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“Capturing
the Congress”
WE
HAVE
asked the Nationalists all over
India to muster strong at Surat during the Congress session. It is believed in
some quarters that we intend to march upon the Congress and re-enact a Pride's
Purge. Another insinuation is that we form a band of vain, petulant upstarts who
delight in wrecking and breaking for its own sake. The Bengalee calls
upon the people to repudiate these traitors, and the Tribune of Lahore,
the Indu Prakash and Social Reformer of Bombay, the Indian
People of Allahabad have by this time swelled that cry. The principle that
underlay our attempt to get Lajpat elected to the Presidential chair has not
been appreciated by the Punjabee, the Hindu and even Lala Lajpat
Rai himself. Capital is being made of this fact and unworthy motives attributed
to the Nationalists. Our enemies have got a splendid opportunity to discredit
the Nationalist movement by saying that even those who are avowedly sympathetic
towards the propaganda cannot support all its senseless manifestation. The
emergence of a new school of thought, their vigorous and menacing activity and
enthusiasm have always made the votaries of established order uneasy and
vindictive. In the frenzied anxiety to retain all power, in a paralysing fear of
change they raise a terrible clamour and try to play upon the timidity and the
spirit of routine of the unthinking people. They cry for the blood of the new
messengers without even patiently listening to their message. Even master minds
succumb to this weakness. When Dr. Price delivered his eloquent sermon on the
great impetus given to national freedom by the revolutionary propaganda in
France, Burke became quite unnerved and was so much carried away by an
unreasonable fear as to wreck his own reputation as a sedate and practical
statesman by setting to work to write that hysterical diatribe against the
French Revolution, which even his admirers could not help regretting.
It
is no wonder therefore that the Nationalists should be
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assailed
with the most unjustifiable vehemence in their attempt to awaken and organise
the people and to shift the centre of power and authority to them. But while the
Nationalists should pursue their line of action with unabated zeal, they are
also to consider, in view of the fierce and vindictive opposition which they
have provoked not only from the bureaucracy but also a section of their own
countrymen, whether they should not work in their own way without coming into
collusion with those whose ideals and methods of work render any concerted
action hardly possible. We invite the Nationalists to Surat not so much to
capture the Congress by violence, as our enemies maliciously put it, but to see
that the Nationalist sentiment and Nationalist programme find their place in the
deliberations and finally prevail. Many of us think that the Nationalists cannot
pull on with the Moderates and Loyalists who are determined to baffle their
patriotic activities to democratise the Congress by a cobweb of malicious
misrepresentation and vilification. The Nationalists indulge in no vague charges
against the Moderates. They expose their high-handedness with an unequivocal
statement of facts. But these people do not meet us on the charges brought
against them, but try to evade the real issue by irrelevant and senseless
denunciations. Under the circumstances, some of us thought it wiser and easier
for the Nationalists to have an organ of their own, without giving the Moderates
and Loyalists a chance of misrepresenting and vilifying them. The experience of
the Midnapur
Conference shows that the delegates, young and old, all smart under the
autocracy of the old workers, which is leading many to think a separatist
movement preferable to a perpetual friction. But for the present we must put all
such thoughts from us. It has been decided to continue the
attempt to fight out the battle of Nationalism in the Congress Pandal until at
last a majority of the delegates declare for our views. To that end we must now
devote all our energies.
Lala
Lajpat Rai’s Refusal
The
refusal of Lala Lajpat Rai to accept nomination to the Presi-
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dentship
of the Congress as against Dr. Rash Behari Ghose has given great cause for
rejoicing to the Moderates and to Anglo-Indian journals like the Empire. The
refusal is natural enough, for when a man who has not been nominated is under
such circumstances pressed for a reply to the question whether he will accept
nomination or not, he is put into a delicate position in which he must either
appear to be wanting in modesty or give away his supporters. This was the
dilemma in which the Loyalists have placed Lala Lajpat Rai. Evidently, he has
been persuaded to think that he was being asked to stand against Dr. Rash Behari
Ghose and that the proposal of the Nationalists was intended as a personal
honour to himself. Needless to say, the Nationalists have not asked Lajpat Rai
to stand as a candidate. The step they have taken is simply to ask from Dr. Rash
Behari Ghose the magnanimity to withdraw and leave the field clear so that a
great principle might be vindicated in the most striking way of which the
circumstances admitted. Had Dr. Ghose shown that magnanimity there would have
been no necessity for Lajpat Rai to be asked to stand as a candidate; the
unanimous will of the country would have called him to the Presidential chair.
Our proposal was not meant as an invitation to do honour to a particular
individual, nor, great as is our personal regard for Lajpat Rai, was it dictated
by personal affection. We look upon him as the embodiment of an ideal and his
nomination as the nation's answer to the repressions of the bureaucracy. Lala
Lajpat Rai, out of feelings which we respect, has declined to give us that
opportunity. We are sorry to have lost it, but glad at least that of the two men
put forward, one should have shown the magnanimity to which the other has not
been able to rise.
The
Delegates’ Fund
Many who are desirous of contributing to the Delegates’
Fund, have addressed enquiries to us about the manner in which it is to be
disposed of. The object of the fund is to send to Surat a number of delegates
with uncompromising views and of an uncompromising spirit who will see to it, so
far as lies in their
Page-650
power,
that the Congress at Surat shall make no backward step but, if possible, move a
step further towards associating itself with the new life of the country. We
hope that no attempt will be made to take any backward step, but we know that
there is a reactionary element in the Congress which would be only too glad to
recede, and if by negligence we give them their opportunity, the responsibility
for any backsliding will be ours. We hope also that Bengal will present a solid
front against any reaction, but we have no right to be sure of it, and only if
there is the strong moral backing of a number of delegates, who will not
compromise with their principles or allow respect of persons or utter persuasion
or browbeating to sway them from their firm position, can we expect the Bengal
leaders to stand fast against the pressure that may be brought to bear on them.
The delegates who will be assisted out of the fund must therefore pledge
themselves to stand firm for Boycott as a general principle,
for the
Swadeshi resolution as it was framed last year, for National Education
and Arbitration as prominent planks in the Congress platform and to do their
best to see that the Congress takes up the cause of the Transvaal Indians,
rejects Mr. Morley's reforms or any other sham and simulacrum of self-government
and takes a sensible step forward in the direction of national organisation. The
precise proposals which will be pressed upon the Subjects Committee will be
formulated after due discussion in the Nationalist Conference which meets on the
24th at Surat, but these are the broad lines on which we propose to frame them.
We may mention finally that all we propose to give out of the fund is
assistance; no single delegate will be given all his expenses to and from or at
Surat. If it should be decided to propose constitutional changes in the
direction of democratising the Congress, our delegates will support such
proposals. Those, therefore, who contribute to the Fund should understand that
they are contributing to send delegates who will support progress and to save
the National Assembly from the danger of a disastrous and ignominious relapse
into the past methods and ideas which the nation is fast outgrowing and which
Bengal has altogether renounced.
Bande
Mataram, December 18, 1907
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