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Sikh History
AN OPEN LETTER TO SIR JOHN SIMON
By Puran Singh
Dear Sir John Simon,
The Indian situation is indeed very complex and baffles
all kinds of genius to find a royal road to India's freedom.
It may not be out of place at this stage when changes in
the Constitution are under contemplation to write to you
a few thoughts that occur to me one of the royt. They may
be of no direct help to you but I am sure they would reveal
a bit of the mind of an Indian who is in the thick of all
the mental conflictions and naturally reads more of the
minds of his people than any foreigner can.
I see the boycott of your Commission is already getting
weak. The most ardent boycotters have published their proposed
Constitution. Thus they have put their views indirectly
before you. It appears to me even if they had boycotted
you completely as they intended, this temporary loss of
temper on their part could have been treated but as trivial.
Let me say frankly there is no ghost of a chance of a successful
revolution in India at least at the call of these intellectuals.
If it could come at their call, it is certainly overdue
because in the verity of things, there is nothing like freedom.
In reality, there are many sudden turns in the affairs of
men, and your countrymen are also afraid of a possible revolution,
of course till it does not actually come. An armed revolt
being out of question, I know, between you and them, there
will be much of the usual give and take, a lot of crossing
of t's and dotting of i's. This business of writing a lot
of Constitution by Pundit Moti Lal Nehru or yourself is
of little interest to us poor farmers of India. And why?
I. The Witches' Cauldron
When things descend to melancholy, details of daily life
and to the carrying out of these fine Constitutions in the
spirit of practical sympathy, there is very little man material
in India which can be singled out truly as cultured and
rightly trained to deserve the title "Indian"
which means one who, like a Japanese or an Englishman, will
place before himself the interest of the country as a whole,
first and foremost, and who would burn with a passion of
its service. There are Hindus, Sikhs, Moslems, Christians,
Parsis and Jains in India but very few Indians. And strange
as it may sound, it is quite true that those who have removed
those labels are empty bottles, without having any character
of wine, of acid, or of poison. They are of no account,
because, for centuries, in India the formation of character
has been associated, not with the practice of broad minded
patriotism, but with certain racial prejudices and social
superstitions. It is, therefore, not extricable from the
so called religious bias and bigotry. Self Government in
India means Government by the very few cunning and aggressive
people who, once put in possession of the authority, would
twist all letters of law and constitutions to their individual
wills and make them work on the communal or the so called
religious bias.
The Moslem does not believe in any country as his own. He
believes in a brotherhood which, by its sheer number, must
conquer the whole world. To him, political advancement of
the Moslem brotherhood is his real progress. From a racial
point of view, this Moslem outlook is worthy of praise,
and such a community of people, unless forced by compelling
circumstances, forever refuse to live under any alien domination.
The Moslem essentially desires to rule over the world and
even his children dream of pan-Islamic Asiatic Empire.
The interest of Moslem in India cannot be national in the
sense that the national Congress of the Hindu intellectuals
so far has been declaring to mean. Men of exceptional outlooks
can be found in the races, and in India's Moslems also.
To get such exceptions together at Lucknow and find agreements
merely on the surface of things in certain wordings of a
few formal resolutions to agree to the Nehru Committee's
Draft, is to me a ludicrous unreality of the so-called history-making
announcements.
I was going to say it is indulgence of the Indian intellectuals
in happy phrases when the country is slowly and surely going
from bad to worse. For the reason given, which is in the
very constitution of the Moslem mentality, he can come to
no terms with the Hindu but those that give him the domination
and advantage over the Hindu and all other low-lying communities
living in India. Any compromise arrives at would collapse
as soon as the Moslem finds out that it is not to his interest
and he would be thereby put merely in a position of disadvantage.
Agreements bought at such a price are not worth the paper
on which they are written. Surely, the Nehru Report is not
founded on true patriotism nor true nationalism in which
the individual community merges into the larger nation with
a flaming passion.
