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Facts and Opinions
Volume I - Oct. 2, 1909 - Number 15
The
Rump Presidential Election
The Lahore Special Correspondent of the Rashtra Mat telegraphs to his paper a story of the proceedings at the
Presidential election for the Rump Congress at Lahore, which, if
correct, sheds a singular light on the proceedings of the valiant Three who are defending the bridge of conciliation and
alliance between the bureaucracy and the Moderates which now
goes by the name of the Indian National Congress. According
to this correspondent, the account of Sir Pherozshah's election cabled from Lahore is incorrect and garbled. What really
happened was that eighteen gentlemen assembled at Lahore as
the Reception Committee, of whom more than half were employees of Mr. Harkissen Lal's various commercial ventures.
This independent majority voted plump for Harkissen Lal's
candidate. Sir Pherozshah, but the rest were strong and firm for
Sj. Surendranath Banerji. This revolt in the camp led to much
anxiety and confusion and great efforts were made to bring back
the insurgents to their allegiance, but in vain. If this account is
correct, no criticism can be too strong for the misrepresentation
which suppressed the facts of the election. Was it not circulated
that Sir Pherozshah would not accept the Presidentship unless
it were offered unanimously ? A strenuous attempt was made to
save the face of the Dictator by representing in the Lahore cables
that the nomination of Sj. Surendranath by the Bengal Convention Committee was only a suggestion in a private letter. But
even then, what of Burma ? What of this remarkable division in
the toy committee itself at Lahore ? We imagine that the Lion will
put his dignity in his pocket or in his mane or any other hiding
place that may be handy and accept the Presidentship; and if he
does, we also imagine that he will roar discreetly at Lahore about
the touching and unanimous confidence placed in him and the
imperative voice of the whole country calling him to fill this great
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and responsible position of a Rump President ! We have a suggestion for our highly esteemed Lion. Why not save his dignity
and effect his object by appointing some lieutenant like Mr.Wacha as President ? In that case Sir Pherozshah would be as
much President in fact as if he enjoyed the doubtful and mutilated honours of the Rump Presidentship.
Nation-Stuff
in Morocco
The Powers of Europe are highly indignant at the tortures and
mutilations practised by Mulai Hamid on his vanquished rival,
El Roghi, and his captured adherents. There is no doubt that
the savage outbreak of mediaeval and African savagery of which
the Moorish Sultan has been guilty, is revolting and deprives
him personally of all claim to sympathy; but European moral
indignation in the matter seems to us to be out of place when we
remember the tortures practised by American troops on Filipinos
(to say nothing of the ghastly details of lynching in the Southern
States,) and the unbridled atrocities of the European armies in
China. Be that as it may, we come across a remarkable account,
extracted in the Indian Daily News, of the stuff of which the
Moorish people are made. The narrator is Belton, the Englishman who commanded the Sultan's army and has resigned his
post as a protest against the Sultan's primitive method of treating
political prisoners. Death and mutilation seem to have been the
punishments inflicted. Belton narrates that twenty officers of
El Roghi had their right hands cut off and then seared, according
to the barbarous old surgical fashion, in a cauldron of boiling
oil, to stop the bleeding. Not from one of these men, reports
the English soldier with wonder, did there come, all the time, a
single whimper. And he goes on to tell how one of them, after
the mutilation, quietly walked over to the fire where the cauldron was boiling,
and, while his stump was being plunged in the boiling liquid, lighted from the flame with the utmost serenity a
cigarette he held in his hand. Whatever may be the present backwardness of the Moors and the averseness to light of their tribes,
there is the stuff of a strong, warlike and princely nation in the
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land which gave birth to these iron men. If ever the wave of
Egyptian Neo-Islam and Mahomedan Nationalism sweeps across
Morocco, Europe will have to reckon with no mean or contemptible people in the North West of Africa.
Cook
Versus Peary
It is with a somewhat sardonic sense of humour that we in India,
whom that eminently truthful diplomat, Lord Curzon, once had
the boldness to lecture on our mendacity and the superior truth
of the Occidental, have watched the vulgar squabble between
Dr. Cook and Commander Peary about the discovery of the
North Pole. Long ago, most of the romance and mystery had gone out of the search
for the Pole. The quest, though still extremely difficult and even perilous to an incautious adventurer,
had no longer the charm of those gigantic dangers which met
and slew the old explorers. It was known besides that little was
likely to reward the man who succeeded, and there was small
chance of anything but ice and cold being discovered at the North
Pole. What little of the interesting and poetic was left in the idea,
has now gone out of it for ever, and only a sense of nausea is left
behind, as the controversy develops and leaves one with a feeling
that it would have been better if the goal of so many heroic sacrifices had been left undiscovered for all time, rather than that it
should have been discovered in this way. The spectacle of two
distinguished explorers, one, we suppose from his title, an American naval officer and the other a savant not unknown to fame,
hurling at each other such epithets as liar and faker, accusing each
other of vile and dishonourable conduct, advancing evidence
that when examined melts into thin air, citing witnesses who,
when questioned, give them the lie, while all Europe and America
join and take sides in the disgusting wrangle, is one that ought to
give pause to the blindest admirer of Western civilisation and
believer in Western superiority. We certainly will not imitate
the general run of European writers who, arguing smugly from
temporary, local or individual circumstances, talk in the style
of self-satisfied arrogance, of Oriental barbarity, Oriental trea-
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chery and mendacity, Oriental unscrupulousness; we will not
say that the continents of Europe and America are peopled by
nations of highly civilised liars, impostors and fakers of evidence
without any sense of truth, honour or dignity, although we have
as good cause as any Western critic of Asia; but at any rate the
legend of European superiority and the inferior morals of the Asiatic has, by this time, been so badly damaged that we think
even the Englishman might think twice before it bases its opposition to national aspirations on the pretensions of the Pharisee.
It is evident that we are as good as the Europeans; we think we
are in most respects better; we certainly could not be worse.
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