbidden in general and there are Jain farmers 108 Theoretically all life forms are said to deserve full protection from all kinds of injury but Jains recognise a hierarchy of life Mobile beings are given higher protection than immobile ones For the mobile beings they distinguish between one sensed two sensed three sensed four sensed and five sensed ones a one sensed animal has touch as its only sensory modality The more senses a being has the more they care about non injuring it Among the five sensed beings the precept of non injury and non violence to the rational ones humans is strongest in Jain Ahimsa 109 Jains agree with Hindus that violence in self defence can be justified 110 and they agree that a soldier who kills enemies in combat is performing a legitimate duty 111 Jain communities accepted the use of military power for their defence there were Jain monarchs military commanders and soldiers 112 Buddhism Edit Further information Noble Eightfold Path Buddhist ethics Killing causing others to kill Buddhism and violence and Engaged Buddhism In Buddhist texts Ahimsa or its Pali cognate avihiṃsa is part of the Five Precepts Pancasila the first of which has been to abstain from killing This precept of Ahimsa is applicable to both the Buddhist layperson and the monk community 113 114 115 The Ahimsa precept is not a commandment and transgressions did not invite religious sanctions for layperson but their power has been in the Buddhist belief in karmic consequences and their impact in afterlife during rebirth 116 Killing in Buddhist belief could lead to rebirth in the hellish realm and for a longer time in more severe conditions if the murder victim was a monk 116 Saving animals from slaughter for meat is believed to be a way to acquire merit for better rebirth These moral precepts have been voluntarily self enforced in lay Buddhist culture through the associated belief in karma and rebirth 117 The Buddhist texts not only recommended Ahimsa but suggest avoiding trading goods that contribute to or are a result of violence These five trades O monks should not be taken up by a lay follower trading with weapons trading in living beings trading in meat trading in intoxicants trading in poison Anguttara Nikaya V 177 Translated by Martine Batchelor 118 Unlike lay Buddhists transgressions by monks do invite sanctions 119 Full expulsion of a monk from sangha follows instances of killing just like any other serious offense against the monastic nikaya code of conduct 119 War Edit Violent ways of punishing criminals and prisoners of war was not explicitly condemned in Buddhism 120 but peaceful ways of conflict resolution and punishment with the least amount of injury were encouraged 121 122 The early texts condemn the mental states that lead to violent behavior 123 Nonviolence is an overriding theme within the Pali Canon 124 While the early texts condemn killing in the strongest terms and portray the ideal king as a pacifist such a king is nonetheless flanked by an army 125 It seems that the Buddha s teaching on nonviolence was not interpreted or put into practice in an uncompromisingly pacifist or anti military service way by early Buddhists 125 The early texts assume war to be a fact of life and well skilled warriors are viewed as necessary for defensive warfare 126 In Pali texts injunctions to abstain from violence and involvement with military affairs are directed at members of the sangha later Mahayana texts which often generalise monastic norms to laity require this of lay people as well 127 The early texts do not contain just war ideology as such 128 Some argue that a sutta in the Gamani Samyuttam rules out all military service In this passage a soldier asks the Buddha if it is true that as he has been told soldiers slain in battle are reborn in a heavenly realm The Buddha reluctantly replies that if he is killed in battle while his mind is seized with the intention to kill he will undergo an unpleasant rebirth 129 In the early texts a person s mental state at the time of death is generally viewed as having a great impact on the next birth 130 Some Buddhists point to other early texts as justifying defensive war 131 One example is the Kosala Samyutta in which King Pasenadi a righteous king favored by the Buddha learns of an impending attack on his kingdom He arms himself in defence and leads his army into battle to protect his kingdom from attack He lost this battle but won the war King Pasenadi eventually defeated King Ajatashatru and captured him alive He thought that although this King of Magadha has transgressed against his kingdom he had not transgressed against him personally and Ajatashatru was still his nephew He released Ajatashatru and did not harm him 132 