Come to the Hindu. He is the implacable but cowardly foe
of the Moslem. He does not trust him and in the heart of
his heart, he considers him filthy, cow eating, treacherous,
barbarous, one capable of any tyranny, rapine, plunder and
cruelty. Even the touch of a Moslem pollutes his food! The
Hindu believes his own culture and caste superior to all
other human institutions. He alone is pure. For this very
attitude, in him also, there can be no genuine feeling akin
to that noble patriotism which shapes the destinies of nations
to their freedom and progress in the West.
Thus there are two distinct mentalities at dagger's drawn,
in spite of professing friendship and political union and
social amities. One is aggressive, self assertive, revengeful
mentality of a united people of one religion, one-creed,
one caste, with a dream of an empire driving them onward.
The other is the self-centered bias of highly conservative,
non-progressive, over-individualized, indifferent, disunited,
dollar-loving people who have consented to be slaves for
centuries. The Hindu is still referring, for orders, to
his old scriptures from where no more orders come. He cannot
raise the marriage-able age of the girl. He cannot remarry
his child widow. He cannot give up caste and superstitions.
He is hopelessly bound with the past, somewhat like the
Russian peasant tied to the superstitions of the Roman Catholic
Church. This eternal difference between the Hindu and the
Moslem is seen by Dr. James Cousins even up to the method
of wearing the Hindu dhoti and the Moslem trousers.
TANSEN -- It is, your majesty, and it would be a song most
pitiful that Akbar's legs were traitor to his feet, and
after those long miles of journeying flaunted discovery.
An hour ago I died to Islam and was born a Hindu but you
are struck halfway from life to life loins downward shamelessly
a Mussalman.
AKBAR -- I have seen Hindu trousered.
TANSEN -- Very true, but there is something deeper than
the fact that has escaped you. Take a pair of trousers from
Muslim's legs and put them on a Hindu's and they will seem
alike aliens of the race. Aye, perverts from the faith.
No, no too much hangs from your waist to risk. Here take
this cloth and reincarnate quickly.
AKBAR -- If my limbs could ape the Hindu as glibly as your
tongue takes on his language. I far more would fear to lose
myself in that which we assume, than be unmasked, and so
I rather choose to don the Hindu than to slough the Muslim.
And being both be either at the need. (He has put on a Hindu
dhoti or skirt).
TANSEN -- "Well, well the risk at least is covered
up."
(The King's Wife.)
Then there are Sikhs, for example, amongst many important
newly created nations. And each of these minorities is pulling
in its own way because each one believes in a new inspiration
and a new life that it wishes to save by cutting itself
from the Hindu stock. If the mother-stock shoots up, the
beauty and life of the new graft will go. For example, the
Sikh believes in the inspirations of the Ten Gurus. His
past begins from Guru Nanak and his future lies in the progress
of his ideals. His masters did cut off a portion from the
dead stock of Hindus and infuse a new life into it. They
isolated the Sikhs from the disintegrating people called
the Hindus who are self-hypnotized slaves of the peculiar
theological tyranny of complex intrigue of Brahmanism. The
Sikh Gurus molded a fine strong nation out of the terror-stricken
masses. All historians admit the worth of this great experiment
of the Gurus and appreciate how Guru Gobind Singh infused
a spirit similar to the Bushido Spirit of the Japanese into
his Sikhs. The Guru isolated them from dead mass around.
The Sikh keeps long hair, wears a sword; However ridiculous
these signs may appear to the modern, considered under the
local social conditions of India and the environmental context,
they are fruits of an act of genius which has concealed
the new life of a whole nation under such trivial-things-the
knot of hair and beard-as nature conceals the lightning
spark in the soft wool of clouds. Hindus have seen that
this process is against them. The Guru has declared the
Hindu dead as long as he does not join his Khalsa for his
emancipation. The Hindu cannot tolerate such experimental
condemnations of his caste and religion as the Guru makes
by the very reactivity of his fresh inspiration on the masses
of the Punjab. The Hindu turned down Buddhism in the past
and is thinking of devouring Sikhism, because both systems
condemn the Hindu tyranny of caste masquerading as religion
of love. A few straws show which way the wind blows. Mahatma
Gandhi preaches against keeping of hair. He denounces those
Sikhs shouts of conquests as communal as against national,
with which they battered the Mughal tyranny and became a
free nation. The Sikh will die if he cuts his hair and assumes
the Hindu shape. The patronizing attitude which the Nehru
Constitution adopts towards the Sikhs is the policy of the
Hindu Congress to include the Sikhs in the Hindus.
