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II. LIFE IN
BARODA: 1893-1906
APPOINTMENTS IN BARODA STATE .
He was first put in the
Land Settlement Department, for a short time in the Stamps Office, then in the
Central Revenue Office and in the Secretariat. Afterwards without joining the
College and while doing other work he was lecturer in French at the College and
finally at his own request was appointed there as Professor of English. All
through, the Maharaja used to call him whenever something had to be written
which needed careful wording; he also employed him to prepare some of his
public speeches and in other work of a literary or educational character.
Afterwards Sri Aurobindo became the Vice-Principal of the College and was for
some time acting Principal. Most of the personal work for the Maharaja was done
in an unofficial capacity; he was usually invited to breakfast with the
Maharaja at the Palace and stayed on to do this work.
Sri Aurobindo was never
appointed to the post of Private Secretary. He was put first in the Settlement
Department, not as an officer but to learn the work, then in the Stamps and
Revenue departments; he was for some time put to work in the Secretariat for
drawing up dispatches, etc. Finally, he oscillated towards the College and
entered it at first as part time lecturer in French, afterwards as a regular
Professor teaching English and was finally appointed Vice-Principal. Meanwhile,
whenever he thought fit, the Maharaja would send for him for writing letters,
composing speeches or drawing up documents of various kinds which needed
special care in the phrasing of the language. All this was quite informal;
there was no appointment as Private Secretary. Once the Maharaja took Sri
Aurobindo as Secretary in his Kashmir tour, but there
was much friction between them during the tour and the experiment was not
repeated.
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INVITATIONS BY THE
GAEKWAR FOR MEALS
These invitations were
usually for some work to be done and could not be refused.
THE MAHARAJA'S CERTIFICATE
"Diligent, serious,
etc."— this valuation of Sri Aurobindo's qualities was not the Maharaja's.
He gave him a certificate for ability and intelligence but also for lack of
punctuality and regularity. If instead of "diligent and serious" and
"a career of meritorious service" it were said that he was brilliant
and quick and efficient in work, it would be more accurate. The description, as
it is, gives an incorrect picture.
The authorities objected to his patriotic activities.
Is the reference to the Baroda
authorities?
Sri
Aurobindo is not aware that his utterances or writings were ever objected to by
them. His articles in the Indu Prakash were anonymous, although many
people in Bombay knew that he was
the writer. Otherwise, except for a few speeches at functions in the Palace
itself such as the reception of Dr. S. K. Mullick which had nothing to do with
politics, he spoke mainly as Chairman of the Baroda College Union; there was no
objection made at any time and he continued to preside over some of these
debates until he left Baroda. It
was in England
while at Cambridge that he made
revolutionary speeches at the meetings of the Indian Majlis which were recorded
as a black mark against him by the India Office.
When he arrived in India, Sri Aurobindo knew no Indian
language except a smattering of Bengali which was one of the subjects he had to
study for the I.C.S.
Bengali was not a subject
for the competitive examination for the I.C.S. It was after he had passed the competitive examination
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that Sri Aurobindo as
a probationer who had chosen Bengal as his province
began to learn Bengali. The course of study provided was a very poor one; his
teacher, a retired English Judge from Bengal was not
very competent, but what was learnt was more than a few words. Sri Aurobindo
for the most part learnt Bengali for himself afterwards in Baroda.
STUDY OF BENGALI IN BARODA
About the learning of
Bengali, it may be said that before engaging the teacher, Sri Aurobindo
already knew enough of the language to appreciate the novels of Bankim and the
poetry of Madhusudan. He learned enough afterwards to write himself and to
conduct a weekly in Bengali, writing most of the articles himself, but his
mastery over the language was not at all the same as over English and he did
not venture to make speeches in his mother tongue.
Sri Aurobindo had
regular lessons in Bengali from Dinendra Kumar Roy at Baroda.
No, there were no regular
lessons. Dinendra lived with Sri Aurobindo as a companion and his work was
rather to help him to correct and perfect his knowledge of the language and to
accustom him to conversation in Bengali than any regular teaching.
Sri Aurobindo was not a
pupil of Dinendra Kumar; he had learnt Bengali already by himself and only
called in Dinendra to help him in his studies.
In Baroda,
Sri Aurobindo engaged Pundits and started mastering both Bengali and Sanskrit.
A teacher was engaged for Bengali,
a young Bengali littérateur — none for Sanskrit.
He studied Hindi also
at Baroda.