Upon his return the Buddha said among other things that Pasenadi is a friend of virtue acquainted with virtue intimate with virtue while the opposite is said of the aggressor King Ajatashatru 133 According to Theravada commentaries there are five requisite factors that must all be fulfilled for an act to be both an act of killing and to be karmically negative These are 1 the presence of a living being human or animal 2 the knowledge that the being is a living being 3 the intent to kill 4 the act of killing by some means and 5 the resulting death 134 Some Buddhists have argued on this basis that the act of killing is complicated and its ethicization is predicated upon intent 135 Some have argued that in defensive postures for example the primary intention of a soldier is not to kill but to defend against aggression and the act of killing in that situation would have minimal negative karmic repercussions 136 According to Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar there is circumstantial evidence encouraging Ahimsa from the Buddha s doctrine Love all so that you may not wish to kill any Gautama Buddha distinguished between a principle and a rule He did not make Ahimsa a matter of rule but suggested it as a matter of principle This gives Buddhists freedom to act 137 Laws Edit The emperors of Sui dynasty Tang dynasty and early Song dynasty banned killing in Lunar calendar 1st 5th and 9th month 138 139 Empress Wu Tse Tien banned killing for more than half a year in 692 140 Some also banned fishing for some time each year 141 There were bans after death of emperors 142 Buddhist and Taoist prayers 143 and natural disasters such as after a drought in 1926 summer Shanghai and an 8 days ban from August 12 1959 after the August 7 flood 八七水災 the last big flood before the 88 Taiwan Flood 144 People avoid killing during some festivals like the Taoist Ghost Festival 145 the Nine Emperor Gods Festival the Vegetarian Festival and many others 146 147 Methods Edit Martin Luther King Jr speaking at the 1963 March on Washington Even when the bridge was closed the demonstrators on the initial 1965 Selma to Montgomery march stayed on the sidewalk in compliance with nonviolent tactics and strategies Nonviolent action generally comprises three categories Acts of Protest and Persuasion Noncooperation and Nonviolent Intervention 148 Acts of protest Edit Nonviolent acts of protest and persuasion are symbolic actions performed by a group of people to show their support or disapproval of something The goal of this kind of action is to bring public awareness to an issue persuade or influence a particular group of people or to facilitate future nonviolent action The message can be directed toward the public opponents or people affected by the issue Methods of protest and persuasion include speeches public communications petitions symbolic acts art processions marches and other public assemblies 149 Noncooperation Edit Noncooperation involves the purposeful withholding of cooperation or the unwillingness to initiate in cooperation with an opponent The goal of noncooperation is to halt or hinder an industry political system or economic process Methods of noncooperation include labour strikes economic boycotts civil disobedience sex strike tax refusal and general disobedience 149 Nonviolent intervention Edit Compared with protest and noncooperation nonviolent intervention is a more direct method of nonviolent action Nonviolent intervention can be used defensively for example to maintain an institution or independent initiative or offensively for example to drastically forward a nonviolent cause into the territory of those who oppose it Intervention is often more immediate and initially effective than the other two methods but is also harder to maintain and more taxing to the participants involved Gene Sharp a political scientist who sought to advance the worldwide study and use of strategic nonviolent action in conflict wrote extensively about the methods of nonviolent action In his 1973 book Waging Nonviolent Struggle he described 198 methods of nonviolent action and in it places several examples of constructive program in this category 150 In early Greece Aristophanes Lysistrata gives the fictional example of women withholding sexual favors from their husbands until war was abandoned a sex strike A modern work of fiction inspired by Gene Sharp and by Aristophanes is the 1986 novel A Door into Ocean by Joan Slonczewski depicting an ocean world inhabited by women who use nonviolent means to repel armed space invaders Other methods of nonviolent intervention include occupations sit ins fasting hunger strikes truck cavalcades and dual sovereignty parallel government 149 Tactics must be