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The One Thing Needful
A SORT
of atavism is at work in the Indian consciousness at the present moment which is
drawing it back into the spirit of the fathers of the race who laid the
foundations of our being thousands of years ago. Perhaps as a reaction from the
excessively outward direction which our life had taken since the European
invasion, the spirit of the race has taken refuge in the sources of its past and
begun to bathe in the fountains of its being. A reversion such as this is the
sole cure for national decay. Every nation has certain sources of vitality which
have made it what it is and can always, if drawn upon in time, protect it from
disintegration. The secret of its life is to be found in the recesses of its own
being.
The root of the past is the source from which the future draws its sap
and if the tree is to be saved it must constantly draw from that source for
sustenance. The root may be fed from outside, but that food will have to be
assimilated and turned to sap in the root before it can nourish the trunk. All
nations therefore when they receive anything from outside steep it first in
their own individuality before it can form part of their culture and national
life. India has always done this with all outside forces which sought to find
entry into her silent and meditative being. She has suffused them with her
peculiar individuality so completely that their foreign origin is no longer recognisable. If she had done the same with European civilisation,
she would have been the first Asiatic
nation to rise and show the way to her congeners. But at
the time when Europe forced itself upon her, her political life was at its
nadir. Exhausted by the long struggle to substitute a new centre of national
life for the effete Mogul, she was too weak and void of energy to bring her once
robust individuality to bear upon the alien thought of the West. She allowed it
to enter her being whole and undigested. The result was a rapid disintegration
of her own individuality and a hastening of the process of decay which had set
in as a result of the prolonged anarchy
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of the post-Mogul period. If there had been no reaction,
the process would have been soon over and, whatever race finally occupied India,
it would not have been the Indian race. For that race would have slowly perished
as the Greek, when he parted with the springs of his life, perished and gave way
to the Slav, or as the Egyptian perished and gave way to the Berber. This fate
has been averted because a great wave of reaction passed over the country and
sent a stream of the old life and thought of India beating into the veins of
the country and brought it to bear on the foreign matter which was eating up the
body of the nation. That process of assimilation has just begun and its effects
will not be palpable for many years to come. It will first effect its purpose on
the political life of the people, then on its society, last on its literature,
thought and speech. The effect on the political life is already visible, but it
cannot fulfil itself until the political power is in the hands of the people. No
political change can work itself out until the forces of change have taken
possession of the government, because it is through the government that the
functions of political life work. This is their organ and there can be no other.
The possession of the government by the people is therefore the first condition
of Indian regeneration. Until this is attained, nothing else can be attained.
The new forces will no doubt work quietly on society and on literature, but in
an imperfect fashion from which no great results can be anticipated.
Society lives by the proper harmony of its parts and bases that harmony
on the centre of power in which the whole community is summed up, the State. If
the State is diseased, the community cannot be healthy. If the State is foreign
and inorganic, the community cannot live an organic life. If the State be
hostile, the community is doomed. The first want of a subject people is the
possession of the State, without which it can neither be socially sound nor
intellectually great. It was for this reason that Mazzini whose natural
tendencies were literary and poetic, turned
away
from literature
and denied his abilities their natural expression
with the memorable words, "The art of Italy will flourish on our
graves." No great work can be done by a community which is diseased at the
centre or deprived of a centre. The hope of social reform divorced from
political freedom, unless by social
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reform
we mean the aping of European habits of life and social ideas, is an illogical
hope which ignores the nature of social life and the conditions of its
well-being. All expectation of moral regeneration which leaves freedom out of
the count is a dream. First freedom, then regeneration. This is a truism which
we have been obliged to dwell on because there are still remnants of the first
delusive teachings which have done so much harm to India by trying to realise
social reform without providing the element in which alone any reform is
possible.
To recover possession of the State is therefore the first business of the
awakened Indian consciousness. If this is so, then it is obvious that the
political liberation of India cannot be put off to a distant date as a thing
which can be worked out at leisure, with the slow pace of the snail, by creeping
degrees of senile caution. It must be done now. It is the first condition of
life which must be satisfied if the nation is to survive. On this the whole
energies of the people must be concentrated and no other will-o'-the-wisp of
social reform, moral regeneration, educational improvement ought to be allowed
to interfere with the stupendous, single-souled effort which can alone effect
the political salvation of the country. No reasonable reformer ought to be put
out by the demand for the precedence being given to political salvation, because
it is obvious that the political resurgence of the nation involves and
necessitates a regeneration of the society by the great change of spirit and
environment which it will bring about. When the whole life of the nation is full
of the spirit of freedom and it lives in the great life of the world, then only
can the work of the reformer be successful. The preoccupation with politics
which seized Bengal after the Partition was a healthy symptom. Recently there
has been a tendency in some quarters to revive the old dissipation of energies,
to put social reform first, education first or moral regeneration first, and
leave freedom to result from these. The mistake should be checked before it
gains ground. Whatever reform, social, moral or educational, is necessary to
bring about freedom, the effort of the whole people to bring about freedom will
automatically effect. More is impossible until freedom itself is attained. No
attempt to effect social reform for its own sake has any chance
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of
success, because it will at once reawaken the old bitter struggle between the
past and the present which baffled the efforts of the reformers. What the nation
needs, it will carry out by the force of its necessity; but it is vain to expect
it to dissipate its energies on what is for the moment superfluous. First we
must live, afterwards we can learn to live well. The effort to survive must for
some years command all our energies and absorb all our time.
Bande Mataram,
April 25, 1908
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