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Facts and Opinions
Volume I - Jan.
1, 1910 - Number 26
The
Perishing Convention
The
Convention has met at Lahore and the fact that it could meet at all, has
been hailed as a great triumph by the Anglo-Indian Press. But the success of
this misbegotten body in avoiding immediate extinction has only served to show
the marks of decay in every part of its being, and the loud chorus of eulogies
streaming up from Anglo-India will not help to prolong its days. The miserable
paucity of its numbers, the absence of great ovations to its leaders, the
surroundings of stifling coldness, indifference and disapproval in the midst
of which its orators perorated and resolved, have been too striking to be concealed.
Even the Statesman, which is anxious to pass off this fiasco as a signal triumph for Moderatism
and dwells on the enthusiasm and earnestness in the Bradlaugh
Hall, — an enthusiasm and earnestness other reporters were unable to discover,
— is obliged to admit the smallness of the
circle to which these creditable feelings were confined. To this body calling
itself the Indian National Congress how many delegates did the Indian nation
send ? The magnificent total of three hundred. From Bengal Sjs. Surendranath, Bhupendranath and A. Chaudhury with less than half-a-dozen followers enriched Lahore
with their presence; Madras could muster only twelve; the Central Provinces
sent so few that the reporters are ashamed to mention the number. The United
Provinces sent, according to the Amrita
Bazar Patrika's Correspondent, about
thirty; the Bombay number is not mentioned, but even the Statesman does
not go beyond eighty; the rest came from the Punjab. Even the Anglo-Indian
champion of Conventionism, estimating
largely and on the basis of hopes and expectations, cannot raise the total to
four hundred. The same paper takes refuge in the "huge concourse" of
spectators, but, when it comes to actual facts, the huge concourse melts away
into some hundreds of spectators,
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an estimate supported by the statement in the Bengalee
that there were considerably more spectators than delegates. It is admitted
that Bradlaugh Hall which cannot seat more
than three thousand was far from being filled, the Statesman observing
two wings of the Hall to be quite empty and other accounts reporting the Hall
to be half empty. An allowance of some thousand spectators to watch the
performances of the gallant three hundred in this Thermopylae of Moderatism, will be as liberal as the facts will
allow. Could there be more damning evidence of the unpopularity of this
pretentious body of well-to-do oligarchs electing themselves semi-secretly in close electorates of a handful of
men and yet daring to call themselves the nation's Congress ? The farce is
almost over. The falsity of their pretentions
has been shown up signally. The Convention will not dare again to meet in the
Punjab; it will not come to Bengal; Nagpur, Amraoti and the Maharashtra
are barred to it: and if the attendance from
Madras is any sign, it will not be easy for it to command a following or an
audience again in the Southern Presidency. What remains to Conventionism ?
Bombay city, Gujerat and the United
Provinces are still open to them for a season. The abstention of a disgusted
nation has passed sentence of death on this parody of the Indian National
Congress.
