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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-06-07_Bande Mataram/Bande Mataram 8-5-07.htm
Bande Mataram
{
CALCUTTA, May 8th, 1907 }
Curzonism for the University
At last the Brahmastra which Lord Curzon forged for the stifling of patriotism through the instrumentality of the University, is to
be utilised, and utilised to its full capacity. We all remember the particular skirmish in the first Swadeshi struggle in which Sir
Bampfylde Fuller fell. Sir Bampfylde insisted on the disaffiliation of the Serajgunge Schools because the teachers and students
were publicly taking part in politics. Lord Minto's Government refused to support him in this action because it was inadvisable, having regard to the troubled nature of the times
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-06-07_Bande Mataram/Bande Mataram 11-4-07.htm
Bande Mataram
{ CALCUTTA, April 11th, 1907 }
The Situation in East Bengal
While commenting on the proceedings of the Berhampur Conference, we expressed our opinion that the leaders had been guilty
of the most serious deficiency in statesmanship and courage in failing to understand and meet the situation created by the occurrences in Tipperah. Leadership in this country has hitherto gone with the fluent tongue, the sonorous voice, skill in dialectics and
acute adroitness in legal draftsmanship. The leader has not been called upon to understand the great and urgent national needs or
to meet the calls of a dangerous crisis. In the opposit
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-06-07_Bande Mataram/Bande Mataram 6-12-07.htm
Bande Mataram
{
CALCUTTA, December 6th, 1907 }
Caste and Representation
The policy of the bureaucracy in the face of the national movement, so far as it is anything more than crude repression, is a
policy of makeshifts and dodges, and, though skilful in a way, it shows throughout an extraordinary ignorance of the country
they rule. The latest brilliant device is an attempt to reshuffle the constituent elements of Indian politics and sort them out afresh
on the basis not only of creed, but of caste. The Pioneer has come out with an article in its best style of businesslike gravity,
in which it settles the basis on which representation shou
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-06-07_Bande Mataram/Bande Mataram 10-8-07.htm
Bande Mataram
{
CALCUTTA, August 10th, 1907 }
To Organise
Srijut Surendranath Banerji in his remarkable speech in College Square, the other day, observed that what the country
now needed was not oratory but statesmanship, for the only effective answer to bureaucratic repression is the organisation
of the whole strength of the country to carry out its national ideal in spite of all repression. We think the veteran leader has
gauged the situation very accurately, but we confess we do not see at present where the statesmanship is to come from which
is to carry out the difficult, arduous and delicate task before us. What we have done hi
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-06-07_Bande Mataram/Bande Mataram 20-5-07.htm
Bande Mataram
{
CALCUTTA, May 20th, 1907 }
The Statesman on Mr. Mudholkar
Nothing can be more instructive than the way in which recent events have arrayed all Anglo-Indians, "liberal" or reactionary,
on one side and on the other hand brought all Indian politicians, moderate or "extremist", nearer to each other. It shows that
the profound division of interests creates an unbridgeable gulf between the aliens in possession and the people of the country
in their different degrees of aspiration.
Apparent alliances between Anglo-India and any section of
the people, can only be temporary adjustments of self-interest or of policy. When the cr
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-06-07_Bande Mataram/The Proposed Reconstruction of Bengal.htm
The Proposed Reconstruction of Bengal
Partition or Annihilation?
In the excitement & clamour that has followed the revolutionary proposal of Lord Curzon's Government to break Bengal into
pieces, there is some danger of the new question being treated only in its superficial aspects and the grave & startling national
peril for which it is the preparation being either entirely missed or put out of sight. On a perusal of the telegrams which pour in
from Eastern Bengal one is struck with the fact that they mainly deal with certain obvious & present results of the measure, not
one of which is really vital. The contention repeatedly harpe
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-06-07_Bande Mataram/Bande Mataram 20-6-07.htm
Bande Mataram
{ CALCUTTA, June 20th, 1907 }
Concerted Action
We publish in another column a letter from a correspondent
signing himself "Organised Co-operation", in which a very elaborate plan is
sketched out for ascertaining the opinion of the nation and following out in
unison the programme arrived at. The scheme is, we fear, more elaborate than
practicable. If the suggestion originally put forward by the Nationalists of the
creation of Congress electorates had been adopted, such a plebiscite might have
been possible; as it is, the necessary machinery does not exist. Moreover, such
an all-India plebiscite covering the whole field of politics,
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-06-07_Bande Mataram/Bande Mataram 11-7-07.htm
Bande Mataram
{
CALCUTTA, July 11th, 1907 }
English Obduracy and Its Reason
We seriously invite our Moderate friends to ask themselves for a reason as to why Englishmen should invariably meet all their
demands for political reforms with the one unalterable answer that they are not fit to receive them. Why should John Morley
whose writings and sayings are so instinct with an ardent love of liberty, so lightly flout their prayer for some concessions of a
democratic nature? He not only denies the Indians the least measure of liberty, but shuts the door of any possible hope abruptly
in their face by telling them that as long as his ima
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-06-07_Bande Mataram/Bande Mataram 16-11-07.htm
Bande Mataram
{
CALCUTTA, November 16th, 1907 }
Nagpur and Loyalist Methods
The decision of the All-India Congress Committee, holding its session appropriately enough not in any place of meeting suitable to its character as a public body but in "Sir Pherozshah Mehta's bungalow", has put the crown on one of the most discreditable intrigues of which even Bombay Loyalism is capable. We held our peace about the real meaning of the Nagpur affair
so long as there was the remotest possibility of the sense of shame and decency reawakening among even a section of the
Nagpur Loyalists, lest a too trenchant exposure of the whole intrigue might imperil
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-06-07_Bande Mataram/India and the British Parliament.htm
New Lamps for Old
with
India and the British Parliament
The nine articles comprising New Lamps for Old
were published
in the Indu Prakash of Bombay from 7 August 1893 to 6 March 1894. A preliminary article, "India and the British Parliament",
was published in the same newspaper on 26 June 1893.
India and the British Parliament
A great critic has pronounced that the aim of all truly helpful
criticism is to see the object as it really is. The Press is the sole contemporary critic of politics, and according as its judgments
are sound or unsound, the people whose political ideas it form