Dear Sir John Simon! There yonder are the witches who have
put their cauldron on fire. And these matters cannot be
settled till the witches' cauldron boils and incantations
are murmured. Vapors rise and in them there are acting and
reacting upon each other the communal tensions and inflammable
prejudices.
You might have already seen the scene of the Walpurgis night
of Goeth's Faust in India. There is some fearsome conspiracy
against the poor people who till the soil. What can be done
by you or any one to help them? The Biblical truth that
thy enemies shall be of thy own household appears to be
true of the Indian intellectuals, who deceive themselves
in imaginings that they are the saviors of the poor people-Saviors
with what? They but organize an empty handed protest and
noise of wayward meeting on the mob against the British.
II. A Few Imaginings
Let me indulge, while face to face with the witches, in
some imaginings, if perhaps, some stray flight of the flying
horse of the Arabian Nights might take me and you out of
this ghostly darkness. Ah! could nature send its bolt from
the blue and break this huge peninsula into small little
islands! Ah! could the Engineer divide it by many a Panama
canal. Failing this geographical division, could India be
cut up and divided a new to make more harmonious Presidencies
with the population of the Hindu with his various castes
that in practical life from many small nations is themselves,
and the Moslem, equally balanced in the practical exercise
of political power that the British might give them out
of their great mercy for fallen nations !!
I put it down merely for making the impossible possible.
Suppose, as one of the suggestions, Gujrat, Kathiawar, a
portion of C.P., the Sind, the Punjab and the North Western
Frontier are made into one Presidency, a portion of Bombay
goes with Madras as a second Presidency and the half of
Madras is lumped up with Bengal as the third, Bihar and
U.P. and a portion of C.P. constitutes the fourth Presidency.
The Hindus in this division of India can be treated as many
diverse communities. Because the differences between the
Brahman and Non-Brahman are as acute as between the Hindu
and the Moslem, between the Hindu and the Sikh. And these
new Harmony Presidencies of India could be conveniently
sub-divided into small independent States governed by one
Presidency Legislative council and one Governor. To give
the latter to small Provinces would be ruinously costly.
On the other hand to have large Harmony Presidencies would
be too unwieldy for administration of justice, etc., if
they are not cut up into small autonomous States. This administrative
cutting up of India would set in process for the development
of India into the future independent States of Asia. You
are asked to hand India over to us by the Nehru Committee.
Failing the redivision of India into New Harmony Presidencies,
it would be a much better feat of far-sighted statesmanship
to hand it over to a benevolent dictatorship of some kind.
Perhaps you will say I am wasting your time; but I assure
you, you and your friends will be equally wasting your time
if you, only as constitutional lawyers, sitting down like
Pandit Moti Lal Nehru and the men of his mind, write Constitutions
for this India where the witches' cauldron is boiling and
Walpurgis night is on. Any Constitution coming in here like
this essentially means the domination of one community over
all others which must be kept in a permanent state of suspended
animation. All progress under such Constitutions shall be
one-communal and not multi-communal. It would no more be
dyarchy but it would be a form of civil anarchy in administration
run by an autocratic and communal majority. The herd and
its vote does not really matter. The whole District is run
by a few officers. They are not chosen by the people. They
are the real autocrats. And if the services are corrupted
by communal bias, it is the more powerful community that
shall drive the others in practical details of administration.
The Hindu if he is in the chair would tease the Moslem mass
and if the Moslem is in authority he would injure the Hindu
mass. Votes for electing a truly representative Legislative
body under such conditions of communal tension in securing
the monopoly of authority under any such system as adumbrated
by the Nehru Committee shall, for all times, be wholly impotent
and ineffective in maintaining the morale of the public
services. The adult franchise is but a the herd vote.
