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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-06-07_Bande Mataram/Bande Mataram 25-5-07.htm
Bande Mataram
{
CALCUTTA, May 25th, 1907 }
The East Bengal Disturbances
We have said that the deportation of Lala Lajpat Rai brings no new element into the situation beyond hastening the processes
of Nationalism and bringing us from a less to a more acute stage of our progress to independence. The second disturbing element
has been the culmination of the alliance between Salimullah of Dacca and the bureaucracy in the anarchy and the outrages in the
Mymensingh district. These disturbances are now almost over for the time being, though we must take full advantage of the lull
allowed to us, so as to put our house in order against a
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-06-07_Bande Mataram/Bande Mataram 17-3-08.htm
Bande Mataram
{
CALCUTTA, March 17th, 1908 }
The Warning from Madras
The outbreak at Tinnevelly is significant as a warning both to the authorities and to the leaders of the popular party. For the
bureaucracy, if they have eyes to see or ears to hear, it should be an index of the fierceness of the fire which is burning underneath
a thin crust of patience and sufferance and may at any moment lead to a general conflagration. Whence does this fire come or
what does it signify? It is a suddenly blazing fire of straw, say the bureaucrats, kindled by the hands of mischievous agitators;
it means nothing except that the authors of the mischief must be vig
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-06-07_Bande Mataram/Bande Mataram 27-5-07.htm
Bande
Mataram
{ CALCUTTA, May 27th, 1907 }
The Gilded Sham Again
The Statesman on Sunday
came out with the startling fact that Mr. Morley has "finally formulated a
workable scheme giving prominent natives a larger representation on the various
bodies having effective control of Indian affairs". This is, we presume, the
last and most authoritative of the special cablegrams with which the
Statesman
has been regaling us, for want of more substantial fare, ever since Mr. John
Morley became Chief Bureaucrat for India. For, we are told, Mr. Morley will make
an important announcement when introducing the Indian budget. We would cal
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-06-07_Bande Mataram/Bande Mataram 12-9-06.htm
Bande Mataram
{ CALCUTTA, September
12th, 1906 }
The Old Policy and the New
Babu Bhupendranath Bose has issued a manifesto of his views in the Bengalee, in which he explains his letter to the Secretary of the People's Association at Comilla. That document, it seems, was a private letter, although it was obviously intended
to produce a public effect, viz. to prevent the nomination of Mr. Tilak and to counteract the effect of Babu Bipin Chandra Pal's
meeting and speeches in Comilla. However, we have now an authoritative statement of Babu Bhupendranath's "policy", and
no further misunderstanding is possible. This policy is precisely
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-06-07_Bande Mataram/Bande Mataram 14-9-06.htm
Bande Mataram
{ CALCUTTA, September 14th, 1906}
A Disingenuous Defence
The strictures which the extraordinary announcement made at Bhagalpur by Babu Surendranath Banerji has aroused, have
compelled the Bengalee to offer a sort of apology or explanation for the unconstitutional action of the leaders. It was distinctly
stated at Bhagalpur that Mr. Dadabhai Naoroji had accepted the Presidentship of the Congress. It follows therefore that the
Presidentship was unconstitutionally offered to Mr. Naoroji by one or two individuals behind the back of the Reception Committee. It is now explained that Mr. Naoroji simply wired his willingness to
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-06-07_Bande Mataram/Bande Mataram 17-4-07.htm
Bande Mataram
{ CALCUTTA, April 17th, 1907 }
A Vilifier on Vilification
Our Bombay contemporary the Indu Prakash is very wroth with the Nationalist party for their want of sweet reasonableness.
He accuses them of rowdyism "which would put the East End rowdy to shame," and adds, "Their forte seems to be abuse,
vilification, impertinence and superlative silliness, and these are exhibited alternately." It strikes us that the
Indu Prakash has
been guilty of "abuse, vilification, impertinence and superlative silliness" not alternately but in a lump within the brief space of
these two sentences. This sort of phraseology is however part of the
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-06-07_Bande Mataram/Bande Mataram 18-3-07.htm
Bande Mataram
{ CALCUTTA, March 18th, 1907 }
British Protection or Self-Protection
There are two superstitions which have driven such deep root into the mind of our people that even where the new spirit is
strongest, they still hold their own. One is the habit of appealing to British courts of justice; the other is the reliance upon the
British executive for our protection. The frequent recurrence of incidents such as the Mymensingh and Comilla disturbances will
have its use if it drives into our minds the truth that in the struggle we have begun we cannot and ought not to expect protection
from our natural adversaries. It is perfectly
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-06-07_Bande Mataram/Bande Mataram 23-5-07.htm
Bande Mataram
{
CALCUTTA, May 23rd, 1907 }
And Still It Moves
What is the precise difference which the recent Government measures have made in the conditions of the Swadeshi movement? The first to be considered, because the most dramatic and striking of these measures, is the deportation of Lala Lajpat Rai.
Has this deportation brought any really new element into the problem? When we began the movement, we were prepared,
or at least we professed to be prepared, for the utmost use by the Government of all the weapons the existing law puts
in its hand. We were prepared for press-prosecutions, we were prepared to go to jail on false
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-06-07_Bande Mataram/Bande Mataram 1-7-07.htm
Bande Mataram
{
CALCUTTA, July 1st, 1907 }
Stand Fast
A temporary lull in the policy of repression adopted by the bureaucracy in dealing with Bengal has ceased and the surging
waves are once again threatening to engulf the province. At Bagerhat the
Sub-divisional Conference will not be allowed to
meet. At Barisal the worst scenes enacted during the early days of Fullerism are being repeated. Honour is not safe in East Bengal,
nor is the person. And a fresh outburst of repressive measures is likely to take place in West Bengal as the result of Sir Andrew
Fraser's visit to Simla. And Mr. Newman of the Englishman is persistently pressi
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/-06-07_Bande Mataram/Bande Mataram 8-9-06.htm
Bande Mataram
{ CALCUTTA, September 8th, 1906 }
The Times on Congress Reforms
The pronouncement of the Times on the proposal of the Congress for a further reform and expansion of the Indian Councils
is significant for the thoroughness with which the futility and impossibility of the entire Congress ideal is exposed by the
writer. Mr. Gokhale took great pains last year in his address as President of the Congress to point out, in detail, how the
present Council of the Indian Viceroy might be remodelled, without disturbing the present position of the Government. His
idea is that the elected members of the Viceregal Council may well