|
Facts and Opinions
Volume I -
Dec. 4, 1909 - Number 22
The
Lieutenant-Governor's Mercy
The outcry of the
Moderates against the exclusion of their best men has led to certain
concessions by which apparently the Government hope to minimise or obviate the
formidable opposition that is slowly gathering head against the new Councils.
These concessions remove not a single objectionable principle from the Bill.
They are evidently designed to facilitate the admission into the Council of the
two men in Bengal whose opposition may prove most harmful to the chances of the
exceedingly skilful Chinese puzzle called the Councils Regulations, by which
the consummate tacticians of Simla hope to preserve full control for the
authorities while earning the credit of a liberal and popular reform. The
modification by which men who have served three years on a Municipality become
eligible even if they are no longer on any such body at the time of election,
seems specially designed to admit Sj. Bhupendranath Bose
who, with all the other well-known men of Bengal, was excluded by the careful
provisions of the Scheme. But to have placated Sj. Bhupendranath
and at the same time disqualified the greater Moderate leader would obviously
have been an infructuous concession.
Accordingly, we are now given to understand that the Lieutenant-Governor has
been pleased to intimate to the most powerful man in Bengal that, if he stands
for election, the disqualification under which he has been placed, will be
waived as a special concession in his favour ! We do not know what were the
feelings of Sj. Surendranath when he was
informed that this back-door had been opened to him by the indulgence of the
bureaucracy to its dismissed servant. But to us the permission seems to be
more humiliating and injurious than the original exclusion, — to Bengal, if not
to Surendranath personally. As things stand, he cannot make use of the
concession without forfeiting his already much-imperilled popularity and
putting him-
Page – 290
self uselessly into a ridiculous and undignified position. If he stood now, the
whole country would believe that his dissatisfaction with the Reforms was due
to his personal exclusion and not to the vicious principles of the Scheme. He
would enter not in his own right, but by the grace and mercy of the bureaucracy
of whom he has been the lifelong opponent. And to what end ? To stand isolated or with a handful of
ineffective votes against a solid phalanx of officials, Government nominees,
Europeans, Mahomedans and lukewarm waverers or reactionaries. Sj. Surendranath gains nothing
for himself or the country by entering the Councils on these shameful terms; he gains everything by holding aloof and
standing out for better conditions.
An
Ominous Presage
The Indian
Daily News nowadays plays the Statesman's
abandoned role of the Friend of India. This journal has been recently harping on
the necessity of the reform of the Municipalities and throwing out suggestions
of the lines on which those reforms should be framed. We cannot imagine
anything more ominous, more fatal to the little of self-government that we
possess, than these suggested reforms. We pointed out in our article on
the Reforms that under this scheme the Municipalities were the only weak point
in the Government's armour and we hazarded a prophecy that the Government would
follow the policy of thorough and mend this vulnerable part. This is precisely
what our Anglo-Indian "friend" earnestly and repeatedly calls on them
to do without farther delay. The principle to be enforced is that same false,
vicious and anti-democratic principle of the representation of separate
interests which has made the new Reforms a blow straight at the heart of
progress instead of an important step in progressive development. It is true
that the Daily News deprecates separate electorates and advocates
official control veiled and occasional instead of official control insistent,
naked and unashamed. But we know perfectly well that official control veiled
and occasional, as in the universities, can be made as potent and effective a
weapon for the suppression of independent
Page – 291
action
as official control direct and habitual. And if the European, the Mahomedan and the landlord are to predominate in
the Municipalities as in the reformed Councils and the representation of the
"professional classes" carefully restricted, we do not care whether
it is done by separate electorates or by some other equally careful
manipulation of the electoral lists. The result will be the same. The Daily
News seems to be inspired in its anxiety for reform by two lofty motives,
the predominance of the European vote, wealthy but small in numbers, and the
distinction of the predominance of the professional men who, under present
circumstances, can alone represent educated India. On the Councils the
non-official European representation is small, not in proportion to the numbers
of its constituency, but in its comparative voting power, yet this class is on
the whole satisfied, because it not only gets what it knows to be disproportionately
large representation but can be sure of the co-operation of the official in farthering its interests. On the Municipalities, if the direct official control
disappears, it will be necessary for the European vote to be dominant so as to
prevent a combination of other elements from pushing other interests to the
detriment of European privilege or monopoly. The distinction which this
journal, in common with other Anglo-Indian papers, draws between men with a
real stake in the country and educated men, who apparently because of their
education have none, sheds a flood of light on the kind of friendship which it
cherishes for the people of this country.