By giving the Monford Reforms you took away all the noblessee
oblige of the "Steel frame" services which did
work like irresponsible autocrats but in a spirit in which
there are some odor of benevolence. After the Reforms, India
has become no one's land, the cost of administration has
gone up and the spirit of the services demoralized. The
past cannot be brought back and the future cannot be assured,
neither as you might wish nor as they might desire. It has
become no one's business for example, to look after the
costs of the Government.
You have tried for the last hundred years to teach us and
to make us into a free nation as you say, but, unlike Afghans
who are much less civilized than ourselves, in spite of
your intentions, we, as a people, are but a set of women
who can just dangle their bangles on their wrists and pose
beautiful. America threw your tea into the sea and Washington
led and then was the Constitution drafted. One can understand
Abraham Lincoln proclaiming from the housetops his grand
political maxim-the Government of the people, by the people,
for the people. That was some culture, some education which
grew restless and effectively restless for its freedom.
But a trained statesman must laugh in his sleeves at the
impotence of men like Gandhi and Moti Lal Nehru, who wish
to be Abraham Lincoln of India without the substance which
entitles the people on this earth with human nature as constituted,
to liberty. I have said you have tried a hundred years to
educate us and look at this great and disappointing intellectual
disaster. There is not one Amanullah in this whole country
of India, there is not one Kamal Pasha. This fundamental
problem of education which you also have taken into your
hands is such as cannot be solved by systems but by men.
If you really wish to lead India to independence or Dominion
status which practically means independence with an empty
and courteous bow to England, I say, do not give the poor
people of India, Constitutions, do not define their rights.
Let all these things come later, but give us say a real
Dictator to train at least one province, say the Punjab,
at the cost of the whole of India and make it really independent
and see incidentally with what sport other provinces bear
this wonderful concentration for the sake of the uplift
of their brothers of blood for the Punjab. So far, either
you have not done your best to educate us or you are unfit
to organize nations to freedom. You must confess either
unwillingness to make us men, free men, or the utter incompetence
of your system and men as you have so far given us. The
education our Universities are giving is the imitation of
that luxurious academic training which you give to your
youths to enable them to run the Empire and its Embassies.
Of what use is it to us? Afghans have arsenals, aeroplanes,
but we are rendered so impotent that our youths cannot earn
their livings !! We get mere crumbs that fall from the Olympian
Tables. All, in India, must overwork to death to have one
meal a day or die of starvation. We the farmers are crushed
under steel heels.
III. A Bit of Brutal Frankness
Coming to practical problems which I am afraid the more
you think about, the more theoretical and unpractical they
grow, you would see some great minds become mad while thinking
of India. The sign of madness is that they go on preaching
but one fad. You must agree with me that if we were a people
and we had any power or if we were less civilized and more
manly with some ground under our feet, you would not have
entered our house and said:
"Now boys be quiet, we run your home for your good."
You must admit that your proclamations are only political
speeches which mean very little, because if you really wanted,
you would have by these hundred years and more made us men
fit for self-government. As I have already pointed out,
if this is not correct then you as a nation are hopelessly
unfit for organizing people to their political freedom.
Hence we think you only know how to run the Government and
utilize the country in your own ways for your own good.
Whatever may be the case, our suspicion is that you did
not and perhaps do not mean to help us to freedom.
On your side, there are suspicions against us. If you arm
us, we may revolt and be free. Of course if you had meant
to give us independence you might have taken that risk.
But you did not and naturally you would not.
The general man strength of this country is getting low
every day in various ways. Defective education, slow and
systematic economic drain, and want of opportunity for our
being made armed soldiers for the defense of this country
are a few amongst many. Dadabhai Narojee and William Digby
say that India is being bled white. Lord Curzon supports
them in the contention that India is the poorest country
in the world. Imagine, if this country belonged to you in
another sense, you would have secured long ago her economic
independence. That indeed must be your first concern even
if for doing it, you have to make India an English colony
like Australia. Why has Australia grown into a power in
such a short time? The Indian thinkers should have given
up their case for her political independence even in their
"class rooms" of these mockeries of Legislative
Assemblies, had they not come to the grim conclusion that
because of our being helpless dependents, ground by your
system of drainage of our wealth and consequently of strength,
we cannot possibly secure our economic independence till
we get rid of you.
