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The Government Plan of Campaign
THE
bureaucracy is developing its campaign against Swadeshism with a great rapidity
and a really admirable energy and decision. Barisal was naturally the first
district to be declared, and now we learn that Dacca, Mymensingh, Faridpur,
Pabna, Rungpur and Tippera, the Habiganj sub-division of the district of Sylhet
and the Sudharam Thana in the district of Noakhali have also been proclaimed.
Others, no doubt, will follow. All these districts have been selected for the
prominence they have taken in the Swadeshi movement. It is significant also that
in Backergunge the proclamation has been attended by a Magisterial order which
forbids the carrying of lathis and sword-sticks between sunrise and
sunset and the gathering of men in strength after nightfall. This can have no
other effect than to prevent the Swadeshists offering an effective resistance in
case of an attack being organised at night under orders from Dacca; for it is
not likely that a lawless mob bent upon mischief would pay any heed to the
Magisterial ukase. Meanwhile we have seen at Tangail a foreshadowing of the
first line of attack on the Students under cover of the Risley Circular. The
objective of the authorities is clear enough. It is to prevent the promulgation
and organisation of the Swadeshi and Swaraj sentiment in Punjab and Bengal. In
the promulgation of Swadeshism we have used three great instruments, the Press,
the Platform and the students. The Press by itself can only popularise ideas,
it cannot impart that motive impulse of deep emotion and enthusiasm which is
given by the direct appeal, the personal magnetism of a born speaker. But the
work of the Platform in its turn is not sufficient in itself. The motive impulse
created by the orator is apt to be evanescent, unless it is confirmed by daily
insistence on the note sounded, and the inspiring sight of the idea being
actually carried into practice by devout and enthusiastic missionaries of the
creed. In the Swadeshi agitation this part, the most important and neces-
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sary
of the three, has been played by the students. It is they who have been the
active missionaries of Swadeshism, carrying it into practice with the divine
ardour and eagerness of youth, without the reserves of caution, temporising,
doubt, half-belief with which colder age would have killed it in its birth;
wherever they went, they have created a permanent Swadeshi atmosphere in
which the tender plant of Nationalism could grow, could put forth leaf and bud,
could flower into the religion of patriotism.
The English have a
long experience in the art of political agitation
and it could not take them long to discover where the strength of the agitation
lay. But they were for a long time at a loss how to deal with it without losing
their prestige and reputation as a strong and benign Government. They tried
experiments and would not carry them out to the end. They took up a policy of
direct and violent coercion in a limited area and then, alarmed at the noise and
opposition created, dropped it like a hot coal. Next they tried the effect of a
general attitude of "sympathy" and calm toleration covering with its
specious and ample cloak a great deal of petty local persecution and secret
undermining of Swadeshism. Meanwhile they were preparing the ground for an
anti-Hindu campaign through the instrumentality of the Mahomedans which was only
to be brought into use if the policy of "sympathy" failed. The policy
of sympathy did fail and the local authorities were allowed to let loose the
Mahomedan mob on the Hindus. Here again there was a failure or a very partial
success. The first attempt at Comilla miscarried owing to the high spirit and good organisation of
Comilla Swadeshism. The second blow at Jamalpur fell with tremendous effect, but
the additional outbreak of the 27th upset
the official apple-cart. It went much farther, probably, than was originally
intended; for, possibly, the original intention was simply to teach the Swadeshi
Hindus a lesson and perhaps to give an excuse for exceptional measures. But the
second outbreak went too far. It drove the Hindus out of Jamalpur, it identified
the officials publicly and unmistakably with the hooligans, it lit a fire that
spread all over Bengal and created a commotion throughout India; it gave a
stupendous impulse to the self-defence movement all over the province; it found
a few scattered Akharas and left
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the
whole Hindu population feverishly drilling and standing on guard. Finally, it
threatened to imperil Anglo-Indian trade by prolonging the disturbances into the
critical part of the jute season. Moreover, the attempt of the officials to
isolate Swarajism in East Bengal had failed. Swarajism had set fire to the
Punjab, it had begun to permeate the United Provinces, it was spreading with
great rapidity in Madras. Another year and the whole of India would have been
submerged.
It was these circumstances, apparently, which led the Government to the
resolution of grappling with the Frankenstein monster Lord Curzon had raised
and of deploying all the powers and instruments of despotism for its
suppression. The panic created by the Rawalpindi disturbance has only led it to
unmask its batteries sooner and concentrate all its fire on Swadeshism with
greater energy and rapidity than might otherwise have been the case. No direct
attempt has yet been made to silence the Press, but we have no doubt it will be
done, if the Government find that the deportation of Lala Lajpat Rai does not
produce a permanent change in its tone. On the other hand, very effective
measures have been taken against the platform. The wholesale arrests in
Rawalpindi, the monstrous charges brought against Lala Hansraj and others for no
worse offence than being present at a public meeting which happened to be
followed in point of time by a riot, the deportation of Lala Lajpat Rai are all
measures of intimidation against the platform. Lest these should prove
insufficient, the bureaucracy has armed itself with powers which, if carefully
used, will put an end to Swadeshi propaganda from the platform and can in any
case crush it by violent and persistent coercion. It is applied, on the familiar
principle of localising opposition and crushing it in detail, to East Bengal and
Punjab only, but can easily be extended, should occasion arise. Finally, by the
Risley Circular it is sought to strike out of the hands of Nationalism its chief
strength, the young and rising generation whose political activity in their
student days means the creation of a new race of men whom it will be impossible
to rule by despotic methods. If we submit, therefore, to these bureaucratic
measures it means that the three potent instruments of our movement will be
rendered useless for our purposes and Swadeshism
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is
at an end. The bureaucracy will necessarily wait to see how we take its attack.
If we submit, they will not incur unnecessary odium by pressing the measures too
hard but will hold them in terrorem over us and apply them lightly
wherever necessary. If we try to carryon the movement, they will carryon the
campaign of
Russianism to the bitter end, regardless of ulterior consequences, unless the
developments are such as to convince them that the Russian method is useless or
worse. Meanwhile, as is shown by the deputation of Mr. Beatson Bell to
Mymensingh, efforts will be made to get the Mahomedan outbreak under control
again, if for nothing else than in the interests of jute. The Anglo-Indian cry
of "jute in danger" is one which cannot be ignored. Until the
gathering in of the jute, there will probably be no farther Mahomedan turbulence
except in sporadic instances. What will happen afterwards will depend much on
the course of events between. We may also expect other attempts besides the mere
application of the Risley Circular to take the sting out of the volunteer
movement.
Such is the prospect before us. It is high time that we should decide how
we are to meet it. Our leaders have evidently abandoned the helm and are merely
sitting tight watching the stormy waters roll. So poor is our organisation that
even a meeting of mofussil and Calcutta delegates to consider the crisis has not
been arranged. There is a talk, we learn from the Friend of India, of an
extraordinary All-India Congress at which Mr. Gokhale and some other delegates
will meet in Bombay under the aegis of Sir Pherozshah Mehta to protest against
these new settled facts. All this will not help us and we must find out our own
salvation. We shall devote the next few days to expressing our own opinion of
the possibilities before us and we earnestly invite the attention and opinion of
our readers upon them, — if they agree
with us that there is still room for the open agitation for which we have always
stood and which we still advocate.
Bande Mataram,
May 22, 1907
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