Mumbai:
Mahatma Gandhi's great grandson, Tushar feels there is a difference in the way the Father of the Nation and social activist Anna Hazare have used fasting as a form of protest.
"Hazare's fast is different because Bapu's fast was to reform an adversary into a friend, while Anna's fast is against an enemy. It is like a "me versus you" kind of thing," Tushar Gandhi said.
Hazare has become an "icon of the desperation" being felt by the people in India, he said. However, there is an element of populism in the movement, he added.
"What we are seeing since yesterday is concern of people about democratic rights. There is a sense of disconnect between the people and the Government," he said. That is reflected in this whole movement, he added.
Asked how would have the Mahatma viewed Hazare's agitation, Tushar said, "Bapu would have never allowed the situation to reach this level. He would have become active when the disease (corruption) was at a nascent stage and not when it has reached alarming proportions."
"However, one positive thing that has come out (of Hazare's agitation) is that non-violence is powerful. Not one glass pane has been broken by the protesters, not one stone hurled. That is a potent sign. It shows the power of non-violence," he said.