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The Past and
the Future
OUR
contemporary, the
Statesman, notices in an unusually self-restrained article the recent
brochure republished by Dr. A. K. Coomaraswamy from the Modern Review
under the title, "The Message of the East". We have not the work before us but,
from our memory of the articles and our knowledge of our distinguished
countryman's views, we do not think the Statesman has quite caught the
spirit of the writer. Dr. Coomaraswamy is above all a lover of art and beauty
and the ancient thought and greatness of India, but he is also, and as a result
of this deep love and appreciation, an ardent Nationalist. Writing as an artist,
he calls attention to the debased aesthetic ideas and tastes which the ugly and
sordid
commercialism of the West has introduced into the mind of a nation once
distinguished for its superior beauty and grandeur of conception and for the
extent to which it suffused the whole of life with the forces of the intellect
and the spirit. He laments the persistence of a servile imitation of English
ideas, English methods, English machinery and production even in the new
Nationalism. And he reminds his readers that nations cannot be made by politics
and economics alone, but that art also has a great and still unrecognised claim.
The main drift of his writing is to censure the low imitative un-Indian and
bourgeois ideals of our national activity in the nineteenth century and to
recall our minds to the cardinal fact that, if India is to arise and be great as
a nation, it is not by imitating the methods and institutions of English
politics and commerce, but by carrying her own civilisation, purified of the
weaknesses that have overtaken it, to a much higher and mightier fulfilment than
any that it has reached in the past. Our mission is to outdistance, lead and
instruct Europe, not merely to imitate and learn from her. Dr. Coomaraswamy
speaks of art, but it is certain that a man of his wide culture would not
exclude, and we know he does not exclude, thought, literature and religion from
the forces that must uplift
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our nation and are necessary to its
future. To recover Indian thought, Indian character, Indian perceptions, Indian
energy, Indian greatness, and to solve the problems that perplex the world in an
Indian spirit and from the Indian standpoint, this, in our view, is the mission
of Nationalism. We agree with Dr. Coomaraswamy that an exclusive preoccupation
with politics and economics is likely to dwarf our growth and prevent the
flowering of originality and energy. We have to return to the fountainheads of
our ancient religion, philosophy, art and literature and pour the revivifying
influences of our immemorial Aryan spirit and ideals into our political and
economic development. This is the ideal the Karmayogin holds before it,
and our outlook and Dr. Coomaraswamy's do not substantially differ. But in
judging our present activities we cannot look, as he does, from a purely
artistic and idealistic standpoint, but must act and write in the spirit of a
practical idealism.
The debasement of our mind, character and
tastes by a grossly commercial, materialistic and insufficient European
education is a fact on which the young Nationalism has always insisted. The
practical destruction of our artistic perceptions and the plastic skill and
fineness of eye and hand which once gave our productions pre-eminence,
distinction and mastery of the European markets, is also a thing accomplished.
Most vital of all, the spiritual and intellectual divorce from the past which
the present schools and universities have effected, has beggared the nation of
the originality, high aspiration and forceful energy which can alone make a
nation free and great. To reverse the process and recover what we have lost, is
undoubtedly the first object to which we ought to devote ourselves. And as the
loss of originality, aspiration and energy was the most vital of all these
losses, so their recovery should be our first and most important objective. The
primary aim of the prophets of Nationalism was to rid the nation of the idea
that the future was limited by the circumstances of the present, that because
temporary causes had brought us low and made us weak, low therefore must be our
aims and weak our methods. They pointed the mind of the people to a great and
splendid destiny, not in some distant millennium but in the comparatively near
future, and fired the hearts
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of the young men with a burning desire to
realise the apocalyptic vision. As a justification of what might otherwise have
seemed a dream and as an inexhaustible source of energy and inspiration, they
pointed persistently to the great achievements
and grandiose civilisation of our forefathers and called on the rising
generation to recover their lost spiritual and intellectual heritage. It cannot
be denied that this double effort to realise the past and the future has been
the distinguishing temperament and the chief uplifting force in the movement,
and it cannot be denied that it is bringing back to our young men originality,
aspiration and energy. By this force the character, temper and action of the
Bengali has been altered beyond recognition in a few years. To raise the mind,
character and tastes of the people, to recover the ancient nobility of temper,
the strong Aryan character and the high Aryan outlook, the perceptions which
made earthly life beautiful and wonderful, and the magnificent spiritual
experiences, realisations and aspirations which made us the deepest-hearted,
deepest-thoughted and most delicately profound in life of all the peoples of the
earth, is the task next in importance and urgency. We had hoped by means of
National Education to effect this great object as well as to restore to our
youth the intellectual heritage of the nation and build up on that basis a yet
greater culture in the future. We must admit that the instrument which we
cherished and for which such sacrifices were made, has proved insufficient and
threatens, in unfit hands, to lose its promise of fulfilment and be diverted to
lower ends. But the movement is greater than its instruments. We must strive to
prevent the destruction of that which we have created and, in the meanwhile,
build up a centre of culture, freer and more perfect, which will either permeate
the other with itself or replace it if destroyed. Finally, the artistic
awakening has been commenced by that young, living and energetic school which
has gathered round the Master and originator, Sj. Abanindranath Tagore. The
impulse which this school is giving, its inspired artistic recovery of the past,
its intuitive anticipations of the future, have to be popularised and made a
national possession.
