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Mr. A. Chowdhury's Policy
MR. Ashutosh Chowdhury has used the opportunity given to him by his selection for
the chair of the Pabna Conference to make a personal pronouncement of policy.
This is the second time that Mr. Chowdhury has had an opportunity of this kind,
the first being the Provincial conference at Burdwan. On that occasion he made a
pronouncement which indicated a new departure in politics and created some
flutter in the Congress dovecote. It would not be accurate to say that the
Burdwan pronunciamento influenced the course of affairs; the propounder of the
new policy, if such it could be called, had not sufficient weight of personality
to become the leader of a New Party, nor was his policy either definite enough
or sound enough to attract a following. But it had a certain importance. It was
the immature self-expression of ideas and forces which had been gathering head
in the country and groping about for means of entry into the ordinary channels
of political action and expression. It was rather the prophecy of a new turn in
Indian politics than itself a policy already understood and matured. The prophet
himself was perhaps the one who least understood his own prophecy. The confusion
of his ideas was shown soon afterwards by his identifying himself with the old
current of Congress politics and thus turning his back on the two main positions
in his Burdwan speech, the repudiation of mendicant politics and the dictum that
a subject nation has no politics. He left it to others to develop the political
ideas he had dimly and imperfectly outlined and give them a definite shape
embodied in a clear political programme. Still more forcibly is this lack of
comprehension evidenced by Mr. Chowdhury's attempt to revert, with
modifications, to his Burdwan ideas even after the momentous changes of the last
three years. He has once more reverted to his dictum that a subject nation has
no politics; he once more proposes that we should give up our political
agitation; once more he puts forward self-help as a
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substitute.
When he spoke at Burdwan, industrial expansion was the idea of the day and Mr.
Chowdhury offered it to us as a substitute for political mendicancy. Today
Swadeshi, Boycott and National Education are the ideas of the day and Mr.
Chowdhury offers them as a substitute for the struggle for Swaraj.
We do not wish to overrate the importance of Mr. Chowdhury's
pronouncements. Mr. Chowdhury is not a political leader with a distinct
following in the country who are likely to carry out his ideas. He is a sort of
Rosebery of Bengal politics, a brilliant, cultured amateur who catches up
certain thoughts or tendencies that are in the air and gives them a more or less
striking expression, but he has not the qualities of a politician — robustness,
backbone, the ability to will a certain course of action and the courage to
carry it out. He has intellectual sensitiveness, but not intellectual
consistency. Suave, affable, pliable, essentially an amiable and cultured
gentleman, he is unfit for the rough and tumble of political life, especially in
a revolutionary period; no man who shrinks from struggle or is appalled by the
thought of aggression can hope to seize and lead the wild forces that are rising
to the surface in twentieth-century India. But this very knack of catching up
however partially the moods of the moment gives a certain interest to Mr.
Chowdhury's pronouncements
which make them worth examining.
When Mr. Chowdhury at Burdwan pronounced
against the mendicant policy he was voicing two distinct and various currents of
political tendency. The opprobrious term of mendicancy was applied to the old
Congress School of politics not because remonstrance and protest are in
themselves wrong and degrading, but because in the circumstances of modern India
a policy of prayer, petition and protest without the sanction of a great
irresistible national force at its back was bound to pauperise the energy of the
nation and to accustom it to a degrading dependence. It was not only a waste of
energy but a sapping of energy, and it was ruinous to manhood and self-respect.
But the recognition of this fact only led to another problem. If we did not sue
to others for help, we must help ourselves; if we did not depend on the alien's
mercies, we must depend on our own
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strength.
