NATIONALISM IN THE WEST
Man's history is being shaped according to the difficulties
it encounters. These have offered us problems and claimed their
solutions from us, the penalty of non-fulfilment being death or
degradation.These difficulties have been different in different peoples
of the earth, and in the manner of our overcoming them lies our
distinction.The Scythians of the earlier period of Asiatic history had to
struggle with the scarcity of their natural resources. The easiest
solution that they could think of was to organize their whole
population, men, women, and children, into bands of robbers. And
they were irresistible to those who were chiefly engaged in the
constructive work of social co-operation.But fortunately for man the easiest path is not his truest
path. If his nature were not as complex as it is, if it were as
simple as that of a pack of hungry wolves, then, by this time,
those hordes of marauders would have overrun the whole earth. But
man, when confronted with difficulties, has to acknowledge that he
is man, that he has his responsibilities to the higher faculties of
his nature, by ignoring which he may achieve success that is
immediate, perhaps, but that will become a death-trap to him. For
what are obstacles to the lower creatures are opportunities to the
higher life of man.To India has been given her problem from the beginning of
history—it is the race problem. Races ethnologically different have
in this country come into close contact. This fact has been and
still continues to be the most important one in our history. It is
our mission to face it and prove our humanity by dealing with it in
the fullest truth. Until we fulfil our mission all other benefits
will be denied us.There are other peoples in the world who have to overcome
obstacles in their physical surroundings, or the menace of their
powerful neighbours. They have organized their power till they are
not only reasonably free from the tyranny of Nature and human
neighbours, but have a surplus of it left in their hands to employ
against others. But in India, our difficulties being internal, our
history has been the history of continual social adjustment and not
that of organized power for defence and aggression.Neither the colourless vagueness of cosmopolitanism, nor the
fierce self-idolatry of nation-worship, is the goal of human
history. And India has been trying to accomplish her task through
social regulation of differences, on the one hand, and the
spiritual recognition of unity on the other. She has made grave
errors in setting up the boundary walls too rigidly between races,
in perpetuating in her classifications the results of inferiority;
often she has crippled her children's minds and narrowed their
lives in order to fit them into her social forms; but for centuries
new experiments have been made and adjustments carried
out.Her mission has been like that of a hostess who has to
provide proper accommodation for numerous guests, whose habits and
requirements are different from one another. This gives rise to
infinite complexities whose solution depends not merely upon
tactfulness but upon sympathy and true realization of the unity of
man. Towards this realization have worked, from the early time of
the Upanishads up to the present moment, a series of great
spiritual teachers, whose one object has been to set at naught all
differences of man by the overflow of our consciousness of God. In
fact, our history has not been of the rise and fall of kingdoms, of
fights for political supremacy. In our country records of these
days have been despised and forgotten, for they in no way represent
the true history of our people. Our history is that of our social
life and attainment of spiritual ideals.But we feel that our task is not yet done. The world-flood
has swept over our country, new elements have been introduced, and
wider adjustments are waiting to be made.We feel this all the more, because the teaching and example
of the West have entirely run counter to what we think was given to
India to accomplish. In the West the national machinery of commerce
and politics turns out neatly compressed bales of humanity which
have their use and high market value; but they are bound in iron
hoops, labelled and separated off with scientific care and
precision. Obviously God made man to be human; but this modern
product has such marvellous square-cut finish, savouring of
gigantic manufacture, that the Creator will find it difficult to
recognize it as a thing of spirit and a creature made in His own
divine image.But I am anticipating. What I was about to say is this. Take
it in whatever spirit you like, here is India, of about fifty
centuries at least, who tried to live peacefully and think deeply,
the India devoid of all politics, the India of no nations, whose
one ambition has been to know this world as of soul, to live here
every moment of her life in the meek spirit of adoration, in the
glad consciousness of an eternal and personal relationship with it.
It was upon this remote portion of humanity, childlike in its
manner, with the wisdom of the old, that the Nation of the West
burst in.Through all the fights and intrigues and deceptions of her
earlier history India had remained aloof. Because her homes, her
fields, her temples of worship, her schools, where her teachers and
students lived together in the atmosphere of simplicity and
devotion and learning, her village self-government with its simple
laws and peaceful administration—all these truly belonged to her.
But her thrones were not her concern. They passed over her head
like clouds, now tinged with purple gorgeousness, now black with
the threat of thunder. Often they brought devastations in their
wake, but they were like catastrophes of nature whose traces are
soon forgotten.But this time it was different. It was not a mere drift over
her surface of life,—drift of cavalry and foot soldiers, richly
caparisoned elephants, white tents and canopies, strings of patient
camels bearing the loads of royalty, bands of kettle-drums and
flutes, marble domes of mosques, palaces and tombs, like the
bubbles of the foaming wine of extravagance; stories of treachery
and loyal devotion, of changes of fortune, of dramatic surprises of
fate. This time it was the Nation of the West driving its tentacles
of machinery deep down into the soil.Therefore I say to you, it is we who are called as witnesses
to give evidence as to what our Nation has been to humanity. We had
known the hordes of Moghals and Pathans who invaded India, but we
had known them as human races, with their own religions and
customs, likes and dislikes,—we had never known them as a nation.
