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Facts and Opinions
Volume I - Jan.
22, 1910 - Number 29
Lajpatrai's
Letters
The case of Parmanand, the Arya Samaj teacher, whom with a singular
pusillanimity the D.A.V. College authorities
have dismissed before anything was proved against him, has been of more than
usual interest because of the parade with which Lajpatrai's letters to him were
brought forward. The letters were innocent enough on the face of them, but prejudice
and suspicion were deliberately manufactured out of the connection with Krishnavarma, the expression
"revolutionary", the use of the word "boys", and an
anticipation of the agrarian outbreak in connection with the Punjab
Government's ill-advised Land legislation. The bubble has been speedily pricked
by the simple statement of facts in the Punjabee
and by Lajpatrai's own evidence. That Lajpatrai
was acquainted with Shyamji Krishnavarma
when he was in England, was known already; so were many men who worked with him. Sir Henry Cotton among others, when he was only
an enthusiastic Home Ruler and violently opposed to violence. The project of a
Nationalist Servants of India Society well-equipped with a library and other
appointments for political education was well advertised and known to the
whole country previous to the first deportations. The anticipation of the
agrarian outbreak in the letter expresses an apprehension, not a desire, and
merely shows that Lajpatrai was uneasy at the rate at which the discontent was
swelling and feared that it might lead to an outbreak prematurely forestalling
the use of a peaceful pressure on the Government. It is remarkable how
throughout his career the honesty and consistency of Lala
Lajpatrai's adherence to a peaceful but strenuous Nationalism has been
vindicated at every step, and this last revelation of his private and even
secret letters is an ordeal of fire out of which he has triumphantly emerged
with his
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consistency
and his innocence wholly established.
A Nervous
Samaj
It is with great regret that we find
ourselves compelled to enlarge on the hint we gave in our last issue and
comment adversely on the methods by which the Arya
Samaj is attempting to save itself from the displeasure of the Government. It
is well that it should have disclaimed sedition and repudiated the charge of
being not a religious but a political body. But to run nervously to all and
sundry for a testimonial of respectability, to sue for a certificate of loyalty
to the Lieutenant-Governor of the Punjab and express gratitude for an
ungracious, ambiguous and minatory letter of reply, to prejudge by dismissal a
man whose guilt has yet to be proved, are actions which show that Swami Dayananda's
religion may have emancipated the intellects of the leading Samajists but has done little to elevate their
character. We must also express our amazement at the action of the Samaj in
accepting the resignation by Lala Lajpatrai of his offices on
the various governing bodies of the Samaj. There are two men who are the glory
of the Samaj and by whose adherence and prominence it commands the respect and
admiration of all India, Lala Lajpatrai and Lala Munshiram.
By its action with regard to the former, the Samaj will lose heavily, it has
already lost heavily, in public estimation. In his generous anxiety for the
body to which he has devoted the greater part of his life-work, Lala Lajpatrai
offered to it the chance of freeing itself
from the attacks its enemies founded upon his connection with it. It was an
offer which he was bound to make, but the Samaj ought to have refused. Lajpatrai's only offence is that he has worked and
suffered for his country. By its action the Samaj has announced to the whole
world that no man must dare to feel and act, however blamelessly, for his
country if he wishes to be recognised by the Samaj. If so, Aryaism will perish from the face of India and
leave no trace behind. The world has no use any longer for religious bodies
which exclude courage, manliness, generosity, justice and patriotism from
their moral practice.
Page – 364
The
Banerji Vigilance Committees
The novel
departure initiated by the fertile mind of Srijut Surendranath Banerji at Barrackpur in the creation of Vigilance
Committees to check the nocturnal lovers of bomb and bullet practice on the E.B.S.R. has created great interest and amusement
among his countrymen. There are many who are ungenerous enough to attribute
this anti-Anarchical zeal less to loyalty and a noble "co-operative"
instinct than to the fact that our great leader has himself to travel daily
over the zone of danger. Even if it were so, the sneer is ungenerous. We all
love our lives, we have all to travel occasionally by the E.B.S.R. in first or
second class and we cannot ignore the fact that random bullets and explosive
cocoanuts are not respecters of persons and, if they find the head even of a
Nationalist leader in the way, will not be polite enough to walk round it. We
shall all therefore be grateful to our old man eloquent, if he can ensure our
common safety. But for ourselves, we do not see how he can effect his laudable
object. It would be possible for Srijut Surendranath and the other estimable
burgesses of Barrackpur to patrol the railway at night, but the weather is
still cold, sleep is pleasant, bullets and cocoanuts perilous missiles, and, if
anything happens, the police are quite capable of suspecting and arresting the
too vigilant patrons of the public peace. One might revive the "National
Volunteers" for the purpose; but the Samities
are disbanded, students forbidden to take part in politics or do anything that
would interfere with their studies. They are not likely to be enthusiastic for
this kind of volunteer work under these conditions. And, if such organisations
were created, it would be more likely to alarm than gratify a suspicious and
nervous Government which might see in it a disingenuous device for reviving
the proclaimed Samities. The only other
resource is for these novel vigilance men to turn detective, discover the Terrorists
and give information to the police, which they can only do by becoming agents
provocateurs and so worming themselves into the confidence of their quarry.
