The
Hammer of God
(Speech delivered in
Jhalakati, East Bengal on June 19, 1909, On
Nationalism, pp.391-400)
FELLOW-COUNTRYMEN,
delegates and people of Barisal and Bakarganj: - I have first to
express to you my personal gratitude for the kindly reception you have
accorded to me. For a year I have been secluded from the fellowship
and brotherly embrace of my fellow-countrymen. In me, therefore, the
kindliness of your welcome must awake much keener feelings than would
have been the case in other circumstances. Especially is it a cause of
rejoicing to me to have that welcome in Barisal. When I come to this
district, when I come to this soil of Bakarganj which has been made
sacred and ever memorable in the history of this country I come to no
ordinary place. When I come to Barisal I come to the chosen temple of
the Mother
—
I come to a sacred pithasthan
of the national spirit
—
I come to the
birth-place and field of work of Aswini Kumar Dutta.
It is now the fourth
year since I came to Barisal first on the occasion of the provincial
conference. Three years have passed since then
—
they have been years
of storm and stress to the country, they have been years during which
history has been making, during which the people of India have been
undergoing a process of rebirth. Many things have happened in these
years, especially in the last few months. One sign of what has been
happening in the past is this empty chair [pointing to the chair
upon which Aswini Kumar's photo was placed]. One aspect of these
years has been a series of repressions. They have been years in which
the country has had to undergo the sufferings and sacrifices which
repression involves. Barisal has had its full share of these
sufferings. They had begun even before I last came among you. You had
then the regulation lathi of the police, and the Gurkha visitation.
After that there have been other forms of coercion. In this very town
of Jhalakati you had to pay a punitive police tax. It was a punitive
tax, punitive not of any offence of which you have been guilty, — for, you have been guilty of none. In
Barisal, there was no disturbance, no breach of the law. On the
contrary, you have always been patient and self-restrained — you have always kept within the four
corners of the law. What you have been punished for was your patriotism
— you were punished for your
swadeshism — you were punished for your
successful organisation of boycott. That tax was borne by the Mahajans
of Jhalakati with the readiness and uncomplaining endurance of
large-hearted patriotism.
And
now there have come the deportations. You have been called to endure
the exile of those who have been dearest to you, who stood for all that
was patriotic and noble in the district. Of the deportations Barisal
has had more than its full share. Of those deported three are sons of
this district. The man whose name will live for ever on the lips of his
countrymen as one of the great names of the age — one of the makers of the
new nation Aswini Kumar Dutta has been taken away from you. His active
and devoted lieutenant has been taken away from you. That warm-hearted
patriot whom I am proud to have had the privilege of calling my
personal friend — Manoranjan Guha —
has been taken
away from you. Why have they been exiled? What was their offence? Can
anyone in Barisal name a single action — can anyone of those who have sent him into
exile name definitely any single action which Aswini Kumar Dutta has
committed, of which the highest and noblest man might not be proud? Can
anyone name a single action of Krishna Kumar Mitra's which would be
derogatory to the reputation of the highest in the land? There have
indeed been charges, —
vague charges,
shameless charges, —
made. The law
under which they have been exiled requires no charge. The law under
which they have been exiled has been impugned in Parliament as an
antiquated and anomalous Regulation, utterly out of place and unfit to
be used in modern times. When it was so attacked and its use by the
Government of India challenged, Lord Morley, the man who rules India
with absolute sway and stands or should stand to us as the incarnation of British
statesmanship, made an answer which was not the answer of a statesman
but of an attorney. "The law", he said, "is as good a law as any on the
Statute Book." What is meant — what
does Lord Morley mean
— by a "good
law"? In a certain sense every law is good law which is passed by an
established authority. If there were a law which made swadeshi illegal,
by which to buy a swadeshi cloth would become a criminal action
punishable by a legal tribunal there have been such laws in the past — and if that were enacted by the
Legislative Council, it would
be in Lord Morley's sense of the word as good a law as any upon the
Statute Book. But would it be
a good law in the true sense or a travesty of law and justice? Lord
Morley says it
is a good law.
