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The
New Ideal
THE
need of a great ideal was never more keenly
felt than it is in India at the present day. Nowhere have so many weaknesses
combined to stand in the way of a nation in the whole range of history. Nowhere
have the rulers reduced their subjects to so complete, pervading and abject a
material helplessness. When the Mogul ruled, he ruled as a soldier and a
conqueror, in the pride of his strength, in the confidence of his invincible
greatness, as the lord of the peoples by natural right of his imperial character
and warlike strength and skill. He stooped to no meanness, hedged himself in
with no army of spies, entered into no relations with foreign powers, but,
grandiose and triumphant, sat on the throne of a continent like Indra on his
heavenly seat, master of his world because there was none strong enough to
dispute it with him. He trusted his subjects, gave them positions of power and
responsibility, used their brain and arm to preserve his conquests and by the
royalty of that trust and noble pride in his own ability to stand by his innate
strength, was able to hold India for over a century until Aurangzebe forgot the
Kuladharma of hi use and by distrust, tyranny and meanness lost for his
descendants the splendid heritage of his forefathers. The present domination is
a rule of shopkeepers who are at the same time bureaucrats, a combination of the
worst possible qualities for imperial Government. The shopkeeper rules by
deceit, the bureaucrat by the use of red tape. The shopkeeper by melancholy
meanness alienates the subject population, the bureaucrat by soulless rigidity
deprives the administration of life and human sympathy. The shopkeeper uses his
position of authority to push his wares and fleece his subjects, the bureaucrat
forgets his duty and loses his royal character in his mercantile greed. The
shopkeeper becomes a pocket Machiavel, the bureaucrat a gigantic retail trader.
By this confusion of dharmas, varnasankara is born in high places and the
nation first and the rulers afterwards go to perdition.
Page-834
This
is what has happened in India under the present regime. The bureaucracy have
ruled in the spirit of a mercantile power, holding its position by aid of
mercenaries, afraid of its subjects, with no confidence in its destiny, with no
trust even in the mercenaries who support it, piling up gold with one hand, with
the other holding a borrowed sword over the head of a fallen people. It has
sought its strength not in the mission with which God had entrusted it, nor in
the greatness of England, her mastery of the ocean, her pride of unconquered
prowess, her just and sympathetic principle of government, but in the weakness
of the people. The strength of England has been held as a threat in the
background, not as a source of quiet and unostentatious self-confidence which
enable the rulers to be generous as well as just. The liberal principles of
English rule have been chanted as a sort of magic mantra to hypnotise the
nation into willing subjection, not used as a living principle of government.
What have been the real sources of bureaucratic strength? An Arms act, a corrupt
and oppressive police, an army of spies, a mercenary military force officered by
Englishmen, a people emasculated, kept ignorant, out of the world's life, poor,
intimidated, abjectly under the thumb of the police constable or the provincial
prefect. Such a principle of rule cannot endure. It contradicts the law of God
and offends the reason of man; it is as unprofitable as it is selfish and
heartless.
The nation which has passed through a century of such a misgovernment
must necessarily have degenerated. The bureaucracy has taken care to destroy
every centre of strength not subservient to itself. A nation politically
disorganised, a nation morally corrupted, intellectually pauperised, physically
broken and stunted is the result of a hundred years of British rule, the account
which England can give before God of the trust which He placed in her hands. The
condition of the people is the one answer to all the songs of praise which the
bureaucrats sing of their rule, which the people of England chorus with such a
smug self-satisfaction and which even foreign peoples echo in the tune of
admiration and praise. But for us the people who have suffered, the victims of
the miserable misuse which bureaucrats have made of the noblest opportunity God
ever gave to a nation, the song has no longer any charm, the mantra has
lost its hypno-
Page-835
tic
force, the spell has ceased to work. While we could we deceived ourselves, but
we can deceive ourselves no longer. Pain is a terrible disillusioner and the
pangs which had come upon us were those of approaching dissolution. It was at
the last moment, when further delay would have meant death, that a higher than
earthly physician administered through a proud viceroy the potent poison of
Partition and saved the life of India. The treatment of the disease has been
drastic and will continue to be drastic. There are those who dream of mild
remedies, whose beautiful souls will not bear to think of the fierceness of
strife, hatred or agony which a revolution implies; but strong poisons are the
only salvation in desperate diseases and we fear that without these poisons
India will not easily or ever recover from the fatal and consuming disease which
has overtaken her. What will support her under the stress of the agony she will
have to undergo? What strength will help her to shake off the weaknesses which
have crowded in on her? How will she raise herself from the dust whom a thousand
shackles bind down? Only the strength of a superhuman ideal, only the gigantic
force of a superhuman will, only the vehemence of an effort which transcends all
that man has done and approaches divinity. Where will she find that strength,
that force, that vehemence? In herself. We have seen Ramamurti, the modern
Bhimasen, lie motionless, resistant, with a superhuman force of will-power acting
through the muscles while two carts loaded with men are driven over his body.