Dr. Coomaraswamy complains of the
survivals of the past in the preparations for the future. But no movement,
however
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vigorous, can throw off in a few years the
effects of a whole century. We must remember also why the degradation and
denationalisation, "the mighty evil in our souls" of which the writer complains,
came into being. A painful but necessary work had to be done, and because the
English nation were the fittest instrument for his purpose, God led them all
over those thousands of miles of alien Ocean, gave strength to their hearts and
subtlety to their brains, and set them up in India to do His work, which they
have been doing faithfully, if blindly, ever since and are doing at the present
moment. The spirit and ideals of India had come to be confined in a mould which,
however beautiful, was too narrow and slender to bear the mighty burden of our
future. When that happens, the mould has to be broken and even the ideal lost
for a while, in order to be recovered free of constraint and limitation. We have
to recover the Aryan spirit and ideal and keep it intact but enshrined in new
forms and more expansive institutions. We have to treasure jealously everything
in our social structure, manners, institutions, which is of permanent value,
essential to our spirit or helpful to the future; but we must not cabin the
expanding and aggressive spirit of India in temporary forms which are the
creation of the last few hundred years. That would be a vain and disastrous
endeavour. The mould is broken; we must remould in larger outlines and with a
richer content. For the work of destruction England was best fitted by her
stubborn individuality and by that very commercialism and materialism which made
her the anti-type in temper and culture of the race she governed. She was chosen
too for the unrivalled efficiency and skill with which she has organised an
individualistic and materialistic democracy. We had to come to close quarters
with that democratic organisation, draw it into ourselves and absorb the
democratic spirit and methods so that we might rise beyond them. Our
half-aristocratic, half-theocratic feudalism had to be broken, in order that the
democratic spirit of the Vedanta might be released and, by absorbing all that is
needed of the aristocratic and theocratic culture, create for the Indian race a
new and powerful political and social organisation. We have to learn and use the
democratic principle and methods of Europe, in order that hereafter we may build
up something more suited to our
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past and to the future of humanity. We
have to throw away the individualism and materialism and keep the democracy. We
have to solve for the human race the problem of harmonising and spiritualising
its impulses towards liberty, equality and fraternity. In order that we may
fulfil our mission we must be masters in our own home. It is out of no hostility
to the English people, no race hatred that we seek absolute autonomy, but
because it is the first condition of our developing our national self and
realising our destiny. It is for this reason that the engrossing political
preoccupation came upon us; and we cannot give up or tone down our political
movement until the lesson of democratic self-government is learned and the first
condition of national self-fulfilment realised. For another reason also England
was chosen, because she had organised the competitive system of commerce, with
its bitter and murderous struggle for existence, in the most skilful, discrete
and successful fashion. We had to feel the full weight of that system and learn
the literal meaning of this industrial realisation of Darwinism. It has been
written large for us in ghastly letters of famine, chronic starvation and
misery and a decreasing population. We have risen at last, entered into the
battle and with the boycott for a weapon, are striking at the throat of British
commerce, even as it struck at ours, first by protection and then by free trade.
Again it is not out of hatred that we strike, but out of self-preservation. We
must conquer in that battle if we are to live. We cannot arrest our development
of industry and commerce while waiting for a new commercial system to develop or
for beauty and art to reconquer the world. As in politics so in commerce, we
must learn and master the European methods in order that we may eventually rise
above them. The crude commercial Swadeshi, which Dr. Coomaraswamy finds so
distasteful and disappointing, is as integral a part of the national awakening
as the movement towards Swaraj or as the new School of Art. If this crude
Swadeshi were to collapse and the national movement towards autonomy come to
nothing, the artistic renascence he has praised so highly, would wither and sink
with the drying up of the soil in which it was planted. A nation need not be
luxuriously wealthy in order to be profoundly
artistic, but it must have a certain amount of well-being, a
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national culture and, above all, hope and
ardour, if it is to maintain a national art based on a widespread development of
artistic perception and faculty. Moreover, aesthetic arts and crafts cannot live
against the onrush of cheap and vulgar manufactures under the conditions of the
modern social structure. Industry can only become again beautiful if poverty and
the struggle for life are eliminated from society and the co-operative State and
commune organised as the fruit of a great moral and spiritual uplifting of
humanity. We hold such an uplifting and reorganisation as part of India's
mission. But to do her work she must live. Therefore the commercial
preoccupation has been added to the political. We perceive the salvation of the
country not in parting with either of these, but in adding to them a religious
and moral preoccupation. On the basis of that religious and moral awakening the
preoccupation of art and fine culture will be added and firmly based. There are
many who perceive the necessity of the religious and moral regeneration, who are
inclined to turn from the prosaic details of politics and commerce and regret
that any guide and teacher of the nation should stoop to mingle in them. That is
a grievous error. The men who would lead India must be catholic and many-sided.
When the Avatar comes, we like to believe that he will be not only the religious
guide, but the political leader, the great educationist, the regenerator of
society, the captain of co-operative industry, with the soul of the poet,
scholar and artist. He will be in short the summary and grand type of the future
Indian nation which is rising to reshape and lead the world.
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