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Shall India be Free
?
UNITY AND
BRITISH RULE
IT
IS a
common cry in this country that we should effect the unity of its people before
we try to be free. There is no cry which is more plausible, none which is more
hollow. What is it that we mean when we talk of the necessity of unity? Unity
does not mean uniformity and the removal of all differences. There are some
people who talk as if unity in religion, for instance, could not be accomplished
except by uniformity. But uniformity of religion is a psychical impossibility
forbidden by the very nature of the human mind. So long as men differ in
intellect, in temperament, in spiritual development, there must be different
religions and different sects of the same religion. The Brahmo Samaj
was set on foot in India by Rammohan Roy with the belief that this would be the
one religion of India which would replace and unite the innumerable sects now
dividing our spiritual consciousness. But in a short time this uniting religion
was itself rent into three discordant sects, two of which show signs of internal
fissure even within their narrow limits; and all these divisions rest not on
anything essential but on differences of intellectual
constitution, variety of temperament, divergence of the lines of spiritual
development. The unity of the Hindu religion cannot be attained by the
destruction of the present sects and the substitution of a religion based on the
common truths of Hinduism. It can
only be effected if there is, first, a common feeling that the sectarian
differences are of subordinate importance compared with the community of
spiritual truths and discipline as distinct from the spiritual truths and
discipline of other religions, and, secondly, a common agreement in valuing and
cherishing the Hindu religion in its entirety as a sacred and inalienable
possession. This is what fundamentally constitutes the sentiment of unity,
whether it be religious, political or social. There must be the sense of a
community in something dear and precious which others do not possess; there must
be an acute sense of
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difference from other communities which have no share in our common possession;
there must be a supreme determination to cherish, assert and preserve our common
possession from disparagement and destruction. But the sentiment of unity is
not sufficient to create unity; we require also the practice of unity. Where the
sentiment of unity exists and the practice does not, the latter can only be
acquired by a common effort to accomplish one great, common and all-absorbing
object.
The first question we have to answer is -- can this practical unity be
accomplished by acquiescence in foreign rule? Certainly, under foreign rule a
peculiar kind of uniformity of condition is attained. Brahmin and Sudra,
aristocrat and peasant, Hindu and Mahomedan, all are brought to a certain
level of equality by equal inferiority to the ruling class. The differences
between them are trifling compared with the enormous difference between all of
them and the white race at the top. But this uniformity is of no value for the
purposes of national unity, except in so far as the sense of a common
inferiority excites a common desire to revolt against and get rid of it. If the
foreign superiority is acquiesced in, the result is that the mind becomes taken
up with the minor differences and instead of getting nearer to unity disunion is
exaggerated. This is precisely what has happened in India under British rule.
The sentiment of unity has grown, but in practice we are both socially and
politically far more disunited and disorganised than before the British
occupation. In the anarchy that followed the decline of the Moghul, the struggle
was between the peoples of various localities scrambling for the inheritance of
Akbar and Shahjahan. This was not a vital and permanent element of disunion. But
the present disorganisation is internal and therefore more likely to reach the
vitals of the community.
This disorganisation is the natural
and inevitable result of foreign rule. A state which is created by a common
descent, real or fictitious, by a common religion or by common interests welding
together into one a great number of men or group of men, is a natural organism
which so long as it exists has always within it the natural power of revival and
development. But as political science has pointed out, a state created by the
encampment of a
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foreign race
among a conquered population and supported in the last resort not by any section
of the people but by external force, is an inorganic state. The subject
population, it has been said, inevitably becomes a disorganised crowd.
