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Europe and Asia
THE
London correspondent of a contemporary quotes, with the apposite change of a
word, some verses from a poem by Wilfrid Blunt which so admirably express the
basic motive of the Nationalist movement in India that we reproduce it here. It
is often represented by our opponents that the cry for Swaraj is a mere
senseless cry for freedom without any recognition of the responsibilities of
freedom. This is not so. Those who have followed the exposition of the
Nationalist ideal in Bande Mataram know well that we advocate the
struggle for Swaraj, first, because Liberty is in itself a necessity of national
life and therefore worth striving for for its own sake; secondly, because
Liberty is the first indispensable condition of national development
intellectual, moral, industrial, political (we do not say it is the only
condition) — and therefore worth striving for for India's sake; thirdly,
because in the next great stage of human progress it is not a material but a
spiritual, moral and psychical advance that has to be made and for this a free
Asia and in Asia a free India must take the lead, and Liberty is therefore worth
striving for for the world's sake. India must have Swaraj in order to live; she
must have Swaraj in order to live well and happily; she must have Swaraj in
order to live for the world, not as a slave for the material and political
benefit of a single purse-proud and selfish nation, but as a free people for the
spiritual and intellectual benefit of the human race.
The verses quoted are from a poem called The Wind and the Whirlwind addressed
to England. England, by her oppression of the Asiatic peoples under her sway, by
her selfish and ruthless exploitation of their wealth, by her refusal to allow
them the chance of national life and free development, is sowing the wind, and
she will reap the whirlwind in the loss of her Empire, perhaps in national decay
and death.
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“Truth
yet shall triumph in a world of justice;
This is of faith. I swear it. East and West
The
law of Man's progression shall accomplish
Even this last great marvel with the rest.
Thou
wouldst not further it. Thou canst not hinder.
If thou shalt learn in time, thou yet shalt live.
But
God shall ease thy hand of thy dominion
And give to these the rights thou wouldst not give.
The
nations of the East have left their childhood.
Thou art grown old. Their manhood is to come;
And
they shall carry on Earth's high tradition
Through the long ages when thy lips are dumb,
Till
all shall be wrought out. O lands of weeping,
Lands watered by the rivers of old Time,
Ganges
and Indus and the streams of Eden,
Yours is the future of the world's sublime.
Yours
was the fount of man's first inspiration,
The well of wisdom whence he earliest drew.
And
yours shall be the floodtime of his reason,
The means of strength which shall his strength renew.
The
wisdom of the West is but a madness,
The fret of shallow waters in their bed.
Yours
is the flow, the fullness of man's patience,
The ocean of God's rest inherited.
And
thou, too, India, mourner of the nations,
Though thou hast died today in all men's sight,
And
though upon thy cross with thieves thou hangest,
Yet shall thy wrong be justified in right."
The view of the East as just emerging from its childhood and the West as
old and senile, is contrary to received ideas, but there is a deep truth
underlying it. The East is more ancient by many
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thousands
of years than the West, but a greater length of years does not necessarily imply
a more advanced age. The years which would mean only childhood to a long-lived
species would bring old age and death to more ephemeral stocks. Asia is long-lived, Europe brief, ephemeral. Asia is in everything hugely mapped, immense and
grandiose in its motions, and its life-periods are measured accordingly. Europe
lives by centuries, Asia by millenniums. Europe is parcelled out in nations,
Asia in civilisations. The whole of Europe forms only one civilisation with a
common, derived and largely second-hand culture; Asia supports three
civilisations, each of them original and of the soil. Everything in Europe is
small, rapid and short-lived; she has not the secret of immortality. Greece, the
chief source of her civilisation, matured in two or three centuries, flourished
for another two, and two more were sufficient for her decline and death. How few
in years are the modern European nations, yet Spain is already dead, Austria
death-stricken and suffering from gangrene and disintegration, France overtaken
by a mortal and incurable malady, England already affected by the initial
processes of decay. Germany and America alone show any signs of a healthy and
developing manhood. In the place which is left vacant by the decline of the
European nations Asia young, strong, and vigorous, dowered with the gift of
immortality and the secret of self-transmutation, is preparing to step forward
and possess the future. She alone can teach the world the secret of immortality
which she possesses and in order that she may do so, she must reign.
Asia has been described by the Europeans as decrepit; they will find to
their amazement and dismay that she is rather emerging into her age of robust
and perfect manhood. It is true that she reached ages ago heights of science,
philosophy, civilisation which Europe is now toilfully trying to reach and that
afterwards there was a slackening down, loss and disturbance from which she is
only now recovering, but there was no decay or decline. It was rather the
disturbance, the temporary arrest, disorganisation and derangement which marks
the transition from boyhood to manhood. Her mighty civilisations, her great
philosophies, her acute scientific observations and intuitions were the toys
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and
games of her yet immature and imperfect powers, the light and easy play of a
child-giant, and form merely a slight index of the far greater things she will
accomplish in the coming days of her ripe strength and maturity. What she did,
she did by the activity of intention and imagination, the first free penetrating
sympathy of a mind fresh from the divine source of life. She will now learn the
scientific method of the adult and senescent West and apply it with a far
greater force and ability to lines of development in which Europe is a bungler
and novice,
The
wisdom of the West is but a madness,
The fret of shallow waters in their bed.
This
shallowness proceeds from the fact that the West has developed materially and on
the surface, but has not sought for strength and permanence in the deeper roots
of life of which our outer activity is only a partial manifestation. The
fundamental difference between East and West has been exemplified more than once
in recent times. What European nation could have changed its whole political,
social and economic machinery in a few years like Japan, with so little trouble,
with such thoroughness and science, with the minimum of disturbance to its
national economy? The phenomenon is so alien to European nature and European
experience that even to this day Western observers have been unable to
understand it. Japan is a "weird" nation, that is all the conclusion
they can come to on the subject. What European nation again would deal so
swiftly, directly and earnestly with its own national vices as the Chinese are
dealing with the opium vice in China? The very idea that China really meant it
was incredible to English observers. And well it might be, for one can imagine
what would be the fate of any such attempt to deal with the national vice of
drunkenness in England. If India is unable to show such signal triumphs, it is
because she has been disorganised by the merciless pressure of the alien rule
and all her centres of strength and action destroyed or disabled. Yet even so,
she has shown and is still showing signs of a prolonged and unconquerable
vitality such as no nation subject for an equally long time has evinced since
history began. It is this moral strength,
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this
ability to go to the roots, this gift of diving down into the depths of self and
drawing out the miraculous powers of the Will, this command over one's own soul
which is the secret of Asia. And he who is in possession of his soul, the
Scripture assures us, shall become the master of the world.
Bande Mataram,
July 3, 1907
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