|
How to Meet the Ordinance
WHEN
we come to look at it closely, the new policy of the British Government in India
is a real blessing to the country. We find ourselves in unexpected agreement
with the Anglo-Indian Press in this matter. The Anglo-Indian Press is full of
joy at these departures from pre-established policy and as- severs in one chorus
though in many keys, ekam bahudhā, that it is the very best thing the
bureaucracy could have done in the interests of its own continued supremacy. We
will not question their authority in a matter in which they alone are interested
but we can certainly add that it is the very best thing the bureaucracy could
have done in the interests of the country. Lord Minto ought therefore to be a
very happy man, for it is not everyone whose actions are so blessed by Fate as
to command equal approbation from the Englishman and the Bande Mataram.
Our reasons for this approval are obvious on the face of it. The great
strength of British despotism previous to Lord Curzon's regime was its
indirectness. By a singularly happy policy it was able to produce on the subject
nations the worst moral and material results of serfdom, while at the same time
it never allowed them to realise that they were serfs, but rather fostered in
them the delusion that they were admirably governed on the whole by an
enlightened and philanthropic people. We pointed out the other day that the
relics of this superstition still lingered even in the minds of many
thoroughgoing Nationalists of the new school. We did not indeed believe that the
bureaucratic Government was a good government or the British people guided in
their politics by enlightenment and philanthropy, but many of us believed that
there were certain excesses of despotism of which they were not capable and that
the worst British administration would not easily betray overt signs of moral
kinship with its Russian cousin. We ourselves, although we were prepared for the
worst and always took care to warn the people that the worst might soon come,
thought sometimes that there was a fair ba-
Page-337
lance
of probabilities for and against frank downward Russianism. For such last relics
of the old superstitions, for such over-charitable speculation, there is no
longer any room. The whole country owes a debt of gratitude to Sirdar Ajit Singh
and the Bharat Mata section of the Punjab Nationalists for forcing the hands of
the bureaucracy and compelling them to change, definitely, indirect for direct
methods of despotism. It has cleared the air, it has dispelled delusions; it has
forced us to look without blinking into the face of an iron Necessity.
The question may then be asked, what farther room is there for passive
resistance? A Punjab politician is said to have observed, after the arrests of
Lala Hansraj and his friends and the first development of violent insanity in
the Punjab authorities, "I do not see why the people should go on any
longer with open agitation." But, in our opinion, there is still room for
passive resistance, if for nothing else than to force the bureaucracy to lay all
its cards face upward on the table; the oppression must either be broken or
increased so that the iron may enter deeper into the soul of the nation. There
is still work and work enough for the martyr, before the hero appears on the
scene. Take for instance the Coercion Ukase, the new ordinance to restrict the
right of public meeting at the sweet will of the executive. It is obvious that
the matter cannot be allowed to rest where it is. We would suggest to the
leaders that the right policy to begin with is to ignore the existence of the
Ordinance. So far as we understand, the Lieutenant-Governor of Shillong has been
empowered to proclaim any area in his jurisdiction, but as yet no area has been
proclaimed. This is therefore the proper time for the leaders to go to East
Bengal and hold meetings in every District; and those who go, should not be any
lesser men, but the leaders of the two parties in Bengal themselves. We are
inclined to think it was a mistake to recall Srijut Bepin Chandra Pal from
Madras at this juncture; but since he has been recalled, it should be for a
joint action in East Bengal against the policy of repression. If the bureaucracy
lie low, well and good; it will be a moral victory for the people. But the
moment any particular area is proclaimed, the leaders should immediately go
there and hold the prohibited meetings as a challenge to the validity of the
ukase, refusing to
Page-338
disperse
except on the application of force by the police or the military. The
bureaucracy will then have the choice either of allowing the Ordinance to remain
a dead letter or of imprisoning or deporting men the prosecution of whom will so
inflame the people all over India as to make administration impossible or of
breaking up meetings by force. If they adopt the third alternative, the leaders
should then go from place to place and house to house, like political Shankaracharyas, gathering the people together in groups in private houses and
compounds and speaking to them in their gates, advising them, organising them.