We loved and hated them as occasions arose; we fought for them and
against them, talked with them in a language which was theirs as
well as our own, and guided the destiny of the Empire in which we
had our active share. But this time we had to deal, not with kings,
not with human races, but with a nation—we, who are no nation
ourselves.Now let us from our own experience answer the question, What
is this Nation?A nation, in the sense of the political and economic union of
a people, is that aspect which a whole population assumes when
organized for a mechanical purpose. Society as such has no ulterior
purpose. It is an end in itself. It is a spontaneous
self-expression of man as a social being. It is a natural
regulation of human relationships, so that men can develop ideals
of life in co-operation with one another. It has also a political
side, but this is only for a special purpose. It is for
self-preservation. It is merely the side of power, not of human
ideals. And in the early days it had its separate place in society,
restricted to the professionals. But when with the help of science
and the perfecting of organization this power begins to grow and
brings in harvests of wealth, then it crosses its boundaries with
amazing rapidity. For then it goads all its neighbouring societies
with greed of material prosperity, and consequent mutual jealousy,
and by the fear of each other's growth into powerfulness. The time
comes when it can stop no longer, for the competition grows keener,
organization grows vaster, and selfishness attains supremacy.
Trading upon the greed and fear of man, it occupies more and more
space in society, and at last becomes its ruling force.It is just possible that you have lost through habit
consciousness that the living bonds of society are breaking up, and
giving place to merely mechanical organization. But you see signs
of it everywhere. It is owing to this that war has been declared
between man and woman, because the natural thread is snapping which
holds them together in harmony; because man is driven to
professionalism, producing wealth for himself and others,
continually turning the wheel of power for his own sake or for the
sake of the universal officialdom, leaving woman alone to wither
and to die or to fight her own battle unaided. And thus there where
co-operation is natural has intruded competition. The very
psychology of men and women about their mutual relation is changing
and becoming the psychology of the primitive fighting elements,
rather than of humanity seeking its completeness through the union
based upon mutual self-surrender. For the elements which have lost
their living bond of reality have lost the meaning of their
existence. Like gaseous particles forced into a too narrow space,
they come in continual conflict with each other till they burst the
very arrangement which holds them in bondage.Then look at those who call themselves anarchists, who resent
the imposition of power, in any form whatever, upon the individual.
The only reason for this is that power has become too abstract—it
is a scientific product made in the political laboratory of the
Nation, through the dissolution of personal humanity.And what is the meaning of these strikes in the economic
world, which like the prickly shrubs in a barren soil shoot up with
renewed vigour each time they are cut down? What, but that the
wealth-producing mechanism is incessantly growing into vast
stature, out of proportion to all other needs of society,—and the
full reality of man is more and more crushed under its weight? This
state of things inevitably gives rise to eternal feuds among the
elements freed from the wholeness and wholesomeness of human
ideals, and interminable economic war is waged between capital and
labour. For greed of wealth and power can never have a limit, and
compromise of self-interest can never attain the final spirit of
reconciliation. They must go on breeding jealousy and suspicion to
the end—the end which only comes through some sudden catastrophe or
a spiritual re-birth.When this organization of politics and commerce, whose other
name is the Nation, becomes all-powerful at the cost of the harmony
of the higher social life, then it is an evil day for humanity.
When a father becomes a gambler and his obligations to his family
take the secondary place in his mind, then he is no longer a man,
but an automaton led by the power of greed. Then he can do things
which, in his normal state of mind, he would be ashamed to do. It
is the same thing with society. When it allows itself to be turned
into a perfect organization of power, then there are few crimes
which it is unable to perpetrate. Because success is the object and
justification of a machine, while goodness only is the end and
purpose of man. When this engine of organization begins to attain a
vast size, and those who are mechanics are made into parts of the
machine, then the personal man is eliminated to a phantom,
everything becomes a revolution of policy carried out by the human
parts of the machine, with no twinge of pity or moral
responsibility. It may happen that even through this apparatus the
moral nature of man tries to assert itself, but the whole series of
ropes and pullies creak and cry, the forces of the human heart
become entangled among the forces of the human automaton, and only
with difficulty can the moral purpose transmit itself into some
tortured shape of result.This abstract being, the Nation, is ruling India. We have
seen in our country some brand of tinned food advertised as
entirely made and packed without being touched by hand. This
description applies to the governing of India, which is as little
touched by the human hand as possible. The governors need not know
our language, need not come into personal touch with us except as
officials; they can aid or hinder our aspirations from a disdainful
distance, they can lead us on a certain path of policy and then
pull us back again with the manipulation of office red tape; the
newspapers of England, in whose columns London street accidents are
recorded with some decency of pathos, need but take the scantiest
notice of calamities which happen in India over areas of land
sometimes larger than the British Isles.But we, who are governed, are not a mere abstraction. We, on
our side, are individuals with living sensibilities. What comes to
us in the shape of a mere bloodless policy may pierce into the very
core of our life, may threaten the whole future of our people with
a perpetual helplessness of emasculation, and yet may never touch
the chord of humanity on the other side, or touch it in the most
inadequately feeble manner. Such wholesale and universal acts of
fearful responsibility man can never perform, with such a degree of
systematic unawareness, where he is an individual human being.
These only become possible, where the man is represented by an
octopus of abstractions, sending out its wriggling arms in all
directions of space, and fixing its innumerable suckers even into
the far-away future. In this reign of the nation, the governed are
pursued by suspicions; and these are the suspicions of a tremendous
mass of organized brain and muscle. Punishments are meted out,
which leave a trail of miseries across a large bleeding tract of
the human heart; but these punishments are dealt by a mere abstract
force, in which a whole population of a distant country has lost
its human personality.I have not come here, however, to discuss the question as it
affects my own country, but as it affects the future of all
humanity. It is not a question of the British Government, but of
government by the Nation—the Nation which is the organized
self-interest of a whole [...]