RANADE GANDHI &
JINNAH
Address delivered on the 101st
Birthday celebration of Mahadev Govind Ranade held on the 18th
January 1943 in the Gokhale memorial hall, Poona by the Hon'ble Dr. B. R.
Ambedkar
PREFACE
The Deccan Sabha of Poona invited me to
deliver an address on the 101st birthday of the late Justice Mahadev Govind
Ranade which it proposed to celebrate and which fell on the 18th January 1943.
I was not very willing to accept the invitation. For I knew that my views on
social and political problems, a discussion of which could not be avoided in a
discourse on Ranade, would not very pleasing to the audience and even perhaps
to the members of the Deccan Sabha. In the end I accepted their invitation. At
the time when I delivered the Address I had no intention of publishing it.
Addresses delivered on anniversaries of Great Men are generally occasional
pieces. They do not have much permanent value. I did not think that my address
was an exception to this. But I have some troublesome friends who have been
keen on seeing the whole of it in print and have been insisting upon it. I am
indifferent to the idea. I am quite content with the publicity it has receive
[d] and I have no desire to seek more. At the same time if there are people who
think that it is worthy of being rescued from falling into oblivion, I do not
see any reason for disappointing them.
The address as printed differs from the
address as delivered in two respects. Section X of the address was omitted from
the address as delivered to prevent the performance going beyond [a] reasonable
time. Even without it, it took one hour and a half to deliver the address. This
is one difference. The other difference lies in the omission of a large portion
of Section VIII which was devoted to a comparison of Ranade with Phule. For
this omission there are two reasons. In the first place, the comparison was not
sufficiently full and detailed to do justice to the two men; in the second
place, when the difficulties of finding enough paper compelled me to sacrifice
some portion of the address, this appeared to be best offering.
The publication of the address is taking
place under peculiar circumstances. Ordinarily reviews follow publication. In
this case the situation is reversed. What is worse is that the reviews have
condemned the address in scathing terms. This is a matter primarily for the
publishers to worry about. I am happy that the publisher knows the risk and he
takes it. Nothing more need be said about it except that it supports the view
taken by my friends that the address contains matter which is of more than
ephemeral value. As for myself I am not in the least perturbed by the
condemnation of this address by the Press. What is the ground for its
condemnation? And who has come forward to condemn it?
I am condemned because I criticized Mr.
Gandhi and Mr. Jinnah for the mess they have made of Indian politics, and that
in doing so I am alleged to have shown towards them hatred and disrespect. In
reply to this charge what I have to say is that I have been a critic and I must
continue to be such. It may be I am making mistakes, but I have always felt
that it is better to make mistakes than to accept guidance and direction from
others or to sit silent and allow things to deteriorate. Those who have accused
me of having been actuated by feelings of hatred forget two things. In the
first place this alleged hatred is not born of anything that can be called
personal. If I am against them, it is because I want a settlement. I want a
settlement of some sort, and I am not prepared to wait for an ideal settlement.
Nor can I tolerate [for] anyone on whose will and consent settlement depends,
to stand on [his] dignity and play the Grand Moghul. In the second place, no
one can hope to make any effective mark upon his time, and bring the aid that
is worth bringing to great principles and struggling causes, if he is not strong
in his love and his hatred. I hate injustice, tyranny, pompousness and humbug,
and my hatred embraces all those who are guilty of them. I want to tell my
critics that I regard my feelings of hatred as a real force. They are only the
reflex of the love I bear for the causes I believe in, and I am in no wise
ashamed of it. For these reasons I tender no apology for my criticism of Mr.
Gandhi and Mr. Jinnah, the two men who have brought India's political progress
to a standstill.
The condemnation is by the Congress
Press. I know the Congress Press well. I attach no value to its criticism. It
has never refuted my arguments. It knows only [how] to criticise, rebuke and
revile me for everything I do; and to misreport, misrepresent and pervert
everything I say. Nothing that I do pleases the Congress Press. This animosity
of the Congress Press towards me can to my mind, not unfairly, be explained as
a reflex of the hatred of the Hindus for the Untouchables. That their animosity
has become personal is clear from the fact that the Congress Press feels
offended for my having criticised Mr. Jinnah, who has been the butt and the
target of the Congress for the last several years.
However strong and however filthy be
the abuses which the Congress Press chooses to shower on me, I must do my duty.
I am no worshipper of idols. I believe in breaking them. I insist that if I
hate Mr. Gandhi and Mr. Jinnah—I dislike them, I do not hate them—it is because
I love India more. That is the true faith of a nationalist. I have hopes that
my countrymen will some day learn that the country is greater than the men,
that the worship of Mr. Gandhi or Mr. Jinnah and service to India are two very
different things and may even be contradictory of each other.
B.R.A.
15th March 1943
22, Prithvi Raj Road
New Delhi
I. RANADE, GANDHI AND JINNAH
I must tell you that I am not very happy over this invitation. My fear
is that I may not be able to do justice to the occasion. When a year ago the
Centenary of Ranade's Birthday was celebrated in Bombay the Rt. Hon'ble
Srinivas Shastri was chosen to speak. For very many reasons he was well
qualified for performing the duty. He can claim to be a contemporary of Ranade
for a part of his life. He had seen him at close range and was an eye witness
of the work to which Ranade devoted his life. He had opportunity lo judge him
and compare him with his co-workers. He could therefore expound his views about
Ranade with a sense of confidence and with intimacy born out of personal touch.
He could cite an anecdote and illuminate the figure of Ranade before his
audience.
None of these qualifications are
available to me. My connection with Ranade is of the thinnest. I had not even seen
him. There are only two incidents about Ranade which I can recall. First
relates to his death. I was a student in the first standard in the Satara High
School. On the 16th January 1901 the High School was closed and we boys had a
holiday. We asked why it was closed and we were told that because Ranade was
dead. I was then about 9 years old. I knew nothing about Ranade, who he was,
what he had done; like other boys I was happy over the holiday and did not care
to know who died.
The second incident which reminds me of
Ranade is dated much later than the first. Once I was examining some bundles of
old papers belonging to my father when I found in them a paper which purported
to be a petition sent by the Commissioned and non-Commissioned officers of the
Mahar Community to the Government of India against the orders issued in 1892
banning the recruitment of the Mahars in the Army. On inquiry I was told that
this was a copy of a petition which was drafted by Ranade to help the aggrieved
Mahars to obtain redress.
Beyond these two incidents I have nothing to recall of Ranade. My
knowledge about him is wholly impersonal. It is derived from what I have read
about his work and what others have said about him. You must not expect me to
say anything of a personal character which will either interest you or instruct
you. I propose to say what I think of him as a public man in his days and his
place in Indian Politics today.
II. RANADE, GANDHI AND JINNAH
As you are well aware, there are friends of Ranade who do not hesitate
to describe him as a Great Man and there are others who with equal insistence
deny him that place. Where does the truth lie? But this question must, I think,
wait upon another, namely, is history the biography of Great Men? The question
is both relevant as well as important. For, if Great Men were not the makers of
history, there is no reason why we should take more notice of them than we do
of cinema stars. Views differ. There are those who assert that however great a
man may be, he is a creature of Time—Time called him forth, Time did
everything, he did nothing. Those who hold this view, in my judgement, wrongly
interpret history.
There have been three different views
on the causes of historical changes. We have had the Augustinian theory of
history, according to which history is only an unfolding of a divine plan in
which mankind is to continue through war and suffering until that divine plan
is completed at the day of judgement. There is the view of Buckle, who held
that history was made by Geography and Physics. Karl Marx propounded a third
view. According to him history was the result of economic forces. None of these
three would admit that history is the biography of Great Men. Indeed, they deny
man any place in the making of history.
No one except theologians accepts the
Augustinian theory of history. As to Buckle and Marx, while there is truth in
what they say, their views do not represent the whole truth. They are quite
wrong in holding that impersonal forces are everything and that man is no
factor in the making of history. That impersonal forces are a determining
factor cannot be denied. But that the effect of impersonal forces depends on
man must also be admitted. Flint may not exist everywhere. But where it does
exist, it needs man to strike flint against flint to make fire. Seeds may not
be found everywhere. But where they do exist, it needs man to ground it to
powder and make it a delectable and nutritious paste and thereby lay the
foundation of agriculture. There are many areas devoid of metals. But where
they do exist, it needs a man to make instruments and machines which are the
basis of civilization and culture.
Take the case of social forces. Various
tragic situations arise. One such situation is of the type described by Thayer
in his biography of Theodore Roosevelt when he says:
"There comes a time in every sect, party or institution when it
stops growing, its arteries harden, its young men see no visions, its old
men dream no dreams; it lives on the past and desperately tries to perpetuate
the past. In politics when this process of petrifaction is reached we call it
Bourbonism and the sure sign of the Bourbon is that, being unconscious that he
is the victim of sclerosis, he sees no reason for seeking a cure. Unable to
adjust himself to changed and new conditions he falls back into the past as an
old man drops into his worn-out arm-chair."
The other kind of situation is not one of decay but of destruction. The
possibilities of it are always present whenever there is a crisis. The old ways,
old habits and old thoughts fail to lift society and lead it on. Unless new
ones are found there is no possibility of survival. No society has a smooth
sailing. There are periods of decay and possibilities of destruction through
which every society has to pass. Some survive, some are destroyed, and some
undergo stagnation and decay. Why does this happen? What is the reason that
some survive? Carlyle has furnished an answer. He puts in his characteristic
way:
"No time need have gone to ruin, could it have found a great
enough, a man wise and good enough; Wisdom to discern truly what the Time
wanted, valour to lead it on to the right road thither, these are the salvation
of any Time."
