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Shall India be Free ?
NATIONAL
DEVELOPMENT AND FOREIGN RULE
IN
DEALING
with the Loyalist creed it will be convenient to examine first the general
postulate before we can come to those which apply particularly to the conditions
of India. The contention is that a healthy development is possible under foreign
domination. In this view national independence is a thing of no moment or at
least its importance has been grossly exaggerated. Nations can very well do
without it; provided they have a good government which keeps the people happy
and contented and allows them to develop their economic activities and moral
virtues, they need not repine at being ruled by others. For certain nations in
certain periods of their development liberty would be disastrous and subjection
to foreign rule is the most healthy condition. India, argue the Loyalists, is an
example of such a nation in such a period. The first business of its people is
to develop their commerce, become educated and enlightened, re- form their
society and their manners and to grow more and more fit for self-government. In
proportion as they become more civilised and more fit, they will receive from
their sympathetic, just and discerning rulers an ever-increasing share in the
administration of the country until with entire fitness will come entire
possession of the status of British citizenship. The idea is that foreign rule
is a Providential dispensation or a provision of Nature for training an
imperfectly developed people in the methods of civilisation and the arts of
self-government. This theory is a modern invention. Ancient and mediaeval
Imperialism frankly acknowledged the principle of might is right; the conquering
nation considered that its military superiority was in itself a proof that it
was meant to rule and the subject nation to obey; liberty, being denied by
Providence to the latter, could not be good for it and there was no call on the
ruler to concede it either now or hereafter. This was the spirit in which
England conquered and governed Ireland by the same methods of cynical
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treachery and ruthless massacre which in modern times are usually considered to
be the monopoly of despotisms like Turkey and Russia. But by the time that
England had fastened its hold on India, a change had come over the modern world.
The Greek ideas of freedom and democracy had penetrated the European mind and
created the great impulse of democratic Nationalism which dominated Europe in
the 19th century. The idea that despotism of any kind was an offence against
humanity, had crystallised into an instinctive feeling, and modern morality and
sentiment revolted against the enslavement of nation by nation, of class by
class or of man by man. Imperialism had to justify itself to this modern
sentiment and could only do so by pretending to be a trustee of liberty,
commissioned from on high to civilise the uncivilised and train the untrained
until the time had come when the benevolent conqueror had done his work and
could unselfishly retire. Such were the professions with which England justified
her usurpation of the heritage of the Moghul and dazzled us into acquiescence in
servitude by the splendour of her uprightness and generosity. Such was the
pretence with which she veiled her annexation of Egypt. These Pharisaic pretensions were especially necessary to British Imperialism because in England the Puritanic middle class had risen to power and imparted to the English
temperament a sanctimonious self- righteousness which refused to indulge in
injustice and selfish spoliation except under a cloak of virtue, benevolence and
unselfish altruism. The genesis of the Loyalist gospel can be found in the
need of British Imperialism to justify itself to the liberalised sentiment of
the 19th century and to the Puritanic middle-class element in the British
nation.
The question then arises, has this theory any firmer root? Is it anything more
than a convenient theory? Has it any relations with actual facts or with human
experience? To answer this question
it is necessary to distinguish between three kinds of
liberty which
are generally confused together. There is a national liberty of freedom from
foreign control; there is an internal liberty or that freedom from the despotism
of an individual, a class or a combination of classes to which the name of self-
government is properly given; and there is individual liberty or
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the freedom of the individual from unnecessary and arbitrary restrictions
imposed on him either by the society of which he is a part or by the
Government, whether that Government be monarchical, democratic, oligarchic or
bureaucratic. The question at issue is, then, which, if any, of these three
kinds of liberty is essential to the healthy development of national life; or,
can there be such development without any liberty at all?
The object of national existence, of the formation of men into groups and their
tacit agreement to allow themselves to be ruled by an organised instrument of
administration which is called the Government, is nothing else than human
development in the individual and in the group. The individual, standing alone,
cannot develop; he depends on the support and assistance of the group to which
he belongs. The group itself cannot develop unless it has an organisation by
means of which it not only secures internal peace and order and protection from
external attack but also proper conditions which will give free play for the
development of its activities and capacities -- physical, moral, intellectual.
