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Mustafa Kamil Pasha
WE
published yesterday among our selections a full account of the life and death of
Mustafa Kamil Pasha, the great Nationalist leader in Egypt, who has regenerated
Nationalism in his motherland and will be remembered in history as the chief
among the creators of modern Egypt. The early death of this extraordinary man
will be a blow to the movement, but we must remember what we are apt to forget
that the life-work of a great man often does not begin till he dies. While the
body fetters the activities of the spirit within, his work is limited in its
scope and imperfect in its intensity, but when the material shackles are struck
off by the friendly hand of death, then the spirit ranges abroad in perfect
freedom and the sudden and startling rapidity with which its work develops,
forms a theme for the amazement and admiration of posterity. Whatever else
Mustafa Kamil may have been, he was a sincere and enthusiastic patriot. When he
left Egypt to help the cause of his country in foreign countries, he was
welcomed even in England by those who had the generosity to appreciate
patriotism; but the moment it appeared that his work was beginning to bear
practical fruit in Egypt itself, a storm of misrepresentation began to beat
about his devoted head which has not even yet ceased. He was denounced as an
intriguer, a paid tool of the Khedive, a Turcophil emissary of the Sultan. But
Egypt felt the heart of a patriot in his writings and his speeches and her
people responded to his call. The steady growth of the Nationalist Party has
been mainly the work of Mustafa Kamil. It attained its consummation in the
meaning of the recognised Nationalist Party when he was on the brink of the
grave and his last self-forgetful service to his country was the speech which he
rose from his death-bed to deliver upon that memorable occasion.
The programme of the Nationalist Party in Egypt has some resemblances to
that of the Indian Nationalists. Its object is the independence of Egypt, its
method is the appeal to the
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self-consciousness
of the nation, and its reliance is on the help which God always gives to the
cause of righteousness when it is pursued in a lofty and disinterested spirit.
In his earlier career Mustafa relied too much on foreign sympathy and he
persisted till the end in clinging to the hope of some assistance, moral if not
material, from the foreign Powers financially interested in Egypt. But his trust
in this chance of outward help never extended to the folly of expecting British
statesmen to co-operate of deliberate purpose in hastening the day of Egypt's
liberation. He was a statesman as well as a prophet of Nationalism. If he relied
too much on foreign sympathy, it was because the national sentiment in Egypt was
as yet local and he trusted in the moral support of other countries to prevent
England from putting it down with the strong hand before it had become
sufficiently self-conscious to survive oppression. The Sultan stood between
Egypt and complete annexation to England, and therefore he always persisted in
laying stress on the suzerainty of the Sultan. The religious solidarity of Islam
was a moral asset in his favour and he insisted on this solidarity but never
suffered it for a moment to interfere with the distinct existence of Egyptian
Nationality. The cause of Nationality was his first object; the rest merely
helps and supports. Towards the end of his career as the sentiment of
Nationality grew more and more self-conscious and self-reliant in his
countrymen, he too came to perceive in its fullness the truth that Egypt must
rely on herself first and not on others. Foreign help can only be safe and
beneficial if the nation has already grown strong enough to rely mainly on
itself for its own separate existence.
Mustafa Kamil was a man of the type of Mazzini in one respect, his
intense idealism and lofty idea of cosmopolitan unity embracing national
independence. It is this idealism which will keep Egypt alive and secure the
immortality of the Nationalist movement. When a movement for independence begins
with diplomacy and Machiavellianism, it is doomed to failure as the Carbonari
movement failed in Italy. God is not with it. It does not rely on the eternal
principles of truth and virtue, but on the finite strength of human intellect
and human means and to that finite strength God leaves it. When that strength
comes to its
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limits,
there is nothing left, and failure is final. But when a movement takes its stand
on truth and justice, then it appeals to God Himself and He will see to it that
the trust reposed in Him is not falsified. Failures may come but they will be
only fresh incentives to purer and nobler effort. An immortal power will stand
behind the movement and death will be afraid to come near it. Its
leaders
may be snatched
away by the
hand of death, hurried into exile or
imprisonment, given to the hand of the executioner, but fresh leaders will
arise. Its means may change from time to time, it may pass through ever-new
phases and sometimes men may fail to recognise it as the same old movement, but
God is within it always as its eternal and undying Self and it lasts till it
receives its consummation.
Bande
Mataram,
March 3, 1908
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