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Swaraj
NATIONALISM
was filled at the Pabna conference with a
new spirit unlike anything yet known to us. Whatever resolutions were passed or
steps taken, were taken in a spirit of practical utility, which has been
hitherto absent from our Congresses and Conferences. We have hitherto been
engaged in dispute about ideals and methods. We are confident that the country,
at least Bengal, has now reached a stage when this dispute is no longer
necessary. Whatever we may say out of policy or fear, the whole nation is now at
one. Swaraj is the only goal which the heart of Bengal recognises, Swaraj
without any limitation or reservation. Even the President in his second and
closing speech was so much moved by the spirit in the air that he forgot the
feeling of caution which obliged him in his opening address to deprecate
ambitious ideals, and out of the gladness of his heart there burst from him a
flood of inspiring eloquence which made the whole audience astir with feelings
of impassioned aspiration. Swaraj was the theme of his eloquence and to anyone
listening carefully it was evident that 'Swaraj', unlimited and without
reservation, was the ideal enthroned in the heart of the poet. Even Surendranath
or those who voted for colonial Swaraj knew well in their heart of hearts that
their ideal was not the ideal of the nation. Long habit and apprehension were
the only obstacles in their way which prevented them from throwing themselves
into the current. But the rest of the audience were visibly moved by the
passionate eloquence which flowed from the lips of Rabindranath. What matters it
what resolutions may be passed or rejected? Swaraj is no longer a mere word, no
longer an ideal, distant and impossible, for the heart of Bengal has seized upon
it, and the intellect of Bengal has acknowledged it. We hold no brief for
anyone, but we believe that Srijut Manoranjan Guha was an inspired speaker when
he told the Conference never to lose sight of God in the movement. Mighty
aspirations are in the heart of the people and he is false to
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the
inspiration within him who tries to dwarf them. Let us work practically at the
smallest details, but let us never forget that the work is not for its own sake
but for the sake of Swaraj. We shall be false to our inspiration if we forget
the goal in the details; we shall condemn ourselves to the fate of the man who
in the eagerness of picking up pebbles on the seashore threw away the alchemic
stone, which God had for a moment given into his hands. Swaraj is the alchemic
stone, the Parash-Pathar, and we have it in our hands. It will turn to gold
everything we touch. Village Samitis are good, not for the sake of village
Samitis but for the sake of Swaraj. Boycott is good, not for the sake of Boycott
but for the sake of Swaraj. Swadeshi is good, not for the sake of Swadeshi but
for the sake of Swaraj. Arbitration is good, not for the sake of arbitration but
for the sake of Swaraj. If we forget Swaraj and win anything else we shall be
like the seeker whose belt was turned indeed to gold but the stone of alchemy
was lost to him for ever.
Never should
we forget that but for the hope of Swaraj we should never have done what we have
done during the last three years. No lesser hope, no ideal of inferior grandeur
could have nerved us to the tremendous efforts, the great sacrifices, the
indomitable persistence in the face of persecution which has made these three
years ever memorable as the birth-time of a nation. Who could have borne what we
have borne for the sake of some petty object? No good can result from denying
what God has revealed to us. When Peter denied his master, half of his virtue
went out of him. Let not our people have to repent as Peter had to repent, and
shed tears of bitter sorrow because the divinity has been expelled by their own
folly from their bosom.
When a light has been revealed, folly alone will try to shut it out behind a
screen. When a mighty power has entered into the heart, madness alone can wish
to forfeit it. Swaraj is the direct revelation of God to this people,
— not mere political freedom but a freedom
vast and entire, freedom of the individual, freedom of the community, freedom of
the nation, spiritual freedom, social freedom, political freedom. Spiritual
freedom the ancient Rishis had already declared to us; social freedom was part
of the message of Buddha, Chaitanya, Nanak and Kabir and the saints
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of Maharashtra; political freedom is the last word of the
triune gospel. Without political freedom the soul of man is crippled. Only a few
mighty spirits can rise above their surroundings, but the ordinary man is a
slave of his surroundings and if those be mean, servile and degraded, he himself
will be mean, servile and degraded. Social freedom can only be born where the
soul of man is large, free and generous, not enslaved to petty aims and
thoughts. Social freedom is not a result of social machinery but of the freedom
of the human intellect and the nobility of the human soul. A man who follows
petty ends cannot feel his brotherhood with his fellows, for he is always
striving to raise himself above them and assert petty superiorities. If caste
makes him superior or money makes him superior, he will hug to his bosom the
distinctions of caste or the distinctions of wealth. If
political freedom is absent, the community has no great ends to follow and the
individual is confined within a narrow circuit in which the superiority of
caste, wealth or class is the only ambition which he can cherish. If political
freedom opens to him a wider horizon, he forgets the lesser ambitions. Moreover
a slave can never be noble and broad-minded. He cannot forget himself in the
service of his fellows; for he is already a slave and service is the badge of
his degradation, not a willing self-devotion. When man is thus degraded, it is
idle to think that society can be free.