carefully chosen taking into account political and cultural circumstances and form part of a larger plan or strategy Successful nonviolent cross border intervention projects include the Guatemala Accompaniment Project 151 Peace Brigades International and Christian Peacemaker Teams Developed in the early 1980s and originally inspired by the Gandhian Shanti Sena the primary tools of these organisations have been nonviolent protective accompaniment backed up by a global support network which can respond to threats local and regional grassroots diplomatic and peacebuilding efforts human rights observation and witnessing and reporting 152 153 In extreme cases most of these groups are also prepared to do interpositioning placing themselves between parties who are engaged or threatening to engage in outright attacks in one or both directions Individual and large group cases of interpositioning when called for have been remarkably effective in dampening conflict and saving lives Another powerful tactic of nonviolent intervention invokes public scrutiny of the perceived oppressors as a result of the resisters remaining nonviolent in the face of violent repression If the military or police attempt to repress nonviolent resisters violently the power to act shifts from the hands of the oppressors to those of the resisters If the resisters are persistent the military or police will be forced to accept the fact that they no longer have any power over the resisters Often the willingness of the resisters to suffer has a profound effect on the mind and emotions of the oppressor leaving them unable to commit such a violent act again 154 155 Revolution EditCertain individuals Barbara Deming Danilo Dolci Devere Allen etc and party groups e g Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism Pacifist Socialist Party or War Resisters League have advocated nonviolent revolution as an alternative to violence as well as elitist reformism This perspective is usually connected to militant anti capitalism citation needed Many leftist and socialist movements have hoped to mount a peaceful revolution by organising enough strikers to completely paralyse the state and corporate apparatus allowing workers to re organise society along radically different lines citation needed Some have argued that a relatively nonviolent revolution would require fraternisation with military forces 156 Criticism EditErnesto Che Guevara Leon Trotsky Frantz Fanon and Subhas Chandra Bose were fervent critics of nonviolence arguing variously that nonviolence and pacifism are an attempt to impose the morals of the bourgeoisie upon the proletariat that violence is a necessary accompaniment to revolutionary change or that the right to self defense is fundamental citation needed In the essay Reflections on Gandhi George Orwell argued that the nonviolent resistance strategy of Gandhi could be effective in countries with a free press and the right of assembly which could make it possible not merely to appeal to outside opinion but to bring a mass movement into being or even to make your intentions known to your adversary but he was skeptical of Gandhi s approach being effective in the opposite sort of circumstances 157 Reinhold Niebuhr similarly affirmed Gandhi s approach while criticising aspects of it He argued The advantage of non violence as a method of expressing moral goodwill lies in the fact that it protects the agent against the resentments which violent conflict always creates in both parties to a conflict and it proves this freedom of resentment and ill will to the contending party in the dispute by enduring more suffering than it causes However Niebuhr also held The differences between violent and non violent methods of coercion and resistance are not so absolute that it would be possible to regard violence as a morally impossible instrument of social change 158 In the midst of repression of radical African American groups in the United States during the 1960s Black Panther member George Jackson said of the nonviolent tactics of Martin Luther King Jr The concept of nonviolence is a false ideal It presupposes the existence of compassion and a sense of justice on the part of one s adversary When this adversary has everything to lose and nothing to gain by exercising justice and compassion his reaction can only be negative 159 160 Malcolm X also clashed with civil rights leaders over the issue of nonviolence arguing that violence should not be ruled out if no option remained He noted that I believe it s a crime for anyone being brutalized to continue to accept that brutality without doing something to defend himself 161 In his book How Nonviolence Protects the State anarchist Peter Gelderloos criticises