Abstract
The academic approach to leadership rests on a particular understanding of human action as goaloriented: leadership helps a group achieve a common, given goal or reward. One of the iconic historical figures that students of leadership never fail to present as an example, however, had a very different conception of human action. Mohandas Gandhi did not understand the orientation towards goals, outcomes or rewards as the essence of human action. Drawing on the Bhagavad Gita, Gandhi emphasized that proper human action must not be preoccupied with its fruit, i.e. that we enact the fullness of our human nature precisely when our action, in a sense to be clarified, is disinterested. Gandhi’s influence concerns the very attitudes that we adopt towards ourselves and our pursuit of goals. A discussion of Gandhi’s reading of the Gita, and of the manner in which it informed key notions such as satyagraha, truth and non-violence, will suggest that to those that were drawn to him, Gandhi served the role of a touchstone, enabling others to ponder a “truer” and “better” version of themselves. If we wish to characterise his influence as “leadership”, I propose to describe it as “apophatic leadership”, which is “negative” in the sense that it enables us to detach ourselves from goals that hitherto were taken for granted.