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Nagpur and Loyalist Methods
THE decision of the All-India Congress
Committee, holding its session appropriately enough not in any place of meeting
suitable to its character as a public body but in "Sir Pherozshah Mehta's
bungalow", has put the crown on one of the most discreditable intrigues of which
even Bombay Loyalism is capable. We held our peace about the real meaning of the
Nagpur affair so long as there was the
remotest possibility of the sense of shame and decency reawakening among even a
section of the Nagpur Loyalists, lest a too trenchant exposure of the whole
intrigue might imperil that slender chance. Now that the die is cast, it is time
for us to speak our minds. From the whole course of the Loyalist manoeuvres in
Nagpur since the strength of the Nationalist
Party in the
Central Provinces became apparent, it was
quite evident that from the first the Loyalists had made up their minds under
inspiration from
Bombay to prevent the holding of the Congress
at
Nagpur. To effect this object they were
prepared to bring about a public scandal of the most shameful kind and bring
discredit on the Congress if only their party might win a tactical advantage
and, as the chief Moderate organ in Bombay frankly put it, keep the Congress out
of the hands of the Extremists. It was in order to keep the Congress out of the
hands of the Extremists that the session was originally arranged to be held at
Nagpur and .the prior claims of the
Punjab ignored. For Nagpur was then supposed to be a
sleepy hollow of politics, a happy hunting-ground of Rai Bahadurs and Government
pets and tame patriots with the official collar round their necks, where there
was no fear of Mr. Tilak's nomination becoming even a remote possibility and Sir
Pherozshah Mehta might safely hope to retrieve the crushing blow his
dictatorship had received at Calcutta. The Congress cabal had, unfortunately for
themselves, reckoned without the fiery energy and indomitable self-confidence
which have always been the characteristics of Nationalism in every country and
every age of
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its emergence. The Nationalists of the
Berar and Central Provinces took the work of proselytisation in hand and as the
result of several tours undertaken by leading members of the party from town to
town and village to village the sleepy hollow awoke to life, a great revolution
of opinion was effected and Nationalism became in a few months a power to be
reckoned with. It soon appeared that in
Nagpur there was on one side the small body of
wealthy, respectable and successful elders with their dependents, hangers-on and
satellites and on the other side, behind a growing body of true patriots among
the men of name and standing, the great bulk of the young men and the poorer
middle class. When a trial of strength came over the question of Mr. Tilak's
nomination the Loyalists could muster a large body of votes on the Reception
Committee only by the wealthy men paying for the admission of their dependents
and hangers-on, while even so against the Rs. 21,000 they could muster, the
Rashtriya Mandal was able to show a total of more than Rs. 30,000 representing
what would have been a substantial majority of votes if the rule of a
three-fourths majority had not been in force. It thus became apparent that the
Nationalist Party might easily command a majority of the local delegates and,
since the place of session was within easy reach of Bengal and a strong body of
Nationalist votes from the North, from Madras and from the Deccan might be
expected, Loyalism was evidently in danger of a serious reverse compared with
which its experiences at Calcutta might sink into insignificance. Nor was the
outlook made rosier by the fact that there was on the Nagpur Executive Committee
an active Nationalist majority led by a strong and fearless stalwart. It had
become imperative, if the primary object of loyalist politics, "to keep the
Congress out of the hands of the Extremists" and so avoid a rupture with the
bureaucracy, was not to be hopelessly frustrated, either to drive the Extremists
out of the Executive Committee and turn it into a convenient instrument for Sir
Pherozshah Mehta's masterly manoeuvres or to transfer the Congress to a less
central and thoroughly Loyalist locality where the Dictator's will could reign
supreme.
From this point onward the
hand of the great wire-puller behind the scenes can be observed in all the
developments on the
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Nagpur stage. Left to themselves there is
little doubt that the two local parties would have come to some understanding;
nor can it be for a moment supposed that the audacious and high-handed attempt
at a shamelessly unconstitutional coup d’état
on the 22nd September was conceived in the brain of so harmless and
insignificant a personality as Mr. Chitnavis. The attempt to expel Dr. Munje and
his Nationalist colleagues from the Executive Committee was a failure because
leonine tactics require a leonine personality to carry them through and Mr.