nonviolence as being ineffective racist statist patriarchal tactically and strategically inferior to militant activism and deluded 162 Gelderloos claims that traditional histories whitewash the impact of nonviolence ignoring the involvement of militants in such movements as the Indian independence movement and the Civil Rights Movement and falsely showing Gandhi and King as being their respective movement s most successful activists 162 7 12 He further argues that nonviolence is generally advocated by privileged white people who expect oppressed people many of whom are people of color to suffer patiently under an inconceivably greater violence until such time as the Great White Father is swayed by the movement s demands or the pacifists achieve that legendary critical mass 162 23 On the other hand anarchism also includes a section committed to nonviolence called anarcho pacifism 163 164 The main early influences were the thought of Henry David Thoreau 164 and Leo Tolstoy while later the ideas of Mahatma Gandhi gained importance 163 164 It developed mostly in Holland Britain and the United States before and during the Second World War 165 The efficacy of nonviolence was also challenged by some anti capitalist protesters advocating a diversity of tactics during street demonstrations across Europe and the US following the anti World Trade Organization protests in Seattle Washington in 1999 American feminist writer D A Clarke in her essay A Woman With A Sword suggests that for nonviolence to be effective it must be practiced by those who could easily resort to force if they chose citation needed Nonviolence advocates see some truth in this argument Gandhi himself said often that he could teach nonviolence to a violent person but not to a coward and that true nonviolence came from renouncing violence not by not having any to renounce This is the meaning of his quote It is better to be violent if there is violence in our hearts than to put on the cloak of nonviolence to cover impotence 166 Advocates responding to criticisms of the efficacy of nonviolence point to the limited success of non violent struggles even against the Nazi regimes in Denmark and even in Berlin 167 A study by Erica Chenoweth and Maria Stephan found that nonviolent revolutions are twice as effective as violent ones and lead to much greater degrees of democratic freedom 168 Research EditA 2016 study finds that increasing levels of globalization are positively associated with the emergence of nonviolent campaigns while negatively influencing the probability of violent campaigns Integration into the world increases the popularity of peaceful alternatives to achieve political goals 169 A 2020 study found that nonviolent campaigns were more likely to succeed when there was not an ethnic division between actors in the campaign and in the government 170 According to a 2020 study in the American Political Science Review nonviolent civil rights protests boosted vote shares for the Democratic party in presidential elections in nearby counties but violent protests substantially boosted white support for Republicans in counties near to the violent protests 171 Notable nonviolence theorists and practitioners EditMain Article List of peace activists James Bevel 1936 2008 strategist and director of most of the major events of the 1960s civil rights movement tactician of nonviolence Grace Lee Boggs 1915 2015 philosopher feminist founder of Detroit Summer Dorothy Day 1897 1980 Journalist and co founder of the Catholic Worker movement Barbara Deming 1917 1984 feminist author war tax resister Daniel Ellsberg 1931 2023 Whistleblower who released the Pentagon Papers Mohandas Gandhi 1869 1948 strategist and organizer in South African and India Bernard Lafayette b 1940 Civil rights organizer Kingian nonviolence educator James Lawson b 1928 Civil rights organizaer tactician of nonviolence Martin Luther King Jr 1929 1968 Civil rights organizer and tactician of nonviolence Gene Sharp 1928 2018 leading scholar of nonviolenceSee also EditCategory Nonviolence organizations Ahimsa Anti war Christian anarchism Christian pacifism Conflict resolution Consistent life ethic Department of Peace Draft evasion see Draft resistance List of peace activists Mahavira The Hero of Nonviolence Non aggression principle Nonkilling Nonresistance Nonviolence International Nonviolent Communication Nonviolent resistance Pacifism Padayatra Passive resistance Peace Peace movement Satyagraha Season for Nonviolence Social defence Third Party Non violent Intervention Turning the other cheek Violence begets violence War resisterReferences EditCitations Edit A clarification of this and related terms appears in Gene Sharp Sharp s Dictionary of Power and Struggle