The
Convention President's Address
The most remarkable feature of Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya's address is not what he said, but what
he omitted to say. If the accounts telegraphed can be trusted, he said nothing
about self-government, nothing about Swadeshi, — the Boycott, of course, the
Convention has boycotted, — nothing about the Bengal deportees, only a few
words about the Transvaal. The speech was really a speech about the Reforms and
every other great question of Indian politics was ignored or neglected. The
attitude of the Convention on the Reforms is marked by that open insincerity
which is the hall-mark of Moderate politics. The Convention resolution is made
up of two parts, an ecstatic tribute of praise and gratitude to the two Lords Morley and
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Minto, for their earnest and "arduous" endeavours, (note the
grotesque absurdity of the language), in extending to the people of this
country a "fairly liberal" measure of constitutional reform, and a
detailed and damning indictment of the measure for restrictions and provisions
which are "excessive and unfair", "unjust, invidious and
humiliating", "arbitrary and unreasonable", and for the
"general distrust" of the educated classes and the "ineffective
and unreal" composition of the non-official majority. If there is any
meaning in language, the second part of the resolution gives the lie direct to
the first. The language used is far stronger than any the Karmayogin has ever permitted itself to employ
in its condemnation of the Reforms and, if the condemnation is at all
justified by facts, the Reforms are a reactionary and not a progressive piece
of legislation. And yet who is the chief mouthpiece of the Convention and the
most damaging critic of the Reforms ? A
gentleman who has set the seal of approval on Lord Morley's measure by entering
the Council of his province as an elected member. Actions speak more strongly
than words, and the Government of India care
little for criticism in detail so long as they get acceptation of the whole. From the Viceroy down to the obscurest
Anglo-Indian scribbler the appeal to the Moderates is to criticise details
hereafter, if they choose, but to accept the Reforms, the perpetual division of
the two Indian communities, the humiliation of the Hindus, the extrusion of the
educated classes from their old leading position, the denial of the only true
basis of self-government, — to let, as the Indian
Daily News persuasively puts it, bygones be bygones. Anglo-India pats Moderatism on the back and says in effect:
"What
if we have kicked you downstairs ? Can't you be a good fellow and sit quietly on
the bottom step until we take it in our heads to pull you up a little
farther ?" And Moderatism must comply if it wishes to be tolerated.
The
Alleged Breach of Faith
The Moderate critics are never tired of
harping on the difference between Lord Morley's scheme and the Regulations and
alleging
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or hinting that
promises have been made to the ear which have been broken in the act. The
Statesman very
naturally resents the implied charge of breach of faith. We do not know what
private hopes the Secretary of State may have held out to Mr. Gokhale or Sj. Surendranath Banerji,
but, judging from Lord Morley's public
utterances, we do not think the charge of a breach of faith can be for a moment
sustained. He has never pretended that his reform was the granting of a
democratic constitution or the first step towards Parliamentary
self-government. On the contrary he distinctly stated that if he had thought
his measure to be anything of the kind he would have immediately withdrawn it.
All that he promised was a scheme by which Indian public opinion could be more
liberally consulted, and there were from the beginning distinct indications
that the Government would put its own meaning on the phrase and draw a
distinction between Indian opinion and Indian educated opinion. If the
Moderates chose to interpret this limited concession as the granting of a
constitution and a new Magna Charta, neither Lord Morley
nor Lord Minto are to blame for a deliberate
and gratuitous self-deception and deception of the people. The complaint that
the non-official majority is ineffective and unreal, means simply that it is
not a popular majority. We do not think the Government ever promised a popular
majority; they promised a non-official majority and they have given it. If the
Moderates chose to believe that the Government would go out of its way to make
the non-official majority a popular one, they have themselves to thank for this
pitiful self-delusion, against which the Nationalists have been warning the
country for some time past. The truth is that they have been utterly worsted in
their diplomatic relations with British Liberalism and they are now trying to
exculpate themselves before the public by throwing the blame on their allies.
No English statesman can be condemned for trying to get the best of a
diplomatic bargain of this kind; the loser
must blame his own folly, not the good faith of the other party. Did not the
Bengal Moderates recently propose a similar bargain to the Nationalists in the
United Congress Committee's negotiations ?
And, if the Nationalist had been fools enough to agree, would they have been
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justified
afterwards in quarrelling with the good faith of the Moderates merely because
they themselves had chosen to enter the Convention on conditions which would
have meant hopeless ineffectiveness in that body and political suicide outside ?
If infants in diplomacy choose to cherish an obstinate admiration for their own
Machiavellian cleverness or mere bookmen who do not understand the A.B.C. of
practical politics, elect to play the game with past masters of political
statecraft, the result is a foregone conclusion. We have exposed over and over
again the hollowness of the pretensions of
this measure to figure as a great step forward in Indian administration or the
beginning of a new progressive era in Indian politics, but we did not need the
publication of the Regulations to open our eyes to this hollowness. Lord Morley's own statements, the nature of things and
of humanity and the clauses of the Reform Bill itself were a sufficient guide
to anyone with even an elementary knowledge of politics.