It is the irony of the fate that there may be prosperity
in our budgets and in the trade statistics, but the masses
are growing weaker and weaker for want of food. We the tillers
of the soil are famishing. Millions there are who scarcely
get one full meal a day. They are good soil for the growth
of plague germs, malarial parasites, kala bazar and consumption.
Man and woman material is fast decaying. This is the fundamental
indictment against your policy of drift. Closely connected
with this policy is the academic knowledge being imparted
to the youths of the country by our Universities. This knowledge
falsely stimulates the intellects. The stimulated intellect
wishes to surround itself with higher standards of life
than the productive capacity of the county can permit or
its undeveloped resources can afford. What is that strange
system that does not change for the good of the people,
aye for keeping them alive? As I will show later, this has
given birth to an artificial prosperous middle class in
the country mainly made up of the variety of the Government
services. I, therefore, appeal to you to realize this situation
as it is in reality, and do something substantial to avert
this disaster. What use indeed are those ponderous unwieldy
Royal Commissions on Industry and Agriculture that came
and went. You will see that the Agricultural Commission
has clearly left the problem as it was. Their conclusions
and suggestions are mere more yawns of an exhausted listener
who has been made to hear so much volume of vague and vaporous
opinions. It was not necessary that they should have come
all the way and gone through all that travail to tell His
Excellency the Viceroy of India that the Economic condition
of Indian farmer needs immediate looking after. The Commission
on Industries came to the ridiculous conclusions of two
more Imperial Services! You must admit that this is not
how living nations are doing their business of development
now, nor how the Japanese would tackle a life and death
problem like this.
Provision of cheap and good food to the millions of Indian
farmers is more important than the declaration of the rights
of the people. Much is being side shunted for purposes of
political show. Allow me to put a little suggestion here.
Mahatma Gandhi, for example, thinks that we men should spin
like women and he repeats the gospels of khaddar, as I have
said, like genius gone mad when thinking on the complex
problem of Indian freedom. Thus he wishes to give useful
employment to the farmers to clothe themselves, but what
use is clothing of men who are starving and have no strength
for any extra employment? Why is the dairy industry dying
all over? It is a preeminently agricultural occupation.
There are no pastures provided. For example, Government
sells land in Punjab colonies by auction to raise as much
money as possible. This is helping the capitalist and killing
the farmer. No lands have been reserved by the Government
as open pastures for each village. Consequently it has become
uneconomical to keep herds of milch cattle. This had led
the farmer to adulterate his ghee with hydrogenized oils.
If people could be helped by grants of large tracts of lands
as pastures all over India, the home industry of ghee making
would pay better than khaddar. They would have plenty of
milk to drink. It is better to go nude but well-fed. When
they are well fed, khaddar making certainly can be additional
advantage and the women folk could spin like old Eve, and
the poor masses could again throw up some coppice of life.
The very foundation of the society and the Government, the
Indian tiller is being sapped. The permanent settlement
system in Bengal has worked havoc. The Taluqdars of Oudh
and the United Provinces are a kind of ransacking "permanent
settlement of Bengal." The taluqdars are the middle
men between the tillers and the Government. They overtax
them and overwork them. Practically the middle class which
should be consisting of the tillers and the farmers in this
most agricultural country in the world, as we happily yet
a little in the Punjab, has practically disappeared in Bengal,
in Bihar, and in the United Provinces. I am afraid it is
also fast disappearing from the Punjab. Consciously or unconsciously
the Government has helped the rise of men of the type of
the late Sir Ganga Ram in the Punjab, who are engines of
destruction of the real middle class of wealth-creative
laborers who form the back bone of all nations of the world.
And why have such men made millions? Because the government
is so hopelessly devoid of true experts. The experts of
the Government gaped like wax toys in utter astonishment
finding men like Sir Ganga Ram succeeding lift irrigation
which they had not even imagined as profitable.
