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A
Treacherous Stab
WE
HAVE seldom read anything more disgraceful, more unpatriotic, more opposed to
all ideas of decency, than the sneering and ill-natured attack on Lala Lajpatrai
which the Tribune has chosen this particular moment to deliver. It is a
time when all over India men of all shades of opinion, except the worshippers of
the bureaucracy, are putting aside their differences with this modest and
self-sacrificing patriot in order to express their unanimous fellow-feeling with
him in his hour of trial. It is precisely this moment that the Tribune chooses
for its stab at Lala Lajpatrai who is no longer there to speak for himself. If
this unseemly conduct is dictated by a desire to dissociate itself from the
exiled patriot in order to save its own skin, it can only be characterised as
the basest cowardice. If by envy, party spirit and secret jubilation at the
removal of a powerful Nationalist, it is indecent and unpatriotic. In ordinary
times the Tribune was free to criticise and abuse Lajpatrai and nobody
would have cared, but when a man is suffering for his country, no one pretending
to be a patriot has a right to vent on him either private spleen or a dislike on
public grounds. We have our own differences with Mr. Gokhale and Srijut
Surendranath Banerji, but were either of these leaders to become the objects of
official persecution, we should consider ourselves eternally disgraced if we
remembered anything but the one fact that he was suffering for the sake of our
common Motherland. The sneers of the Tribune would not in themselves be
worth noticing; it is as an example of the utter want of true patriotism that it
calls for condemnation.
Bande
Mataram, May
14, 1907
Page-57
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