We say it is a lawless law, a
dishonest law, — a law that is, in any real
sense of the word, no law at all. For what is its substance and
purpose? It provides that when you cannot bring any charge against a
man which can be supported by proofs and when you have no evidence
which would stand for a moment before a court of justice, in any legal
tribunal — when you have nothing
against him except that his existence is inconvenient to you, then you
need not advance any charge, you need not bring any evidence, you are
at liberty to remove him from his home, from his friends, from his
legitimate activities and intern him for the rest of his life in a
jail. This is the law which is as good a law as any on the Statute
Book! But what does its presence on the Statute Book mean? It means
that under certain circumstances or whenever an absolute authority
chooses, there is no law in the land for any subject of the British
Crown, — no safety for the liberty
of the person. It is under this law that nine of the most devoted
workers for the country have been exiled, some of whose names are
household words in India and incompatible with any imputation of evil.
When the authorities were pressed in Parliament for an account of the
reasons for their action they would not bring and refused to bring any
definite accusation. Once indeed under the pressure of
cross-examination a charge was advanced, — wild, vague and baseless. It was said in
effect that these men were instigators and paymasters of anarchy and bloodshed. What was the authority
under which such a charge was made? How was it that this monstrous
falsehood was allowed to proceed from the mouths of His Majesty's
Ministers and pollute the atmosphere of the House of Commons? Is there
a man in his senses who will believe that Aswini Kumar Dutta was the
instigator and paymaster of anarchy and bloodshed or that Krishna Kumar
Mitra was the instigator and paymaster of anarchy and bloodshed,
—
men whose names were
synonymous for righteousness of action and nobility of purpose and
whose whole lives were the embodiment of uprightness, candour and fair
and open living before all men? We have been told that it was not only
on police evidence that they were exiled. That was not what was said at
the beginning. At first it was on police information that the
deportations were justified and any attempt to impugn that authority
was restnted. But now that police information has been shown to be
false and unreliable, it is said that there was other than police
information to justify the action of the authorities. We know what that
information must have been. I will not make any sweeping charge against
a whole body of men without exception. I know that even among the
police there are men who are upright and observe truth and honesty in
their dealings. I have met such men and honoured them. But we know what
the atmosphere of that department is, we know what the generality of
police officers are and how little reliance can be placed upon them. Of
the value of police information Midnapore is the standing and
conclusive proof. Besides this police information what else can there
have been? Obviously the information on which the police has relied in
certain of these cases
—
the evidence of the
hired perjurer and forger, of the approver who to save himself from a
baseless charge makes allegations yet more unfounded against others and
scatters mud on the most spotless reputations in the land. If there
were any other source besides this, we know too what that must have
been. There are a sprinkling of Vibhishans among us, —
men who for their own ends are willing to tell any lie that they think
will please the authorities or injure their personal enemies. But if
the Government in this country have upon such information believed that
the lives of Aswini Kumar Dutta and Krishna Kumar Mitra are a mere mask
and not the pure and spotless lives we have known, then we must indeed
say, "What an amount of folly and ignorance rules at the present moment
in this unhappy country."
Well,
we have had many other forms of repression besides these deportations.
We have had charges of sedition, charges of dacoity and violence,
brought against the young men who are the hope of our country
—
charges such as
those which we have seen breaking down and vanishing into nothing when
tested by a high and impartial tribunal. This is the nature of the
repression we have been called upon to suffer. It has been so
engineered by the underlings of the Government that it strikes
automatically at those who are most energetic, most devoted, most
self-denying in the service of the mother country. It addresses itself
to the physical signs, the outward manifestations of our national life,
and seeks by suppressing them to put an end to that national life and
movement. But it is a strange idea, a
foolish idea, which men have,
indeed, always cherished under such circumstances, but which has been
disproved over and over again in history —
to think that a
nation which has once risen, once has been called up by the voice of
God to rise, will be stopped by mere physical repression. It has
never
so happened in the history of a nation, nor will it so happen in the
history of India. Storm has swept over us today. I saw it come. I saw
the striding of the storm-blast and the rush of the rain and as I saw
it an idea came to me. What is this storm that is so mighty and sweeps
with such fury upon us? And I said in my heart, "It is God who rides
abroad on the wings of the hurricane,
—
it is the might and
force of the Lord that manifested itself and His almighty hands that
seized and shook the roof so violently over our heads today." A storm
like this has swept also our national life. That too was the
manifestation of the Almighty. We were building an edifice to be the
temple of our Mother's worship
—
were rearing her a
new and fair mansion, a palace fit for her dwelling. It was then that
He came down upon us. He flung Himself upon the building we had raised.