Thus, when the flood is weeping on the very foundation of
the Government and society, the farmer and the tiller of
soil, will you sit to define the rights of the people or
first save them from death?
The economic condition of the Indian farmer can be improved
by the future Indian Constitution siding with the farmers
and the tillers of soil and not with the capitalistic combines
and influences working in India or in England. Real improvements
in Indian agriculture would come through the Constitutions
and special Legislations and not through the so called agricultural
experts till the economic condition of the farmer goes up
to a certain standard. The Agricultural expert is of very
little use to them. The application of modern agricultural
knowledge which is so far advanced and has become popular
knowledge in other countries is matter of propaganda for
a long time yet in India. This propaganda reaches home through
commercial concerns better than through these huge and luxurious
Imperial departments of the Government of India. The very
first thing is to abolish the Imperial Science Services
and reorganize the Scientific Research. The Government Services
should be reduced and expenditure on the remaining few and
essential few must be cut down to very minimum. The Japanese
Prime Minister is getting less pay than that of an ordinary
Deputy Commissioner of India!
All salaries of the Government services form a part of the
general plunder of the farmer and tiller on whom the only
addition to services, the class of lawyers, the government
contractors and suppliers should be considered parasites
living on the revenues on the country. As said above, the
Government servants and this class of people constitute
an artificial middle class in India who keep up a show of
prosperity. They are consumers of wealth and not the producers
thereof. All the fire-work of prosperity is being displayed
at the grim cost of the farmer's body and soul. A contractor
who may not be able to earn by his own power even one hundred
a month does manage by some fluke to make hundreds of thousands
from the Government. The Government muddles up things when
they find themselves being looted in broad daylight. For
example, they start stores purchase department, not knowing
that this service would add another middle man to the numerous
middle men between the Government and the manufacturers.
So any remedy made out by the Government is generally worse
than the disease. The Government is run on files are mostly
very clean and well-written! All is well with the files,
but the broad day-light waste is rampant.
Again the centralization of all commercial concerns ...
the Railways, forests, store purchase, construction, buildings,
and roads ... as Imperial services and departments is hopelessly
costly and inefficient. The bulkiness of the country and
its requirements needed splitting up of work, giving commercial
concerns to commercial people or to public companies. Failing
to find English and Indian experts commercial boards of
international experts of all nations can be asked to come
in and run these concerns in a pure business like way. The
policy of not bringing in foreign experts whenever required
apparently either for political reasons or for reasons of
jealousy to provide high billets only to Englishmen, tends
to inefficiency that can never be found out by any Government
however well meaning and anxious for the welfare of the
people. But there is something rotten in the State of Denmark.
These very countrymen of yours manage things so well, say
in Australia. One is driven to the conclusion-split up India,
reduce the cost of administration, and increase the efficiency
of the men who work in the systems. Ring out policy of false
prestige and waste and ring the Policy of Honest Work for
the uplift and development of the people. The greater the
number of Government services, the more costly and less
efficient the general administration. The hugeness of office
work take away the genius of Government for the efficient
management of the State affairs. To use a military metaphor,
the present Government of India with its variety of Services
is like the army in the trenches without the general staff
behind. The Government looks like an emergency Government
even in times of peace. The Government shows huge profits
of these departments, but never considers at what comparative
cost. It is wrong to be satisfied with the declared profits.
Can those profits be made still more and at a very much
less cost? Could not the land-tax be decreased and the tillers
of soil given relief. What is the meaning of policy that
makes profits and spends on the consuming and unproductive
artificial middle class?
In commercial departments, to lend the security and prestige
of the Government service leads to excessive corruption
as in the case of railways and to neglect of duty and general
inefficiency as in the case of the so-called Research Departments
in India. Scientific research should never be departmental.
It should be surrounded by the whole world's critical atmosphere
where no third class mediocres be able to breathe. To make
Imperial Departments of science and scientific inquiry is
immoral, considering that no Government can well criticize
its experts. Research should be handed over to the Universities.
The Universities should not be merely examining bodies as
they are at present in India but great cultural world-centers.