This seems to me to be quite a conclusive answer to those who deny man any
place in the making of history. The crisis can be met by the discovery of a new
way. Where there is no new way found, society goes under. Time may suggest
possible new ways. But to step on the right one is not the work of Time. It is
the work of man. Man therefore is a factor in the making of history and that
environmental forces whether impersonal or social if they are the first are not
the last things.
III. RANADE, GANDHI AND JINNAH
Who can be called a Great Man? If asked of military heroes such as Alexander,
Attila, Caesar and Tamerlane, the question is not difficult to answer. The
military men make epochs and effect vast transitions. They appal and dazzle
their contemporaries by their resounding victories. They become great without
waiting to be called great. As the lion is among the deer, so they are among
men. But it is equally true that their permanent effect on the history of
mankind is very small. Their conquests shrink, and even so great a General as
Napoleon after all his conquests left France smaller than he found it. When
viewed from a distance they are seen to be only periodical, if necessary,
incidents in the world's movement, leaving no permanent mark on the character
of the society in which they live The details of their career and their moral
may be interesting, but they do not affect Society and form no leaven to
transform or temper the whole.
The answer becomes difficult when the
question is asked about a person who is not a military general. For, it then
becomes a question of tests, and different people have different tests.
Carlyle the apostle of Hero Worship had
a test of his own. He laid it down in the following terms:—
"But of Great Man especially, of him I will venture to assert that
it is incredible he should have been other than true. It seems to me the
primary foundation of him, this. . . No man adequate to do anything, but is
first of all in right earnest about it; what I call a sincere man. I should say
sincerity, a deep, great genuine sincerity, is the first characteristic of all
men in any way heroic."
Carlyle was of course particular in defining his test of sincerity in
precise terms, and in doing so he warned his readers by defining what his idea
of sincerity was—
"Not the sincerity that calls itself sincere: ah no," he said,
"that is a very poor matter indeed;— a shallow, braggart, conscious
sincerity; oftenest self-conceit mainly. The Great Man's sincerity is of the
kind he cannot speak of, is not conscious of: nay, I suppose, he is conscious
rather of insincerity; for what man can walk accurately by the law
of truth for one day? No, the Great Man does not boast himself sincere, far
from that; perhaps does not ask himself if he is so: I would say rather, his
sincerity does not depend on himself; he cannot help being sincere!"
Lord Rosebery proposed another test when dealing with Napoleon—-who was
as great an Administrator as a General. In answering the question, Was Napoleon
great? Rosebery used the following language:
"If by 'great' be intended the combination of moral qualities with
those of intellect, great he certainty was not. But that he was great in the
sense of being extraordinary and supreme we can have no doubt. If greatness
stands for natural power, for predominance, for something human beyond
humanity, then Napoleon was assuredly great. Besides that indefinable spark
which we call genius, he represents a combination of intellect and energy which
has never perhaps been equalled, never, certainly, surpassed."
There is a third test, suggested by the philosophers or, to be more
accurate, by those who believe in divine guidance of human affairs. They have a
different conception of what is a Great Man. To summarise the summary of their
view, as given by Rosebery, a great man is launched into the world, as a great
natural or supernatural force, as a scourge and a scavenger born to cleanse
society and lead it on to the right path, who is engaged in a vast operation,
partly positive, mainly negative, but all relating to social regeneration.
Which of these is the true test? In my
judgement all are partial and none is complete. Sincerity must be the test of a
Great Man. Clemenceau once said that most statesmen are rogues. Statesmen are
not necessarily Great Men, and obviously these on whose experience he founded
his opinion must have been those wanting in sincerity/ Nonetheless no one can
accept that sincerity is the primary or the sole test. For sincerity is not
enough. A Great Man must have sincerity. For it is the sum of all moral
qualities without which no man can be called great. But there must be something
more than mere sincerity in a man to make him Great. A man may be sincere and
yet he may be a fool, and a fool is the very antithesis of a Great Man.
A man is Great because he finds a way
to save Society in its hours of crisis. But what can help him to find the way?
He can do so only with the help of intellect. Intellect is the light. Nothing
else can be of any avail. It is quite obvious that without the combination of
sincerity and intellect no man can be great. Is this enough to constitute a
Great Man? At this stage we must, I think, make a distinction between an
eminent individual and a Great Man. For I am certain that a Great Man is
something very different from an eminent individual. Sincerity and intellect:
are enough to mark out an individual as being eminent as compared to his
fellows. But they are not enough to raise him to the dignity of a Great Man.
A Great Man must have something more
than what a merely eminent individual has. What must be that thing? Here comes
the importance of the philosopher's definition of a Great Man. A Great Man must
be motivated by the dynamics of a social purpose and must act as the scourge
and the scavenger of society. These are the elements which distinguish an
eminent individual from a Great Man, and constitute his title deeds to respect
and reverence.
IV. RANADE, GANDHI AND JINNAH
Was Ranade a great man? He was of course great in his person. Vast
in physique —he could have been called "Your Immense" as the
Irish servant who could not pronounce Your Eminence used respectfully to call
Cardinal Wiseman —his master. He was a man of sanguine temperament, of genial
disposition and versatile in his capacity. He had sincerity which is the sum of
all moral qualities and his sincerity was of the sort which was prescribed by
Carlyle. It was not a conscious "braggart sincerity." It was the
natural sincerity a constitutional trait and not an assumed air. He was
not only big in his physique and in his sincerity, he was also big in
intellect. Nobody can question that Ranade had intellect of a high calibre. He
was not merely a lawyer and a judge of the High Court, he was a first class economist,
a first class historian, a first class educationist, and a first class Divine.
He was not a politician. Perhaps it is good that he was not. For if he had
been, he might not have been a Great Man. As Abraham Lincoln said, politicians
"are a set of men who have interests aside from the interests of the
people and who, to say the most of them are taken as a mass, at least one long
step removed from honest men."
Ranade, though not a politician, was a
profound student of politics. Indeed it would be difficult to find in the
history of India any man who could come up to Ranade in the width of his
learning, the breadth of his wisdom and the length of his vision. There was no
subject which he did not touch and in which he did not acquire profundity. His
reading was on the scale of the colossal and every inch he was a scholar. He
was great not merely by the standard of his Time, but he was great— measured by
any standard. As I have said no claim for being a Great Man can rest on the
foundation of sincerity and intellect either singly or in combination. Ranade
could not be called great if he had these two qualities and no more.
His title to being a Great Man must
rest upon the social purposes he served and on the way he served them. On that
there can be no doubt. Ranade is known more as a social reformer than as a
historian, economist or educationist. His whole life is nothing but a
relentless campaign for social reform. It is on his role as a social reformer
that this title to being a Great Man rests. Ranade had both the vision and the
courage which the reformer needs, and in the circumstances in which he was born
his vision was no small [er] a virtue than his courage. That he developed a
vision of the Prophet—I am using the word in the Jewish sense—cannot but be
regarded as a matter of surprise if the time in which he was born is taken into
account. Ranade was born in 1842 some 24 years after the battle of Kirkee which
brought the Maratha Empire to an end. The downfall of the Maratha Empire evoked
different feelings among different people. There were men like Natu who served
as accessories before the fact. There were some who played the part of
accessories after the fact, inasmuch as they were happy that the cursed rule of
the Brahmin Peshwa was brought to an end. But there can be no doubt that a
large majority of the people of Maharashtra were stunned by the event.
When the whole of India was enveloped
by the advancing foreign horde and its people being subjugated piece by piece,
here in this little corner of Maharashtra lived a sturdy race who knew what
liberty was, who had fought for it inch by inch and established it over miles
and miles. By the British conquest they had lost what was to them a most
precious possession. One can quite imagine how the best intellect of
Maharashtra had its mind utterly confounded and its horizon fully and
completely darkened. What could be the natural reaction to so great a
catastrophe? Can it be other than resignation, defeatism and surrender to the
inevitable? How did Ranade react? Very differently. He held out the hope that
the fallen shall rise. Indeed he developed a new faith on which this hope was
found [ed]. Let me quote his own words. He said:—
"I profess implicit faith in two articles of my creed. This country
of ours is the true land of promise. This race of ours is the chosen
race."
He did not rest quiet by merely enunciating this new Mosaic Gospel of
hope and confidence. He applied his mind to the question of the realization of
this hope. The first requisite was of course a dispassionate analysis of the
causes of this downfall. Ranade realized that the downfall was due to certain
weaknesses in the Hindu social system and unless these weaknesses were removed
the hope could not be realized. The new gospel was therefore followed by a call
to duty. That duty was no other than the duty to reform Hindu society.
Social reform became therefore the one
dominant purpose of his life. He developed a passion for social reform and
there was nothing he did not do to promote it. His methods included meetings,
missions, lectures, sermons, articles, interviews, letters—all carried on with
an unrelenting zeal. He established many societies. He founded many journals.
But he was not content with this. He wanted something more permanent, something
more systematic for promoting the cause of social reform. So he founded the
Social Conference, an All-India Organization which ran as an adjunct to the
Indian National Congress. Year after year the Conference met to discuss the
social ills and to find the ways of remedying them, and year after year Ranade
attended its annual sessions as though it was a pilgrimage and fostered the
cause of social reform.