India must undergo an ordeal of passive endurance far more terrible without
relaxing a single fibre of her frame. We have seen Ramamurti break over his
chest a strong iron chain tightened round his whole body and break it by the
sheer force of will working through the body. India must work a similar
deliverance for herself by the same inner force. It is not by strength of body
that Ramamurti accomplishes his feats, for he is not stronger than many athletes
who could never do what he does daily, but by faith and will. India has in
herself a faith of superhuman virtue to accomplish miracles, to deliver herself
out of irrefragable bondage, to bring God down upon earth. She has a secret of
will power which no other nation possesses. All she needs to rouse in her that
faith, that will, is an ideal which will
Page-836
induce
her to make the effort. That ideal is now being preached by Srijut Bepin Chandra
Pal in every speech he delivers and never has it been delivered with such beauty
of expression, such a passion of earnestness and pathos, such a sublimity of
feeling as at Uttarpara on Sunday when he addressed a meeting of the people in
the compound of the Uttarpara Library. The ideal is that of humanity in God, of
God in humanity, the ancient ideal of the sanātana dharma but applied,
as it has never been applied before, to the problem of politics and the work of
national revival. To realise that ideal, to impart it to the world is the
mission of India. She has evolved a religion which embraces all that the heart,
the brain, the practical faculty of man can desire but she has not yet applied
it to the problems of modern politics. This therefore is the work which she has
still to do before she can help humanity; the necessity of the mission is the
justification for her resurgence, the great incentive of saving herself to save
mankind is the native power which will give her the force, the strength, the
vehemence which can alone enable her to realise her destiny. No lesser ideal
will help her through the stress of the terrible ordeal which she will in a few
years be called to face. No hope less pure will save her from the demoralisation
which follows revolutionary strife, the growth of passions, a violent
selfishness, sanguinary hatred, insufferable licences, the disruption of
moralities, the resurgence of the tiger in man which a great revolution is apt
to foster. Srijut Bepin Chandra speaks under an inspiration which he himself is
unable to resist. The public wish to hear
him
on Swaraj, Swadeshi, Boycott, National Education
—
the old subjects of his unparalleled
eloquence, and he himself may desire to speak on them, but the voice of a
prophet is not his own to speak the thing he will, but another's to speak the
thing he must. India needed the gospel of Swaraj, Swadeshi, Boycott and National
Education to nerve her to her first effort, but now that she is drawing nearer
to the valley of the shadow of Death she needs a still mightier inspiration, a
still more enthusiastic and all-conquering faith. The people have not yet
understood, but the power to understand is in them, and if any voice can awake
that power, it is Bepin Chandra's.
Bande Mataram,
April
7, 1908
Page-837
The
"Indu" and the Dhulia Conference
Non-Party
Lines
The Reception Committee of the Dhulia
Conference has fallen under the ban of the Indu Prakash because it has
dared to attempt a compromise in which the views of the "Extremists"
have not been completely ignored. The only "compromise" which
Moderates are prepared to accept is one in which Nationalism is ignored and the
Nationalists make a complete surrender. It is strange to find these
irreconcilable fanatics of separatism posing as men of sobriety and moderation,
these ignorers of every principle of constitutional action posing as
constitutionalists. The framing of two or three resolutions of self-help and
the repetition of three of the Calcutta Congress resolutions is described by the
organ of Sir Pherozshah as the capture of the Conference by Extremism. The Dhulia Reception Committee have framed fifteen resolutions of which the first
three are the Congress resolutions on Self-Government, Swadeshi and National
Education; the fourth is a resolution for an united Congress on the lines
settled at the Calcutta Congress; the fifth is for village organisation and
arbitration; the ninth advocates physical culture. These six resolutions are the
only ones which have the slightest nationalist tinge, and it must be remembered
that the first is a Moderate and not a Nationalist resolution. The rest are
petitionary resolutions of the ancient type, the last of them compromising a
respectable-sized omnibus full of petitions. To our mind, it seems that the
Dhulia Nationalists have compromised
with a vengeance and if ever there was a Conference
framed on non-party lines, this deserves the description. But
our excellent old Moonshine will not allow anything to be non-party which
is not entirely Moderate.