They should be not Indian but International in the greatness
of their teachers and in the quality of their work done
by their laboratories and their luminaries. The staff should
rise or fall by their international reputation. The merest
tyros are put in charge of the Research Departments.
My plea is that you should define in the new Constitution
the real and limited function of the Government. Running
business concerns as Imperial Departments should be discouraged.
Scientific Research, as said above, of India should be under
the Universities of fame, under the governance of men whose
reputation for honest, scientific work is beyond doubt.
What use is any Scientific Council of Government officials?
The great men can bear no yoke. It is men of true scientific
independence and of the unbiased scientific mind that shall
control research. Surely not the mere file-makers and Imperialistic
experts.
IV. The Proposed Remedies
I have pointed out what occurs to me as fundamentally wrong
in the Constitution of the people and the Institutions of
the Government of India. I have drawn your attention to
the economic condition of the people who are the backbone
of the Government and how the Government unnecessarily feeds
its huge bulky and inefficient services at the cost of the
ryot. There is the false glitter of an artificial middle
class in India, which of Government servants and parasites.
What are the remedies then? It is for you to find them out
and not end as did the Industrial and Agricultural Commissions.
Let us look at the remedies proposed by more brainy people
than myself. The remedy proposed by Gandhi is "khaddar,
non-violent non-co-operation and eventually civil disobedience."
He, too, however has seen the scene of Walpugris night in
India. The witches on the heath are against him. In India
alone you have mob-war on the Sikh-made mutton and the Muslim-made
mutton, on music before the mosque, on the killing of cows!
They are the ephemeral vapors of the witches' cauldron.
The impossible condition attached with Gandhi's remedy is
self-sacrifice without an end. All self-sacrifice in political
matters is for the gain of political ends. When these advantages
are never in sight, self-sacrifice in such matters can never
become the religion of the people. Gandhi wishes to make
the politics of India some such religion which can only
be the impossible religion of a few Christ-like men, and
of the minds who can never stoop down from those heights.
And the Nehru draft. The Hindu has bowed down to the wind.
It is ushering in of civil anarchy in which the one community
wins the head and all others lose the tail. In fact the
Muslim has floored the Hindu by creating a Kohat and a Lahore
for him. Mahatma Gandhi and others all say as India is not
homogeneous for there is the Muslim, this is the best compromise
under the critical local conditions.
Supposing you were to go and leave the country, there would
set in an anarchy, in which all communities will have an
equal opportunity to fight to any fate of freedom or eternal
slavery. And the Hindu-Sanskrit culture and intelligence
will be put again to a military test. One Khilji did walk
over from Delhi to Cape Comorin with a few armed soldiers
unopposed by the Hindu millions. He who occupied the Punjab
occupied the whole of India with one pitched battle near
Delhi or Agra. This is the history of the Hindu's defense
of his country and himself. The same is the case to-day.
He who governs the Punjab governs the whole of India. In
the Nehru Constitution, the Muslim has completely defeated
the Hindu. The great anarchy, creative of equal opportunities
for all and the victory of one community over all others,
is not to come but this incipient consumption-like civil
anarchy is welcomed in the Nehru Constitution by all kinds
of men! It shows how in their zeal for mere tall talks on
national work, they are blind to the practical effects of
their proposals on the governed masses. If it is not the
collapse of the Hindu, on what principle like Bombay and,
made into a backward pure Muslim province? And why should
the Sindhi merchants, mostly Sikh and Hindu, who trade all
over the world be compelled to agree to it for the sake
of the Nehru draft and an academics agreement? If that principle
is granted why should not the Central Punjab be made into
a Sikh Province? Because the Majha and Malwa Sikhs have
so far not created a Kohat and a Multan, what else? The
Nehru Committee has ignored the Sikh because he is not as
many in numbers as the Muslim. But conquerors like Ahmad
Shah acknowledged the Sikh as the only entity in the Punjab.