The nation or group is not like the individual who can specialise his
development and throw all his energies into one line. The nation must develop
military and political greatness and activity, intellectual and aesthetic
greatness and activity, commercial greatness and activity, moral sanity and
vigour; it cannot sacrifice any of these functions of the organism without
making itself unfit for the struggle for life and finally succumbing and
perishing under the pressure of more highly organised nations. The purely
commercial State like Carthage is broken in the shock with a nation which has
developed the military and political as well as the commercial energies. A
purely military state like Sparta cannot stand against rivals which to equal
military efficiency unite a greater science, intellectual energy and political
ability. A purely aesthetic and intellectual state like the Greek colonies in
Italy or a purely moral and spiritual community like the empire of Peru are
blotted out of existence in the clash with ruder but more vigorous and
many-sided organisms. No government, therefore, can really be good for a nation
or serve the purposes of national life and development which does not give full
scope for the development of all the na-
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tional activities, capacities and energies. Foreign rule is unnatural and
fatal to a nation precisely because by its very nature it throws itself upon
these activities and capacities and crushes them down in the
interests of its own continued existence. Even when
it does not crush them down violently, it obstructs their growth passively by
its very presence. The subject nation becomes dependent, disorganised and
loses its powers by atrophy. For this reason national independence is absolutely
necessary to national growth. There can be no national development without
national liberty.
Individual liberty is necessary to national development, because, if the individual is unduly hampered, the richness of national life
suffers and is impoverished. If the individual is given free room to realise
himself, to perfect, specialise and enrich his particular powers and attain
the full height of his manhood, the variety and rapidity of national progress
is immensely increased. In so far as he is fettered and denied scope, the development of the nation is cramped and retarded. A Government which denies scope
and liberty to the individual, as all foreign governments must to a considerable
extent deny it, helps to cramp the healthy development of the nation and not to
forward it. The development of the individual is and must be an embarrassment
to the intruding power unless the numbers are so few that they can be bribed
into acquiescence and support by the receipt of honours, employment or other
personal advantages. For development creates ambition and nothing is more fatal
to the continuance of foreign rule than the growth of ambitions in the subject
race which it cannot satisfy. The action of Lord Curzon in introducing the
Universities Act was for the British domination in India an act of inevitable
necessity, which had to be done some time or other. Its only defect from the
Imperialist point of view was that it came too late.
Just as individual liberty is necessary for the richness and
variety of national development, so self-government is necessary for its
completeness and the full deployment of national strength. If certain classes
are dominant and others depressed, the result is that the potential strength of
the depressed classes is so much valuable force lost to the sum of national
strength. The dominant
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classes may undoubtedly show a splendid development and may make the nation
great and famous in history; but when all is said the strength of the nation is
then only the sum of the strength of a few privileged classes. The great
weakness of India in the past has been the political depression and nullity of
the mass of the population. It was not from the people of India that India was
won by Moghul or Briton, but from a small privileged class. On the other hand,
the strength and success of the Marathas and Sikhs in the 18th century was due
to the policy of Shivaji and Guru Govinda which called the whole nation into the
fighting line. They failed only because the Marathas could not preserve the
cohesion which Shivaji gave to their national strength or the Sikhs the
discipline which Guru Govinda gave to the Khalsa. Is it credible that a foreign
rule would either knowingly foster or allow the growth of that universal
political consciousness in the subject nation which self-government implies? It
is obvious that foreign rule can only endure so long as political consciousness
can be either stifled by violence or hypnotised into inactivity. The moment the
nation becomes politically self-conscious, the doom of the alien predominance is
sealed. The bureaucracy which rules us, is not only foreign in origin but
external to us, -- it holds and draws nourishing sustenance for itself from the
subject organism by means of tentacles and feelers thrust out from its body
thousands of miles away. Its type in natural history is not the parasite, but
the octopus. Self-government would mean the removal of the tentacles and the
cessation both of the grip and the sustenance. Foreign rule is naturally opposed
to the development of the subject nation as a separate organism, to the growth
of its capacity for and practice in self-government, to the development of
capacity and ambition of its individuals. To think that a foreign rule would
deliberately train us for independence or allow us to train ourselves is to
suppose a miracle in nature.
Bande Mataram, April 29, 1907
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