Extremism in the "Bengalee"
THE Bengalee,
excited by the news of a second outrage on the Hindu religion at Ambariya in
Mymensingh, came out yesterday with a frankly extremist issue. We only wish
that we could look on this as anything more than a fit of passing excitement;
but the Bengalee is hot today and cold tomorrow. Nevertheless, what it
says is true, and it is well and pointedly expressed: -
Page-319 personal standpoint; but national heroes are not usually made of such stuff nor
are national interests promoted by the wearers of soft raiment. The worship of
Motherland is the sole privilege of those choice spirits who have the heart to
incur sacrifice, the hand to execute the mandate of conscience, and the
recklessness to hang propriety and prudence."
Page-320 ration, your
unseasonable and unreasonable prudence; and another fifty years will find you
more degraded than ever, a nation of Greeks with polished intellects and debased
souls, body and soul
helplessly at the mercy of alien masters.
Page-321 India. That position can only be maintained either by hypnotising the people or terrorising them. The new spirit is unsealing the eyes of the people and breaking the hypnotic spell of the last century; especially in East Bengal the process of disillusionment has been fairly thorough. The bureaucracy is therefore compelled to fall back on the only other alternative, terrorism. But our Moderate friends will persist in believing that the policy in East Bengal is only the policy of individuals. They are therefore "demanding" the recall of Mr. Hare. "He has eclipsed," says the Bengalee, "the record of Aurangzeb as a persecutor of Hindus, without Aurangzeb's excuse of religious zeal... He has made every Hindu hate British rule in the privacy of his heart." But will the recall of Mr. Hare be of any more effect than the recall of Bampfylde Fuller? For our part we had never any illusions on the point. We knew that what Sir Bampfylde began in his fury and heat of rage, Mr. Hare would pursue in cold blood and with silent calculation. Supposing the wish of the Bengalee's heart gratified and Mr. Hare sent home to the enjoyment of his well-earned pension, what then? A third man will come who will carry out the same policy in a different way. It is not Hare or Fuller who determines the policy of the Shillong Government, but the inexorable necessity of the bureaucratic position which drives them into a line of action insane but inevitable. They must either crush the Swadeshi movement or give up their powers wholly or in part to the people; and to the latter course they cannot be persuaded by any means which we have yet employed. Bande Mataram, May 3, 1907
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