|
SEVEN
Conclusions
TO SUM up the conclusions at
which we have arrived. The object of all our political movements and therefore
the sole object with which we advocate passive resistance is Swaraj or national
freedom. The latest and most venerable of the older politicians who have sat in
the Presidential Chair of the Congress, pronounced from that seat of authority
Swaraj as the one object of our political endeavour, — Swaraj as the only
remedy for all our ills, — Swaraj as the one demand nothing short of which
will satisfy the people of India. Complete self-government as it exists in the
United Kingdom
or the Colonies, — such was his definition of Swaraj. The Congress has
contented itself with demanding self-government as it exists in the Colonies. We
of the new school would not pitch our ideal one inch lower than absolute Swaraj,
— self-government as it exists in the
United Kingdom. We believe that no smaller ideal can inspire national revival or nerve the
people of
India
for the fierce, stubborn and formidable struggle by which alone they can again
become a nation. We believe that this newly awakened people, when it has
gathered its strength together, neither can nor ought to consent to any
relations with
England
less than that of equals in a confederacy. To be content with the relations of
master and dependent or superior and subordinate, would be a mean and pitiful
aspiration unworthy of manhood; to strive for anything less than a strong and
glorious freedom would be to insult the greatness of our past and the
magnificent possibilities of our future.
To the ideal we have at heart there are three paths, possible or
impossible. Petitioning, which we have so long followed, we reject as
impossible, — the dream of a timid inexperience, the teaching of false friends
who hope to keep us in perpetual subjection, foolish to reason, false to
experience. Self-development
Page-118
by
self-help which we now purpose to follow, is a possible though uncertain path,
never yet attempted under such difficulties, but one which must be attempted,
if for nothing else yet to get free of the habit of dependence and helplessness,
and re-awaken and exercise our half-atrophied powers of self-government.
Parallel to this attempt and to be practised simultaneously, the policy of
organised resistance to the present system of government forms the old
traditional way of nations which we also must tread. It is a vain dream to
suppose that what other nations have won by struggle and battle, by suffering
and tears of blood, we shall be allowed to accomplish easily, without terrible
sacrifices, merely by spending the ink of the journalist and petition-framer and
the breath of the orator. Petitioning will not bring us one yard nearer to
freedom; self-development will not easily be suffered to advance to its goal.
For self-development spells the doom of the ruling bureaucratic despotism, which
must therefore oppose our progress with all the art and force of which it is the
master; without organised resistance we could not take more than a few faltering
steps towards self-emancipation. But resistance may be of many kinds,
—
armed revolt, or aggressive resistance short of armed revolt, or
defensive resistance whether passive or active; the circumstances of the country
and the nature of the despotism from which it seeks to escape must determine
what form of resistance is best justified and most likely to be effective at the
time or finally successful.
The Congress has not formally abandoned the petitioning policy; but it is
beginning to fall into discredit and gradual disuse, and time will accelerate
its inevitable death by atrophy; for it can no longer even carry the little
weight it had, since it has no longer the support of an undivided public opinion
at its back. The alternative policy of self-development has received a partial
recognition; it has been made an integral part of our political activities, but
not in its entirety and purity. Self-help has been accepted as supplementary to
the help of the very bureaucracy which it is our declared object to undermine
and supplant, — self-development as supplementary to development of the nation
by its foreign rulers. Passive resistance has not been accepted as a national
policy, but in the form of Boycott it has been declared
Page-119
legitimate
under circumstances which apply to all
India.
This is a compromise good enough for the moment but in which the new
school does not mean to allow the country to rest permanently. We desire to put
an end to petitioning until such a strength is created in the country that a
petition will only be a courteous form of demand. We wish to kill utterly the
pernicious delusion that a foreign and adverse interest can be trusted to develop
us to its own detriment, and entirely to do
away with the foolish and
ignoble hankering after help from our natural adversaries. Our attitude to
bureaucratic concession is that of Laocoon: "We fear the Greeks even when
they bring us gifts." Our policy is self-development and defensive
resistance. But we would extend the policy of self-development to every
department of national life; not only Swadeshi and National Education, but
national defence, national arbitration courts, sanitation, insurance against
famine or relief of famine, — whatever our hands find to do or urgently needs
doing, we must attempt ourselves and no longer look to the alien to do it for
us. And we would universalise and extend the policy of defensive resistance
until it ran parallel on every line with our self-development. We would not only
buy our own goods, but boycott British goods; not only have our own schools, but
boycott Government institutions; not only erect our own Arbitration Courts, but
boycott bureaucratic justice; not only organise our league of defence, but have
nothing to do with the bureaucratic Executive except when we cannot avoid it. At
present even in
Bengal
where Boycott is universally accepted, it is confined to the boycott of British
goods and is aimed at the British merchant and only indirectly at the British
bureaucrat. We would aim it directly both at the British merchant and at the
British bureaucrat who stands behind and makes possible exploitation by the
merchant.