Language of Civil Resistance in Conflicts Oxford University Press New York 2012 a b c d Weber Thomas 2003 Nonviolence is who Gene sharp and Gandhi Peace amp Change 28 2 250 270 doi 10 1111 1468 0130 00261 a b c d e f Nepstad Sharon Erickson 2015 Nonviolent struggle theories strategies and dynamics New York ISBN 978 0 19 997599 0 OCLC 903248163 Lester R Kurtz Jennifer E Turpin Encyclopedia of Violence Peace and Conflict p 557 1999 In the West nonviolence is well recognized for its tactical strategic or political aspects It is seen as a powerful tool for redressing social inequality Mark Kurlansky Nonviolence The History of a Dangerous Idea Foreword by Dalai Lama p 5 6 Archived 2023 04 30 at the Wayback Machine Modern Library April 8 2008 ISBN 0 8129 7447 6 Advocates of nonviolence dangerous people have been there throughout history questioning the greatness of Caesar and Napoleon and the Founding Fathers and Roosevelt and Churchill James L Bevel The Strategist of the 1960s Civil Rights Movement by Randall L Kryn a paper in David Garrow s 1989 book We Shall Overcome Volume II Carlson Publishing Company Movement Revision Research Summary Regarding James Bevel by Randy Kryn October 2005 Archived 2010 07 26 at the Wayback Machine published by Middlebury College Stanley M Burstein and Richard Shek World History Ancient Civilizations page 154 Holt Rinhart and Winston 2005 As Chavez once explained Nonviolence is not inaction It is not for the timid or the weak It is hard work it is the patience to win RP s History Online Velvet Revolution Archived from the original on 2011 07 17 Retrieved 2013 01 19 a b Ives Susan 19 October 2001 No Fear Palo Alto College Archived from the original on 20 July 2008 Retrieved 2009 05 17 Chris Graham Peacebuilding alum talks practical app of nonviolence Archived 2009 10 28 at the Wayback Machine Augusta Free Press October 26 2009 Ackerman Peter and Jack DuVall 2001 A Force More Powerful A Century of Non Violent Conflict Palgrave Macmillan Adam Roberts Introduction in Adam Roberts and Timothy Garton Ash eds Civil Resistance and Power Politics The Experience of Non violent Action from Gandhi to the Present Oxford University Press 2009 pp 3 and 13 20 Pandey Janardan 1998 Gandhi and 21st Century p 50 ISBN 978 81 7022 672 7 a b Stephen H Phillips amp other authors 2008 in Encyclopedia of Violence Peace amp Conflict Second Edition ISBN 978 0 12 373985 8 Elsevier Science Pages 1347 1356 701 849 1867 a b c John Arapura in K R Sundararajan and Bithika Mukerji Ed 1997 Hindu spirituality Postclassical and modern ISBN 978 81 208 1937 5 see Chapter 20 pages 392 417 a b c Chapple C 1990 Nonviolence to animals earth and self in Asian Traditions see Chapter 1 State University of New York Press 1993 Sharp Gene 1973 The Politics of Nonviolent Action Porter Sargent p 12 ISBN 978 0 87558 068 5 Two Kinds of Nonviolent Resistance Archived 2021 05 02 at the Wayback Machine Civil Rights Movement Archive Nonviolent Resistance amp Political Power Archived 2021 02 24 at the Wayback Machine Civil Rights Movement Archive U S a b c Nicolas Walter Non Violent Resistance Men Against War Reprinted in Nicolas Walter Damned Fools in Utopia edited by David Goodway PM Press 2010 ISBN 160486222X pp 37 78 King Martin Luther Jr 2010 01 01 Stride Toward Freedom The Montgomery Story Beacon Press p 114 ISBN 978 0 8070 0070 0 Animal Vegetable Mineral The Making of Buddhist Texts Archived 2017 01 06 at the Wayback Machine 12 July 2014 University of Cambridge www Cam ac uk Retrieved 12 March 2019 Vogeler Ingolf Jainism in India Archived 2016 10 26 at the Wayback Machine University of Wisconsin Eau Claire UWEC edu Retrieved 12 March 2019 a b Sundaram P S 1990 Tiruvalluvar Kural Gurgaon Penguin pp 44 50 51 ISBN 978 0 14 400009 8 Cristina Ciucu Being Truthful to Reality Grounds of Nonviolence in Ascetic and Mystical Traditions in Sudhir Chandra dir Violence and Non violence across Time History Religion and Culture Routledge Taylor amp Francis Londres et New York 2018 pp 247 314 Dallos Csilla 2011 From Equality to Inequality Social Change Among Newly Sedentary Lanoh Hunter Gatherer Traders of Peninsular Malaysia University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 144 2661 71 4 Dentan Robert Knox 1968 The Semai A Nonviolent People Of Malaya Case studies in cultural anthropology Archived from the original on 2021 03 23 Retrieved 2019 11 10 Leary John Violence and the Dream People The Orang Asli in the Malayan Emergency 1948 1960 No 95 Ohio University Press 1995 p 262 Leary John Violence and the Dream People The Orang Asli in the Malayan Emergency 1948 1960 No 95 Ohio University Press 1995 Robarchek Clayton A and Robert Knox Dentan Blood drunkenness and the bloodthirsty Semai