So too spiritual
freedom can never be the lot of many in a land of slaves. A few may follow the
path of the Yogin and rise above their surroundings, but the mass of men cannot
ever take the first step towards spiritual salvation. We do not believe that the
path of salvation lies in selfishness. If the mass of men around us is
miserable, fallen, degraded how can the seeker after God be indifferent to the
condition of his brothers? Compassion to all creatures is the condition of
sainthood, and the perfect Yogin is he who is sarvabhūtahite
ratah, whose mind is full of the will to do good to all creatures. When a
man shuts his heart to the cries of sufferings around him, when he is content
that his fellow-men should be sorrowful, oppressed, sacrificed to the greed of
others, he is making his own way to salvation full of difficulties and
stumbling-blocks. He is forgetting that God is not only in him-
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self but in all these millions. And for those who have
not the strength, spiritual freedom in political servitude is a sheer
impossibility. When India was free, thousands of men set their feet in the
stairs of heaven, but as the night deepened and the sun of liberty withdrew its
rays, the spiritual force inborn in every Indian heart became weaker and weaker
until now it burns so faintly that aliens have taken upon themselves the role of
spiritual teachers, and the people chosen by God have to sit at the feet of the
men from whose ancestry the light was hidden. God has set apart India as the
eternal fountain-head of holy spirituality, and He will never suffer that
fountain to run dry. Therefore Swaraj has been revealed to us. By our political
freedom we shall once more recover our spiritual freedom. Once more in the land
of the saints and sages will burn up the fire of the ancient Yoga and the hearts
of her people will be lifted up into the neighbourhood of the Eternal.
Bande Mataram,
February 18, 1908
The Future of the Movement
When a great people rises from the dust,
what mantra is the sanjīvanī
mantra
or what power is the resurrecting force of its resurgence? In India
there are two great mantras, the mantra of "Bande Mataram" which
is the public and universal cry of awakened love of Motherland, and there is
another more secret and mystic which is not yet revealed. The mantra of "Bande
Mataram" is a mantra once before given to the world by the Sannyasins of
the Vindhya hills. It was lost by the treachery of our own countrymen because
the nation was not then ripe for resurgence and a premature awakening would have
brought about a speedy downfall. But when in the great earthquake of 1897 there
was a voice heard by the Sannyasins, and they were conscious of the decree of
God that India should rise again, the mantra was again revealed to the
world. It was echoed in the hearts of the people, and when the cry had ripened
in silence in a few great hearts, the whole nation became conscious of the
revelation. Who imagined when the people of Bengal rose in 1905
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against the Partition that that was the
beginning of a great upheaval? It is a passing tempest, said the wise men of
England, let it go over our heads and we will wait. But the tempest did not
pass, nor the thunders cease. So there was a reconsideration of policy and the
wise men said, — "The people of Bengal are easily cowed down, and we will try
whether force cannot do what patience has failed to do". When Sir Bampfylde
Fuller met Lord Curzon at Agra, this was the policy agreed on between them — to
hammer the Bengalis into quietude. But Sir Bampfylde Fuller has gone and the
movement remains. Hare too will go, and many will go, but the movement will
remain. The regulation lathi, the Police truncheon, the threat of the Goorkha
rifle are as straws in the wind before the Divine breath of God. Human power is
mere weakness when measured with the will of the Eternal. So the movement will
continue. It is now time to look deeper into it and know its fountain sources.
So long we were content with the superficial aspects, but the time has come for
God to reveal Himself, and the powers of the world to look on in amazement at
His wonderful workings. When we left Pabna we knew that He was at work to unite
the Bengali race. We hope yet to see that He is at work to unite the Indian
people. When the Convention Committee meets at Allahabad, it will be seen
whether it is His will to unite the parties into a single whole or to separate
them from each other, so that the work of salvation may be hastened by the
energy of the Nationalist Party being separated from the steadiness of the
Moderates. Whatever may happen, it is His will. We look forward to the Easter
meeting for light on what He intends. If the Moderate leaders of Bengal are
wise, they will realise that Bengal at least is destined to become
predominatingly Nationalist, that it is her mission to lead and force the rest
of India to follow. Whoever tries to prevent her from fulfilling that mission,
is setting himself against the decrees of God and will be blown away like
stubble before the tempest.
Bande Mataram,
February 19, 1908
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