The double policy we propose has three objects before it: — to develop
ourselves into a self-governing nation; to protect ourselves against and repel
attack and opposition during the work of development; and to press in upon and
extrude the foreign agency in each field of activity and so ultimately supplant
it. Our defensive resistance must therefore be mainly passive in the beginning,
although with a perpetual readiness to supplement it
Page-120
with
active resistance whenever compelled. It must be confined for the present to
Boycott, and we must avoid giving battle on the crucial question of taxation for
the sole reason that a No-Taxes campaign demands a perfect organisation and an
ultimate preparedness from which we are yet far off. We will attack the
resources of the bureaucracy whenever we can do so by simple abstention, as in
the case of its immoral Abkari revenue; but we do not propose at present to
follow European precedents and refuse the payment of taxes legally demanded from
us. We desire to keep our resistance within the bounds of law, so long as law
does not seek directly to interfere with us and render impossible our progress
and the conscientious discharge of our duty to our fellow-countrymen. But if, at
any time, laws should be passed with the object of summarily checking our
self-development or unduly limiting our rights as men, we must be prepared to
break the law and endure the penalty imposed for the breach with the object of
making it unworkable as has been done in other countries. We must equally be
ready to challenge by our action arbitrary executive coercion, if we do not wish
to see our resistance snuffed out by very cheap official extinguishers. Nor must
we shrink from boycotting persons as well as things; we must make full though
discriminating use of the social boycott against those of our countrymen who
seek to baffle the will of the nation in a matter vital to its emancipation, for
this is a crime of lèse-nation
which is far more heinous than the legal offence of lèse-majesté
and deserves the severest penalty with which the nation can visit traitors.
We advocate, finally, the creation of a strong central authority to carry
out the will of the nation, supported by a close and active organisation of
village, town, district and province. We desire to build up this organisation
from the constitution the necessity of which the Congress has recognised and for
which it has provided a meagre and imperfect beginning; but if, owing to
Moderate obstruction, this constitution cannot develop or is not allowed to
perform its true functions, the organisation and the authority must be built up
otherwise by the people itself and, if necessary, outside the Congress.
The double policy of self-development and defensive resis-
Page-121
tance
is the common standing-ground of the new spirit all over
India. Some may not wish to go beyond its limits, others may look outside it; but so
far all are agreed. For ourselves we avow that we advocate passive resistance
without wishing to make a dogma of it. In a subject nationality, to win liberty
for one's country is the first duty of all, by whatever means, at whatever
sacrifice; and this duty must override all other considerations. The work of
national emancipation is a great and holy yajña
of which Boycott, Swadeshi, National Education and every other activity,
great and small, are only major or minor parts. Liberty is the fruit we seek
from the sacrifice and the Motherland the goddess to whom we offer it; into the
seven leaping tongues of the fire of the yajña
we must offer all that we are and all that we have, feeding the fire even
with our blood and lives and happiness of our nearest and dearest; for the
Motherland is a goddess who loves not a maimed and imperfect sacrifice, and
freedom was never won from the gods by a grudging giver. But every great yajña
has its Rakshasas who strive to baffle the sacrifice, to bespatter it with
their own dirt or by guile or violence put out the flame. Passive resistance is
an attempt to meet such disturbers by peaceful and self-contained brahmatejas;
but even the greatest Rishis of old could not, when the Rakshasas were
fierce and determined, keep up the sacrifice without calling in the bow of the
Kshatriya. We should have the bow of the Kshatriya ready for use, though in the
background. Politics is especially the business of the Kshatriya, and without
Kshatriya strength at its back, all political struggle is unavailing.
Vedantism accepts no distinction of true or false religions, but
considers only what will lead more or less surely, more or less quickly to moksa,
spiritual emancipation and the realisation of the Divinity within. Our
attitude is a political Vedantism. India, free, one and indivisible, is the
divine realisation to which we move, — emancipation our aim; to that end each
nation must practise the political creed which is the most suited to its
temperament and circumstances; for that is the best for it which leads most
surely and completely to national liberty and national self-realisation. But
whatever leads only to continued subjection must be spewed out as mere vileness
and impurity. Passive
Page-122
resistance
may be the final method of salvation in our case or it may be only the
preparation for the final sādhanā.
In either case, the sooner we put it into full and perfect practice, the
nearer we shall be to national liberty.
Page-123
Home
|