He shook the roof with His mighty hands and part of the building was
displaced and ruined. Why has He done this? Repression is nothing but
the hammer of God that is beating us into shape so that we may be
moulded into a mighty nation and an instrument for His work in the
world. We are iron upon His anvil and the blows are showering
upon us
not to destroy but to re-create. Without
suffering there can be no
strength, without sacrifice there can be no growth. It is not in
vain
that Aswini Kumar has been taken from his people. It is not in vain
that Krishna Kumar Mitra has been taken from us and is rotting in Agra
Jail. It is not in vain that all Maharashtra mourns for Tilak at
Mandalay. It is He, not any other, Who has taken them and His ways are
not the ways of men, but He is all-wise. He knows better than we do
what is needful for us. He has taken Aswini Kumar Dutta away from
Barisal. Is the movement dead? Is swadeshi dead? The rulers of the
country in their scanty wisdom have thought that by lopping off the
heads the.movement will cease. They do not know that great as he is,
Aswini Kumar Dutta is not the leader of this movement, that Tilak is
not the leader,
—
God is the leader.
They do not know that the storm that has been sweeping over the country
was not sent by them, but by Him for His own great purposes. And the
same strength that was manifested in the storm today and in the storm
of calamity that has passed over the country
—
the same strength is
in us.
And
if they are mighty to afflict, we are mighty to endure. We are
no
ordinary race. We are a people ancient as our hills and rivers and we
have behind us a history of manifold greatness, not surpassed by any
other race. We are the descendants of those who performed tapasya and
underwent unheard-of austerities for the sake of spiritual gain and of
their own will submitted to all the sufferings of which humanity is
capable. We are the children of those mothers who ascended with a smile
the funeral pyre that they might follow their husbands to another
world. We are a people to whom suffering is welcome and who have a
spiritual strength within them, greater than any physical force. We are
a people in whom God has chosen to manifest Himself more than any other
at many great moments of our history. It
is because God has
chosen to manifest Himself and has entered into the hearts of His
people that we are rising again as a nation. Therefore
it
matters not even if
those who are greatest and most loved are taken away. I trust in God's
mercy and believe that they will soon be restored to us. But even if
they don't come again still the movement will not cease. It will move
forward irresistibly until God's will in it is fulfilled. He fulfils
His purposes inevitably and this too He will fulfil. Those who are
taken from us must after all some day pass away. We are strong in their
strength. We have worked in their inspiration. But in the inevitable
course of nature they will pass from us and there must be others who
will take their places. He has taken them away from us for a little in
order that in their absence we might feel that it was not really in
their strength that we were strong, in their inspiration that we worked
but that a Higher Force was working in them and when they are removed,
can still work in the hearts of the people. When they pass away others
will arise or even if no great men stand forth to lead, still the soul
of this people will be great with the force of God within and do the
work. This it is that He seeks to teach us by these separations
—
by these calamities.
The men are gone. The movement has not ceased. The National School at
Jhalakati was started one month after the deportation of Aswini Kumar
Dutta; that is a patent sign that the movement is not, as our rulers
would ignorantly have it, got up by eloquent agitators. The movement
goes on by the force of nature; it works as force of nature, works and
goes inevitably on, whatever obstacle comes in the way.