Unmaking another anthropological myth American Anthropologist 89 no 2 1987 356 365 Walli Koshelya The Conception of Ahimsa in Indian Thought Varanasi 1974 p 113 145 Sanskrit अस म त त इन द र सन त सत य ह सन त र पस प श व द य म य स भ ज ध न न न वज र व १३ Rigveda 10 22 Archived 2020 09 24 at the Wayback Machine Wikisource English Unto Tahtinen 1964 Non violence as an Ethical Principle Turun Yliopisto Finland PhD Thesis pages 23 25 OCLC 4288274 For other occurrence of Ahimsa in Rigveda see Rigveda 5 64 3 Archived 2020 09 24 at the Wayback Machine Rigveda 1 141 5 Archived 2018 11 06 at the Wayback Machine To do no harm Archived 2013 10 17 at the Wayback Machine Project Gutenberg see translation for Yajurveda 36 18 VE For other occurrences of Ahimsa in Vedic literature see A Vedic Concordance Maurice Bloomfield Harvard University Press page 151 Tahtinen p 2 Shatapatha Brahmana 2 3 4 30 2 5 1 14 6 3 1 26 6 3 1 39 Henk M Bodewitz in Jan E M Houben K R van Kooij ed Violence denied violence non violence and the rationalisation of violence in South Asian cultural history BRILL 1999 page 30 Tahtinen pp 2 3 John Bowker Problems of suffering in religions of the world Cambridge University Press 1975 page 233 a b Kaneda T 2008 Shanti peacefulness of mind C Eppert amp H Wang Eds Cross cultural studies in curriculum Eastern thought educational insights pages 171 192 ISBN 978 0 8058 5673 6 Taylor amp Francis Izawa A 2008 Empathy for Pain in Vedic Ritual Journal of the International College for Advanced Buddhist Studies 12 78 Tahtinen pp 2 5 English translation Schmidt p 631 M K Sridhar and Puruṣottama Bilimoria 2007 Indian Ethics Classical traditions and contemporary challenges Editors Puruṣottama Bilimoria Joseph Prabhu Renuka M Sharma Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 0 7546 3301 3 page 315 Long Jeffery D 2009 Jainism An Introduction I B Tauris pp 31 33 ISBN 978 1 84511 625 5 Dundas Paul 2002 The Jains Routledge pp 22 24 73 83 ISBN 978 0415266055 Ravindra Kumar 2008 Non violence and Its Philosophy ISBN 978 81 7933 159 0 see page 11 14 Swami P 2000 Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Upaniṣads SZ Vol 3 Sarup amp Sons see pages 630 631 Ballantyne J R amp Yogindra S 1850 A Lecture on the Vedanta Embracing the Text of the Vedanta sara Presbyterian mission press The Mahabharata in Sanskrit Book 13 Chapter 117 www sacred texts com Archived from the original on 2023 04 06 Retrieved 2023 05 12 Chapple C 1990 Ecological Nonviolence and the Hindu Tradition In Perspectives on Nonviolence pp 168 177 Springer New York Ahimsa To do no harm Archived 2013 11 07 at the Wayback Machine Subramuniyaswami What is Hinduism Chapter 45 Pages 359 361 Fischer Louis Gandhi His Life and Message to the World Mentor New York 1954 pp 15 16 a b c Balkaran R amp Dorn A W 2012 Violence in the Valmi ki Ramayaṇa Just War Criteria in an Ancient Indian Epic Archived 2019 04 12 at the Wayback Machine Journal of the American Academy of Religion 80 3 659 690 a b c Klaus K Klostermaier 1996 in Harvey Leonard Dyck and Peter Brock Ed The Pacifist Impulse in Historical Perspective see Chapter on Himsa and Ahimsa Traditions in Hinduism ISBN 978 0 8020 0777 3 University of Toronto Press pages 230 234 a b c d Paul F Robinson 2003 Just War in Comparative Perspective ISBN 0 7546 3587 2 Ashgate Publishing see pages 114 125 Coates B E 2008 Modern India s Strategic Advantage to the United States Her Twin Strengths in Himsa and Ahimsa Comparative Strategy 27 2 pages 133 147 Subedi S P 2003 The Concept in Hinduism of Just War Journal of Conflict and Security Law 8 2 pages 339 361 Tahtinen pp 96 98 101 Mahabharata 12 15 55 Manu Smriti 8 349 350 Matsya Purana 226 116 Tahtinen pp 91 93 The Role of Teachers in Martial Arts Archived 2019 04 12 at the Wayback Machine Nebojsa Vasic University of Zenica 2011 Sport SPA Vol 8 Issue 2 47 51 see page 46 2nd column SOCIAL CONFLICT AGGRESSION AND THE BODY IN EURO AMERICAN AND ASIAN SOCIAL THOUGHT Donald Levine University of Chicago 2004 Ueshiba Kisshōmaru 2004 The Art of Aikido Principles and Essential Techniques Kodansha International ISBN 4 7700 2945 4 Tahtinen pp 96 98 99 a b Christopher Chapple 1993 Nonviolence to Animals Earth and Self in Asian Traditions State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 1498 1 pages 16 17 W Norman Brown February 1964 The sanctity of the cow in Hinduism Archived 2020 09 30 at the Wayback Machine The Economic Weekly pages 245 255 D N Jha 2002 The Myth of the Holy Cow ISBN 1 85984 676 9 Verso Steven Rosen 2004 Holy Cow The Hare Krishna Contribution to Vegetarianism and Animal Rights ISBN 1 59056 066 3 pages 19 39 Baudhayana Dharmasutra 2 4 7 2 6 2 2 11 15 2 12 8 3 1 13 3 3 6 Apastamba Dharmasutra 1 17 15 1 17 19 2 17 