At a time when Kerala is set to observe the 81st year of the proclamation, an article dated December 12, 1936, has surfaced, in which Gandhi admitted to having doubts which he "could not and would not suppress" about "the great and sweeping reform".
But a telegram on the success of the move put his worries to his rest, he said in the write-up titled "God is Great", published one month after the implementation of the decree.
In the latter part of the write-up, however, he congratulated Travancore King Chithira Tirunal Balarama Varma for abolishing the ban on 'avarnas' (lower-caste people) from entering Hindu shrines, his mother Sethu Parvathy Bhai and dewan Sir C P Ramaswamy Aiyer for the proclamation.
The piece has been included in the souvenir of the Temple Entry Proclamation Memorial, issued by the Travancore Temple Entry Proclamation Memorial Committee, along with other write-ups by Gandhi and speeches on the proclamation.
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"When the Temple Entry Proclamation was issued, I had misgivings which I could not and would not suppress. Was it a political document with loopholes and reservations? What would be its effect on caste Hindus, if it was a super-imposed thing? What would be its effect on Harijans? Would it not leave them in the cold," the Mahatma wrote.
The telegram, with a detailed description about the implementation of the Proclamation and the response of the people, had dispelled all doubts, he noted.
"The actuality has surpassed all expectations. The enthusiasm of the Harijans, the absence of all opposition to their entrance to the farthest limit possible to the highest caste, and the willing, nay the hearty co-operation of the officiating priests show the utter genuineness of the great and sweeping reform. What seemed impossible for man has been made possible by God," he said.
what happened in Travancore was an "instance of mass conversion of Caste Hindus. It's real because it's spontaneous," he wrote.
Of these, 155 were major temples, such as Cape Comorin (now the Kanyakumari Devi Temple) and Ananthapadmanabha (Lord Padmanabha Swamy Temple here).
"Actual working (of the) Proclamation is most successful. It has disproved all fears entertained (in) certain quarters. Orthodox people including Namboodries have, as groups or individuals, displayed no hostility. Most of them expressing themselves in terms of full approval of the Proclamation. We see no signs of resentment," the telegram added.
Noted historian T P Sankarankutty Nair said the Temple Entry Proclamation was one of the greatest social reformatory measures witnessed by erstwhile Travancore.
"The 12-year-old prince had said 'I shall' and he did not forget his promise when he became the ruler of Travancore later," Nair told PTI.
The king formed the Temple Entry Committee in 1932 to examine the possibilities of opening the shrines' doors to all castes and issued the Proclamation in 1936, he said.
Gandhi had visited Travancore to take part in the celebrations for the successful implementation of the proclamation in January 1937.