Have you read Sri Aurobindo's last letters on China? [[See Addendum. ]]
Oh, yes - he read them to me himself! (Mother laughs.)
But everything Sri Aurobindo said has always come true. You know
he also said (but it was in jest, he didn't write it) ... concerning
reuniting with Pakistan he told me: "Ten years. It will take ten years."
The ten years passed and nothing happened - OFFICIALLY nothing
happened. But the truth is (I learned it through certain government
officials), Pakistan did make some overtures in that direction, asking
for a union to be reestablished (they would have kept some sort of
autonomy, but the two countries would have UNITED, it would have been a
UNION), and Nehru refused.
How foolish!
So Sri Aurobindo had seen it.
He had seen it happen. After ten years, when that man who headed
Pakistan died, [[This may refer to the death of Liaquat Ali, and the
grave economic and political difficulties resulting in the dissolution
of the Pakistani Parliament in October 1958, and General Ayub Khan's
seizure of power. ]] they found themselves in grave difficulty and were
unable to get organized; so they sent somebody (unofficially, of course)
to ask India to reestablish union on certain bases - but they refused,
the Indians refused. It was a repetition of the same stupidity as when
Cripps came to make his proposal, when Sri Aurobindo sent a message
saying, "Accept, whatever the conditions, otherwise it will be worse
later on." That's what Sri Aurobindo told them. Gandhi was there and he
retorted, "Why is that man meddling? He should be concerned only with
spiritual life."[[In April 1942, when England was struggling against the
Nazis and Japan, which was threatening to invade Burma and India,
Churchill sent an emissary, Sir Stafford Cripps, to New Delhi with a
very generous proposal which he hoped would rally India's goodwill and
cooperation in the fight against the worldwide threat. In this proposal,
Great Britain offered India Dominion status, as a first step towards an
independent government. Sri Aurobindo at once came out of retirement to
wire his adhesion to Cripps; he wired all of India's leaders, and even
sent a personal messenger to Gandhi and the Indian Congress to convince
them to accept this unhoped for proposal without delay. One of Sri
Aurobindo's telegrams to Rajagopalachari (the future President of India)
spoke of the grave danger, which no one seemed to see, of rejecting
Cripps' proposal: "... Some immediate solution urgent face grave peril.
Appeal to you to save India formidable danger new foreign domination
when old on way to self-elimination." No one understood: "Why is he
meddling?" Had it accepted Dominion status, India would have avoided the
partition of the country in two, the artificial creation of Pakistan,
as well as the three wars that were to follow (and which we haven't
heard the last of), and the blood bath that ravaged Bengal and the
Punjab in 1947 at the time of the partition. (See in Addendum an extract
from Sri Aurobindo's message on the occasion of India's Independence.)
]]
page 420 , Mother's Agenda , volume 3 , 17th Nov. 1962
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