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The Awakening Soul of India
NO NATIONAL
awakening is really vital and enduring which confines itself to a
single field. It is when the soul awakens that a nation is really alive, and
the life will then manifest itself in all the manifold forms of activity in
which man seeks to express the strength and the delight of the expansive spirit
within. It is for ānanda that the
world exists; for joy that the Self puts
Himself into the great and serious game of life; and the joy which He sees is
the joy of various self-expression. For this reason it is that no two men are
alike, no two nations are alike. Each has its own separate nature over and
above the common nature of humanity and it is not only the common human
impulses and activities but the satisfaction and development of its own separate
character and capacities that a nation demands. Denied that satisfaction and
development, it perishes. By two tests, therefore, the vitality of a national
movement can be judged. If it is imitative, imported, artificial, then,
whatever temporary success it may have, the nation is moving towards
self-sterilisation and death; even so the
nations of ancient Europe perished when they gave up their own individuality as
the price of Roman civilisation, Roman peace, Roman prosperity. If, on the
other hand, the peculiar individuality of a race stamps itself on the movement
in its every part and seizes on every new development as a means of
self-expression, then the nation wakes, lives and grows and whatever the
revolutions and changes of political, social or intellectual forms and
institutions, it is assured of its survival and aggrandisement.
The nineteenth century in India was imitative, self-forgetful,
artificial. It aimed at a successful reproduction of Europe in India,
forgetting the deep saying of the Gita,
"Better the law of one's own being though it be badly done than an alien dharma
well-followed; death in one's own dharma is better, it is a dangerous
thing to follow the law of another's nature." For death in one's own dharma
brings new birth, success in an alien path
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means only
successful suicide. If we had succeeded in Europeanising
ourselves, we would have lost for ever our spiritual capacity, our intellectual
force, our national elasticity and power of self-renovation. That tragedy has
been enacted more than once in history, only the worst and most mournful
example of all would have been added. Had the whole activity of the country
been of the derivative and alien kind, that result would have supervened. But
the life-breath of the nation still moved in the religious movements of Bengal
and the Punjab, in the political aspirations of Maharashtra
and in the literary activity of Bengal. Even here it was an undercurrent, the
peculiar temperament and vitality of India struggling for self-preservation
under a load of foreign ideas and foreign forms, and it was not till in the
struggle between these two elements the balance turned in favour of the
national dharma that the salvation of
India was assured. The resistance of the conservative element in Hinduism, tamasic, inert, ignorant, uncreative
though it was, saved the country by preventing an even more rapid and thorough
disintegration than actually took place and by giving respite and time for the persistent
national self to emerge and find itself. It was in religion first that the soul
of India awoke and triumphed. There were always indications, always great
forerunners, but it was when the flower of the educated youth of Calcutta bowed
down at the feet of an illiterate Hindu ascetic, a self-illuminated ecstatic
and "mystic" without a single trace or touch of the alien thought or
education upon him that the battle was won. The going forth of Vivekananda, marked out by the Master as the
heroic soul destined to take the world between his two hands and change it, was
the first visible sign to the world that India was awake not only to survive
but to conquer. Afterwards when the awakening was complete, a section of the
nationalist movement turned in imagination to a reconstruction of the recent pre-British past in all its details. This could
not be. Inertia, the refusal to expand and alter, is what our philosophy calls tamas, and an excess of tamas tends to disintegration and
disappearance. Aggression is necessary for self-preservation and, when a force
ceases to conquer, it ceases to live — that which remains stationary and stands
merely on the defensive, that which retires into and keeps within its own kot or
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base,
as the now defunct Sandhya used
graphically to put it, is doomed to defeat, diminution and final elimination
from the living things of the world. Hinduism has always been pliable and
aggressive; it has thrown itself on the
attacking force, carried its positions, plundered its treasures, made its own
everything of value it had and ended either in wholly annexing it or driving it
out by rendering its further continuation in the country purposeless and
therefore impossible. Whenever it has stood on the defensive, it has
contracted within narrower limits and shown temporary signs of decay.
Once the soul of the nation was awake in religion, it was only a
matter of time and opportunity for it to throw itself on all spiritual and
intellectual activities in the national existence and take possession of them.
The outburst of anti-European feeling which followed on the Partition gave the
required opportunity. Anger, vindictiveness
and antipathy are not in themselves laudable feelings, but God uses them for
His purposes and brings good out of evil. They drove listlessness
and apathy away and replaced them by energy and a powerful emotion; and that energy and emotion were seized upon by
the national self and turned to the uses of the future. The anger against
Europeans, the vengeful turning upon their commerce and its productions, the
antipathy to everything associated with them engendered a powerful stream of
tendency turning away from the immediate anglicised past, and the spirit which
had already declared itself in our religious life entered in by this broad
doorway into politics, and substituted a positive powerful yearning towards the
national past, a still more mighty and dynamic yearning towards a truly
national future. The Indian spirit has not yet conquered the whole field of our
politics in actuality, but it is there victoriously in sentiment; the rest is a
matter of time, and everything which is now happening in politics, is helping
to prepare for its true and potent expression. The future is now assured.
