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The Nagpur Imbroglio
IT
IS
difficult to get authentic and undisputed
news of the Nagpur imbroglio, but if report is to be believed, there is a better
chance than before of a satisfactory working compromise. It is in every way
desirable that the present difficulties should be smoothed over if that can be
done without any sacrifice to essential principle, and for any such compromise
it is essential for both sides to recognise that while they may and should fight
stubbornly for their principles both outside and inside the Congress, yet the
National Assembly itself is not the monopoly of either. A great deal of clamour
has been raised by the Moderates of Nagpur and Bombay over the outbursts of
excited popular feeling in which a few Loyalists were roughly handled, and use
has been freely made of them to obscure the real issue. It is well therefore
that this incident, which we must all regret, should be understood in its true
light. The Moderate majority on the Nagpur Reception Committee happens to be a
factitious majority and most of the members take no sustained interest in the
Committee work, while the Nationalist minority are alert and active. At the
meeting which elected the Executive Committee the Moderates did not attend
except in small numbers and a strong Nationalist majority was elected. The
inconveniences of this tactical defeat were very soon felt by the Moderate Party
and after a fashion to which they are unfortunately too much addicted, they
tried to remedy their original error by riding roughshod over procedure and the
unwritten law that guides the conduct of all public bodies. Mr. Chitnavis, one
of the Secretaries, called on his own initiative a fresh meeting to elect a new
Executive in which the Moderates should predominate. Dr. Munje, also a
Secretary, was perfectly within his rights in opposing the bare-faced illegality
of this unconstitutional procedure and refusing to allow the meeting to be held.
Meanwhile, great popular excitement had been created and there was a strong
feeling of indignation among the students and people in general
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against the Moderate aristocrats of Nagpur
and when they issued from the abortive meeting, they were angrily received by
the crowd waiting outside and handled in a very rough and unseemly manner. This
was certainly regrettable, but it is absurd to make the Nationalist leaders in
Nagpur responsible for the outburst. All that they did was to baffle a very
discreditable attempt to defy all constitutional procedure and public decorum in
the interests of party trickery, and in doing so they were entirely right.
A persistent attempt has also
been made to prejudice the Nagpur Nationalists in the eyes of the country and
obscure the real question by grossly misrepresenting their action with regard to
the issue about the Presidentship. By the rule formulated at last year's
Congress — a rule we have always considered foolish and unworkable
— the local Reception Committee has to
elect the President for the year by a three-fourths majority, and, if they
cannot do so, the decision rests with the All-India Congress Committee. This
arrangement is admirably conceived for swelling the Congress funds on the one
hand and for defeating public opinion on the other. The Reception Committee is
not an elected or representative body but is constituted on a money basis, as
any one who can pay twenty-five rupees or get another to pay it for him can have
his name enrolled as a member. Whichever side has the longer purse can secure
the election of the President of its choice. Such an election is no more likely
to represent public opinion than Mr. Morley's Council of Notables is likely to
represent it. Like the Council of Notables, it will represent the opinion of the
moneyed aristocracy, the men of position and purse, the men "with a stake in the
country". Nevertheless, the rule is there and so long as it stands, it must be
observed. The position in Nagpur as in the Deccan is this, that the Loyalist
Moderate Party is composed of the wealthy, successful and high-placed men, the
retired officials, the Rai Sahebs and Rai Bahadurs, the comfortable professional
men and those who pride themselves on their English education and Western
enlightenment and look down with contempt on the ignorant masses. On the other
hand, the young men and the poorer middle class form the bulk of the Nationalist
Party, although it contains a
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minority of the wealthier men. The lines
of divergence are therefore somewhat different from those in Bengal and the gulf
between the two parties wider both in opinion and in spirit. In Bombay or Nagpur
it would be perfectly impossible for a man like Srijut Surendranath Banerji to
be a leader of the Moderates; he would be looked on with suspicion, continually
checked, snubbed, thrust into the shadow and eventually forced out of the camp.
The struggle over the
Presidentship in Nagpur followed lines necessitated by the character of the two
parties. The Moderates relied on the length of their purse, the Nationalists
appealed to the people. A few Moderates of wealth advanced money and filled the
Reception Committee with men of their persuasion, who were therefore in a sense
paid to vote for any President proposed by their wealthy patrons. The
Nationalists, on the other hand, created a Nationalist organisation or Rashtriya
Mandali and invited all who were willing to become members of the Reception
Committee on condition that Mr. Tilak became President to send in the
requisite sum, not to the Reception Committee but to the Rashtriya Mandali.
Eventually it was found that though the total sum raised by the Nationalists was
much larger than that contributed by the Moderate magnates, yet the votes it
represented fell short of three-fourths. It was decided, therefore, after paying
in the sums sent in unconditionally to the Congress funds, to devote the rest to
some Nationalist purpose, preferably the creation of a National School in Nagpur.
This decision has been deliberately misrepresented as a perversion of Congress
funds and a refusal on the part of the Nationalist Party to contribute their
share of the Congress expenses. The money was expressly sent in on the condition
and with the proviso that the contributors would become members of the Reception
Committee only if there was a certainty of Mr. Tilak's being elected, and
for this reason it was sent in to the Rashtriya Mandali and not to the Congress
Committee, as the latter could not accept conditional contributions. In the
disposal of these monies, therefore, Mr. Tilak not having been elected, the
Congress has no concern whatever and the Moderate Party less than none; it is a
matter entirely between the Nationalist
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organisation and its contributors. Yet it
is on these and similarly flimsy pretexts that the Moderate magnates have
withdrawn from the Reception Committee.
A compromise can now be
arrived at only on condition that the present constitution of the Executive
Committee is not interfered with and that the Congress session will be duly held
at Nagpur. To transfer the Congress to Madras or any other centre for the
convenience of the Moderate Party while there are men willing to hold it in
Nagpur, would mean a definite and final split in the Congress camp, which would
turn the Congress into a Rump of Loyalists and Moderates possibly with a
Nationalist Assembly standing in opposition to it. The All-India Committee is
not likely to force on such an undesirable consummation. Whoever mayor may not
retire himself from the Reception Committee, the body itself remains and is the
only one constitutionally capable of holding the session this year. On the other
hand, the rule of the three-fourths majority remains and if Mr. Tilak's
followers cannot secure this for their nominee, the Nationalists cannot lower
themselves by attempting to secure his election by any unfair or
unconstitutional means. They may also meet the Moderates halfway by raising
further funds as their share of the Congress expenditure. If Mr. Tilak is not
elected, it does not matter to us, in the absence of Lala Lajpat Rai, whether
Dr. Rash Behari Ghose or any other figurehead graces the Presidential seat, and
this need not be a cause of further quarrel. On the basis of Dr. Ghose's
election and the status quo in other respects a compromise ought not to
be impossible, and at the present juncture it is undoubtedly desirable. We hope
that good sense and not party feeling will prevail.
Bande Mataram,
October 29, 1907
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