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Reconstitution of the Congress
THE new demand for
a constitution for the Indian National Congress is, - as we pointed out
yesterday, - only a necessary
corollary to that other and more radical demand for a thorough reconsideration
and reconstruction of the entire plan and programme of that great national
movement which has, since some
time past, been so persistently urged
upon the attention of the leaders by a large and increasing body of
Congress- men almost in every part of the country. The Congress originally came into
being with the express object of helping the Government by furnishing it
with an unauthorised, but therefore none the less useful, instrument for
ascertaining the trend and strength of educated public opinion in the country.
This was the view evidently which Lord Dufferin took of it. This was the logic
also of the attitudes and ideals of almost every Congress leader in the early
years of the life of this institution from Hume downwards, as it is clearly that
of most, if not of all of our Anglo-Indian friends at Palace Chambers. To urge
the will of the people, or more
correctly speaking the will of their
educated leaders, upon the governors of the country, and thus to make the
administration more popular than what it was and could otherwise ever expect
to be, this was clearly the object of even the most radical Congressmen
in the country twenty years ago. All the reforms that
the Congress urged upon the attention of
the Government were
directed towards this end. The reform
and expansion of the Legislative Councils along popular lines by the
introduction of
some measure of election in their
constitution; the reform of the Indian Civil Service with a view to make
room for a larger number
of Indians in it; the reconstitution of
the public services with
the same purpose; the development
of local self-government through
existing Local and District Boards; -
all these were urged
upon the tacit acceptance of the
absolute sovereignty of the British people in India as both desirable and
unalterable. The Congress
wanted to make England's yoke in India
easy, and its
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burden light, but not to remove
that yoke altogether. Indian politicians then, played really the part of British
statesmen, working together, in the Congress, to secure the permanence of the
present subjection, by placing England's rule in India "broad- based upon
the wishes of the people". The idea that India shall always occupy a
subordinate and dependent position in world- politics, and play, even in her
most advanced stage, only second fiddle to her British masters, was not
repellent to the patriots of the Indian National Congress in those days, as it
is not repel- lent to some of the Congress leaders even now. But the attitude of
the country has undergone a more or less radical change in course of these
twenty years. A new patriotism, more sensitive than the patriotism of the old
days, has commenced to grow in the country. The conflict of colour has become
keener between the people and the Government than what it was before; and the
conviction has taken a deep root in many minds, even in the ranks of old
Congressmen, that British Liberalism will never be strong or sincere enough to
accept India as a co-sharer in the great British Empire, standing on terms of
perfect equality with its other parts; but that so long as this British
connection lasts, India must hold a subordinate and more or less dependent
position in the federation of that Empire. The representatives of Government
have themselves become more outspoken in these matters than they were before,
and not only did Lord Curzon put a new interpretation on the Queen's
proclamation, and openly declare that so long as the Government in India
continued to be British, the, highest and most responsible positions in the
State must be the absolute monopoly of the Britisher, but even a Liberal
statesman like Lord Reay, - who had hitherto been regarded as almost friendly to
India- and as sympathetic towards the political aspirations of her people as
Lord Ripon, - repeated the same sentiments only the other day at the meeting of
the East India Association when Mr. Gokhale read his paper there on
self-government in India. Radicals and Conservatives are thus alike anxious to
perpetuate the present despotism in this country. Indian reformers can expect
absolutely no help from either party in their struggles for political freedom.
This conviction is fast growing among our people, and it has, naturally,
commenced to
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turn our eyes away not only from
the Government of India, but also
simultaneously from the British nation across the seas.
If India ever attains
political freedom it will be by her own unaided effort, -
this is the new idea in the country. And
the history of the last twelve months, the sudden awakening of the nation
that is being witnessed on all sides, the sudden and miraculous union between
the masses and the classes in the pursuit of common patriotic end, such as has
been seen in the present Boycott Movement, all these have evolved a new faith
out of this new idea, - a new faith in
the capacity of the people to work out their own destiny, - and have
opened up immense possibilities before this ancient and suffering nation. The
demand for a reconsideration of the plan and programme of the Congress has been prompted
by this new faith, and a constitution for the Congress wanted to organise
these new ideas in the country, and furnish adequate organs and instruments for
the application of the combined activities of the people to the work of
nation-building that lies before us
just now.
Bande Mataram, August 21/22,
1906
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