26 2 18 3 Vasistha Dharmasutra 14 12 Manu Smriti 5 30 5 32 5 39 and 5 44 Mahabharata 3 199 3 207 3 199 5 3 207 5 3 199 19 29 3 207 19 3 199 23 24 3 207 23 24 13 116 15 18 14 28 Ramayana 1 2 8 19 Alsdorf pp 592 593 Mahabharata 13 115 59 60 13 116 15 18 Kaviraj Kunja Lal Bhishagratna 1907 An English Translation of the Sushruta Samhita Volume I Part 2 see Chapter starting on page 469 for discussion on meats and fishes see page 480 and onwards Sutrasthana 46 89 Sharirasthana 3 25 Sutrasthana 27 87 Mahabharata 3 199 11 12 3 199 is 3 207 elsewhere 13 115 13 116 26 13 148 17 Bhagavata Purana 11 5 13 14 and the Chandogya Upanishad 8 15 1 Alsdorf pp 572 577 for the Manusmṛti and pp 585 597 for the Mahabharata Tahtinen pp 34 36 The Mahabharata and the Manusmṛti 5 27 55 contain lengthy discussions about the legitimacy of ritual slaughter Mahabharata 12 260 Archived 2007 09 10 at the Wayback Machine 12 260 is 12 268 according to another count 13 115 116 14 28 Mahabharata 3 199 Archived 2007 09 29 at the Wayback Machine 3 199 is 3 207 according to another count Tahtinen pp 39 43 Alsdorf p 589 590 Schmidt pp 634 635 640 643 Tahtinen pp 41 42 Schmidt pp 637 639 Manusmriti 10 63 11 145 Rod Preece Animals and Nature Cultural Myths Cultural Realities ISBN 978 0 7748 0725 8 University of British Columbia Press pages 212 217 Chapple C 1990 Ecological Nonviolence and the Hindu Tradition In Perspectives on Nonviolence pages 168 177 Springer New York Van Horn G 2006 Hindu Traditions and Nature Survey Article Worldviews Global Religions Culture and Ecology 10 1 5 39 Tirukkuṛaḷ Archived 16 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine see Chapter 32 and 33 Book 1 Tirukkuṛaḷ Translated by V V R Aiyar Tirupparaithurai Sri Ramakrishna Tapovanam 1998 Laidlaw pp 154 160 Jindal pp 74 90 Tahtinen p 110 Vijay K Jain 2012 p 34 Vijay K Jain 2012 p 33 Dundas pp 158 159 189 192 Laidlaw pp 173 175 179 Religious Vegetarianism ed Kerry S Walters and Lisa Portmess Albany 2001 p 43 46 translation of the First Great Vow Dundas Paul The Jains second edition London 2002 p 160 Wiley Kristi L Ahimsa and Compassion in Jainism in Studies in Jaina History and Culture ed Peter Flugel London 2006 p 438 Laidlaw pp 153 154 Laidlaw pp 26 30 191 195 Dundas p 24 suggests the 5th century the traditional dating of lord Mahaviraswami s death is 527 BCE Dundas pp 19 30 Tahtinen p 132 Dundas p 30 suggests the 8th or 7th century the traditional chronology places him in the late 9th or early 8th century Acaranga Sutra 2 15 Sthananga Sutra 266 Tahtinen p 132 Goyal p 83 84 103 Dundas pp 160 234 241 Wiley p 448 Granoff Phyllis The Violence of Non Violence A Study of Some Jain Responses to Non Jain Religious Practices in Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 15 1992 pp 1 43 Tahtinen pp 8 9 Laidlaw p 169 Laidlaw pp 166 167 Tahtinen p 37 Lodha R M Conservation of Vegetation and Jain 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Disciples of the Buddha Their Lives Their Works Their Legacy Wisdom Publications pp 387 with footnote 12 ISBN 978 0 86171 128 4 Sarao p 49 Goyal p 143 Tahtinen p 37 Lamotte pp 54 55 a b McFarlane 2001 p 187 sfn error no target CITEREFMcFarlane2001 help McFarlane 2001 pp 187 191 sfn error no target CITEREFMcFarlane2001 help Batchelor Martine 2014 The Spirit of the Buddha Yale University Press p 59 ISBN 978 0 300 17500 4 Archived from the original on 2023 01 11 Retrieved 2017 11 08 a b McFarlane 2001 p 192 sfn error no target CITEREFMcFarlane2001 help Sarao p 53 Tahtinen pp 95 102 Tahtinen pp 95 102 103 Kurt A Raaflaub War and Peace in the Ancient World Blackwell Publishing 2007 p 61 Bartholomeusz p 52 Bartholomeusz p 111 a b Bartholomeusz p 41 Bartholomeusz p 50 Stewart McFarlane in Peter Harvey ed Buddhism Continuum 2001 pages 195 196 Bartholomeusz p 40 Bartholomeusz pp 125 126 Full texts of the sutta 1 Archived 2009 06 09 at the Wayback Machine Rune E A Johansson The Dynamic 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principles Peace Brigades International PBI General Assembly 2001 1992 Archived from the original on 2010 06 02 Retrieved 2009 05 17 Christian Peace Maker Teams Mission Statement Christian Peacemaker Team CPT founding conference 1986 Archived from the original on 2021 05 02 Retrieved 2009 05 17 Sharp Gene 1973 The Politics of Nonviolent Action P Sargent Publisher p 657 ISBN 978 0 87558 068 5 Sharp Gene 2005 Waging Nonviolent Struggle Extending Horizon Books p 381 ISBN 978 0 87558 162 0 Revolution and the party in Gramsci s thought International Viewpoint online socialist magazine internationalviewpoint org Archived from the original on 2023 05 12 Retrieved 2023 05 12 Orwell George Reflections on Gandhi orwell ru Archived from the original on 2019 05 