In this way the fire of Nationalism will enter into every nook and cranny of the
country and a strength be created far greater than any which monster meetings
can engender. How will the bureaucracy meet such a method of propagandism? Will
they forbid us to congregate in our own compounds? Will their police enter our
houses and force us to shut our gates to the guest and the visitor? Whatever
they do, the country will gain. Every fresh object-lesson in bureaucratic
methods will be a fresh impulse to the determination to achieve Swaraj and get
rid of the curse of subjection. All that is needed to meet the situation, all
that we demand of our leaders is a quiet, self-possessed, unflinching courage
which neither the fear of imprisonment, nor the menace of deportation, nor the
ulterior possibility of worse than deportation, can for a moment disturb.
The
Latest Phase of Morleyism
That
Mr. Morley should completely throw off the mask and unceremoniously declare his
real attitude towards Nationalist aspirations is more than what was expected by
most people. It is not customary with politicians to be so rudely and
unnecessarily frank. Besides, such frankness is calculated to shake that faith
in their benevolent professions which is the chief security of British
domination in India. We have always been deceived by words. The effect of a
series of repressive measures on the feelings of the people is at once
counteracted by one kind word from a Viceroy or Secretary of State. Mere
flattering promises have
Page-339
hitherto
been sufficient to win and retain our allegiance. Why our bureaucrats have
broken away from their policy of keeping their real intention veiled behind a
number of cant phrases and now make no secret of their determination to put down
Nationalism with a high hand can be easily understood by those who have been
watching the progress of events during the last two years. The appearance of a
Nationalist Party and the home truths they preach have been causing real anxiety
to the bureaucracy. If this party gets the ear of the people whose patriotic
impulses are never checked by considerations of expediency or immediate
self-interest, then such a popular re-awakening is bound to strike at the very
root of foreign overlordship. It has therefore become essentially necessary to
intercept all communications between the people and their real leaders and
well-wishers. It is for this reason that these openly despotic methods are being
tried in order to demoralise the Nationalists. The other game is to tempt the
Moderates to betray the country by ever dangling before their eyes the bait of
administrative reform. This is in every way a great crisis for the country and
by his conduct at this moment every man shall be judged. Persecution and
temptation are God's methods for separating the showy dross from the true gold.
An Old Parrot Cry Repeated
The
Hindu Patriot claims to have grown wise with age, and tries to argue us
into serfdom. Happily oblivious of its younger days when it had not yet been
prompted by senile prudence to sell itself to the alien lords, it comes forward
to justify its back-sliding and aim a few ineffective blows at the Swarajists.
This is how it analyses the present situation: —
We want food for our nourishment; we want education; we want new outlets
for the employment of our sons. But they give us none of these. They would make
us swallow the bitter pill of autonomy even at the point of the bayonet and
preach the Gospel of "Swaraj". It is to be our food, our raiment and
the panacea for all our evils. Everything else they would throw overboard.
Page-340
It
would scarcely have called for notice had not this view been shared even now by
a small section of the so-called educated community. The Patriot tries to
establish what has been disproved by our experience during the last quarter of
a century. We had been trying patch-works and half-measures — with what
effect the Patriot knows as well as ourselves. It was only when we
discovered that we had begun at the wrong end, that the ever-increasing drain on
the country with its necessary accompaniments — plague and famine — could
not be stopped so long as the people were left to the tender mercy of the
foreign overlord, that the cry of Swaraj went forth, and people began to take
politics more seriously than before. It is exactly because we cannot get food
for nourishment, nor proper education nor even "employment for our
sons", so long as we have to depend for these things on our unwelcome
guests, that we have begun to think of managing our household, and surely it can
serve no useful purpose to ignore our own experience and repeat the political
farce over again. Are Englishmen here to give us food and education and provide
fat berths for our own children? The whole political situation has been
misunderstood, and where the very premises are wrong, the arguments can but lead
astray.
Bande
Mataram, May 15, 1907
Page-341
Home
|