Chitnavis was trying to wear the giant's robe without possessing the bulk and
sinews of the giant. But their failure and the disturbance that followed it
served the alternative plan of the Loyalists. That disturbance was obviously not
engineered by the Nationalist leaders since, their point having been gained, it
could serve no purpose whatever and on the contrary might do them harm, as it
was bound to give and did give the Loyalists a handle for discrediting the
Nationalists and stood them in good stead as a convenient and always serviceable
pretext for breaking the Nagpur session if every other trumped-up excuse should
fail. The same guiding hand is seen in the skill with which the very success of
the Rashtriya Mandal, was turned to the uses of the intrigue by the preposterous
and cynical demand that the condition under which money had been paid in to it
should be disregarded and a breach of faith with the public committed. Neither
can we regard seriously the much advertised visits of Moderate leaders to Nagpur
to effect a reconciliation, followed as they were by ostentatiously sorrowful
and misleading telegrams to the effect that both sides refused to accept any
compromise while the simple truth was that the Nationalists in their eagerness
to have the session at Nagpur were making every time larger and larger
concessions and it was the Loyalists who throughout showed themselves
intractable. It is not to be believed that if such influential peacemakers had
been in earnest, the Nagpur Loyalists would have showed this spirit of
inflexibility; it was obviously not a local product but made in Bombay, and all
these attempts at conciliation were simply meant to prepare the public mind
for the transfer to Surat which had already been decided on by the master mind
in Bombay. Meanwhile
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the wires were pulled at
Surat and
Madras and the
Surat respectables and Mr. Krishna Swami Aiyer
and his Mahajan Sabha danced to the skilful manipulation. We do not believe the
Madras offer was anything but a feint, for Madras is much too near to Bengal and
there is already a strong Nationalist Party in the northern parts of that
province; but to have only the single offer from Surat would have been to leave
the whole intrigue too bare to the public eye. Our belief is confirmed by the
Bombay correspondent of the Bengalee,
who openly says that
Madras was not chosen because there were men
in
Madras pledged to Extremist views. Finally,
the last act of the farce supplies the key to all that has gone before. An
informal and unofficial representation from a minority of the Reception
Committee is precipitately seized upon by the All-India Congress Committee, a
meeting is announced not at Nagpur where the members might have gone into the
matter on the spot and arranged a working compromise, but in Bombay and at Sir
Pherozshah Mehta's bungalow, as if the Committee and the Congress itself were
Sir Pherozshah's personal movable property; and instead of calling for a report
of the Reception Committee or taking cognisance of the fact that there were
citizens of Nagpur willing and able to reconstitute the Committee and hold the
session as arranged at Calcutta, the Moderate majority records a predetermined
decision to transfer Sir Pherozshah's movable property to Surat at a safe
distance from Bengal where the Loyalist position is as yet unbreached and there
is no time for the Nationalists to instruct public opinion before the holding of
the session.
The intrigue is now complete,
to the huge delight of the Englishman, and officialdom is full of hope
that Sir Pherozshah will this year save the
British Empire. For the Nationalists it should be a spur
to redoubled efforts to spread their creed into every corner of the country so
that Loyalism may nowhere find a secure resting place for its footsoles. As to
the Surat Pherozshah Congress it would be the logical course for us regarding
the decision of the All-India Committee meeting as a misuse of the powers of
that body, to abstain and allow the Loyalists to hold a purely Moderate Congress
of their own. The other alternative is to arrange forthwith the organisation of
Nationalist propaganda
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in Gujerat and make full use of the
opportunity such as it is which the session will provide. In either case, a
conference of our party is necessary, for, in view of the bureaucratic campaign
on one side and the danger of a retrograde step on the part of the Congress on
the other, the times are critical and concerted action imperative.
Bande Mataram,
November 16, 1907
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