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College Square Speech*
I
THANK you for the kindly welcome that you have
accorded to me. The time fixed by the law for the breaking up of the meetings
is also at hand, and I am afraid I have disappointed one or two speakers by
getting up so soon. But there is just one word that has to be spoken today.
sir
E. baker's
speech
Recently a speech has been made in the Bengal
Legislative Council by the Lieutenant-Governor of this province, a speech which
I think is one of the most unfortunate and most amazing that have ever been
delivered by a ruler in his position. The occasion of the speech was a
reference to certain murders that have recently been committed in London. Those
murders have been committed by a young man and there has been no proof that any
other man in India or in England is connected with him, no proof that any
conspiracy has been behind him. Not only so but the Police in London have
declared that so far as their evidence goes they find that the murder was
dictated by personal and not political motives. That crime is still the subject
of a trial which has not been closed. Was this the time, — was this the occasion
for the Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal to rise from his seat in the Legislative
Council and practically associate, practically make the whole country
responsible for the crime of a single isolated youth in London ? Not only so,
but the Lieutenant-Governor, in referring to the crime, said that there had
been plenty of denunciations in this country but those denunciations did not go
far. And he wanted from us one thing more and that was co-operation. He wants
co-operation from the whole community. He further saddled his request with the
threat that if this co-operation were not obtained, steps would have to be
taken
* Speech
delivered on 18th July, 1909 when presiding at the meeting in College Square,
Calcutta.
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in which there would be no room for nice
discrimination between the innocent and the guilty.
The murders that have been committed in Bengal
have been sufficiently proved by the failure of case after case to be the acts
of isolated individuals. There has been only a single instance which is still
sub judice, and even if it were fully established, it would only prove that
the crime was done in one case by a small group of men. Under such circumstances
what is the cooperation that the L.-G. demands from us ? He will not be
satisfied if we denounce and dissociate ourselves from the crime. He wants
co-operation. It is at least desirable that he should name and describe the
co-operation he insists on before he carries out the remarkable threat with
which he has sought to enforce his demand. There has been much talk recently, in
a wider sense, of co-operation. Now, gentlemen, we are a people who demand
self-government. We have a government with which we are not at all associated
and over which we have no control. What is the co-operation a government of this
kind can really demand from us ? It can only demand from us obedience to the
law, co-operation in keeping the law and observing peace and order. What further
co-operation can they expect from us ? Even in the matter which the L.-G. has
mentioned, we are at a loss to see how a people circumstanced like ourselves can
help him. Still I have a proposal to make. I think there is only one way by
which these unfortunate occurrences can be stopped. The ruler of Bengal in his
speech spoke in approval of a certain speech made by Mr. Gokhale at Poona
recently. In that speech Mr. Gokhale declared that the ideal of independence was
an ideal which no sane man could hold. He said that it was impossible to achieve
independence by peaceful means and the people who advocate the peaceful methods
of passive resistance are men who, out of cowardice, do not speak out the
thought that is in their heart. That idea of Mr. Gokhale has been contradicted
beforehand by the Sessions Judge of Alipore and even an Anglo-Indian paper was
obliged to say that Mr. Gokhale's justification of the repressions on the ground
that stern and relentless repression was the only possible attitude the
Government could adopt towards the ideal of independence was absurd because the
ideals and the
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thoughts
of a nation could not be punished. This was a very dangerous teaching which Mr.