Consciously or unconsciously the tendency of the intruding body is to break down
all the existing organs of national life and to engross all power in itself. The
Moghul rule had not this tendency because it immediately naturalised itself in
India. British rule has and is forced to have this tendency because it must
persist in being an external and intruding presence encamped in the country and
not belonging to it. It is doubtful whether there is any example in history of
an alien domination which has been so monstrously ubiquitous, inquisitorial and
intolerant of any centre of strength in the country other than itself as the
British bureaucracy. There were three actual centres of organised strength in
pre-British India -- the supreme ruler, Peshwa or Raja or Nawab reposing his
strength on the Zemindars or Jagirdars; the Zemindar in his own domain reposing
his strength on his retinue and tenants; and the village community independent
and self-existent. The first result of the British occupation was. to reduce to
a nullity the supreme ruler, and this was often done, as in Bengal, by the help
of the Zemindars. The next result was the disorganisation of the village
community. The third was the steady breaking-up of the power of the Zemindar
with the help of a new class which the foreigners created for their own purposes
-- the bourgeois or middle class. Unfortunately for the British bureaucracy it
had in order to get the support and assistance of the middle class to pamper the
latter and allow it to grow into a strength and develop organs of its own,
such as the Press, the Bar, the University, the Municipalities, District
Boards, etc. Finally the situation with which British statesmen had to deal was
this: -- the natural sovereigns of the land helpless and disorganised, the landed
aristocracy helpless and disorganised, the peasantry helpless and disorganised,
but a middle class growing in strength, pretensions and organisation. British
statesmanship following the instinctive and inevitable trend of an alien
domination, set about breaking down the power it had established in order to
destroy the sole remaining centre of national strength and possible re-
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vival. If
this could be done, if the middle class could be either tamed, bribed or limited
in its expansion, the disorganisation would be complete. Nothing would be left
of the people of India except a disorganised crowd with no centre of strength or
means of resistance.
It was in Bengal that the middle class was most developed and self-conscious;
and it was in Bengal therefore that a quick succession of shrewd and dangerous
blows was dealt at the once useful but now obnoxious class. The last effort to
bribe it into quietude was the administration of Lord Ripon. It was now sought
to cripple the organs through which this strength was beginning slowly to feel
and develop its organic life. The Press was intimidated, the Municipalities officialised, the University officialised and its expansion limited. Finally the
Partition sought with one blow to kill the poor remnants of the Zemindar's power
and to influence and to weaken the middle class of Bengal by dividing it. The
suppression of the middle class was the recognised policy of Lord Curzon. After
Mr. Morley came to power, it was, we believe, intended to recognise and
officialise the Congress itself if possible. Even now it is quite conceivable,
in view of the upheaval in Bengal and the Punjab, that an expanded Legislature
with the appearance of a representative body but the reality of official
control, may be given not as a concession but as a tactical move. The organs of
middle class political life can only be dangerous
so long as they are independent. By taking away
their independence
they become fresh sources of strength for the Government
--
of weakness for the
class which strives to find in
them its growth and self-expression.
The Partition opened the eyes of the threatened class to the nature of the
attack that was being made on it; and the result was a widespread and passionate
revolt which has now spread from Bengal to the Punjab and threatens to break out
all over
India. The struggle is now a struggle for life and death. If the bureaucracy
conquers, the middle class will be broken, shattered perhaps blotted out of
existence; if the middle class conquers, the bureaucracy are not for long in the
land. Everything depends on the success or failure of the middle class in
getting the people to follow it for a common salvation. They may get this
support
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by taking
their natural place as awakeners and leaders of the nation; they may get it by
the energy and success with which they wage their battle with the bureaucracy.
In Eastern Bengal, for instance, the aid of a few Mahomedan aristocrats has
enabled the bureaucracy to turn a large section of the Mahomedan masses against
the Hindu middle class, and the educated community is fighting with its back to
the wall for its very existence. If it succeeds under such desperate
circumstances, even the Mahomedan masses will eventually follow its leading.
This process of political disorganisation is not so much a deliberate policy on
the part of the foreign bureaucracy, as an instinctive action which it can no
more help than the sea can help flowing. The dissolution of the subject
organisation into a disorganised crowd is the inevitable working of an alien
despotism.
Bande Mataram, May 2, 1907
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