02 Retrieved 2019 11 22 IraChernus NiebuhrSection6 2015 09 23 Archived from the original on 2015 09 23 Retrieved 2019 11 22 Jackson George Soledad Brother The Prison Letters of George Jackson Lawrence Hill Books 1994 ISBN 1 55652 230 4 Walters Wendy W At Home in Diaspora U of Minnesota Press 2005 ISBN 0 8166 4491 8 X Malcolm and Alex Haley The Autobiography of Malcolm X page 366 Grove Press 1964 a b c Gelderloos Peter How Nonviolence Protects the State Boston South End Press 2007 a b George Woodcock Anarchism A History of Libertarian Ideas and Movements 1962 a b c Resisting the Nation State the pacifist and anarchist tradition by Geoffrey Ostergaard Archived from the original on 2011 05 14 Retrieved 2013 01 02 Woodstock George 1962 Anarchism A History of Libertarian Ideas and Movements Finally somewhat aside from the curve that runs from anarchist individualism to anarcho syndicalism we come to Tolstoyanism and to pacifist anarchism that appeared mostly in the Netherlands Britain and the United states before and after the Second World War and which has continued since then in the deep in the anarchist involvement in the protests against nuclear armament Gandhi Mahatma Gandhi Mohandas Karamchand 1965 Gandhi on Non violence Selected Texts from Mohandas K Gandhi s Non violence in Peace and War Page 37 New Directions Publishing ISBN 978 0 8112 0097 4 Nathan Stoltzfus Resistance of the Heart Intermarriage and the Rosenstrasse Protest in Nazi Germany Rutgers University Press March 2001 ISBN 0 8135 2909 3 paperback 386 pages Why Civil Resistance Works The Strategic Logic of Nonviolent Conflict New York Columbia University Press 2011 Karakaya Suveyda 2018 Globalization and contentious politics A comparative analysis of nonviolent and violent campaigns Conflict Management and Peace Science 35 4 315 335 doi 10 1177 0738894215623073 ISSN 0738 8942 S2CID 147472801 Pischedda Costantino 2020 02 12 Ethnic Conflict and the Limits of Nonviolent Resistance Security Studies 29 2 362 391 doi 10 1080 09636412 2020 1722854 ISSN 0963 6412 S2CID 212965225 Wasow Omar 2020 Agenda Seeding How 1960s Black Protests Moved Elites Public Opinion and Voting American Political Science Review 114 3 638 659 doi 10 1017 S000305542000009X ISSN 0003 0554 Sources Edit Jain Vijay K 2012 Acharya Amritchandra s Purushartha Siddhyupaya Realization of the Pure Self With Hindi and English Translation Vikalp ISBN 978 81 903639 4 5 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain True Michael 1995 An Energy Field More Intense Than War Syracuse University Press ISBN 978 0 8156 2679 4Further reading EditFiala Andrew ed The Routledge Handbook of Pacifism and Nonviolence Routledge 2018 excerpt Films about nonviolence a table of over 150 documentary and feature films about nonviolent action with additional resources ISBN 978 1577663492 Nonviolence in Theory and Practice edited by Robert L Holmes and Barry L Gan OCLC 03859761 The Kingdom of God Is Within You by Leo Tolstoy ISBN 978 0 85066 336 5 Making Europe Unconquerable the Potential of Civilian Based Deterrence and Defense see article by Gene Sharp ISBN 0 87558 162 5 Waging Nonviolent Struggle 20th Century Practice And 21st Century Potential by Gene Sharp with collaboration of Joshua Paulson and the assistance of Christopher A Miller and Hardy Merriman ISBN 978 1442217607 Violence and Nonviolence An Introduction by Barry L Gan ISBN 9780367479237 Violence and Non violence across Times History Religion and Culture Routledge London and New York 2018 Sudhir Chandra dir articles by various authors ISBN 0 8166 4193 5 Unarmed Insurrections People Power Movements in Non Democracies by Kurt Schock ISBN 1 930722 35 4 Is There No Other Way The Search for a Nonviolent Future by Michael Nagler ISBN 0 85283 262 1 People Power and Protest since 1945 A Bibliography of Nonviolent Action compiled by April Carter Howard Clark and Michael Randle ISBN 978 953 55134 2 1 Revolutionary Peacemaking Writings for a Culture of Peace and Nonviolence by Daniel Jakopovich ISBN 978 0 903517 21 8 Handbook for Nonviolent Campaigns War Resisters International ISBN 978 0 19 955201 6 Civil Resistance and Power Politics The Experience of Non violent Action from Gandhi to the Present ed Adam Roberts and Timothy Garton Ash Oxford University Press 2009 hardback How to Start a Revolution documentary directed by Ruaridh Arrow A Force More Powerful 1999 documentary directed by Steve York Expanded database of 300 nonviolent methods and examplesExternal links Edit Quotations related to Nonviolence at Wikiquote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nonviolence amp oldid 1166121132, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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