Gokhale introduced into his speech, that the
ideal of independence — whether we call it Swaraj or autonomy or Colonial
Self-Government, because these two things in
a country circumstanced like India meant in practice the same (loud applause),
— cannot be achieved by peaceful means; Mr. Gokhale knows or
ought to know that this ideal which he decries is deeply rooted in the minds of
thousands of people and cannot be driven out. He has told the ardent hearts
which cherish this ideal of independence and are determined to strive towards
it that their ideal can only be achieved by violent means. If any doctrine can
be dangerous, if any teacher can be said to have uttered words dangerous to the
peace of the country, it is Mr. Gokhale himself. (Loud cheers). We have
told the people that there is a peaceful means of achieving independence in
whatever form we aspire to it. We have said that by self-help, by passive resistance
we can achieve it. We have told the young men of our country, "Build up
your own industries, build up your own schools and colleges, settle your own
disputes. You are always told that you are not fit for self-government. Show by
example that you are fit to govern yourselves, show it by developing
self-government through self-help and not by depending upon others." There
is a second limb to that policy and it is passive resistance. Passive
resistance means two things. It means, first, that in certain matters we shall
not co-operate with the Government of this country until it gives us what we
consider our rights. Secondly, if we are persecuted, if the plough of
repression is passed over us, we shall meet it not by violence, but by
suffering, by passive resistance, by lawful means. We have not said to our
young men, "When you are repressed, retaliate"; we have said, "Suffer." Now we are told that by
doing so we are encouragers of sedition and
anarchism. We have been told by Anglo-Indian papers that by speaking in Beadon Square and other places on patriotism and
the duty of suffering we encourage sedition. We are told that in preaching
passive resistance we are encouraging the people to violate law and order and
are fostering violence and rebellion. The contrary is the truth. We are showing
the people of this country in passive resistance the
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only way in which
they can satisfy their legitimate aspiration without breaking the law and
without resorting to violence. This is the only way we can find to co-operate
in maintaining peace and order. The co-operation we expect from the
Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal and from the Government of this country in return
is that they will respect the primary rights of the people of this country,
they will respect the right of public meeting and the right of a free Press and
the right of free association. If they co-operate so far then we can assure
them that this movement will advance on peaceful lines and the thing which
troubles them will cease for ever. But the L.-G.
says that measures will be passed which will observe no nice discrimination
between the innocent and the guilty. A more cynical statement has seldom
issued from a ruler in the position of Sir Edward Baker. If the threat is
carried out, who will be the gainers ? I do
not deny that it may for a time stop our public activities. It may force the
school of peaceful self-development and passive resistance to desist for a
while from its activities at least in their present form. But who will gain by
it ? Not the Government, neither Mr. Gokhale
and his school of passive co-operation. It is the very terrorists, the very
anarchists, whom you wish to put down, who will gain by it. It will remove from
the people their one hope, but it will give the terrorists a fresh incentive
and it will teach the violent hearts, the undisciplined and ardent minds a very
dangerous lesson that there is no peaceful way to the fulfilment of their
aspirations and the consequence will be such as one trembles to contemplate. I
trust the threat will never be carried out. I trust that the Government will be
ruled by wise counsels and consider the matter more carefully. There are
ominous signs and it seems as if measures were about to be passed which will
put an end to the right of public meeting and the public expression of our
feelings. But I trust that wiser counsels will yet prevail. The Government
should remember that it stands dissociated from the people by its very
constitution. If it wants co-operation it cannot get the co-operation which is
simply another name for passive obedience. That is the doctrine which is being
taught today, the doctrine of the divine right of officials and the obligation
on the people of passive obedience. That is a doctrine which no modern
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nation can accept.
No modern nation can accept the extinction of its legitimate and natural hopes.
Co-operation can only be given if the Government which is now alien becomes our
own, if the people have a share in it, not merely in name, not merely by the right
of talk in the Legislative Council, not merely by apparent concessions, but by
getting some measure of control in the matter of legislation, in the
expenditure of the taxes they are called on to pay for the maintenance of the
administration, if, in short, they can be given some starting-point from which
in future the Government of the country can be developed into a Government of
the people. That is the only condition upon which the co-operation, of which
we hear so much nowadays, can be given. Without it co-operation is a satire,
it is a parody. It is the co-operation in which one side acts and the other
side merely says "yes" which is demanded of us. We cannot give our
sanction to such cooperation. So long as even that little of substantial self-government is not conceded to us, we have
no choice but to cleave firmly to passive resistance as the only peaceful path
to the realisation of our legitimate aspirations. We cannot sacrifice our
country. We cannot give up the ideal that is dear to our heart. We cannot
sacrifice our Mother. If you take away our primary rights all that is left for
us is passive resistance and peacefully to suffer, peacefully to refuse the
parody of co-operation which we are asked to give.
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