But how was that strength to be educated? Again, when we had decided that a
subject nation has no politics, what then? Were we to renounce the birthrights
inherent in our manhood and leave the field to the bureaucratic despotism or
were we to resolve to cease to be a subject nation so that we might recover the
right and possibility of political life and activity? There were two currents of
political thought growing up in the country. One, thoughtful, philosophic,
idealistic, dreamed of ignoring the terrible burden that was crushing us to
death, of turning away from politics and educating our strength in the village
and township, developing our resources, our social, economic, religious life
regardless of the intrusive alien; it thought of inaugurating a new revolution
such as the world had never yet seen, a moral, peaceful revolution, actively
developing ourselves but only passively resisting the adversary. But there was
another current submerged as yet, but actively working underneath, which tended
in another direction, — a sprinkling of men in whom one fiery conviction
replaced the cultured broodings of philosophy and one grim resolve took the
place of political reasoning. The conviction was that subjection was the one
curse which withered and blighted all our national activities, that so long as
that curse was not removed it was a vain dream to expect our national activities
to develop themselves successfully and that only by struggle could our strength
be educated to action and victory. The resolve was to rise and fight and fall
and again rise and fight and fall waging the battle for ever until this once
great and free nation should again be great and free. It was this last current
which boiled up to the surface in the first vehemence of the anti-Partition
agitation, flung out the challenge of boycott and plunged the Bengali nation
into a struggle with the bureaucracy which must now be fought out till the end.
All were carried away in the tide of that great upheaval; but it is
needless to say that this was not what the advocates of self-help pure and
simple had contemplated, Mr. Chowdhury least of all. He very early identified
himself with the small knot of older leaders who from time to time struggled
with the tide and tried to turn it back; but until now the tide was too strong
for them. For a moment, however, the rush has been checked by
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superhuman
efforts of repression on the part of the panic-stricken bureaucracy and it is
natural that those who were not with their whole heart and conviction for the
struggle for Swaraj, should begin to revert to their old ideas, to long to give
up the struggle, to retreat into the fancied security of their fortress of unpolitical Swadeshism and a policy of self-help which seeks to ignore the
unignorable. The tendency is to cry, "The old policy is a failure, the
Briton has revealed his true nature; the new policy is a failure, we have not
strength to meet the giant power of the bureaucracy; let us have the field, let
us quietly pursue our own salvation in the peaceful Ashrams of Swadeshism and
self-help." Mr. Ashutosh Chowdhury with his keen intellectual sensitiveness
has felt this tendency in the air and given it expression. It is a beautiful and
pathetic dream. We will develop our manufacture,
boycott foreign goods, of course in a quite friendly
and non-political spirit, and England will
look quietly on while its trade is being ruined! We will ignore the Government
and build up our own centres of strength in spite of it, a Government the whole
principle and condition of whose existence is that there shall be no centre of
strength in the country except itself! Mr. Chowdhury's policy would be an
excellent one if he could only remove two factors from the political problem;
first, Indian Nationalism, secondly, the British Government. And how does he
propose to remove them? By shutting his eyes to their existence. Ignore the
Government, dissociate yourselves from the men of violence, — and the thing is
done. Such is the political wisdom of Mr. Ashutosh Chowdhury.
A
Current Dodge
Referring
to the transfer to other places of Mr. Barneville and Maulavi Faizuddin Hossein
who tried cases of looting in Jamalpur and recorded as their opinions that the
riots were not provoked by Hindu boycotters and National volunteers, even the Hindu
Patriot which has never been friendly to the Nationalist movement writes:—
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"Transferring
judges and magistrates whose decisions differ from the settled policy or
preconceived views of the Executive officials, is a current dodge whereby the
ends of justice are sought to be subordinated to political or other
considerations. And this is but another very forcible illustration of the evils
of the combination of Judicial and Executive functions, and it also explains the
reason why there is so much opposition to the separation of the duties. All the
same, however, we may frankly observe here that any attempt to destroy the
integrity of the law courts will deepen the anxiety which is being manifested on
all sides. It is the proverbial impartiality of British justice which is prized
more than anything else."
But this current dodge is played not by the local executive officials but
by the higher bureaucracy and need not be an argument in favour of the
separation of Judicial and Executive functions. Our contemporary's attempt to
smother facts in a profusion of side-issues cannot deceive those who can read
between the lines. We must congratulate him all the same on his sudden flash of
intelligent outspokenness. But our contemporary need not feel anxious about
"the proverbial impartiality of British justice". The proverb is badly
in need of a change. And as we said yesterday when referring to many cherished
shibboleths of the people departing into the limbo of forgotten follies, the
greatest fall has been the fall of the belief in the imperturbable impartiality
of British justice. The transfer of Mr. Barneville and the Maulavi is only
another count in the indictment.
Bande
Mataram,
June 22, 1907
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