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Omissions and Commissions at Berhampur
THE
spirit of mendicancy has not been given much play in the proceedings of the
Berhampur Conference and so far this year marks a distinctive advance. Last
year's Conference was totally exceptional; and there could be no certainty that
the victory then won for reason and patriotism, would be permanent, for the
mendicant spirit fled from the Conference Pandal before Kemp's cudgels and the
triumph of the gospel of self-help was accomplished in an atmosphere of such
excitement that even the chill blood of a Legislative Councillor was heated into
seditious utterance. The very moment after the dispersal of the Conference the
mendicant nature reasserted itself, justifying the maxim of the ancients,
"Drive out Nature with a pitchfork (or a regulation lathi), yet it will
come back at the gallop." But since then Nationalist sentiment in Bengal
has grown immensely in volume; and although the Conference was held in a
Moderate centre, in the peaceful and untroubled atmosphere of West Bengal, no
positive mendicancy was permitted. There were, indeed, certain features of the
Conference which we cannot view with approval. Last year the right of raising
the cry of the Motherland wherever even two or three of her sons might meet,
whether in public places or private, was asserted by the whole body of delegates
in spite of police cudgels; this year the right was surrendered because
Babu Baikunthanath Sen had pledged his personal honour to a foreign bureaucrat
that there would be no breach of the peace. Since this plea was accepted by the
delegates, we must take it that all Bengal has acknowledged the shouting of
"Bande Mataram" in the streets to be a breach of the peace! Here is a
victory for the bureaucracy. And yet the Chairman of the Reception Committee was
not ashamed to include in his rotund rhetorical phrases congratulations on our
triumph and our scars of victory. The private and personal
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honour
of Babu Baikunthanath was set in the balance against the public honour of the
delegates of Bengal, and the latter kicked the beam. It will be said that the
position of Babu Baikunthanath as host precluded the delegates from doing
anything which would compromise that estimable gentleman. We deny that Babu
Baikunthanath stood in the position of host to the Conference, whatever may have
been his relation to individual delegates; in any case the representatives of
Bengal went to Berhampur not to eat good dinners and interchange kindly social
courtesies, but simply and solely to do their duty by the country. We deny the
right of any individual, whatever his position, to pledge a whole nation to a
course inconsistent with courage and with honour. But the leaders seem to have
accepted the plea with alacrity as a good excuse for avoiding a repetition of
Barisal. "For such another field they dreaded worse than death." The
incident shows the persistence of that want of backbone which is still the curse
of our politics. In any other country the very fact that the delegates had been
assaulted at one Conference for asserting a right, would have been held an
imperative reason for re-asserting that right at every succeeding Conference,
till it was admitted. Unless we can show the same firmness, we may as well give
up the idea of passive resistance for good and all.
Several of the Resolutions seem to us unnecessary in substance and others
invertebrate in phrasing. We have no faith whatever in the Judicial and
Executive separation nostrum; we do not believe that it will really remedy the
evil which it is designed to meet. So long as the executive and judiciary are
both in the pay of the same irresponsible and despotic authority, they will for
the most part be actuated by the same spirit and act in unison; the relief given
will only be in individual cases. Even that much relief we cannot be sure of;
for the moment the functions are separated, it will become an imperious need for
the bureaucracy to tighten their hold on the judiciary and, with all the power
in their hands, they will not find the task difficult. Already the High Court
itself has long ceased to be the "palladium of justice and liberty"
against bureaucratic vagaries, and the unanimity of the two Services is likely
to be intensified by the so-called reform. It is quite possible that the
separation will make things
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worse
rather than better. One reform and one alone can secure us from executive
oppression and that is to make the people of this country paymasters and
controllers of both executive and judiciary. No patchwork in any direction will
be of any avail. What for instance is the use of clamouring about the Road-Cess
when we know perfectly well that it was levied not for roads and other district
purposes but as a plausible means of circumventing the Permanent Settlement? No
one can deny that it is admirably fulfilling the purpose for which it was
levied. It is absurd to think that the bureaucracy will be anxious to open out
the country any farther than is necessary for military and administrative
purposes and for the greater facility of exploitation by the foreign trader and
capitalist. The needs and convenience of the people are not and can never be a
determining factor in their expenditure. For the same reason they cannot be
expected to look to sanitation beyond the limit necessary in order to safeguard
the health of Europeans and avoid in the world's eyes manifest self-betrayal as
an inefficient, reactionary and uncivilised administration. Realty to secure the
public health and effectually combat the plagues that are rapidly destroying our
vitality, swelling the death-rate and diminishing the birth-rate would demand an
amount of cooperation with the people for which they will never be willing to
pay the price.
With the exception of these minor triflings and of one glaring omission beside
which all its omissions and commissions fade into insignificance, the work of
the Conference has on the whole been satisfactory. It is well that it has
sanctioned the taking up of sanitation measures by popular agency; it is well
that it has dealt with the question of arbitration and that it has approved of
measures for grappling with the urgent question of scarcity and famine. But in
failing utterly to understand and meet the situation created by the disturbances
in East Bengal, the Conference has shown a want of courage and statesmanship
which is without excuse, — we wish we could say that it was without parallel.
We shall deal with this subject separately as its importance demands.
Bande Mataram,
April 6, 1907
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