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Facts and Opinions
Volume I - Jan.
15, 1910 - Number 28
The
Patiala Case
The Patiala Case has developed its real objective,
which is the destruction of the Arya Samaj, the
men arrested being merely pawns in the game. The speech of the Counsel for the
prosecution, Mr. Grey, in no way sets out an ordinary case against individuals,
nor is there any passage in it which gives any light as to particular evidence
against the persons on their trial, but from beginning to end it is an
arraignment of the Arya Samaj as a body whose whole object, semi-open rather
than secret, is the subversion of British rule. Mr. Norton, taking advantage of
the presence of Sj. Aurobindo Ghose in the dock, attempted to build up in
the Alipur Case an elaborate indictment of
the whole national movement as a gigantic conspiracy, but he did not neglect
the individual cases and made some attempt to conceal the extra-judicial object
of his oratory by a continual reference to actual evidence, relevant or
irrelevant, in the case. Mr. Grey has not given himself that trouble. The political
character of his advocacy is open and avowed. But he follows his Calcutta
precursor in the ludicrous jumps of his logic from trivial premises to
gigantically incongruous conclusions, in his heroic attempt to make bricks out
of straw. His chief arguments are that the Arya Samajists
read the Amrita Bazar Patrika and the Punjabee,
— to say nothing of the long defunct Bande
Mataram, — and that some of the prominent members of the Arya Samaj
are politicians and yet remain members of the Arya Samaj. The perfectly general
interpretations by Swami Dayananda of the Vedic
view of politics are the basis of his attack, and even the vehement character
of the great reformer's polemics against other religions, the orthodox Hindu
included, are pressed into the service of this unique argument. And all this is
used to prejudice men under trial on a serious charge. Mr. Norton trifled with
the traditions of the British bar by his pressing of tri-
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vial and doubtful evidence against the accused in the Alipur
Case, but it seems to us that Mr. Grey has departed still farther from those
lofty traditions. And what if the Patiala
Court decides that the Arya Samaj is a seditious body, seditious in origin,
seditious in intention, seditious in action ? Will the Government prescribe as
an illegal association this wealthy, powerful and highly organised community
containing more than half the brains and activity of the Punjab ? Already the charge has been made that by giving
special privileges to the Mahomedans, the
Government have abandoned definitely the principle of religious neutrality on
which their rule has hitherto been founded. The present Governor of the Punjab
is possibly capable of such a step, — after the whitewashing of the Police in
the Gulab Bano
case and his speech to the Loyalist deputation, we can believe him capable of
any rash and headstrong step. Fortunately, there is little likelihood that Mr.
Grey's oratory will be any more effective than Mr. Norton's.
The
Arya Samaj and Politics
We
have received a communication from a member of the Samaj in which he puts to us
certain pointed questions relating to the aims, character and works of the
Samaj and of its founder's teachings. We have not that direct and first-hand
knowledge which would enable us to answer these questions with any authority.
But on the general question our views are known. Aryaism
is not an independent religion. It is avowedly an attempt to revive the Vedic religion in its pristine purity. The Vedic religion is a national religion, and it
embraces in its scope all the various activities of the national life. Swami Dayananda
as a restorer of Vedicism included the
theory of politics in his scope and revealed the intensely national character
of the Hindu religion and morality. His work was avowedly a work of national
regeneration. In dealing with the theory of politics as based on the Vedic
religion he had naturally to include the truth that independence is the true
and normal condition of a nation and all lapse into subjection must be a sin
and degeneration, temporary
Page – 354
in
its nature. No man can deny this great truth. Freedom is the goal of humanity
and Aryaism was in its nature a gospel of
freedom, individual freedom, social freedom, intellectual freedom, freedom in
all things, and the accomplishment of such an all-pervading liberation cannot
come about without bringing national freedom in its train. If to perceive
these truths of Vedism and of nature is to
be political and seditious, then Swami Dayananda's teaching was political and seditious
and the religion he preached may be stigmatised as political and seditious. But
if sedition be limited to its proper meaning, an attempt by illegal and violent
means to bring about the fall of the established authority or prepare by word
or action lawless opposition and revolution, then there is no sedition in the
Swami's preaching or in the belief and
actions of the Arya Samaj.