In fostering the cause of social reform
Ranade showed great courage. Many people of this generation will perhaps laugh
at such a claim. Courting prison has become an act of martyrdom in India. It is
regarded both as a patriotic act and also as an act of courage. Most people who
would otherwise be beneath notice and in whose case it could rightly be said
that they were scoundrels who had taken to politics as their last refuge, have
by going to prison become martyrs and have acquired a name and fame which, to
say the least, is quite astounding. There would be some substance in this view,
if prison life involved the rigours to which men like Tilak and those of his
generation had been subjected. Prison life today has lost all its terrors. It
has become a mere matter of detention. Political prisoners are no longer
treated as criminals. They are placed in a separate class. There are no
hardships to suffer, there is no reputation to lose and there is no privation
to undergo. It calls for no courage.
But even when prison life had, as in
the time of Mr. Tilak, its rigours the political prisoners could make no claim
to greater courage than a Social Reformer. Most people do not realize that
society can practise tyranny and oppression against an individual in a far
greater degree than a Government can. The means and scope that are open to
society for oppression are more extensive than those that are open to
Government, also they are far more effective. What punishment in the penal code
is comparable in its magnitude and its severity to excommunication? Who has
greater courage—the Social Reformer who challenges society and invites upon
himself excommunication or the political prisoner who challenges Government and
incurs sentence of a few months or a few years imprisonment? There is also
another difference which is often lost sight of in estimating the courage shown
by the social reformer and the political patriot. When the Social Reformer
challenges Society there is nobody to hail him a martyr. There is nobody even
to befriend him. He is loathed and shunned. But when the political patriot
challenges Government he has whole society to support him. He is praised,
admired and elevated as the saviour. Who shows more courage—the Social Reformer
who fights alone, or the Political Patriot who fights under the cover of [a]
vast mass of supporters? It would be idle to deny that Ranade showed courage in
taking up the cause of Social Reform. Indeed he showed a high degree of
courage. For let it be remembered that he lived in times when Social and
Religious customs, however gross and unmoral, were regarded as sacrosanct, and
when any doubt questioning their divine and moral basis was regarded not merely
as heterodoxy, but as intolerable blasphemy and sacrilege.
V. RANADE,
GANDHI AND JINNAH
His path as a Reformer was not smooth. It was blocked from many sides.
The sentiments of the people whom he wanted to reform were deeply rooted in the
ancient past. They held the belief that their ancestors were the wisest and the
noblest of men, and the social system which they had devised was of the most
ideal character. What appeared to Ranade to be the shames and wrongs of the
Hindu Society were to them the most sacred injunctions of their religion. This
was the attitude of the common man. The intelligentsia. was divided into two
schools—a school which was orthodox in its belief but unpolitical in its
outlook, and a school which was modem in its beliefs but primarily political in
its aims and objects. The former was led by Mr. Chiplunkar and the latter by
Mr. Tilak. Both combined against Ranade and created as many difficulties for
him as they could. They not only did the greatest harm to the cause of social
reform, but as experience shows they have done the greatest harm to the cause
of political reform in India.
The unpolitical or the orthodox school
believed in the Hegelian view—it is a puzzle to me—namely to realize the ideal
and idealize the real. In this it was egregiously wrong. The Hindu Religious
and Social system is such that you cannot go forward to give its ideal form a
reality because the ideal is bad; nor can you attempt to elevate the real to
the status of the ideal because the real i.e., the existing state of affairs,
is worse than worse could be. This is no exaggeration. Take the Hindu Religious
System or take the Hindu Social System, and examine it from the point of
social utility and social justice. It is said that religion is good when it is
fresh from the mint. But Hindu religion has been a bad coin to start with. The
Hindu ideal of society as prescribed by Hindu religion has acted as a most
demoralizing and degrading influence on Hindu Society. It is Nietzschean in its
form and essence.
Long before Nietzsche was born, Manu
had proclaimed the gospel which Nietzsche sought to preach. It is a religion
which is not intended to establish liberty, equality and fraternity. It is a
gospel which proclaims the worship of the superman—the Brahamin—by the rest of
the Hindu Society. It propounds that the superman and his class alone are born
to live and to rule. Others are born to serve them, and to nothing more. They
have no life of their own to live, and no right to develop their own
personality. This has been the gospel of the Hindu Religion. Hindu philosophy,
whether it is Vedanta, Sankhya, Nyaya, [or] Vaishashika, has moved in its own
circle without in any way affecting the Hindu religion. It has never had the
courage to challenge this gospel. That Hindu philosophy that everything is
Brahma remained only a matter of intellect. It never became a social
philosophy. The Hindu philosophers had both their philosophy and their Manu
held apart in two hands, the right not knowing what the left had. The Hindu is
never troubled by their inconsistency.
As to their social system, can things
be worst [=worse]? The Caste System is in itself a degenerate form of the
Chaturvarna which is the ideal of the Hindu. How can anybody who is not a
congenital idiot accept Chaturvarna as the ideal form of society? Individually
and socially it is a folly and a crime. One class and one class alone to be
entitled to education and learning! One class and one class alone to be
entitled to Arms! One class and one class alone to trade! One class and one
class alone to serve! For the individual the consequences are obvious. Where
can you find a learned man who has no means of livelihood who will not degrade
his education? Where can you find a soldier with no education and culture who
will use his arms to conserve and not to destroy? Where can you find a merchant
with nothing but the acquisitive instinct to follow who will not descend to the
level of the brute? Where can you find the servant who is not to acquire
education, who is not to own Arms, and who is not to possess other means of
livelihood, to be a man as his Maker intended him to be?
If baneful to the individual, it makes
society vulnerable. It is not enough for a social structure to be good for a
fair weather. It must be able to weather the storm. Can the Hindu Caste System
stand the gale and the wind of an aggression? It is obvious that it cannot.
Either for defence or for offence a society must be able to mobilize its
forces. With functions and duties exclusively distributed and immutably
assigned, what way is there for mobilization? Ninety per cent of the Hindus—
Brahmins, Vaishyas and Shudras—could not bear arms under the Hindu social
system. How can a country be defended if its army cannot be increased in the
hour of its peril? It is not Buddha who, as is often alleged, weakened Hindu
Society by his gospel of non-violence. It is the Brahminic theory of
Chaturvarna that has been responsible not only for the defeat, but for the
decay, of Hindu Society.
Some of you will take offence at what I
have said about the demoralizing effect of the Hindu socio-religious ideal on
Hindu Society. But what is the truth? Can the charge be denied? Is there any
society in the world which has unapproachable, unshadowables, and unseeables?
is there any society which has got a population of Criminal Tribes? Is there a
society in which there exist today primitive people, who live in jungles, who
do not know even to clothe themselves? How many do they count in numbers? Is it
a matter of hundreds, is it a matter of thousands? I wish they numbered a
paltry few. The tragedy is that they have to be counted in millions, millions
of Untouchables, millions of Criminal Tribes, millions of Primitive Tribes!!
One wonders whether the Hindu civilization is civilization, or infamy.
This is about the ideal. Turn now to
the state of things as it existed when Ranade came on the scene. It is
impossible to realize now the state of degradation they had reached when the
British came on the scene, and with which the reformers like Ranade were faced.
Let me begin with the condition of the intellectual class. The rearing and
guiding of a civilization must depend upon its intellectual class—upon the lead
given by the Brahmins. Under the old Hindu Law the Brahmin enjoyed the benefit
of the clergy and could not be hanged even if he was guilty of murder, and the
East India Company allowed him the privilege till 1817. That is no doubt
because he was the salt of the Earth. Was there any salt left in him? His
profession had lost all its nobility. He had become a pest.
The Brahmin systematically preyed on
society and profiteered in religion. The Puranas and Shastras
which lie manufactured in tons are a treasure trove of sharp practices which
the Brahmins employed to befool, beguile and swindle the common mass of poor,
illiterate, and superstitious Hindus. It is impossible in this address to give
references to them. I can only refer to the coercive measures which the
Brahmins had sanctified as proper to be employed against the Hindus, to the encashment
of their rights and privileges. Let those who want to know read the preamble to
Regulation XXI of 1795. According to it, whenever a Brahmin wanted to get
anything which could not be willingly got from his victim, he resorted to
various coercive practices—lacerating his own body with knives and razors, or
threatening to swallows some poison, were the usual tricks he practised to
carry out his selfish purposes. There were other ways employed by the Brahmin
to coerce the Hindus, which were as extraordinary as they were shameless. A
common practice was the erection in front of the house of his victim of
the koorh—a circular enclosure in which a pile of wood was placed;
within the enclosure an old woman was placed, ready to be burnt in the koorh if
his object was not granted. The second device of such a kind was the placing of
his women and children in the sight of his victim and threaten[ing] to behead
them. The third was the dhurna—starving on the doorstep of the
victim.
This is nothing. Brahmins had started
making claims for a right to deflower the women of non-Brahmins. The practice
prevailed in the family of the Zamorin of Calicut, and among the Vallabhachari
sect of Vaishnavas. What depths of degradation the Brahmins had fallen to! If,
as the Bible says, the salt has lost its flavour, wherewith shall it be salted?
No wonder the Hindu Society had its moral bonds loosened to a dangerous point.
