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Facts and Opinions
Volume I - August
14,1909 - Number 8
The
"Englishman" on Boycott
The speech of Sj. Bhupendranath Bose at the Boycott celebration and the
Open Letter of Sj. Aurobindo Ghose have put the Englishman in a difficulty. It has been the habit of this paper to
lay stress on any facts or suggestions real or imaginary which it could
interpret as pointing to violence and so persistently damn the movement as one
not only revolutionary in the magnitude of the changes at which it aims but
violently revolutionary in its purposed methods. The speech and the open
letter have cut this imaginary ground away from under its feet. As a matter of
fact there is nothing new in the attitude of either the Moderate or the
Nationalist leader. What they say now they have said always. The Moderate party
have always been in favour of constitutional methods which, whatever be the
precise meaning of that phrase in a country where no constitution exists, must
certainly exclude illegality and violence. The Nationalists on their side have
always, while repudiating the principle that men are under all circumstances
bound to obey unjust or injurious laws imposed without national consent,
advocated observance of the law in the circumstances of India both on grounds
of policy and in the interests of sound national development. Passive
resistance to arbitrary edicts and proclamations in order to assert civic
rights, test illegal ukases or compel their recall is not breach of the law but
a recognised weapon in the defence of civic liberty. Yet the Englishman
chooses to save its face by imagining a change of front in the Boycott policy.
There is no change. The Boycott has always been a movement within the law and
such it remains. If there have been some individual excesses, that no more
detracts from the legality of the movement than the excesses of individual
strikers would affect the legality of a strike. The Englishman is full
of anxiety as to the best way to meet the imagined change of front. With great sapiency it
Page
– 143
suggests
to the Government the free use of deportation, for which it has been for some
time clamouring in vain, and threatens the boycotters
with an antiboycott. One does not quite see
how this mighty movement could be engineered. If a boycott of Indians by
Englishmen is suggested, we would remind our contemporary that in life in this
country Indians might conceivably do without Englishmen but Englishmen cannot
do without Indians. That is precisely the strength of our position. The
misfortune is that we ourselves still fail to realise it.
Home
Social Boycott
It seems to be
especially the Boycott President's able defence of social boycott as opposed to
violent constraint that has alarmed the Englishman. Here also there is
nothing new. The social boycott is a weapon absolutely necessary for the
enforcement of the popular will in this matter, the power of using fiscal law
for the same purpose being in the hands of authorities who have been publicly declared
by Lord Curzon to be active parties in
British exploitation of the resources of India. It means the coercion of a very
small minority by a huge majority in the interests of the whole nation; it consists merely in a passive abstinence from
all countenance to the offender, — sending him to Coventry, in the English
phrase; it is effective and, if properly applied, instantaneously effective; it involves, as the
Englishman has been
obliged to see, no violence, no disregard of public order, no breach of the
peace. The only weapon the Englishman can find against it is
deportation, and after all you cannot deport a whole town, village or
community. The Nationalist Party have always struggled for and often obtained
the recognition of the social boycott at various District Conferences and it
has been freely and effectively applied in
all parts, though mostly in East Bengal. It is gratifying to find the most
moderate of Bengal Moderate leaders supporting and justifying it in a carefully
prepared and responsible utterance on an occasion of the utmost public
importance.
Page
– 144
National
or Anti-National
We have long
noticed with the deepest disapprobation and indignation the equivocal conduct
of the National Council authorities with regard to matters of great national
importance, but we have held our peace from unwillingness to hurt an
institution established with such high hopes and apparently destined to play
an important part in the development of the nation. We can hold our peace no
longer. The action of the authorities in forbidding their students to attend a
national festival commemorating the inception of the movement by which the
College and Council were created, — a prohibition extended by them to the mofussil schools, — is only the crowning act of a
policy by which they are betraying the trust reposed in them by the nation,
contradicting the very object of the institution and utterly ruining a great
and salutary movement. They imagine that by being more servile than the most
servile of the ordinary institutions and flaunting their high academical
purpose they will save themselves from official repression and yet keep the
support of the people. They are wrong. Already there is such deep
dissatisfaction with the Council that the mofussil schools are dying of
inanition and people are turning away from the new education as differing in no
essential from the old. If the authorities persist in their evil course, the
public mind will write Anti-national instead of National over their signboard
in Bow Bazar and their schools be left empty of students. We shall return to
this subject in a future issue.
Page – 145
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