you'd be gandhi -- . i thought you'd be bigger. i -- i mean it's all right. it doesn't matter. i'm -- my name is andrews, charlie andrews. i've come from india -- i've read a great deal about you. yes. i've -- i've met some very remarkable people in india. and -- and when i read what you've been doing here, i -- i wanted to help. does that surprise you? perhaps i should -- i think perhaps the phrase was used metaphorically. i don't think our lord meant -- that was lucky. i am. but i'm not so egotistical as to think he plans his day around my dilemmas. that's the sort of thing you'll be seeking on this "farm". some of you may be rejoicing that mr. gandhi has at last been put into prison. but i would ask you -- assembled here in this house of god -- to recognize that we are witnessing something new, something so unexpected, so unusual that it is not surprising the government is at a loss. what mr. gandhi has forced us to do is ask questions about ourselves. as christians, those are difficult questions to answer. how do we treat men who defy an unjust law -- men who will not fight, but will not comply? may i? mohan -- i would like you to meet someone. i lied to you, mohan, when i told you i decided to come to south africa to meet you. professor gokhale sent me. all right -- i'll go and write my report to the viceroy. no violence, please. going nearer to god! mohan -- !! yes, yes, i'm a christian. ah, you'll find him under the tree by the river. you'd better leave the car -- the ground is rather soft. i wish to see the prisoner, please. shades of south africa. did they take your clothes? you always had a puritanical streak, mohan. i think you do. but i thank god we all don't. ah, but my puritanism runs the another way. i'm far too modest for such a display. couldn't i be let in with the prisoner? i am a clergyman. they're calling you "bapu." i thought it meant father. what do you want me to do? i must leave from calcutta, and soon. you'll have to say goodbye to ba for me. well, i --