The East India Company had in 1819 to pass a Regulation (VII of 1819) to put a stop
to this moral degeneracy. The preamble to the Regulation says that women were
employed wholesale to entice and take away the wives or female children for
purposes of prostitution, and it was common practice among husbands and fathers
to desert their families and children. Public conscience there was none, and in
the absence of conscience it was futile to expect moral indignation against the
social wrongs. Indeed the Brahmins were engaged in defending every wrong for
the simple reason that they lived on them. They defended Untouchability which
condemned millions to the lot of the helot. They defended caste, they defended
female child marriage and they defended enforced widowhood—the two great props
of the Caste system. They defended the burning of widows, and they defended the
social system of graded inequality with its rule of hypergamy which led the
Rajputs to kill in their thousands the daughters that were born to them. What
shames! What wrongs! Can such a Society show its face before civilized nations?
Can such a society hope to survive? Such were the questions which Ranade asked.
He concluded that on only one condition it could be saved—namely, rigorous
social reform.
VI. RANADE, GANDHI AND JINNAH
His greatest opponents however came from the political school of the
intelligentsia. These politicals developed a new thesis. According to that
thesis political reform was to have precedence over social reform. The thesis
was argued from platform to platform and was defended by eminent people like
Mr. Justice Telang, a Judge of the Bombay High Court, with the consummate skill
of an acute lawyer. The thesis caught the imagination of the people. If there
was one single cause to which the blocking of the Social Reform movement could
be attributed, it was this cry of political reform. The thesis is
unsupportable, and I have no doubt that the opponents of Ranade were wrong and,
in pursuing it, did not serve the best interests of the country. The grounds on
which Mr. Justice Telang defended the Politicians' thesis were of course
logical. But he totally forgot that logic is not reason, and analogy is not
argument. Neither did he have a correct understanding of the inter-relation
between the "social" and the "political" which Ranade had.
Let us examine the reasons for the
thesis. Those that were advanced were not very impressive. But I am prepared to
meet the most impressive arguments that could be advanced. Even then the thesis
will not stand. The following strike me as being the most impressive. In the
first place, it could be said that we want political power first because we
want to protect the rights of the people. This answer proceeds from a very
frugal theory of Government as was propounded by the American statesman
Jefferson, according to whom politics was only an affair of policing by the
State so that that the rights of people were maintained without disturbance.
Assume that the theory is a sound one. The question is, what is there for the
State to police if there are no rights? Rights must exist before policing
becomes a serious matter of substance. The thesis that political reform should
precede social reform becomes on the face of it an absurd proposition, unless
the idea is that the Government is to protect those who have vested rights and
to penalize those who have none.
The second ground that could be urged
in support of the thesis is that they wanted political power because they
wanted to confer on each individual certain fundamental rights by law, and that
such conferring of the political rights could not lake place unless there was
political power first obtained. This of course sounds very plausible. But is
there any substance in it? The idea of fundamental rights has become a familiar
one since their enactment in the American Constitution and in the Constitution
framed by Revolutionary France. The idea of making a gift of fundamental rights
to every individual is no doubt very laudable. The question is how to make them
effective. The prevalent view is that once rights are enacted in a law, then
they are safeguarded. This again is an unwarranted assumption.
As experience proves, rights are
protected not by law but by the social and moral conscience of society. If
[the] social conscience is such that it is prepared to recognize the rights
which law chooses to enact, rights will be safe and secure. But if the
fundamental rights are opposed by the community, no Law, no Parliament, no
judiciary can guarantee them in the real sense of the word. What is the
use of the fundamental rights to the Negroes in America., to the Jews in
Germany, and to the Untouchables in India? As Burke said, there is no method
found for punishing the multitude. Law can punish a single solitary
recalcitrant criminal. It can never operate against a whole body of people who
are determined to defy it. Social conscience—to use the language of
Coleridge—that calm incorruptible legislator of the soul without whom all other
powers would "meet in mere oppugnancy—is the only safeguard of all rights
fundamental or non-fundamental."
The third argument of the Politicals
could be based on the right to self-government. That self-government is better
than good government is a well-known cry. One cannot give it more value than
one can give to a slogan, and all would like to be assured that self-government
would also be a good government. There is no doubt that the Politicals wanted
good government, and their aim was to establish a democratic form of
government. But they never stopped to consider whether a democratic form of
government was possible. Their contention was founded on a series of fallacies.
A Democratic form of government presupposes a Democratic form of society. The
formal framework of Democracy is of no value, and would indeed be a misfit if
there was no social democracy. The politicals never realized that democracy was
not a form of government. It was essentially a form of Society.
It may not be necessary for a
Democratic society to be marked by unity, by community of purpose, by loyalty
to public ends, and by mutuality of sympathy. But it does unmistakably involve
two things. The first is an attitude of mind, an attitude of respect and
equality towards their fellows. The second is a social organization free from
rigid social barriers. Democracy is incompatible and inconsistent with
isolation and exclusiveness, resulting in the distinction between the
privileged and the unprivileged. Unfortunately, the opponents of Ranade were
never able to realize the truth of this fact.
VII. RANADE, GANDHI AND JINNAH
One may judge it by any test, and it will be found that the stand that
Ranade took in this controversy, and his plan of work, were correct and
fundamental to—if they were not the pre-requisites of—political reform. Ranade
argued that there were no rights in the Hindu Society which the moral sense of
man could recognize. There were privileges and disabilities, privileges for a
few and disabilities for a vast majority. Ranade struggled to create rights.
Ranade wanted to vitalize the conscience of the Hindu Society, which had become
moribund as well morbid. Ranade aimed to create a real social democracy,
without which there could be no sure and stable politics. The conflict was
between two opposing points of view, and it centred round the question which is
more important for the survival of a nation, political freedom or strong
moral fibre. Ranade took the view that moral stamina was more important than
political freedom. This was also the view of Lecky, the great historian who
after a careful and comparative study of history came to the conclusion that:—
"The foundation of a Nation's strength and prosperity is laid in
pure domestic life, in commercial integrity, in a high standard of moral worth,
and of public spirit, in a simple habits, in courage, uprightness, and a
certain soundness and moderation of judgement which springs quite as much
from character as from intellect. If you would form a wise judgement of the
future of a nation, observe carefully whether these qualities are increasing or
decaying. Observe carefully what qualities count for most in public life. Is
character becoming of greater or less importance? Are the men who obtain the
highest posts in the nation men of whom, in private life, irrespective of party
competent judges speak with genuine respect? Are they of sincere convictions,
consistent lives and indisputable integrity? It is by observing this current
that you can best cast the horoscope of a nation."
Ranade was not only wise, but he was also logical. He told [=warned] his
opponents against playing the part of Political Radicals and Social Tories. In
clear and unmistakable terms he warned them saying:—
"You canned be liberal by halves. You cannot be liberal in politics
and conservative in religion. The heart and the head must go together. You
cannot cultivate your intellect, enrich your mind, enlarge the sphere of your
political rights and privileges, and at the same time keep your hearts closed
and cramped. It is an idle dream to expect men to remain enchained and
enshackled in their own superstition and social evils, while they are struggling
hard to win rights and privileges from their rulers. Before long these vain
dreamers will find their dreams lost."
Experience has shown that these words of Ranade have been true, even
prophetic. Let those who deny this consider: Where are we today in politics,
and why are we where we are? It is now 50 years since the National Congress was
born. Its stewardship has passed hands, I won't say from the sane to the
insane, or from realists to idealists, but from moderates to radicals. Where
does the country stand today at the end of 50 years of political marching? What
is the cause of this deadlock? The answer is simple. The cause of deadlock is
the absence of Communal settlement. Ask why is communal settlement necessary
for political settlement, and you realize the fundamental importance of the
stand that Ranade took. For the answer to this question is to be found in the
wrong social system, which is too undemocratic, too over-weighed in favour of
the classes and against the masses, too class-conscious and too
communally-minded. Political democracy would become a complete travesty if it
were built upon its foundations.
That is why nobody except the
high-caste Hindus will agree to make it the case of a political Democracy
without serious adjustments. Well may some people argue to their satisfaction
that the deadlock is the creation of the British Government. People like to
entertain thoughts which soothe them and which throw responsibility on others.
This is the psychology of escapism. But it cannot alter the fact that it is the
defects of [the] social system which has [=have] given rise to the communal
problem and which has [=have] stood in the way of India getting political
power.
Ranade's aim was to cleanse the old
order, if not to build a new one. He insisted on improving the moral tone of
Hindu Society. If he had been heard and followed, the system would have at
least lost its rigours and its rigidity. If it could not have avoided Communal
settlement, it would have made it easy. For his attempts, limited as they were,
would have opened the way to mutual trust. But the Politicals had developed a
passion for political power which had so completely blinded them that they
refused to see virtue in anything else. Ranade has had his revenge. Is not the
grant of political safeguard [s] a penalty for denying the necessity of social
reform?
How much did Ranade achieve in the
field in which he played so dominant a part? In a certain sense the question is
not very important. Achievement is never the true measure of greatness.
"Alas," as Carlyle said, "we know very well that ideals can
never be completely embodied in practice. Ideals must ever lie a very great way
off; and we will right thankfully content ourselves with any not intolerable
approximation thereto!" Let no man, as Schillar says, too querulously
"measure by a scale of perfection the meagre product of reality" in
this poor world of ours. We will esteem him no wise man; we will esteem him a
sickly discontented foolish man. And yet Ranade's record of achievement was not
altogether bare.