The Nasik Murder
The
tale of assassinations is evidently not at an end; and it is difficult to
believe that they will be until a more normal condition of things has been
restored. The sporadic and occasional character of these regrettable incidents
is sufficient to prove that they are not the work of a widespread Terrorist organisation, but of individuals or small groups raw in organisation and
irresolute in action. The Anglo-Indian superstition of a great Revolutionary
organisation like the Russian Revolutionary Committee is a romantic delusion.
The facts are entirely inconsistent with it. What we see is that, where there
is sporadic repression of a severe kind on the part of the authorities, there
is sporadic retaliation on the part of a few youthful conspirators, perfectly
random in its aim and objective. The Nasik murder is an act of terrorist
reprisal for the dangerously severe sentence passed on the revolutionary
versifier Savarkar. It is natural that there
should have been many meetings in Maharashtra
to denounce the assassination, but such denunciations do not carry
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us very far. They
have no effect whatever on the minds of the men who are convinced that to slay
and be slain is their duty to their country. The disease is one that can only
be dealt with by removing its roots, not by denouncing its symptoms. The
Anglo-Indian papers find the root in our criticism of Government action and
policy and suggest the silencing of the Press as the best means of removing the
root. If the Government believe in this antiquated diagnosis, they may
certainly try the expedient suggested. Our idea is that it will only drive the
roots deeper. We have ourselves, while strongly opposing and criticising the
actions and policy of the bureaucracy, abstained from commenting on specific
acts of repression, as we had no wish to inflame public feeling; but to silence
Nationalism means to help Terrorism. Our view is that the only way to
get rid of the disease is to disprove Mr. Gokhale's
baneful teaching that violence is the only means of securing independence, to
give the people hope in a peaceful and effective means of progress towards that
ideal, which is now the openly or secretly cherished ideal of every Indian, and
to that end to organise peaceful opposition and progress within the law. If the
Government can retrace their steps and remove the ban from lawful passive
resistance and self-help and the Nationalist Party, while holding its ultimate
political aim, will define its immediate objective within limits which a
Radical Government can hereafter consider, we believe politics in India will
assume a normal course under normal conditions. We propose to do our part; we
will see whether the Government think it worth their while to respond. They
ought to be able to understand by this time that Nationalism and not Moderatism is the effective political force in
India.
Transvaal
and Bengal
There
are two crying grievances which have done more than anything else to embitter
popular feeling against the authorities and in both cases the populations most
directly affected have resorted to passive resistance as the only remedy open
to them. The first is the gross and systematic oppression now being prac-
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tised on the Indians in the
Transvaal, the other the repression of national aspirations towards unity and
self-development in Bengal, typified by
Partition and Deportation. Nothing can be more inconsistent than the attitude
taken by the Moderate Convention towards these two questions. They have
telegraphed their sympathy with the heroic passive resistance of the Transvaal
Indians; they have shown their sympathy with Bengal by boycotting our boycott.
Eighteen thousand rupees were promised for the Transvaal Indians in the one
scene of enthusiasm which relieved the depressed dullness of the proceedings,
and although we have little hope that this spasmodic activity will be followed
up by steady support, it is better than nothing. On the other hand the Bengal
questions were left to be moved by Bengalis, the Partition to Sj. Bhupendranath,
the Deportations to Mr. A. Chaudhury. A
deputation was appointed by the Convention to proceed to lay the question of
Partition once more before Lord Morley; and
of whom, think you, the deputation is to consist ? Sj.
Surendranath Banerji
and Sj. Bhupendranath Bose. Not a single
Moderate deputy is forthcoming from the whole of India to support Bengal even
to this extent in its bitter and arduous struggle. Yet men are not ashamed to
go from Bengal as self-elected delegates to a Convention which has disowned and
dishonoured Bengal and which Bengal has disowned.
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