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JULY 17, 2000 VOL. 156 NO. 2
A
Remarkable Life in India
He
was a political activist, altruist and man of the cloth, but Samuel Stokes'
real talent lay in apples
By MICHAEL FATHERS
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ALSO IN TIME
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Six
decades before it became fashionable for young Americans to travel to
India in search of an alternative life or a new God, the path was blazed
by a strong-willed scion of a prominent Pennsylvania family. Samuel Stokes
arrived in India in 1904 at age 22, with the noble purpose of doing good.
He did plenty of that, as Asha SharmaStokes' granddaughterchronicles
in the detailed and sympathetic biography An American in Khadi (Penguin;
369 pages). A devout, idealistic Quaker, Stokes ignored the foreign missionary
community in India and wandered the foothills of the Himalayas as a Christian
fakir, penniless, helping the sick and speaking only in Hindi. A few years
later he was being feted in London by the Archbishop of Canterbury as
the founder of a brotherhood of wandering Christian holy men"an
irregular cavalry," in the words of another Anglican prelate, "that would
deliver India to Jesus."
But within two years of establishing his brotherhood in 1910, Stokes quit.
He asked Indian friends to choose him a wife, discarded his Western ways,
dressed in khadi (homespun cloth) and set up a home at the base of the
Himalayas, in what is today Himachal Pradesh state. Thus began a philosophical
voyage of discovery that led to his conversion to Hinduism in 1932. He
took the name Satyanand, or "One who rejoices in the truth."
If that were all there was to his life it would be unusual enough. But
there was much more. Stokes was an early member of India's Congress Party
and believed strongly that total independence from Britain was the only
way. He was close to Mahatma Gandhi, but warned that his civil disobedience
campaigns would lead to permanent chaos. In 1921, he was jailed on sedition
charges, thus becoming the first American political prisoner in India.
Just as he won prominence as a political activist and a champion of the
rights of hill dwellers, Stokes changed direction again, this time turning
to horticulture. His name is recorded in India's independence archives,
but his legacy lies in apples. Stokes introduced the "American Delicious"
variety to Indiathe only brand of apple now found in Indian shopsbringing
instant prosperity to thousands of small hill farmers. Sharma has written
a lively and philosophical book, reflecting closely Stokes' mixed personality
and steely commitment.
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