The problems facing the then Social
Reformers contained in the statement on Social Reform prepared by Rai Bahadur
P. Anandcharly were five: (1) Early marriage; (2) Remarriages of widows; (3)
Liberty for our countrymen to travel—or sojourn in foreign lands; (4) Women's
rights of property; and (5) Education of women. Of this programme he achieved a
great part. If he did not achieve all, there were the odds against him, which
should never be forgotten. A clever, [a] determined, and an insincere
intelligentsia came forward to defend orthodoxy and give battle to Ranade. The
scenes were exciting, as exciting as those of a dread grim [sic] of battle. And
battle it was. One cannot recall the spirit of the time when this controversy
over social reform was raging in this country. It is not possible for decency
to enter into the abuses that were hurled, the calumnies that were uttered, the
strategies that were employed by the orthodox section against the Social
Reformers. It is impossible to read the writing of those who supported
orthodoxy in their opposition to the Age of Consent Bill without realizing the
depth of the degradation to which the so-called leaders of the peoples had
fallen.
The Bill aimed to punish a husband who
would have sexual intercourse with his wife if she had not attained the age of
12. Could any sane man, could any man with a sense of shame, oppose so simple a
measure? But it was opposed, and Ranade had to bear the brunt of the mad
orthodoxy. Assuming that Ranade's achievements were small; who could take pride
or exultation in his failure to achieve more? There was no cause for
exultation. The decline of Social Reform was quite natural. The odium of Social
Reform was too great. The appeal of political power too alluring. The result
was that social reform found fewer and fewer adherents. In course of time the
platform of the Social Reform Conference was deserted, and men flocked to the
Indian National Congress. The politicians triumphed over the Social Reformers.
I am sure that nobody will now allow that their triumph was a matter for pride.
It is certainly a matter of sorrow. Ranade may not have been altogether on the
winning side, but he was not on the wrong side and certainly never on the side
of the wrong as some of his opponents were.
VIII. RANADE, GANDHI AND JINNAH
How does Ranade compare with others? Comparisons are always odious and
unpleasant. At the same time it is true that there is nothing more illuminating
than comparisons. Of course, in making them one must bear in mind that to be
interesting and instructive, comparisons must be between those that are alike.
Fortunately there is [a] field for comparison. Ranade was a Social Reformer,
and as a Social Reformer he could be usefully compared with other Social
Reformers. Particularly illuminating will be the comparison between Ranade and
Jotiba Phule.
Phule was born in 1827 and died in
1890. Ranade was born in 1842 and died in 1901. Thus Phule and Ranade were
contemporaries, and both were [among the] foremost social reformers. Some may
perhaps demur to [=doubt] the wisdom of comparing Ranade with other
politicians. This can only be on the ground that Ranade was not a politician.
To say that Ranade was not a politician is to impose a very narrow and very
restricted meaning upon the term politician. A politician does not merely trade
in politics, but he also represents a particular faith covering both—the method
as well as the metaphysics of politics. Ranade was the founder of a school of
politics which was distinctive for its method as well as for metaphysics. Used
in this sense, Ranade was a politician and could be usefully compared with
other politicians. Comparisons of Ranade with social reformers and with
politicians cannot but be illuminating, and there is enough material for such
comparisons. The question really is one of time and taste. Time will not permit
any extensive comparison of Ranade being made both with social reformers as
well as with politicians. I must really choose between comparing Ranade with
social reformers or with politicians. This is a matter of taste.
Left to myself I would have preferred
to use my available time to compare Ranade with Phule. For I regard Social
Reform [as] more fundamental than political reform. Unfortunately my taste is
different from the taste of the audience, and I feel that in detaining the
audience I must be guided more by its likes and dislikes than my own. The
ardour for social reform has cooled down. The craze for politics has held the
Indian public in its grip. Politics has become an appetiser—a mastic [such
that] the more one tastes it the more one craves it. The task I am undertaking
is a very unpleasant one, and if I venture upon it, it is only because it is my
duty to expound fully, and the desire of the public to know truly, the value of
Ranade's political philosophy and his place among politicians of today.
Who are the present-day politicians
with whom Ranade is to be compared? Ranade was a great politician of his day.
He must therefore be compared with the greatest of today. We have on the
horizon of India two Great Men, so big that they could be identified without
being named—Gandhi and Jinnah. What sort of a history they will make may be a
matter for posterity to tell. For us it is enough that they do indisputably
make headlines for the Press. They hold leading strings. One leads the Hindus,
the other leads the Muslims. They are the idols and heroes of the hour. I
propose to compare them with Ranade. How do they compare with Ranade? It is
necessary to make some observations upon their temperaments and methods, with
which they have now familiarized us. I can give only my impressions of them,
for what they are worth.
The first thing that strikes me is that
it would be difficult to find two persons who would rival them for their
colossal egotism, to whom personal ascendancy is everything and the cause of
the country a mere counter on the table. They have made Indian politics a
matter of personal feud. Consequences have no terror for them; indeed they do
not occur to them until they happen. When they do happen they either forget the
cause, or if they remember it, they overlook it with a complacency which saves
them from any remorse. They choose to stand on a pedestal of splendid
isolation. They wall themselves off from their equals. They prefer to open
themselves to their inferiors. They are very unhappy at and impatient of
criticism, but are very happy to be fawned upon by flunkeys. Both have
developed a wonderful stagecraft, and arrange things in such a way that they
are always in the limelight wherever they go.
Each of course claims to be supreme. If
supremacy was their only claim, it would be a small wonder. In addition to
supremacy each claims infallibility for himself. Pius IX, during whose sacred
regime as Pope the issue of infallibility was raging, said— "Before I was
Pope I believed in Papal infallibility, now I feel it."
This is exactly the attitude of the two leaders whom Providence—may I say, in
his unguarded moments—has appointed to lead us. This feeling of supremacy and
infallibility is strengthened by the Press. One cannot help saying that. The
language used by Gardiner to describe the Northcliffe brand of journalism, in
my opinion, quite appropriately describes the present state of journalism in
India.
Journalism in India was once a
profession. It has now become a trade. It has no more moral function than the
manufacture of soap. It does not regard itself as the responsible adviser of
the Public. To give the news uncoloured by any motive, to present a certain
view of public policy which it believes to be for the good of the community, to
correct and chastise without fear all those, no matter how high, who have
chosen a wrong or a barren path, is not regarded by journalism in India its
first or foremost duty. To accept a hero and worship him has become its
principal duty. Under it, news gives place to sensation, reasoned opinion to
unreasoning passion, appeal to the minds of responsible people to appeal to the
emotions of the irresponsible. Lord Salisbury spoke of the Northcliffe
journalism as written by office-boys for office-boys. Indian journalism is all
that plus something more. It is written by drum-boys to glorify their heroes.
Never has the interest of country been sacrificed so senselessly for the
propagation of hero-worship. Never has hero-worship become so blind as we see
it in India today. There are, I am glad to say, honourable exceptions. But they
are too few, and their voice is never heard.
Entrenched behind the plaudits of the
Press, the spirit of domination exhibited by these two Great Men has
transgressed all limits. By their domination they have demoralised their
followers and demoralized politics. By their domination they have made half
their followers fools and the other half hypocrites. In establishing their
supremacy they have taken the aid of "big business" and money
magnates. For the first time in our country, money is taking the field as an
organised power. The questions which President Roosevelt propounded for [the]
American Public to consider will arise here, if they have not already arisen: Who
shall rule—wealth, or man? Which shall lead, money or intellect? Who shall fill
public stations, educated and patriotic free men, or the feudal serfs of
corporate Capital? For the present, Indian politics, at any rate the Hindu part
of it, instead of being spiritualised has become grossly commercialised, so
much so that it has become a byword for corruption. Many men of culture are
refusing to concern themselves in this cesspool. Politics has become a kind of
sewage system, intolerably unsavoury and unsanitary. To become a politician is
like going to work in the drain.
Politics in the hands of these two
Great Men have become a competition in extravaganza. If Mr. Gandhi is known as
Mahatma, Mr. Jinnah must be known as Qaid-i-Azim. If Gandhi has the Congress,
Mr. Jinnah must have the Muslim League. If the Congress has a Working Committee
and the All-India Congress Committee, the Muslim League must have its Working
Committee and its Council. The session of the Congress must be followed by a
session of the League. If the Congress issues a statement, the League must also
follow suit. If the Congress passes a Resolution of 17,000 words, the Muslim
League's Resolution must exceed it by at least a thousand words. If the
Congress President has a Press Conference, the Muslim League President must
have his. If the Congress must address an: appeal to the United Nations, the
Muslim League must not allow itself to be outbidden.
When is all this to end? When is there
to be a settlement? There are no near prospects. They will not meet, except on
preposterous conditions. Jinnah insists that Gandhi should admit that he is a
Hindu. Gandhi insists that Jinnah should admit that he is one of the leaders of
the Muslims. Never has there been such a deplorable state of bankruptcy of statesmanship
as one sees in these two leaders of India. They are making long and
interminable speeches, like lawyers whose trade it is to contest everything,
concede nothing, and talk by the hour. Suggest anything by way of solution for
the deadlock to either of them, and it is met by an everlasting
"Nay." Neither will consider a solution of the problems which is not
eternal. Between them Indian politics has become "frozen," to use a
well-known Banking phrase, and no political action is possible.
How does Ranade strike [us], as
compared to these two? I have no personal impression to give. But reading what
others have said, I think I can say what he must have been like. He had not a
tinge of egotism in him. His intellectual attainments could have justified any
amount of pride, nay even insolence. But he was the most modest of men. Serious
youths were captivated by his learning and geniality. Many, feeling completely
under his sway, responded to his ennobling influence, and moulded their whole
lives with the passionate reverence for their adored master. He refused to be
satisfied with the praises of fools, and was never afraid of moving in the
company of equals and of the give and take it involves. He never claimed to be
a mystic relying on the inner voice. He was a rationalist, prepared to have his
views tested in the light of reason and experience. His greatness was natural.
