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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Karmayogin_Volume-02/The Necessity of the Situation.htm
The Necessity of the Situation
A
VERY serious
crisis has been induced in Indian politics by the revival of Terrorist outrages
and the increasing evidences of the existence of an armed and militant revolutionary
party determined to fight force by force. The effect on the Government seems to
have been of a character very little complimentary to British statesmanship.
Faced by this menace to peace and security the only device they can think of is
to make peaceful agitation impossible. Their first step has been to proclaim
all India as seditious. Their second is to announce the introduction of fresh
legislation making yet more stringent the already all-embracing l
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Karmayogin_Volume-02/Facts and Opinions 24.7.1909.htm
Facts and Opinions
Volume
I - July 24,1909 - Number 5
The
Indiscretions of Sir Edward
The speech of Sir Edward Baker in the Bengal Council last week was
one of those indiscretions which statesmen occasionally commit and invariably
repent, but which live in their results long after the immediate occasion has
been forgotten. The speech is a mass of indiscretions from beginning to end.
Its first error was to rise to the bait of Mr. Madhusudan
Das' grotesquely violent speech on the London murders and assume a
political significance in the act of the young man Dhingra.
The theory of a conspiracy behind this act is, we believe, generally rejected
in Eng
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Karmayogin_Volume-02/Facts and Opinions 29-1-1910.htm
Facts and Opinions
Volume I - Jan.
29, 1910 - Number 30
The
High Court Assassination
The
startling assassination of Deputy Superintendent Shams-ul-Alam
on Monday in the precincts of the High Court, publicly, in daylight, under the
eyes of many and in a crowded building, breaks the silence which had settled on
the country, in a fashion which all will deplore. The deceased officer was
perhaps the ablest, most energetic and most zealous member of the Bengal
detective force. It was his misfortune that he took the leading part not only
in the Alipur Bomb Case in which he
zealously and untiringly assisted the Crown solicitors, but in the investig
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Karmayogin_Volume-02/The Hughly Conference.htm
The Hughly Conference
THE
chances of politics are in reality the
hidden guidance of a Power whose workings do not reveal themselves easily even to the most practised eye. It is difficult
therefore to say whether the successful conclusion of the
Provincial Conference at Hughly without the often threatened breach between the
parties, will really result in the furtherance of the object for which the Nationalists consented to
waive the reaffirmation of the policy formulated at Pabna
and refrained from using the preponderance which the general
sentiment of the great majority of the delegates gave them
at Hughly. If things go by the counting of heads, as is the rule in dem
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Karmayogin_Volume-02/Swaraj and the Musulmans.htm
"Swaraj" and the Musulmans
we
EXTRACT in our columns this week the comments of Srijut Bepin Chandra
Pal's organ, Swaraj, on the Government's pro-Mahomedan
policy and its possible effects in the future. We are glad to see this great
Nationalist again expressing his views with his usual orginality
and fine political insight. We do not ourselves understand the utility of such
a campaign as Srijut Bepin Chandra is carrying on in England. In politics quite
as much as in ordinary conduct the rule of desh-kal-patra,
the right place, the right time and the right person, conditions the value and
the effectiveness of the work. For Bepin Babu's
mission there could not be
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Karmayogin_Volume-02/Nationalist Organisation.htm
Nationalist Organisation
THE
time has now come when it is imperative in the interests of the Nationalist Party that its forces
should be organised for united deliberation and effective
work. A great deal depends on the care and foresight with
which the character and methods of the organisation are
elaborated at the beginning, for any mistake now may mean
trouble and temporary disorganisation hereafter. It is not the
easy problem of providing instruments for the working of a
set of political ideas in a country where political thought has
always been clear and definite and no repressive laws or police
harassment can be directed against the dissemination of just
polit
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Karmayogin_Volume-02/The New Policy.htm
The New Policy
A
POLICY
of conciliation, a policy of trust in the people, a policy liberal,
progressive, sure if slow, — that was the forecast made by the Moderate
astrologers when the Reform comet sailed into our startled heavens. The
prophets and augurs of the Anglo-Indian Press friendly to Moderate India —
friendly on condition of our giving up all aspirations that go beyond the
Reforms — prophesied high, loud and often to the same purpose, and if, like the
Roman augurs, they winked and smiled mysteriously at each other when they met,
the outside world was not supposed to know anything of their private opinions.
Even the disillusionment caused by the publication of the C
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Karmayogin_Volume-02/An Extraordinary Prohibiition.htm
An Extraordinary Prohibition
PANDIT
Bhoje Dutt of Agra has been in
our midst for some time, and none had hitherto imagined that
he was a political agitator or his teachings dangerous to the
public peace. We all knew him as secretary of the Suddhi Samaj, a religious body
having for its object the readmission of converts from Hinduism into the fold of the religion and also, we
believe, the admission of converts to Hinduism from other
religions into Hindu society with the full status of Hindus.
The society has been working for some time with signal success
and no breach of the law or the peace. Yet the other day Mr.
Swinhoe thought fit to prohibit the Pandit from
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Karmayogin_Volume-02/Kumartuli Speech.htm
Kumartuli Speech*
BABU
Aurobindo Ghose
rose amidst loud cheers and said that when he consented to attend the meeting,
he never thought that he would make any speech. In fact, he was asked by the
organisers of the meeting simply to be present there. He was told that it would
be sufficient if he came and took his seat there. Now he found his name among
the speakers. The Chairman of the meeting, whose invitation was always an
order, had called upon him to speak.
two
reasons
FOR
silence
He had two reasons
as to why he ought not to speak. The first was that since he was again at
liberty to address his countrymen he had made a good many speeches and he had
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/SABCL/Karmayogin_Volume-02/Facts and Opinions 9-10-1909.htm
Facts and Opinions
Volume I - Oct. 9, 1909 - Number
16
The
Apostasy of the National Council
We have received an open letter from
some teachers of
the Rangpur National school in which they warn the President
of the National Council of Education of the evil effects likely
to ensue from the recent National Risley Circular and protest
strongly against the policy underlying it. For reasons of
space we are unable to publish the letter. The signatories point
out that the movement took its birth in the boycott movement
and was from the first, closely associated with it in nature
and sympathy, that the participation of young men in the
national awakeni