MESSAGE
The first message 'on National Education was given for the National Education Week and it was published in the New India of April 8, 1918, edited by Dr. Annie Besant.
National Education Page-505
tion, but much more than that is wanted. The support it gives must be free from all taint of lip-service, passivity and lethargic inaction, evil habits born of long political servitude and inertia, and of that which largely led to it, subjection of the life and soul
to a blend of unseeing and mechanical custom. Moral sympathy is not enough; active support from every individual is, needed. Workers for the cause, money and means for its sustenance,
students for its schools and colleges, are what the movement needs that it may prosper. The first will surely not be wanting; the second should come, for the control of the movement has in its personnel both influence and energy, and the habit of giving as well as self-giving for a great public cause is growing more
widespread in the country. If the third condition is not from the beginning sufficiently satisfied, it will be because, habituated
individually always to the customary groove, we prefer the safe and prescribed path, even when it leads nowhere, to the great
and
effective way, and cannot see our own interest because it presents itself in a new and untried form. But this is a littleness of spirit which the Nation must shake off that it may have the courage of its destiny. Page-506 future destiny and the turn of its steps for a century are being powerfully decided, and for no ordinary century, but one which is itself a great turning-point, an immense turn-over in the inner and outer history of mankind. As we act now, so shall the reward of our Karma be meted out to us, and each call of this kind at such an hour is at once an opportunity, a choice, and a test offered to the spirit of our people. Let it be said that it rose in each to the full height of its being and deserved the visible intervention of the Master of Destiny in its favour.
Page-507 |