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1
Agatha Harrison,
who was also a leader of London's Quakers, reached
Bombay two days
later, and journeyed directly to Bihar to tour with them.
Gandhi addressed
Bihar's Central Relief Committee in Patna, after visiting
several centers of
disaster. "Let us, in the face of this calamity, forget the
distinction between
Hindus and Mussalmans as well as between Indians and
Englishmen," he
told them. "We are going to work not as Congressmen but
as humanitarians
... in a humane task."13
Gandhi now found it more difficult to sleep as this tour
continued, rising
at one in the morning instead of three. "Please do not get
alarmed," he
wrote Brother Vallabh. A gang of angry, high-caste Hindu
thugs had just
recently attacked him as he was getting into his car, badly
denting the car
with stones. He narrowly escaped that assault, after which
he decided to
leave the temple town of Puri and its vehicular travel,
venturing off on a
walking tour of rural Orissa, alone with Mira and just a few
others. He enjoyed
this pilgrimage on foot, along village paths and tribal jungle
trails.
"We are camping in the open air on the outskirts of the
village. A hut-like
structure has been put up for me."14 He knew, of course,
that as soon as the
"rains set in" this method of touring would prove more
difficult, if not impossible.
2
He was ready then to "camp" in the hinterland, finding it
much
more congenial to his passionate, aging temperament
than the hustle and
bustle of urban life.
In mid-June, Gandhi and his followers all returned by train
to Bombay,
where Muriel and Agatha awaited him to say good-bye
before sailing
home. Mira then impulsively decided to join the other
English ladies.
Gandhi's first letter to his departed beloved began: "It was
a chilly parting.
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