When Gandhi met Satoshi
A fictional encounter between two radically different revolutionaries… or maybe not so different after all.
Scene:
A quiet room beyond time, filled with gentle candlelight. Mahatma Gandhi sits cross-legged on a simple mat, spinning a symbolic charkha (spinning wheel). A soft whirring sound is heard — it’s Satoshi Nakamoto, hooded and calm, typing quietly on an open-source laptop.
Gandhi (smiling gently):
I see you’re building something… abstract. Not cloth this time, but code?
Satoshi (nodding):
Yes. It’s called Bitcoin. A currency without rulers. A decentralized network where no single man holds the power.
Gandhi:
Ah! Decentralization. You speak of Swaraj — self-rule. But tell me, does this tool free people, or enslave them in new greed?
Satoshi:
That depends on the user. I built it so that no central bank, no emperor of finance, can erode the common man’s savings.
Gandhi:
Hmm. That is noble. But in my land, I spun khadi — not to gain wealth, but to empower the weaver. Can your coin clothe the poor, feed the farmer?
Satoshi:
Not directly. But it can return power to local communities — if used wisely. It can fund clean water, create transparency in charity, help refugees carry value without paper.
Gandhi (thoughtfully):
Technology must serve the last man. The poorest. If your invention becomes the toy of the rich… it has failed its Dharma.
Satoshi (softly):
I agree. That’s why I vanished. Power corrupts. I wished to spark something, not to rule over it.
Gandhi (smiling):
Then we share a path, my friend. The world will judge our ideas — not by their cleverness, but by the compassion they inspire.
[A pause.]
The spinning wheel turns. The screen glows.
Gandhi leans forward:
You must promise me, Satoshi — build for the village, not just the venture capitalist.
Satoshi (grinning faintly):
Only if you promise to try a Raspberry Pi.
[Fade out.]
The revolution continues — in code, in conscience, and in khadi.