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Sri Aurobindo never
studied Hindi; but his acquaintance with Sanskrit and other Indian languages
made it easy for him to pick up Hindi without any regular study and to
understand it when he read Hindi books or newspapers. He did not learn Sanskrit
through Bengali, but direct in Sanskrit itself or through English.
In Baroda
after making a comparative study of all literatures, history, etc., he began
to realise the importance of the Veda.
No. Started study of Veda
at Pondicherry.
In
1895 were published, for circulation among friends only, his poems, five of
which were written in England
and the rest at Baroda.
It is the
other way round; all the poems in the book [Songs to Myrtilla] were
written in England
except five later ones which were written after his return to India.
It is
not unlikely that "Baji Prabhou" and "Vidula" — two of the
longer poems that belong to Sri Aurobindo''s early period — had been actually
written, or at least mentally sketched, during his last years in Baroda.
No, these
poems were conceived and written in Bengal during the
time of political activity.
Sri
Aurobindo was preoccupied, even when he was but a conscientious teacher or an accomplished
poet...with the problem of service and of sacrifice.... From the very first the
idea of personal salvation or of individual felicity was utterly repugnant to
him.
"Utterly
repugnant" — this is a little too strong. It was rather that it did not seem
anything like a supreme aim or worth being pursued for its own sake; a solitary
salvation leaving the world to its fate was felt as almost distasteful.
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While
engaged in Baroda State Service Sri Aurobindo began to think incessantly if some
opportunity could not be found for service in the larger life of Bengal, of the
Indian nation itself.
He had
already in England
decided to devote his life to the service of his country and its liberation.
He even began soon after coming to India
to write on political matters (without giving his name) in the daily press,
trying to awaken the nation to the ideas of the future. But those were not well
received by the leaders of the time, they succeeded in preventing further
publication and he drew back into silence. But he did not abandon either his
ideas or his hope of an effective action.
THE ARTICLES IN THE "INDU PRAKASH"
The
facts about the articles in the Indu Prakash were these. They were begun
at the instance of K. G. Deshpande, Sri Aurobindo's Cambridge
friend who was editor of the paper, but the first two articles made a sensation
and frightened Ranade and other Congress leaders. Ranade warned the proprietor
of the paper that, if this went on, he would surely be prosecuted for sedition.
Accordingly the original plan of the series had to be dropped at the
proprietor's instance. Deshpande requested Sri Aurobindo to continue in a
modified tone and he reluctantly consented, but felt no farther interest and
the articles were published at long intervals and finally dropped of themselves
altogether.
The
series of articles he wrote in the "Indu Prakash" were on Indian
civilisation, entitled: "New Lamps for Old."
This title
did not refer to Indian civilisation but to Congress politics. It is not used
in the sense of the Aladdin story, but was intended to imply the offering of
new lights to replace the old and faint reformist lights of the Congress.
He sent some of his
friends, at Baroda
and Bombay,
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to Bengal
to prepare for the revolutionary movement.
It was not any of his
friends at Baroda and in Bombay
who went to Bengal on his behalf. His first emissary was
a young Bengali who had by the help of Sri Aurobindo's friends in the Baroda
Army enlisted as trooper in the cavalry regiment in spite of the prohibition by
the British Government of the enlistment of any Bengali in any army in India.
This man who was exceedingly energetic and capable, formed a first group in Calcutta
which grew rapidly (afterwards many branches were established); he also entered
into relations with P. Mitter and other revolutionaries already at work in the
province. He was joined afterwards by Barin who had in the interval come to Baroda.
At this time there was
at Bombay a secret
society headed by a Rajput prince of Udaipur.
This Rajput leader was not
a prince, that is to say, a Ruling Chief but a noble of the Udaipur
State with the title of Thakur. The
Thakur was not a member of the Council in Bombay;
he stood above it as the leader of the whole movement while the Council helped
him to organise Maharashtra and the Mahratta
States. He himself worked
principally upon the Indian Army of which he had already won over two or three
regiments. Sri Aurobindo took a special journey into Central India
to meet and speak with Indian sub-officers and men of one of these regiments.
During his stay at Baroda
Sri Aurobindo got into touch with men that counted, groups that counted. He
went to Bengal "to see what was the
hope of revival, what was the political condition of the people, and whether there
was the possibility of a real movement".
It might be added that he
had begun a work that was still nameless; and it was in the course of that
work that he went to Bengal "to see what was the
hope of revival, etc."