He needed no aid of the stage, nor the technique of an assumed eccentricity,
nor the means of a subsidized press.
As I said, Ranade was principally a
Social Reformer. He was not a politician in the sense of one who trades in
politics. But he has played an important part in the political advancement of
India. To some of the politicians he acted as the teacher who secured such
signal successes, and who dazzled their critics by their brilliance. To some he
acted as the guide, but to all he acted as the philosopher.
What was the political philosophy of
Ranade? It may be summed up in three propositions :
(1) We must not set up as our ideal something which is purely imaginary.
An ideal must be such that it must carry the assurance that it is a practicable
one.
(2) In politics, sentiment and
temperament of the people are more important than intellect and theory. This is
particularly so in the matter of framing a Constitution. A Constitution is as
much a matter of taste as clothes are. Both must fit, both must please.
(3) In political negotiations, the rule
must be what is possible. That does not mean that we should be content with
what is offered. No. It means that you must not refuse what is offered when you
know that your sanctions are inadequate to compel your opponent to concede
more.
These are the three main doctrines of Ranade's political philosophy. It
would be quite easy to illustrate them by appropriate quotations from his
writings and his speeches. There is no time for that, nor is there any
necessity, for they must be clear to every student of Ranade's speeches and
writings.
Who could quarrel with Ranade on these
three propositions, and if there be one, on which? On the first only a
visionary will quarrel. We need not take any notice of him. The second
proposition is so evident that we could only ignore it at our peril. The third
proposition is something on which a difference of opinion is possible. Indeed
it is this which divided the Liberals from the Congressmen. I am not a liberal,
but I am sure the view Ranade held was the right one. There can be no
compromise on principle, and there should not be. But once the principle is
agreed upon, there can be no objection to realize it by instalments. Graduation
in politics is inevitable, and when the principle is accepted it is not harmful
and indeed it may in certain circumstances be quite advantageous.
On this third proposition there was
really no difference between him and Tilak, except this: Tilak would have the
possible maximised by the application of sanctions; Ranade would look askance
at sanctions. This is all. On the rest they were agreed. The absence of
sanctions in Ranade's political philosophy need not detract much from its
worth. We all know what sanctions are available to us. We have tried all, old
as well as new, with what effect I need not stop to describe.
IX. RANADE, GANDHI AND JINNAH
In celebrating the birthday of Ranade we must not overlook what the
critics and opponents are likely to say. The critics will ask what is the point
in celebrating the birthday of Ranade. That the days of hero-worship are gone
long past, will be the line of their argument. The opponents will say if I condemn
idolatry when it pertains to Mr. Gandhi and to Mr. Jinnah, how do I join in
idolizing Mr. Ranade? These are very pertinent questions. True hero-worship is
dying. Of that there is no doubt. It was dying even in the days of Carlyle who
indignantly complained against his age, saying:—
"This is an age that as it were denies the existence of Great Men:
denies the inevitableness of
great men. "
"Show our critics a great man," he said, and "They begin
to what they call 'account for him'; not to worship him but take the dimensions
of him."
But hero-worship is certainly not dead in India. India is still par
excellence the land of idolatry. There is idolatry in religion, there is
idolatry in politics. Heroes and hero-worship is a hard, if unfortunate, fact
in India's political life. I agree that hero-worship is demoralizing for the
devotee and dangerous to the country. I welcome the criticism, in so far as it
conveys a caution that you must know that your man is really great before you
start worshipping him.
This unfortunately is not an easy task.
For in these days, with the Press in hand, it is easy to manufacture Great Men.
Carlyle used a happy phrase when he described the great men of history as so
many Bank Notes. Like Bank Notes they represent gold. What we have to see
[=verify] is that they are not forged notes. I admit that we ought to be more
cautious in our worship of great men. For in this country we have perhaps
arrived at such a stage when alongside the notice boards saying "beware of
pickpockets" we need to have notice boards saying "beware of Great
Men." Even Carlyle, who defended the worship of Great Men, warned his
readers how:—
"Multitudes of Men have figured in history as Great Men who were
false and selfish." He regretted deeply that "The World's wages (of
homage) are pocketed (by these so-called Great Men), the World's work is not
done. Heroes have gone out; quacks have come in."
Ranade never received the honours of apotheosis as these great men of
India today are destined to receive. How could he? He did not come with a
message hot from Senai. He performed no miracles and promised no speedy
deliverance and splendour. He was not a genius and he had no superhuman
qualities. But there are compensations. If Ranade did not show splendour and dominance,
he brought us no catastrophe. If he had no superhuman qualities to use in the
service of India, India was saved from ruin by its [=their] abuse. If he was
not a genius, he did not display that perverse super-subtlety of intellect, and
a temper of mind which is fundamentally dishonest and which has sown the seeds
of distrust and which has made settlement so difficult of achievement.
There is nothing exuberant and
extravagant in Ranade. He refused to reap cheap notoriety by playing the part
of an extremist. He refused to mislead people by playing upon and exploiting
the patriotic sentiments of the people. He refused to be a party to methods
which are crude, which have volume but no effect, and which are neither
fool-proof nor knave-proof, and which break the back even of the most earnest
and sincere servants of the country and disable them from further effort. In
short, Ranade was like the wise Captain who knows that his duty is not to play
with his ship clever and masterful tricks, just for effect and show in the
midst of the ocean, but to take it safely to its appointed port. In short,
Ranade was not a forged bank note and in worshipping him we have no feeling of
kneeling before anything that is false.
In the second place, this celebration
of Ranade's birthday is not all an act of hero-worship. Hero-worship in the
sense of expressing our unbounded admiration is one thing. To obey the hero is
a totally different kind of hero-worship. There is nothing wrong in the former,
while the latter is no doubt a most pernicious thing. The former is only man's
respect for everything which is noble and of which the great man is only an
embodiment. The latter is the villain's [=peasant's] fealty to his lord. The
former is consistent with respect, but the latter is a sign of debasement. The
former does not take away one's intelligence to think and independence to act.
The latter makes one a perfect fool. The former involves no disaster to the
State. The latter is the source of positive danger to it. In short, in celebrating
Ranade's birthday we are not worshipping a boss who is elected by no one,
accountable to no one, and removable by no one, but paying our tribute of
admiration to a leader who led and did not drive people, who sought to give
effect to their deliberate judgement and did not try to impose his own will
upon them by trickery or by violence.
In the third place, it is not for
hero-worship for which this gathering has assembled. This is an occasion to
remind ourselves of the political philosophy of Ranade. To my mind it has
become necessary to remind ourselves of it from time to time. For his is a
philosophy which is safe and sound, sure if slow. Even if it does not glitter,
it is none the less gold. Do any have doubt? If they have, let them ponder over
the following utterances of Bismark, Balfour, and Morley. Bismark the great
German Statesman said:—
"Politics is the game of the possible."
Balfour in his Introduction to Walter Bagehot's well-known book on the
English Constitution says:—
"If we would find the true basis of the long drawn process which
has gradually converted medieval monarchy into a modern democracy, the process
by which so much has been changed and so little destroyed, we must study
temperament and character rather than intellect and theory. This is a truth
which those who recommend the wholesale adoption of British Institutions in
strange lands might remember with advantage. Such an experiment can hardly be
without its dangers. Constitutions are easily copied; temperaments are not; and
if it should happen that the borrowed constitution and the native temperament
fail to correspond, the misfit may have serious results. It matters little what
other gifts a people may possess if they are wanting in these which, from this
point of view, are of most importance. If, for example, they have no capacity
for grading their loyalties as well as for being moved by them; if they have no
natural inclination to liberty and no natural respect for law; if they lack
good humour and tolerate foul play; if they know not how to compromise or when;
if they have not that distrust of extreme conclusions which is sometimes
misdescribed as want of logic; if corruption does not repel them; and if their
divisions tend to be either too numerous or too profound, the successful working
of British Institutions may be difficult or impossible. It may indeed be least
possible where the arts of Parliamentary persuasion and the dexterities of
party management are brought to their highest perfection."
Morley has observed:—
"To hurry on after logical perfection is to show one's
self-ignorant of the material of that social structure with which the
politician has to deal. To disdain anything short of an organic change in
thought or institution is infatuation. To be willing to make such changes too
frequently, even when they are possible, is foolhardiness. That fatal French
saying about small reforms being the worst enemies of great reforms is, in the
sense in which it is commonly used, a formula of social ruin."
These are the principles on which success in Politics depends. Are they
different from those which Ranade enunciated? It bespeaks greatness in Ranade
that he should have propounded them years before Bismark, Balfour and Morley.
The generation which Ranade served was
wise in taking him as its political guide, friend and philosopher. His
greatness lies in the fact that he can be a guide, friend and philosopher to
this present, nay even to future generations.
There is one charge against Ranade
which is frequently made and which I think must be met. It is said of Ranade
that he believed that the conquest of India by the British was Providential,
that it was in the best interest of India, that she should remain within the
British Empire, and that therein lay her final destiny. In short, Ranade is
accused of being opposed to India's Independence.
