|
And Still It Moves
WHAT
is the precise difference which the recent Government measures have made in the
conditions of the Swadeshi movement? The first to be considered, because the
most dramatic and striking of these measures, is the deportation of Lala Lajpat
Rai. Has this deportation brought any really new element into the problem? When
we began the movement we were prepared, or at least we professed to be prepared,
for the utmost use by the Government of all the weapons the existing law puts in
its hands. We were prepared for press-prosecutions, we were prepared to go to
jail on false charges, we refused to be appalled by regulation lathis, broken
heads and Gurkha charges. Whatever use the Bengal Government might make of the
repressive laws which stand on its statute books, to whatever advantage the
local magistracy might turn their powers of government by ukase, we were
prepared for everything, we started with the fixed determination to allow
nothing to daunt us. Deportation was also a pre-existing weapon of repression
available to the bureaucracy under the existing laws. The difference its use has
made is to bring in, in the place of provincial repression by the local
government, imperial repression by the Government of India with the approval of
the Secretary of State. It has also replaced the long and uncertain process of
trial ending in a punishment of fixed duration by the swift and sudden process
of kidnapping and
a punishment
—
no, we
apologise to the Friend of India, we should
rather say, a leniency of uncertain, perhaps life-long duration. One other
element it has introduced which patriots have had to face in all other
countries, but which falls on our heads for the first time, — the punishment
of exile. To speak the truth, this is the one and only terror of deportation to
Indian patriots. The Indian mind with its passionate attachment to the very soil
of the mother-country, its deep reverent feeling that mother and motherland are
more to be cherished than paradise
Page-361
itself,
must feel the deprivation with a force which no European race, except perhaps
the passionate and emotional Italian, could understand. In jail the floor we
tread is at least made of Indian soil, when we exercise in the prison yard the
air that visits our cheeks is Indian air; the pulsation of Indian aspiration,
Indian emotion, Indian life, Indian joys and sorrows beats around our prison
walls and floods our hearts with the magnetic pervasiveness of which the air of
India is more full than that of any other country. The bureaucracy blundered
upon an ingenious way of striking us in a very vulnerable point when it hurried
Lajpat Rai away
to a remote
corner of the world among alien men and cut him
off from all sight of Indian faces and communion with Indian hearts. But what
then? It is but one suffering the more and the deeper the suffering the greater
the glory, the more celestial the reward. We cannot suffer more than Poeris in
his Neapolitan dungeon or Silvio Pellico in his Austrian fortress or Mazzini in
his lifelong exile. It is with the life-blood of a nation's best and the unshed
tears that well up from the hearts of its strong men that the tree of liberty is
watered. The greater the sacrifice, the earlier is its fruit enjoyed.
Yet it cannot be denied that the deportation came as a shock on the
Moderates and as a surprise to the Extremists. It was a shock to the Moderates
because of the source from which it came. They had never been able to shake off
the idea that in the end Mr. John Morley, if not the sympathetic Lord Minto,
would come to their help. To renounce that hope would be to reject the very
keystone of the Moderate policy and turn their backs for ever on the illusions
of thirty years. Even up to the moment almost of the deportation the Bengalee
was clamouring for the recall of Mr. Hare and confidently expecting that his
criminal inactivity in the East Bengal disturbances would be punished by a just
and benign Secretary of State. On such high expectations the deportation came as
a blow straight in the face and struck the Moderate Party dumb and senseless for
a moment. The heaviness of the blow it had received can be judged by the sudden
violence of the Indu Prakash which exceeded in the fierce anger of its
utterances any Extremist organ. There is no disguising the fact that the
Moderate's occupation is gone. British rule has so unmis-
Page-362
takably,
finally, irrevocably declared itself as despotism naked and unashamed, a
despotism moreover which is firmly resolved to remain despotic, — the fiction
of a constitution has been so relentlessly exposed as a sheer mockery and
constitutional agitation has thereby been rendered such a patent elaborate and
heartless farce that, although it will continue just as the snake continues to
wriggle even after it has been cut into two, it has lost all life and all chance
of carrying weight in the country. The temper of the Madras meeting, which a
serious and influential paper like the Madras Standard asserts to have
been composed mainly not of students but of adults, shows what the temper of the
nation is likely to be. The deportation therefore has introduced a new element
for the Moderate politician. His gods have failed him; the benign hand from
which he expected favours has treated him instead to a whip of scorpions; the
face of flowers
he worshipped has had its veil torn
away and stands
revealed as a grinning death's head.
Moderation lies wounded to death. It can no longer exist except as a pretence,
an attitude. To the Nationalist the deportation came as a surprise because of
the occasion for which it was employed. We knew that the benignant bureaucracy
had this weapon in their armoury, that they had used it once and might well use
it again; but we thought it had more respect for its prestige and more common
sense than to waste it on an insufficient occasion. The Natus were deported
because it was suspected that they were behind the Poona assassinations and that
the assassinations themselves were part of an elaborate Maratha conspiracy. In
the Punjab there was nothing but a riot; for the persistent wild rumours of the
disarming of regiments and murder of Europeans have received no confirmation of
any kind. Deportation, as directed against the Nationalist movement, was like
the magic weapon of Karna which could be used only once with effect; it should
therefore have been reserved for a supreme occasion when it might have averted,
for the time at least, an incipient mutiny or formidable rebellion. It was used
instead in a moment of panic to meet a fancied mutiny; it was used not
against the formidable and indispensable leader of a great approaching
rebellion; but against a boy-orator and a pleader of considerable influence who
at the worst was no
Page-363
more
than one of the many prophets of revolution. Meant for Arjuna, it has been
hurled against Ghatothkach. This misuse deprives it of its utility; for as the Empire
shrewdly pointed out the other day, the trick of deportation cannot be
successfully played twice; the second time it will be a direct help to the
strong revolutionary forces which are growing in the country. To the
Nationalists therefore the menace of deportation does not bring in any new
element into the situation, except in so far as it hastens their work or brings
the leaders as well as the rank and file to the touchstone of peril where their
value will be tested.
The new element of deportation, therefore, so far as it is a new element,
merely facilitates the work of Nationalism. There is no reason why it should
modify our action in any essential feature. We may be told of course that we
cannot afford to imperil the leaders on whom the progress of the movement
depends. We answer that the safety of the leaders can only be assured by
sacrificing the vitality and force of the movement, a price too heavy to pay;
secondly, where the will of a higher Power is active in a great upheaval, no
individual is indispensable. The movement will not stop in the Punjab because
Lajpat Rai is gone or Ajit Singh is hiding. Eppur si muove, "and
still it moves", to its predestined end.
Bande
Mataram,
May 23, 1907
Page-364
Home
|