Since 1900 Sri Aurobindo had
wished to enter the political
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fray and to contribute
his mite to the forces that were seriously working for India's
redemption and rehabilitation. He held private talks, he corresponded, he put
pressure on front-rank leaders; but as yet he could do little.
This does not give a
correct idea. He had already joined with some of the more advanced leaders to
organise bodies for political action which would act when the time for action
came;¹ it was only in public as yet that he could do little.
Even his own intrepid province
of Bengal was in no
mood to be persuaded by him and his gospel of virile nationalism.
It was anything but
intrepid at the time; it was the mantra of Bande Mataram and the leap
into revolutionary action that changed the people of the province.
He found that in Bengal
"the prevailing mood was apathy and despair. There was no other go except
to bide his time.
It should be added,
"and to continue his political work behind the scenes in silence. The
moment for public work had not yet come".
Once his work was started he continued it until circumstances
made it possible to join in a public movement.
While in Baroda
State Service he
visited from time to time his grandfather in Bengal.
His visits were for political
purposes.
1The programme of this organisation was at first Swaraj,
Swadeshi, Boycott — Swaraj meaning to it complete independence. The word Swaraj
was first used by the Bengali-Maratha publicist, Sakharam Ganesh Deuskar,
writer of Desher Katha, a book compiling all the details of India's economic
servitude which had an enormous influence on the young men of Bengal and helped
to turn them into revolutionaries. The word was taken up as their ideal by the
revolutionary party and popularised by the vernacular paper Sandhya
edited by Brahmabandhab Upadhyaya; it was caught hold of by Dadabhai Naoroji
at the Calcutta Congress as the equivalent of colonial self-government but did
not long retain that depreciated value. Sri Aurobindo was the first to use its
English equivalent "independence" and reiterate it constantly in the Bande
Mataram as the one and immediate aim of national politics.
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This is not correct. In
these visits he was not concerned with politics. It was some years afterwards
that he made a journey along with Devabrata Bose, Barin's co-adjutant in the Yugantar,
partly to visit some of the revolutionary centres already formed, but also
to meet leading men in the districts and find out the general attitude of the
country and the possibilities of the revolutionary movement. His experience in
this journey persuaded him that secret action or preparation by itself was not
likely to be effective if there were not also a wide public movement which
would create a universal patriotic fervour and popularise the idea of
independence as the ideal and aim of Indian politics. It was this conviction
that determined his later action.
STAY AT DEOGHAR
DURING DECEMBER 1906 TO APRIL 1907
Sri Aurobindo always
stayed at Deoghar with the family of his maternal grandfather Raj Narayan Bose.
The beaux-parents did not live at Deoghar.
Among
the leading lights of the day was P. Mitter who was an out-and-out man of
action.
P. Mitter had a spiritual
life and aspiration and a strong religious feeling; he was like Bepin Pal and
several other prominent leaders of the new nationalist movement in Bengal,
a disciple of the famous Yogi Bejoy Goswami, but he did not bring these things
into his politics.
Sri
Aurobindo was influenced by the patriotic fervour of Swami Vivekananda's
utterances.1
Sri Aurobindo was not
aware of this speech or of any political action by Vivekananda. He had only
heard casually of Vivekananda's intense patriotic feelings which inspired
Sister Nivedita.
1 In
Vivekananda's speech "The Mission of the Vedanta" delivered at
Kumbhakonam.
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Allan Hume had founded
the Indian National Congress to act as an intermediary for bringing together
the élite of the English and the Indian peoples to promote discussions,
reforms, etc.
This description of the Congress
as an intermediary, etc., would hardly have been recognised or admitted by the
Congress itself at that time. The British Government also would not have
recognised it. It regarded the institution with dislike and ignored it as much
as possible. Also, Sri Aurobindo was totally opposed to making any approach on
behalf of the nation to the British Government; he regarded the Congress policy
as a process of futile petition and protest and considered self-help,
non-cooperation and organisation of all forces in the nation for revolutionary
action as the sole effective policy.
Sri Aurobindo did not
believe in, nor did he like, violent revolution.
This is incorrect. If Sri Aurobindo had not believed
in the efficacy of violent revolution or had disliked it, he would not have
joined the secret society whose purpose was to prepare a national insurrection.
His historical studies had not taught him the lesson indicated here. On the
contrary, he had studied with interest the revolutions and rebellions which led
to national liberation, the struggle against the English in mediaeval
France and the revolts which liberated
America and
Italy. He took much of his inspiration
from these movements and their leaders, especially, Jeanne d'Arc and Mazzini.