The charge is founded on the following
utterances of Ranade:—
"It cannot be easily assumed that in God's Providence, such vast
multitudes as those who inhabit India were placed centuries together under
influences and restraints of alien domination, unless such influences and
restraints were calculated to do lasting service in the building up of the
strength and character of the people in directions in which the Indian races
were most deficient. Of one thing we are certain, that after lasting over five
hundred years, the Mohammedan Empire gave way, and made room for the
re-establishment of the old native races in the Punjab, and throughout Central
Hindusthan and Southern India, on foundations of a much more solid character
than those which yielded so easily before the assaults of the early Mohammedan
conquerors."
"Both Hindus and Mohammedans lack
many of those virtues represented by the love of order and regulated authority.
Both are wanting in the love of municipal freedom, in the exercise of virtues
necessary for civic life, and in aptitudes for mechanical skill, in the love of
science and research in the love and daring of adventurous discovery, the
resolution to master difficulties, and in chivalrous respect for womankind.
Neither the old Hindus nor the old Mohammedan civilization was in a condition
to train these virtues in a way to bring up the races of India on a level with
those of Western Europe, and so the work of education had to be renewed, and it
has been now going on for the past century and more under the Pax
Brittanica with results—which all of us are witnesses to in
ourselves."
A mere glance at these statements is enough to show that the charge is
based on a misunderstanding, if not on a misreading, of the statements. The
statements are plain and simple, and they cannot even by inference be said to
lead to the conclusion that Ranade was opposed to India's independence. In that
sense the charge is false and without foundation.
These statements of Ranade, far from
casting any reflection upon his self-respect, testify to his wisdom and to his
sagacity. What did Ranade want to convey by these statements? As I understand
them, I think Ranade wanted to convey two things. The first thing he wanted to convey
was that the conquest of India by Britain has given India the time, the
opportunity, and the necessary shelter for rebuilding, renovating, and
repairing her economic and social structure, to refit herself for bearing the
strain of any foreign aggression when she does become free. The second thing
Ranade wanted to convey was that going out of the British Empire by India
before she had satisfied and solidified herself into a single nation, unified
in thought, in feeling, and charged with a sense of a common destiny, was to
invite chaos and disruption in the name of independence.
How very important these truths are!
People do not realize the part that shelter plays in the smooth working out of
social, economic and political conflicts which are inevitable in every society
which desires to advance. The late Prof. Maitland was once asked to explain why
Parliamentary Institutions flourished in England but failed to take root in
Europe. His answer reveals the importance of shelter. He said the difference
was due to the English channel. By this answer what he meant to convey was that
by reason of the English channel England was immune from foreign aggression
while she was repairing her own body politic, and therefore it became safe for
people to fight against their King for Liberty and also safe for the King to
allow it to his people. This importance of shelter was also emphasized by
Abraham Lincoln. In a speech devoted to showing why American Political
Institutions were destined to remain perpetual, Lincoln said:—
"All the armies of Europe, Asia and Africa combined. . . with a
Bonaparte for a Commander, could not by force take a drink from Ohio, or make a
track on the Blue Ridge in a trial of a thousand years."
In this Lincoln was also emphasizing the importance and the necessity
for shelter for social reconstruction. India is not a sheltered country as
England and America are. She lies across and on the roads, whether the roads
are land routes, sea routes, or air routes. As she has no shelter, the fear is
that she will be broken up if she is attacked from outside while she is engaged
in refitting herself. India needs a dry dock as a shelter for the period of her
refitting, and the British Empire is a dry dock for her. Who can say that
Ranade was not wise in asking his countrymen to bear in mind the importance of
a shelter which the British Empire can give and which India needs so much?
A servient [=subordinate] nation
is always eager to cut the knot and declare its independence of the dominant
nation. But it seldom stops to consider the effect of independence on itself.
Such a consideration is however very important. It is not often realized that the
knot which binds the servient nation to the dominant nation is more necessary
to the servient nation than to the dominant nation. It depends upon the
conditions inside the servient nation. The servient nation may be one whole.
The servient nation may consist of parts. The parts may be such that they will
never become one whole. Or the parts may be such that they are not yet one
whole, but if held together longer they will become one whole. The effect which
the cutting of the knot will have on the servient nation will depend upon the
internal condition of the servient nation. There may be every good in cutting
the knot by a servient nation which is one whole. Nothing good or nothing worse
can happen—depends upon how one looks at it—by the cutting of the knot by a
nation in which the parts can never become one whole. But there is positive
danger in the third case. The premature cutting of the knot is sure to lead to
disintegration, where integration is desirable and possible. It would be a
wanton act. This is the second danger which Ranade wanted to caution his
countrymen against.
Who can say that Ranade was not wise in
giving this caution? Those who are inclined to question its necessity have only
to look to China. It is 30 years since the Chinese Revolution took place. Have
the Chinese settled down? No. People are still asking "when will the
Chinese revolution stop revolving?" and those who know the conditions in
China cannot do better than say "Perhaps in another hundred years."
Has China found a stable Government having the allegiance of all Chinese? Far
from it. Indeed if truth be told, China after the revolution has been a land of
disunity and disruption, far more than she was ever before. The Revolution has
produced a chaos of such magnitude that her very independence has been put in
peril. Few Indians are aware of the fact that if China has not lost her
independence as a result of the chaos caused by the Revolution, it is only
because she had too many enemies who could not agree as to which of them should
devour her. The Chinese Revolution was a great mistake. That was the opinion of
Yuan Shih-k'ai who said:—
"I doubt whether the people of China are at present ripe for a
Republic or whether under present conditions a Republic is adapted to the
Chinese people. . . The adoption of a limited monarchy would bring conditions
back to the normal and would bring stability much more rapidly than that end
could be attained through any experimental form of Government unsuited to the
genius of the people or to the present conditions in China. . . My only reason
for favouring the retention of the present Emperor is that I believe in a
constitutional monarchy. If we are to have that form of Government, there is
nobody else whom the people would agree upon for his place. My sole aim,
in this crisis, is to save China from dissolution and the many evils that would
follow."
Those who think that China should be rather a warning to Indians than an
example will, far from accusing Ranade for [=of] opposing India's independence,
will be happy that he had the wisdom to foresee the evils of a premature
revolution, and warn his countrymen against taking a similar step.
X. RANADE, GANDHI AND JINNAH
Posterity is always interested in the last words and last regrets of
great men. The last words of great men are not always significant of their
experience of this world or their vision of the next. For instance the last
thoughts of Socrates were to call Crito and say, "We owe a cock to
Aesculapius; discharge the debt, and by no means omit it." But their last
regrets are always significant and worth pondering over. Take the case of
Napoleon. Napoleon, before his death at St. Helena, showed evidence of being uneasy
over three capital points which
constituted his last regrets. They were: that he could not have died at some
supreme moment of his career; that he left Egypt and gave up his Eastern
ambitions; and last but by no means the least, his defeat at Waterloo.
Had Ranade any supreme regrets? One
thing is certain: that Ranade, if he had any, could not have the same regrets
such as those which disturbed the peace of mind of Napoleon. Ranade lived for
service and not for glory. It mattered very little to him whether the moment of
his death was glorious or inglorious, or whether he died as a hero, as a
conqueror or a master, or whether he died as a common man sometimes does of
common cold. As a matter of fact, Ranade was not troubled by any regrets. So
far as [the] record goes, Ranade does not seem to be conscious of any act or
event about which he had any regrets. He died a happy and a peaceful death. But
it is worthwhile asking, could Ranade have any regrets if he came to life
today? I am sure there is one matter over which he will feel extremely grieved—
namely the present condition of the Liberal Party in India.
What is the present position of the
Liberal Party in India? The Liberal Party is a casualty. Indeed this is a very
mild expression. The Liberals are "the contemptibles" of Indian
Politics. To use the language of Norton used in another connection, they are
disowned by the people, unowned by the Government, having the virtues of
neither, but possessing the vices of both. There was a time when the Liberal Party
was the rival of the Congress. Today the relation of the Liberal Party to the
Congress is that of a dog to his master. Occasionally the dog barks at his master,
but for the most part of his life he is content to follow him. What is the
Liberal Party if not the tail of the Congress? Many are asking, why do not the
Liberals merge in the Congress—so useless has their existence become. How can
Ranade help not [=help] regretting the collapse of the Liberal Party? How can
any Indian help regretting it?
The collapse of the Liberal Party is a
tragedy to the Liberals. But it is really a disaster to the country. The
existence of a party is so essential to a popular Government that it is
impossible to conceive the possibility of getting on without it. As an eminent
American historian says:—
"It is easier to imagine the demolition of any part of our
constitutional organization, the submersion of a large part of what the
Constitution describes, than to imagine our getting on without political
combinations: they are our vital institutions."
Indeed, to attempt to govern a country by the mass of voters without the
control and discipline of a Party is, to use the language of James Bryce:—
"Like attempting to manage a rail-board by the votes of uninformed
share holders, or to lay the course of a sailing ship by the votes of the
passengers."
It is undeniable that a Party is an essential adjunct to Popular
Government. But it is equally undeniable that the rule of a single party is
fatal to Popular Government. In fact it is a negation of Popular Government.
The case of Germany and Italy furnish the most cogent evidence on this point.
Instead of taking a warning from the totalitarian States, we are taking them as
models to copy. The one-party system is being hailed in this country in the
name of national solidarity. Those who are doing so are failing to take note of
the possibilities of tyranny, as well as the possibilities of misdirection of
public affairs, which is[=are] inherent in the one-party Government.
To have Popular Government run by a
single Party is to let democracy become a mere form, for despotism to play its
part from behind it. How under one-party Government the tyranny of the majority
ceases to be an empty phrase and becomes a menacing fact has been our
experience, in India, under the Congress Regime. Were we not told by Mr.
