Nationalism not Extremism
IT
IS a curious fact that even after
so many months of sustained propaganda and the most clear and definite
statements of the New Politics, there should still be so much confusion as to
the attitude of the Nationalist Party and the elementary issues they have
raised. This confusion is to some extent due to wilful
distortion and deliberate evasion of the true issues. The ultra-loyalist
publicists especially, Indian or Anglo-Indian, are obliged to ignore the true
position of the party, misnamed Extremists, because they are unable to meet its
trenchant and irresistible logic and common sense. But with the great majority
of Indian politicians, the misapprehension is genuine. The political teaching
of the New School is so novel and disturbing to their settled political ideas, --
or
rather the conventional, abstract, second-hand formulas which take the place
of ideas -- that they cannot even grasp its true nature and turn from it with
repugnance before they have given themselves time to understand it. The most
obstinate of these misapprehensions is the idea that the New Politics is a
counsel of despair, a mad revolutionary fury induced by Curzonian reaction. We
can afford to pass over this misapprehension with contempt, when it is put
forward by foolish, prejudiced or conceited critics who are merely trying to
bring odium on the movement or to express their enlightened superiority over
younger politicians. But when a fair and scrupulous opponent honestly trying to
understand the nationalist position falls into the same error, we are bound to
meet it and once more clear our position beyond misapprehension or doubt.
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foremost jurist in India, a scholar and master of the English tongue, a mine of
literature in possession of a style of his own, too rich and scholarly to be
turned to such everyday uses as a Legislative Council speech. But eminence in
law and literature do not necessarily bring with them a grasp of politics. Dr.
Ghose has only recently turned his attention to this field and has not been long
enough in touch with the actualities of politics to get a real grasp of them. It
is therefore natural that he should be misled by names instead of penetrating
beyond names to the true aspects of current politics. The ordinary nick-names of
Moderate and Extremist do not properly describe the parties which they are
used to label; and they are largely responsible for much confusion of ideas as
to the real difference between the two schools. Dr. Ghose evidently labours,
like many others, under the obsession of the word Extremist. He imagines that
the essential difference between the parties is a difference in attitude and in
the intensity of feeling. The Extremists, in his view, are men embittered by oppression which makes even wise men mad; full of passionate repining at
their "more than Egyptian bondage", exasperated by bureaucratic
reaction, despairing of redress at the hands of the British Government or the
British nation, they are advocating an extreme attitude and extreme methods in a
spirit of desperate impatience. The Extremist propaganda is, therefore, a
protest against misgovernment and a movement of despair driving towards
revolt. We are unable to accept this statement of the nationalist position. On
the contrary, it so successfully represents the new politics to be what they are
not, that we choose it as a starting-point for our explanation of what they are.
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description is not Extremism, but Democratic Nationalism.
Page-298 hour for Indian unification and freedom has arrived. In brief, they are convinced that India should strive to be free, that she can be free and that she will, by the impulse of her past and present, be inevitably driven to the attempt and the attainment of national self-realisation. The Nationalist creed is a gospel of faith and hope. Bande Mataram, April 26, 1907
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