Chowringhee
Humour
The Statesman
as a friend was intolerable; as a humorist it is hardly less difficult to bear.
There was an elephantine attempt at sardonic humour in a recent article in
which it weightily urged the educated community to overlook defects and take
full and generous advantage of the great opportunity from the benefits of which
they have been excluded. That is the peculiar humour of these reforms. They are
a Barmecide's feast, gorgeous dishes and silver covers with only unsubstantial
air inside, and even
Page – 292
from
that chameleon's feast the educated classes are carefully excluded, except in a
pitifully infinitesimal degree. Yet the Anglo-Indian papers are indignantly
remonstrating with the educated classes for not crowding to the table where
there are no seats for them and feasting themselves fat on the dainty invisible
meats which others are so eager to partake of. It may be asked why others are
so anxious for these aerial privileges. Well, that is because it is only the
educated classes who are really hungry for substantial political food, the
others are eager to see and handle the gorgeous dishes and the silver covers,
to say nothing of the kudos of having dined at so rich a house and its material
advantages to the individual. But the educated Hindus have had a surfeit of
specious outsides and are learning to merge
the interests of the individual in the good of the nation.
The Last
Resort
The resort to boycott is becoming
instinctive in men's blood; not only in India but everywhere, men
confronted by opposition of a nature which renders it
impossible to deal with it effectively, take to boycott with an admirable
spontaneity. The rapid spread of this ancient Indian device
since China and India applied it for the first time on the gigantic Asiatic scale, is a sign of the times. We can naturally understand the feeling of discomfort which leads
the Anglo-Indian papers to deprecate this move on the part of the Moderates. It
is true that the reported agreement to boycott the Councils has been denied by
representatives of Moderate opinion; but,
whether a formal resolution to the effect was recorded or not at the momentous
meeting in the Indian Association's rooms, it is this policy which the
Moderates are following, for the excellent reason that there is no other. As
they pathetically complain, it is not they who have boycotted the Government
but the Government which has boycotted them. That is not, of course, literally
true. Sj. Ambikacharan Majumdar who has refused to stand as a
candidate, is eligible under the Government rules; the disabilities in the way
of Sj. Bhupendranath and Surendranath have been waived or removed. But this
Page – 293
the
Government has taken care to ensure, that if they enter, and evidently the
Government desires that they should enter, it shall be as grandiose
nonentities, stripped of all powerful backing, individual voices and nothing
more ! Co-operation on such conditions would be the end of the Moderate party in
Bengal and the absolute destruction of the Moderates is an event, which, we
confess, we could not contemplate with equanimity. We need a party which will
form a convenient channel through which the Government can glide gradually down
the path of concession until events have educated our bureaucracy to the point
of recognising the necessity of negotiation with the Nationalists. We are
therefore glad that the Government has made it imperative on the Moderates to
answer boycott with boycott. We have expressed our admiration of the skill with
which the Reform Regulations have been framed, but it is the skill of the
keen-eyed but limited tactician cleverly manipulating forces for a small
immediate gain, not of the far-seeing political strategist. On the contrary,
the framers have flung away supports which
they ought to have secured and secured others which are either weak or unreliable.
The nonentities who are scrambling for a seat in the Council cannot hold the fort
for them; the support of the landholders is
lacking in sincerity and they are, besides, a force the bureaucracy themselves
have stripped ruthlessly of their ancient strength and leadership, which
cannot now be recovered by a seat on the Councils;
the Mussulmans have suddenly been raised by the amazingly short-sighted policy
of Lord Morley into an eager, ambitious and
pushing political force which will demand a higher and ever higher price for
its support. On the other hand the Moderates have been humiliated in the sight
of all India and made a general laughing stock, and the entire Hindu community,
always the mightiest in potentiality in the land and now growing conscious of
its might, has been put far on the way to becoming a permanent and embittered opposition.
O wonders of Anglo-Indian statesmanship !
Page – 294
HOME
|
|