Religion and politics, the two most effective and vital expressions of the
nation's self having been nationalised, the rest will follow in due course. The
needs of our religious and political life are now vital and real forces and it
is these needs which will reconstruct our society, recreate and remould our
industrial and commercial life and
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found
a new and victorious art, literature, science and philosophy which will be not
European but Indian.
The impulse is already working in Bengali art and literature. The
need of self-expression for the national spirit in politics suddenly brought
back Bengali literature to its essential and eternal self and it was in our
recent national songs that this self-realisation came. The lyric and the
lyrical spirit, the spirit of simple, direct and poignant expression, of deep,
passionate, straightforward emotion, of a frank and exalted enthusiasm, the
dominant note of love and bhakti, of a mingled sweetness and strength,
the potent intellect dominated by the self-illuminated heart, a mystical
exaltation of feeling and spiritual insight expressing itself with a plain
concreteness and practicality — this is the soul of Bengal. All our literature,
in order to be wholly alive, must start from this base and, whatever variations
it may indulge in, never lose touch with it. In Bengal, again, the national
spirit is seeking to satisfy itself in art and, for the first time since the
decline of the Moguls, a new school of national art is developing itself, the
school of which Abanindranath Tagore is the founder and master. It is still troubled by the
foreign though Asiatic influence from which its master started, and has
something of an exotic appearance, but the development and self-emancipation of
the national self from this temporary domination can already be watched and
followed. There again, it is the spirit of Bengal that expresses itself. The
attempt to express in form and limit something of that which is formless and
illimitable is the attempt of Indian art. The Greeks, aiming at a smaller and
more easily attainable end, achieved a more perfect success. Their instinct for
physical form was greater than ours, our instinct for psychic shape and colour
was superior. Our future art must solve the problem of expressing the soul in
the object, the great Indian aim, while achieving anew the triumphant
combination of perfect interpretative form and colour. No Indian has so strong
an instinct for form as the Bengali. In addition to the innate Vedantism of all Indian races, he has an
all-powerful impulse towards delicacy, grace and strength, and it is these
qualities to which the new school of art has instinctively turned in its first
inception. Unable to find a perfect model in the scanty relics of old Indian
art, it
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was
only natural that it should turn to Japan for help, for delicacy and grace are
there triumphant. But Japan has not the secret of expressing the deepest soul
in the object, it has not the aim. And the Bengali spirit means more than the
union of delicacy, grace and strength; it
has the lyrical mystic impulse; it has the
passion for clarity and concreteness and as
in our literature, so in our art we see these tendencies emerging — an emotion
of beauty, a nameless sweetness and spirituality pervading the clear line and
form. Here, too, it is the free spirit of the nation beginning to emancipate
itself from the foreign limitations and shackles.
No department of our life can escape this great regenerating and
reconstructing force. There is not the slightest doubt that our society will
have to undergo a reconstruction which may amount to revolution, but it will
not be for Europeanisation as the average
reformer blindly hopes, but for a greater and more perfect realisation of the
national spirit in society. Not individual selfishness and mutually consuming
struggle but love and the binding of individuals into a single inseparable life
is the national impulse.
It sought to fulfil itself in the past by the bond of blood in the joint
family, by the bond of a partial communism in the village system, by the bond
of birth and a corporate sense of honour in the caste. It may seek a more
perfect and spiritual bond in the future. In commerce also so long as we follow
the European spirit and European model, the individual competitive selfishness,
the bond of mere interest in the joint-stock company or that worst and most
dangerous development of co-operative Capitalism, the giant octopus-like Trust
and Syndicate, we shall never succeed in rebuilding a healthy industrial life.
It is not these bonds which can weld Indians together. India moves to a deeper
and greater life than the world has yet imagined possible and it is when she
has found the secret of expressing herself in those various activities that her
industrial and social life will become strong and expansive.
Nationalism has been hitherto largely a revolt against the tendency
to shape ourselves into the mould of Europe; but it must also be on its guard
against any tendency to cling to every detail that has been Indian. That has
not been the spirit of Hinduism in the past, there is no reason why it should
be so in
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the future. In all
life there are three elements, the fixed and permanent spirit, the developing
yet constant soul and the brittle changeable body. The spirit we cannot change,
we can only obscure or lose; the soul must
not be rashly meddled with, must neither be tortured into a shape alien to it,
nor obstructed in its free expansion; and
the body must be used as a means, not over-cherished as a thing valuable for
its own sake. We will sacrifice no ancient form to an unreasoning love of
change, we will keep none which the national spirit desires to replace by one
that is a still better and truer expression of the undying soul of the nation.
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