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Facts and Opinions
Volume I -
Dec. 25, 1909 - Number 25
The
United Congress Negotiations
The
persistence of the Bengalee in shielding Moderate obstinacy under cover
of an appeal to the wholly inconclusive proceedings of the private Conference
in the Amrita Bazar Office last year shows both the paucity of possible
arguments for the Moderate position and the readiness of its chief organ to
ignore facts of which it has been reminded more than once and which it cannot
deny. The difference between the conference last year and the recent negotiations is radical. That conference was between Conventionists and non-Conventionists,
the recent negotiations were between Moderates and Nationalists. The Amrita
Bazar Office Conference was an attempt made by certain leaders in Bengal
and Maharashtra to secure admission for the
Nationalists to the Convention. The United Congress Committee was confined to
Bengal and sat to consider whether Bengal Moderates and Nationalists could not
agree together before inviting the Conventionists of other provinces to accept
the terms offered by United Bengal. Last year's Conference was a confabulation
of leading men representing their own opinions only, this year's negotiations
were conducted by men elected for the purpose by the Provincial Conference
representing the whole of Bengal. At the Conference in Bagbazar
it was the middle section of opinion, neither Moderate nor Nationalist, of
which Sj. Motilal Ghose, Rai Jotindranath Chaudhuri, and some of the older leaders in
the Mofussil are the most influential
members, which engineered a compromise in the absence of the Nationalist
leaders. Sj. Tilak was a prisoner in Mandalay jail, Sj. Aurobindo
Ghose under trial at Alipur, Sj. Khaparde and Sj. Bepin
Chandra Pal absent in England. The compromise was reluctantly accepted
by many of the Nationalists present, — as we have ascertained by correspondence
with some of the chief Nationalists who attended, — and only because it was
pressed on them
Page – 314
that these were the only terms on which the Moderate
Party would admit of the idea of union. It was not accepted at all by the
Bengal Nationalists and it has been recently admitted by the Amrita Bazar Patrika
that letters were received from the Mofussil
repudiating the surrender on the question of the creed. How is it that the Bengalee
persists in ignoring these facts ? The
compromise was rejected by the Moderates themselves, Bombay refusing utterly
to recognise the four Calcutta resolutions as a possible part of any treaty,
and this was recognised by the Moderates this year;
for at the first meeting of the United Congress Committee it was distinctly
intimated to the Nationalist members that the four resolutions must not be
pressed as a condition of union. In other words the one concession for which
some of the leading Nationalists induced themselves to waive their rooted
objections to constitution and creed, is expunged and the Nationalists are
expected to be bound by a rejected compromise by which the Moderates refuse to
be bound. They are expected to adhere to the concessions they made last year,
while the only concession made to them is withdrawn. This fact is quite
sufficient by itself to put the Bengalee's argument out of court. We repeat that the recent
negotiations had nothing to do with last year's abortive compromise, rejected
as it was by both parties immediately after it was made. Their sole object was
to ascertain whether the Moderates would accept substantial concessions from
the Nationalists without asking the latter to sacrifice their conscience and
their principles. Apparently they are not. Therefore union is impossible.