In his public activity he took up non-cooperation and passive resistance as a
means in the struggle for independence but not the sole means and as long as he
was in Bengal he maintained a secret revolutionary
activity as a preparation for open revolt, in case passive resistance proved
insufficient for the purpose.
SWADESHI, PARNELLISM AND THE SINN FEIN MOVEMENT
Sri Aurobindo's policy in India was not based on Parnellism. It
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had more resemblance to
Sinn Fein but was conceived before the Sinn Fein movement and was therefore not
inspired by it.
Sri Aurobindo had
acquired a measure of intellectual pre-eminence as a result of his stay in England;
but that was not enough, and he was certainly not happy. His deeper
perplexities remained; he did not know what exactly he should do to make
himself useful to his countrymen or how he should set about doing it. He
turned to Yoga so that he might be enabled to clarify his own floating ideas
and impulses and also, if possible, perfect the hidden instrument within.
There was no unhappiness.
"Perplexities" also is too strong. Sri Aurobindo's habit in action
was not to devise beforehand and plan but to keep a fixed purpose, watch
events, prepare forces and act when he felt it to be the right moment. His first
organised work in politics (grouping people who accepted the idea of
independence and were prepared to take up an appropriate action) was
undertaken at an early age, but took a regular shape in or about 1902; two
years later he began his practice of Yoga — not to clarify his ideas, but to
find the spiritual strength which would support him and enlighten his way.
He met Brahmananda on
the banks of the Narmada for advice on national education activities.
Sri Aurobindo saw
Brahmananda long before there was any question of national education
activities. Brahmananda never gave him any counsel or advice nor was there any
conversation between them; Sri Aurobindo went to his monastery only for darśana
and blessings. Barin had a close connection with Ganganath and his Guru was one
of the Sannyasis who surrounded Brahmananda, but the connection with Ganganath
was spiritual only.
On commencing his
silent Yoga at Pondicherry Sri Aurobindo presently outgrew the instructions
that had
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been given to him by Lele and his
predecessors.
That was done long before
the sojourn in Pondicherry. There were no predecessors. Sri Aurobindo had some
connection with a member of the governing body of the Naga Sannyasis who gave
him a mantra of Kali (or rather a stotra) and conducted certain kriyās
and a Vedic yajña, but all this was for political success in his mission
and not for Yoga.
During the Baroda
period Sri Aurobindo met, one by one, Sri Hamsa Swamp Swami, Sri Sadguru Brahmananda and Sri Madhavdas.... He had even exchanged spiritual pulses with
his first gurus.
He had momentary contacts
with Brahmananda, but as a great Yogin, not as a Guru — only darśana and
blessings. There was no contact with the others.
Aravinda Babu used to
attend the lectures of the Swami — Paramahamsa Maharaj Indraswarup — with much
interest ... personally met him and learnt about āsanas and prāṇāyāma.
Only heard his lecture at
the [Gaekwar's] Palace, did not go to see him, did not practise prāṇāyāma
till long afterwards.
He met the saint
Madhavdas at Malsar on the banks of the Narmada and learnt about Yoga-āsanas.
Visited, probably with
Deshpande, one or two places on the banks of the Narmada, but no recollection
of Malsar or Madhavdas, certainly no effect of the meeting, if it happened at
all.
Thus it may be said
that Aravinda Babu started taking interest in Yoga from 1898-99.
No. I did not start Yoga
till about 1904.
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Sri Aurobindo began
practising Yoga on his own account, starting with prāṇāyāma
as explained to him by a friend, a disciple of Brahmananda. Afterwards faced
with difficulties, he took the help of Lele who was called for the purpose from
Gwalior by Barindra — this was after the Surat Congress in 1908.
Such guidance as he received from his
earliest gurus and such partial realisation as he was then able to achieve only
reinforced his faith in Yoga as the sole cure for his own "rooted
sorrow" and for the manifold ills of humanity.
(Sri Aurobindo put an
interrogation mark against the word "gurus".)
There was no resort to
Yoga as a cure for sorrow; there was no sorrow to cure. He had always in him a
considerable equanimity in his nature in face of the world and its
difficulties, and after some inward depression in his adolescence (not due to
any outward circumstances, and not amounting to sorrow or melancholy, for it
was only a strain in the temperament), this became fairly settled.
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