Prescriptive
Rights
The first offence of the Conference is that it has not
said ditto to the suggestion of the Bombay. Presidency Association to postpone
the Conference till October by which time the Mode-
Page-838
rates
could have made all arrangements for holding the Congress according to their
will and pleasure and would have pleaded that it was too late to make any
change. The Association has by prescription been organising Conferences, says
the Indu, and so to ignore its opinion is Extremism. The idea of an
Association in Bombay city having the prescriptive right to organise Conferences
and dictate to the Reception Committee, is one of those staggering assumptions
which the Bombay Moderate brain puts forth with an appallingly cheerful defiance
of common sense, logic and constitutional principles unintelligible to the
ordinary man. Might we be allowed to suggest that the early part of the year is
now generally accepted as the proper time for a Provincial Conference and that
the Bombay Association has no more right to be obeyed in this or any other
matter than, say, the Moderate Convention?
The
Calcutta Resolutions
The
Indu proceeds to put forward the remarkable argument that the Conference
could have been an united success only if all contentious matter relating to
Congress politics had been scrupulously omitted, considering that almost all
matters which come before the Congress now involve more or less the contentions
as to principles which divide the Congress, this amounts to saying that an
united Conference is impossible, — a confession of the country's political
incapacity which is redolent of Sir Pherozshah Mehta. The next complaint is that
the Moderates did not try to force their creed on the Conference, while the
Extremists have unblushingly pushed their hobby of the Calcutta positions. We
invite the attention of the country to the practical admission that the
Moderates are opposed to the Calcutta resolutions, an admission which may be
advantageously compared with the repeated Moderate protestations that there
was never any intention of drawing back from the Calcutta positions. Our answer
to the contention is that the Calcutta resolutions are in the nature of a
compromise by which both parties with their programmes are given scope in the
Congress and are
Page-839
therefore
not of a party character but the sole possible basis for united work; the creed
on the other hand is avowedly of a party character and intended to exclude
Nationalists from the Congress. It was for this reason that the Moderates and
Nationalists at Dhulia, being sincerely desirous of union, accepted the former
and avoided the latter. This is a fact which the Bombay Moderates find it
convenient to misrepresent, but it has been clearly
recognised
both at Pabna and Dhulia;
—
the Calcutta
resolutions are not "Extremist"
positions, but a compromise between the parties; as such the Nationalists hold
to them and not as a hobby or as their "creed".
Ignoring and Defying
This
resolution, says the Indu, is an attempt "to ignore and defy the
Convention Committee (and commit the Conference to the lines of the Bodas Ghose
Committee) the unconstitutionalism of which we exposed the other day." We have
unfortunately missed this no doubt luminous exposure, but we are curious to know
by what principle of constitutionalism the Convention Committee enjoys any
authority over a Provincial Conference for it to defy, or holds any position
which it is not at perfect liberty to ignore. What part has a Convention which
was avowedly a party Convention excluding over six hundred Congress delegates,
in the constitution of the Congress? The Provinces are at liberty to ignore both
Committees equally, for neither has at present any constitutional authority or
position, if the Congress is alive. If the Congress is dead, there can be no
talk of constitution; at most the Convention and the Conference are co-legators
and divide the property. The question for a Provincial Conference is not between
one committee and another, but between union and division, the death of the
Congress or its resuscitation.
The Calcutta Compromise
Finally,
the Indu after sneering at the Calcutta resolutions as an
Page-840
Extremist
creed, itself charges the Reception Committee with disloyalty to the Calcutta
position, because they have adopted the Self-Government resolution without
taking on a rider about Legislative Councils and other "steps" to
Self-Government. We know it is the position of the Mehta clique that even
Self-Government is a far off, almost impracticable dream and that we should in
the meanwhile be satisfied with small reforms. The Calcutta Congress fixed
Colonial Self-Government as a practical demand, a thing which should be extended
to India, but it did not as the Indu pretends, fix a far off date for the
extension, only knowing that its demand, though perfectly and immediately
practical (otherwise the expression "should be extended" has no
meaning) would not be granted, it demanded certain reforms as steps towards
Colonial Self-Government. The Dhulia Conference does precisely the same though
the "steps" are asked for in separate resolutions. The Calcutta
Congress, as a compromise, combined petitions with self-help, a resolution for
National Education with a prayer for the extension of Government education. The
Dhulia Conference does precisely the same. The Indu discovers the
inconsistency of this position with the air of Newton discovering the law of
gravitation. Inconsistent it is, but the Calcutta resolutions are not an essay
in logic, they are a compromise between two entirely different programmes, of
which the fittest will survive. We have noticed the arguments of the Indu at
length because it is necessary for the country to realise the sort of shufflings
by which it is sought to justify the policy of "divide and serve" on
which the Bombay clique has set its heart. If we can save the Congress, we will,
but if it is broken, this time at least the responsibility shall rest on the
right shoulders.
Bande Mataram,
April 8, 1908
Page-841
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