A
New Sophism
Another and very singular argument is
advanced by the Bengalee which evinces a similar disregard of facts and
of the real significance of facts. It is alleged that both sides in Bengal are
agreed as to the four resolutions, that the creed is part of the four resolutions,
that the creed was accepted by the Nationalists at Pabna
and therefore they ought not to object to sign it as a condition of
entering the Congress. In the first place, if the four resolutions
Page – 315
are to be so binding on the Nationalists that they
must be ready to sign one of them at the call of the Moderates, then they must
be made equally binding on the Moderates and we call on
them to sign a declaration of acceptance of the Boycott as a condition of entry
into an United Congress. Just as the Moderates from Bombay accepted the Boycott
resolution at Calcutta in deference to the weight of public opinion, so we
accepted the Colonial self-government resolution as the opinion of the majority
and are no more bound to subscribe to it personally than Sir Pherozshah Mehta is bound to subscribe to the
Boycott. The four resolutions merely framed a compromise between the two
political schools, not a declaration of Nationalist faith. As for Bengal, it is
well-known that the whole of Bengal does not accept Colonial self-government as
the ultimate goal of political aspiration. At Pabna
it was only to avoid a discussion dangerous to unity that the Nationalists
contented themselves, in spite of the majority they had, with placing their
dissent on record through the mouth of Sj. Manoranjan Guha. The Bengalee cannot have
forgotten that incident. It was revived
again at Hughly when the Moderates insisted
on whittling down the Boycott to a mere commercial measure as a price of their
adherence to the Conference and Sj. Aurobindo Ghose desired to bring forward an amendment,
which he would subsequently withdraw, in order to mark that the Nationalists
did not accept the resolution as the opinion of the country. The Moderate
leaders threatened to withdraw if this was done and Sj. Aurobindo Ghose was requested
to confine himself to the precedent established by Sj. Manoranjan Guha at
Pabna. He then distinctly expressed his doubt whether this would be sufficient
to make the Nationalist attitude clear to the country and the advantage taken
of our complaisance by the Bengalee to misrepresent the Nationalist
attitude at Pabna shows that his apprehensions were perfectly justified. If
this is the light in which the Moderates choose to put the Nationalist
willingness to compromise, it may be necessary at the next Conference for our
party not only to move an amendment but to put it to the vote regardless of
Moderate threats of secession.
Page – 316
Futile
Espionage
We
wonder whether it is really impossible to maintain a great Empire without
demoralising oneself and the country by means of an unworthy system of
espionage. Since the initiation of the Swadeshi movement the army of spies and
informers have grown as plentiful as insects round a bright light. Formerly men
of some distinction had the honour of being watched in their houses, dogged in
their goings, honoured by the private inspection of their correspondence. But
nowadays it is enough to be suspected of patriotism to have the inefficient hirelings
of the Police, if not the worthy guardians of the Law themselves, sticking like
burs to one's heels. Is anything gained by these excessive and no doubt costly
precautions ? If we are to judge by the sorry specimens who have besieged us
for the last six months, a more incapable creature than the ordinary Indian
spy does not exist. He has an engaging simplicity of artifice which at once
betrays his savoury vocation, and if he does not carry "spy" written
legibly on his forehead, as a multitude of them do, he is so transparent in
his methods that he might just as well be labelled, "Due at Royd Street". Nor do we quite see what is
gained by watching a man's house or his office with an open brazenness. The office of the Dharma1 has recently been favoured with
the loitering of watchers who spend their days gazing lovingly at the building
and making affectionate and importunate enquiries as to the movements and
habits of the editor. This open love-making strikes us as a little indecent; it
would be better done behind a veil. And what do the authorities hope to gain by
these unique researches ? Do they hope to
see either bombs or packets of sedition being carried into the building ? Or is
a leader of public agitation likely to convert his newspaper office or his
house into an open resort of secret conspirators ? Even a bureaucracy ought to
credit its political opponents with some little common sense, even if they
cannot credit them with honesty of motive and frankness of action.
¹ A
Bengali weekly edited by Sri Aurobindo from
August, 1909 to February, 1910.
Page – 317
Convention
Voyagers
We
understand that some seven or eight faithful hearts are meditating the journey
to Lahore to assist Mr. Madan Mohan Malaviya in carrying out Sir Pherozshah's orders. We wish them a good voyage
and a speedy repentance. One wonders, by the way, where the delegates of the
Convention are going to start up from at the last moment. We watch in vain for
the news of numerous elections all over the country. Secret conclaves, hushed-up quarrels, sittings with silent visitors,
and, finally, secret elections seem to be the best features of Convention politics ! Or are the delegates ashamed of
publishing their names ?
Page – 318
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