Rajgopalachariar that the separation of the Executive and the Judiciary which
was necessary under the British is no longer necessary? Does it not show the
Despot's taste for blood? Despotism does not cease to be despotism because it
is elective. Nor does despotism become agreeable because the Despots belong to
our own kindred. To make it subject to election is no guarantee against
despotism. The real guarantee against despotism is to confront it with the
possibility of its dethronement, of its being laid low, of its being superseded
by a rival party.
Every Government is liable to error of
judgement, [a] great many liable to bad administration, and not a few to
corruption, injustice, and acts of oppression and bad faith. No Government
ought to be free from criticism. But who can criticize a Government? Left to
individuals, it can never be done. Sir Toby has left behind advice as to how
one should deal with one's enemy. He said: soon, "so soon as ever thou
seest him, draw, and as thou drawest, swear horrible." But this is not
possible for an individual who wants to stand up against a Government. There
are various things against individuals' successfully playing that part.
There is in the first place what Bryce
calls the fatalism of the multitude, that tendency to acquiesce and submit due
to the sense of [the] insignificance of individual effort, the sense of
helplessness arising from the belief that the affairs of men are swayed by large
forces whose movements cannot be turned by individual effort. In the second
place there is [the] possibility of the tyranny of the majority which often
manifests [itself] in suppressing and subjecting to penalties and other social
disabilities persons who do not follow the majority, of which some of us have
good experience during the Congress regime. In the third place there is the
fear of the C.I.D., the Gestapo, and all the other instrumentalities which are
at the disposal of the Government to shadow its critics and to silence them.
The secret of freedom is courage, and
courage is born in [the] combination of individuals into a party. A Party is
necessary to run Government. But two Parties are necessary to keep Government
from being a despotism. A democratic Government can remain democratic only if
it is worked by two parties—a Party in power and a Party in opposition. As
Jennings puts it:—
"If there is no opposition there is no democracy. 'His Majesty's
Opposition' is no idle phrase. His Majesty needs an opposition as well as a
Government."
In the light of these considerations, who could deny [them and say] that
the collapse of the Liberal Party in India is not a major disaster? Without the
resuscitation of the Liberal Party or the formation of another Party, the fight
for freedom will result in loss of freedom, for despotism is antithetical of
freedom whether the despotism is native or foreign. It is a pity Indians have
lost sight of this fact. But I have no doubt those who are shouting that the
Congress is the only Party and that the Congress is the nation will live to rue
their decision.
Why has the Liberal Party collapsed? Is
there something wrong in the Philosophy of Ranade? Is there anything wrong with
the men in the Liberal Party? Or is the working of the Liberal Party at fault?
I for one hold that there is nothing fundamentally wrong with the philosophy of
Ranade. Nor can it be said that of the two the Congress has the best cause and
the Liberal Party the best men. The Liberal Party has both. To my mind what has
brought about the collapse of the Liberal Party is the complete lack of
organization.
It may not be without interest to
expose the weaknesses in the organization of the Liberal Party.
As pointed out by Pendleton Herring in
his volume on Politics of Democracy, the organization of a Party is
spread over three concentric rings. The centre ring represents the oligarchy in
control of the party organization—what is called the High Command. There are
associated with it, its workers who are primarily concerned with securing their
livelihood through the party organization, whether as party officials or
through public office. They are called professional politicians, and constitute
the party machine. Surrounding this inner group—the High Command and the
machine—there is a large circle of persons bound to the Party by ties of
tradition and emotional loyalty. They think of the principles professed by the
Party. They are more concerned with its ideals and symbols than with the acts
of the professional party workers and leaders. They vote for the Party ideal
rather than for the Party record.
Outside this second ring lies that vast
body of people who are not attached to any Party. It is a floating population.
The reason for their being unattached is either because they are aimless,
thoughtless, or because they have particular interests which are not included
in the platform of any Party. Those outside the second ring constitute the most
vital field of action for a political Party. They are the prize which a Party
must capture. To capture this prize it is not enough to enunciate principles
and formulate policies. Men are not interested in principles and policies. But
they are interested in accomplishing things. What is necessary for a Party is
to bring about concerted action. For in the words of President Woodrow Wilson,
given self-government with a majority rule, things can be accomplished not by
individual voice but by concerted action.
Now for concerted action, what is
necessary is the crystallization of individual opinions into public opinion.
This crystallization or building up of public opinion as a sanction behind a
particular principle becomes the main function of a Party. Theoretically,
political parties are agencies for the expression and execution of public
opinion; but in practice, Parties create, direct, influence, and often control
public opinion. Indeed this is the chief function of a Party. For this, a Party
must do two things. In the first place it must establish contact with the
masses. It must go out among the masses with its wares—its principles,
policies, ideas, and candidates. In the second place it must carry on
propaganda among the masses in favour of its wares. It must animate them and
enlighten them, to quote Bryce again "give the voters some knowledge of
the political issues they have to decide, to inform them of their leaders, and
the crimes of their opponents." These are the basic factors from which
concerted action can arise. A Party which fails to forge concerted action has
no right to call itself a party.
Which of these things the Liberal Party
has done as an organization? The Liberal Party has only the High Command. It
has no machine. Not having any machine, the high command is only a shadow. Its
following is confined to that second concentric ring consisting of persons who
are bound by ties of tradition. The leaders have nothing to evoke emotional
loyalty. They have no war cry to gather a crowd. The Liberal Party does not
believe in mass contact. It would be difficult to imagine a Party so completely
isolated and insulated from the main mass of people. It does not believe in
conversion. Not that it has no Gospel to preach; but like the Hindu religion it
is a nonproselytising creed. It believes in the formulation of principles and
policies. But it does not work for giving effect to them. Propaganda and
concerted action are anathema to the Liberal Party. Individual voices and
annual meetings, and clamour for invitation when a Cripps arrives or when the
Viceroy decides to invite important individuals, have become the limits of its
political activity.
Is there any wonder if the Liberal
Party has fallen into disrepute? The Liberal Party has forgotten the most
elementary fact: that organization is essential for the accomplishment of any
purpose and particularly in politics, where the harnessing of so many divergent
elements in a working unity is so great.
Who is responsible for this collapse of
the Liberal Party in India? However much we may regret to have to say it, I
think it will have to be admitted that the responsibility for this catastrophe
does to some extent fall on Ranade. Ranade belonged to the [upper] Classes. He
was born and bred among them. He never became a man of [the] masses. The
Liberal Party has no machine, and the reason why it did not forge a machine is
because it did not believe in mass contact. This aversion to mass contact is
the legacy of Ranade. In avoiding mass contact the party is following the
tradition left by Ranade.
There is another legacy of Ranade to
the Liberal Party, and that relates to the false faith in the driving force of
principles and policies. Mazzini once said: "You may kill men, you cannot
kill a great idea." To me it appears to be a most mistaken view. Men are
mortal. So are ideas. It is wrong to hold that an idea will take roots proprio
vigore. An idea needs propagation as much as a plant needs watering. Both
will otherwise wither and die. Ranade agreed with Mazzini and did not believe
that the fructification of an idea needed the resources of strenuous husbandry.
If the Liberal Party is content with mere formulation of principles and
policies, it is also because of this tradition of Ranade.
What is the duty of the Liberals? All
Liberals I know will say, our duty is to follow the master. What else could be
the attitude of a devout band of disciples? But can anything be more mistaken
or more uncritical? Such an attitude implies two things. It means that a great
man works by imposing his maxims on his disciples. It means that the disciples
should not be wiser than the master. Both these conclusions are wrong. They do
injustice to the master. No great man really does his work by crippling his
disciple by forcing on them his maxims or his conclusions. What a Great Man
does is not to impose his maxims on his disciples. What he does is to evoke
them, to awaken them to a vigorous and various exertion of their faculties.
Again the pupil only takes his guidance from his master. He is not bound to
accept his master's conclusions. There is no ingratitude in the disciple not
accepting the maxims or the conclusions of his master. For even when he rejects
them he is bound to acknowledge to his master in deep reverence: "You
awakened me to be myself; for that I thank you." The master is not
entitled to less. The disciple is not bound to give more.
It is therefore [a] wrong to the master
as well as to himself, for the disciple to bind himself to the maxims and
conclusions of his Master. His duty is to know the principles and, if he is
convinced of their value and their worth, to spread them. That is the wish of
every Master. Jesus wished it, Buddha wished it. I am sure the same must be the
wish of Ranade. It follows that if the Liberals have faith in, and love and
respect for, Ranade their supreme duty lies not merely in assembling together
to sing his praises, but in organising themselves for spreading the Gospel of
Ranade.
What hope is there of the Liberals
coming forward to fulfill this duty? Signs are very depressing. In the last
election the Liberals did not even contest the seats. That of course is in
itself a matter of some surprise. But this pales into nothing when one recalls
the announcement made by the Rt. Hon'ble Srinivas Shastri—the Leading Light of
the Liberal Party—that he wished the Congress to succeed!! There is no parallel
to this except in the treacherous and treasonous conduct of Bhishma, who lived
on the bounty of the Kauravas but wished and worked for success to their
enemies the Pandavas. This shows even the Liberals had lost faith in the gospel
of Ranade. If this is the general condition of health of the Liberal Party, it
is [=would be] better if the party died. It would clear the way for a new
orientation, and spare us the tedium of idle clatter of liberals and
liberalism. For such an event even Ranade may [=might] express satisfaction
from his grave.
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