That is a kind of dirty work no Indian gentleman is likely to undertake even
with the prospect of vindicating his loyalty, escaping house-searches and
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deportation and earning the encomiums of the
Englishman.
Postal
Precautions
Sj. Aurobindo Ghose has recently received an anonymous letter
giving him the momentous information that a certain Gopal
Chandra Ray of the C.I.D. with
several assistants is busy watching 6 College Square and the Post Office and
copying all the letters and postcards that come in his name without exception. Sj. Aurobindo has not the honour of the noble
Gopal's
acquaintance, nor is he even aware whether this gentleman has any corporeal
existence. The letter may be a hoax; or it may be sent by one of the
"assistants", weary to death of copying letters and postcards and of
the inclement and uncomfortable business of an open air watch fanned by the
breezes of Goldighi in this season. It does
not matter to the gentleman honoured by these attentions whether the whole
police force occupy Goldighi for inquisitorial purposes or whether numerous
editions of his correspondence are turned out for the use of posterity by the
disinterested labours of the C.I.D. Still, he has suggested to us certain
proposals to be placed before the Government in this connection and we proceed
to make them. In the first place, for the sake of humanity, a comfortable stall
might be put up in the Square for the vigilant cow-keeper and his herd whence
they could watch more happily and quite as effectively. Secondly, if the
Government would kindly instruct the Post Office not to lose one-tenth of Aurobindo Babu's letters after copying them
and delay the greater part of the others, there would probably be no harm done
to the Empire. Thirdly, Sj. Aurobindo Ghose begs us to inform the authorities
that he was never greatly in the habit of writing letters before and, after the
exposure of his private correspondence with his friends and family by the
prosecution in the Alipur case, he has
almost dropped the practice except in urgent matters of business. It is
possible, therefore, for this part of the investigation to be carried on very
cheaply, and the Government must not be deceived by any representations on part
of Gopal or others that a big staff is wanted. Further, we are
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instructed
to inform all intending correspondents of the above-mentioned facts so that
they may not be disturbed or anxious about Sj. Aurobindo's health if they get no answer to
their letters. Secondly, it would be advisable for them, when writing to him,
to forward a copy of the letter to the Secretary to the Bengal Government or to
Mr. Denham of the C.I.D.
Thirdly, if any one wishes to send by post specimens of bombs, revolvers, or
anything explosive or picric, or plans and estimates for a conspiracy or
insurrection great or small, he had better send it either by hand or through
the editors of the Statesman or Englishman. No reply need be
expected.
Detective
Wiles
While we are on
this subject, we might suggest to the C.I.D. to train up a few spies and
informers, send them for the completion of their education to France and then
appoint them as teachers in the College in India. Just now they do their work
very clumsily. We may instance the case of an Eurasian or European gentleman
rejoicing in an Irish name or alias and a false address, who left his card on
Sj. Aurobindo Ghose and then opened fire
with a letter requesting the loan of a revolver, brand new and serviceable,
without which the Irish gentleman could not live any longer. Neither is it a
good opening for acquaintance to come for
financial help to a man known to be himself the possessor of a very small
income. To request advice how to serve the country or to become religious is a
more plausible opening, but it ought to be followed up and sustained plausibly.
Even the wearing of the saffron robe need not be a passport to effusive
friendship, unless there is something behind, and not always even then. We may
also refer to the romantic story of the Dead Letter Office return published the
other day by Sj. Prabhaschandra Deb in the Hitabadi. This precious script was curiously
enough addressed to Grey Street, without any number, in Prabhas Babu's handwriting
and with his signature so exactly reproduced as to defy discrimination even by
an expert. As both Prabhas Babu and the
police are well
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aware
that there is now no connection between Sj. Aurobindo and any number in Grey Street, it was
obviously the writer's intention that it should go to the Dead Letter Office
and from there to the C.I.D. Prabhas Babu's
suggestion was not, as the Hitabadi
reported, to send it to the Calcutta Police for inquiry, but to return it to
the Dead Letter Office. Sj. Aurobindo preferred to consign it to the waste
paper basket as a more fitting repository. We cannot imagine any earthly use in
these clumsy devices. Even Mr. Norton would find it difficult to make anything
of a forgery, however exact, more hopelessly suspicious even than the
"sweets" letter.
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