They use the perfectly legitimate means of strengthening the national life at
all points and their objective is national regeneration through an active and
free religion, not political revolution. Individual members may be Loyalists,
Moderates, Nationalists, even Terrorists, but a religious body is not
responsible for the political opinions of its individual members. The religious
teaching of Swami Dayananda was inspired by
national motives, not political; and the aims of the Arya Samaj are national,
not political.
The
Arya Disclaimer
The leaders of the
Arya Samaj have issued a manifesto disclaiming the political motives
attributed to them by the Counsel for the Prosecution in his extraordinary
opening address at Patiala. But is there any
use in these repeated disclaimers ? To a
certain type of official mind, not in the minority in this country, every
movement, body, organ of opinion or centre of activity that makes for national
strength, efficiency or manhood is by that very fact suspect and indeed
self-convicted as seditious and its very existence a crime to be punished by
the law. The Governor of the Punjab is either himself an official of this
class or swayed by advisers of that temper. Under such circumstances it is
enough to issue once for all a strong and dignified repudiation
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of
the charge and then proceed calmly with the great work the Samaj has undertaken, serenely strong and
unperturbed in good fortune or evil
fortune, good report or evil report, confident in God's grace and the spiritual
force communicated by the founder. This is the only course worthy of a manly
community professing a robust and virile religion. Anxious repetition of
unheeded disclaimers seems to us undignified and futile.
What
is Sedition ?
The
question, what is sedition, one of those Chinese puzzles which it seems
impossible to solve, nevertheless presses for solution. In Nagpur it has been established that to laugh at
the holder of a Government title is sedition. In the Swaraj Case Justice Chandavarkar has declared it to be the law that to
condemn terrorism in strong language and trace it to its source is sedition.
At Patiala it is contended that to read the Amrita Bazar Patrika and
the Punjabee is sedition. We are not
quite sure that at Patiala the prosecuting counsel did not hint that to bring
Christianity or Mahomedanism into contempt
or hatred is sedition. And we have these remarkable cases in the Punjab, where
to translate Seeley's Expansion of
England or Mr. Bryan's opinion of
British rule in India seems to have a fair chance of being established as
sedition. Mr. Stead's Review of Reviews is now known to be a seditious
publication. We are not sure, either, that the Indian Daily News is not
even worse, for it is continually trying to bring the police, who are an
indispensable part of the Government established by law, into contempt and
hatred, and the incorrigible persistence of its efforts is sufficient proof of
motive, if not of conspiracy. Now one of the charges against a Punjab accused
is that he wrote impugning the character of the subordinate police service
— just like the Indian Daily News or Sir Andrew Fraser.
We would suggest that Sir Andrew Fraser should
be arrested in England and brought here to answer to the outraged police for
the remarks passed by the Police Commission. The reasoning is perfectly fair.
Any strong criticism, especially if it is persistent, lowers the reputation of
the Government
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and
creates in people a tendency to belittle, that is to say, have a contempt for
authority established by law. It is still worse if the Government is accused of
injustice, say, in the matter of the deportations or the Gulab Bano case; for that inevitably creates hatred. Therefore
strong criticism of the Government is sedition. The Amrita
Bazar Patrika and Punjabee strongly criticise the Government.
Therefore they are seditious papers and their readers seditious conspirators.
Every official is a member of the Government established by law; therefore to
criticise strongly an official or a policeman, still more, officials or
policemen as a class, is sedition. Christianity is the religion of the
Government established by law; to criticise Christianity is to bring Christians
into contempt; the Government are Christians; therefore to criticise Christianity is to bring
the Government established by law into contempt. That is sedition. Therefore to
criticise Christianity is sedition. To say that repression fosters Terrorism
may be true, but it is seditious. To suggest a Press censorship, seriously or
ironically, is to bring the administration of the law of sedition into
contempt, that is, to bring the administrators into contempt; and the administrators are the Government
established by law. Therefore Mr. Stead's Open Letter to Lord Morley is seditious. We are almost afraid to go
on, lest, finally, we should end by proving that the Englishman itself
is an intolerably seditious rag, — for does it not try to bring Sir Edward
Baker and the Government generally into contempt by intimating genially that
they are liars, idiots and good-for-nothing weaklings,
— in connection with the Reforms and their unwillingness to put the whole
population of India into prison ? Would it
not save trouble to prohibit speech or writing in India altogether ?
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