What is it that
this movement seeks, not according to the wild chimeras born of
unreasoning fear but in its real aim and purpose? What is it that we
seek? We seek the fulfilment of our life 'as a nation. This is what the
word swaraj, which is a bugbear and terror to the Europeans, really
means. When they hear it, they are full of unreasoning terrors. They
think swaraj is independence, it is freedom and that means that the
people are going to rise against them in rebellion, that means there
are bombs behind every bush, that every volunteer who gives food to his
famine-stricken countrymen or nurses the cholera-stricken, is a possible
rebel and dacoit. Swaraj is not the
Colonial form of Government nor any
form of Government. It means the fulfilment of our national life. That
is what we seek, that is why God has sent us into the world to fulfil
Him by fulfilling ourselves in our individual life, in the family, in
the community, in the nation, in humanity. That is why He has
sent us
to the world and it is
this fulfilment that we demand; for this fulfilment is life and to
depart from it
is to perish.
Our object, our claim is that we shall not perish as a nation, but live
as a nation. Any authority that goes against this object will dash
itself against the eternal throne of justice — it will dash itself against the laws of
nature which are the laws of God, and be broken to pieces.
This
then is our object and by what means do we seek it? We seek it by feeling our
separateness and pushing forward our individual self-fulfilment by what
we call swadeshi swadeshi in commerce and manufacture, in politics, in
education, in law and administration, in every branch of national
activity. No doubt this means independence, it means freedom; but it does not mean rebellion.
There are some who fear to use the word "freedom", but I have always
used the word because it has
been the mantra of my life to aspire towards the freedom of my nation.
And when I was last in jail I clung to that mantra; and through the
mouth of my counsel I used this word persistently. What he said for me — and it was said not only on my behalf, but on
behalf of all who cherish this ideal, — was this: If to aspire to independence and
preach freedom is a crime you may cast me into jail and there bind me
with chains. If to preach freedom is a crime then I am a criminal and
let me be punished. But freedom does
not mean the use of violence — it
does not mean bombs; it
is the fulfilment of our
separate national existence. If there is any authority mad
enough to
declare that swadeshism, national education, arbitration, association
for improvement of our physique, is illegal, it is not stamping out
anarchism; it
is on the
contrary establishing a worse anarchism from above. It sets itself
against the law of God that gives to every nation its primary rights.
The judge in the Alipore case said that the aspiration after
independence and the preaching of the ideal of independence was a thing
no Englishman could condemn. But if you say that the aspiration after
independence is a thing none can condemn and yet put down by force the
only peaceful means of securing independence, you are really declaring
that it is the practice of
independence which you will not tolerate. Because a few have gone mad
and broken the law you have chosen to brand a whole people, to condemn
a nation and to suppress a whole national movement. With that we have
nothing to do. We have no voice in
the government of our country; and
the laws and their administration are things in which you don't allow
us to have any concern. But one thing
is in our power; — our
courage and devotion are in our power,
our sacrifice, our suffering are in our power. That you cannot take
away from us, and so long as you cannot take that from us you can do
nothing. Your repression cannot for ever continue, for it will bring anarchy into
the country. You will not be able to continue your administration if
this repression remains permanent. Your government will become
disorganised; the trade you are using such means to save will languish
and capital be frightened from the country.
We
have therefore only to suffer. We have only to be strong and enduring.
All this machinery of coercion, all this repression, will then be in
vain. That is the only virtue that is needed. We shall never lose our
fortitude, our courage, our endurance. There are some who think that by
lowering our heads the country will escape repression. That is not my
opinion. It is by looking the storm
in the face and meeting it with
a high courage,
fortitude and endurance that the nation can be saved. It is that which
the Mother demands from us, — which
God demands from us. He sent the storm yesterday and it carried the roof away. He
sent it today with greater
violence and it
seized the
roof to remove it.
But today the
roof remained. This is what He demands of us. —"I have sent my storms
upon you, so that you may feel and train your strength. If you
have
suffered by them, if something has been broken, it does not matter, so long
as you learn the lesson that it
is for strength I make you suffer and
always for strength." What did the volunteers do today when they
flung
themselves in crowds on the roof and braved the fury of the hurricane
and by main strength held down the roof over their heads? That is the
lesson that all must learn and especially the young men of Bengal and
India. The storm may come down on us again and with greater violence.
Then remember this, brave its fury, feel your strength, train your
strength in the struggle with the violence of the wind, and by that
strength hold down the roof over the temple of the Mother.