Perhaps it was Nadir Shah who remarked "from this Nation
comes the odor of Sovereignty." The English commanders,
one after the other have spoken in glowing terms of the
outstanding bravery, chivalry, and the upright character
of the Sikh soldier. The present Commander-in-Chief in India
once remarked that he would trust his wife and daughter
for their safety to a Sikh soldier. And it is in the Punjab
that the Misals of the Sikhs were formed. A Sikh chief would
throw his saddle in a village or a town and thenceforth
it will be his private estate. The Punjabi Hindu could not
oppose the Sikh saddle. Under Maharaja Ranjit Singh, the
Punjab was never a Muslim province but s Sikh province.
The Muslim ministers of the Maharaja remained faithful to
the last, while the Hindu and the Brahmin ministers proved
traitors. It may be remembered Maharaja Ranjit Singh the
Sardar of the Sikh Misals, was invited by the Muslim choudhries
of Lahore to come and be their King. Hari Singh Nalva struck
terror in the den of the lion. The Frontier Pathans still
say to their crying children "Harya Ragla" "Hush,
Harya has come!" How can the Nehru Committee to-day
extinguish such a community by a stroke of the pen. Is this
their Hindu fairness? Sindh must be separated because that
is the Muslim demand and the Sikh is but a Hindu, ignore
him. The Hindu if he were a man should have stood up for
the Sikh and proposed the separation of the Central Punjab
as the Sikh Province. It is all non-violent civil anarchy
giving all advantages to a powerful and well combined community
who shows the mailed fist. Let me say openly if the Sikh
Jats get into their heads that they can have a province
to rule, they will die to a man and create many Kohats.
The Sikh knows how to fight for his rights but why should
such activities at all be inspired by the Nehru report?
Let us take the population basis and the adult suffrage
on which the whole of the theoretical reasonableness of
the Nehru Report is being preached, broadcast.
In this country, where one powerful Zamindar of Bengal has
thousands of his galley slaves to sweat for him for a starving
pittance, where even in the most virile Punjab, the secret
of Agricultural prosperity in the most prosperous irrigated
colonies is the perpetual indebtedness of the tiller who
gets but the barest subsistence and works more for keeping
his flesh and blood together than to earn a wage that may
make life worth its joys, and is under the thumb of the
moneylender, what an absolutely hypothetical value is attached
in this Report to the voter as if he were an old Athenian
peasant or a Roman citizen!
With the old Roman citizen, as even with the Greek peasant,
the political sense was, as to say, the sixth sense. An
illiterate voter would go and ask a literate citizen to
write down for him the name of his chosen candidate. He
behaved as a citizen. Even then, we know how the oratory
of the Anthonies and others swayed the political-minded
mob. And exactly similar is the case in England and other
Western countries now.
For ages, the masses of this country have been terror stricken,
not only by the foreign invaders, but by the habitual and
slow daily tyranny of the little Neros of India, the Indian
Kings, and Zamindars and the Bankers and have been driven
like the bleating sheep that are led to the slaughter house.
It is simply sickening to find such an uninformed population
made as the basis of an adult vote. And when practical modern
administrators of experience laugh at the school-boy like
proposals of the Nehru Committee, the ill-organized noise
of the Congress Camp, utters a hooting shriek. However able
these Hindu lawyers of India may be to make the purely academic
debates hot and saucy in the Assembly chamber, they cut
a sorry figure in practical administration. The Japanese
statesman has the same poor opinion about the quality of
this highly intricate Hindu intellect.
It is an open secret how an audacious A.D.C. and some of
the Secretaries made the late Lord Sinha uncomfortable.
I dare say a Sikh Sardar or a Moslem Zamindar of the Punjab
would have known better how to sit in that chair.
What is then the significance of the Nehru report when it
is vitiated by the fundamental mistake of determining power
to vote by mere population and mere adult suffrage in this
country where it is impossible to get an independent voter?
Mahatma Gandhi has failed to give a remedy. Pandit Moti
Lal Nehru has not asked you to leave the country, as he
should have done, to violent anarchy, but wishes you to
set in that form of consumption which would naturally eat
up the weaker communities. It would be the same thing if
you agree with Nehru's draft or make yourself a similar
one with a few modifications, both will be useless unless
you re-divide India into four or five Harmony-Presidencies
with all communal power well nigh equally balanced. If the
wise acres tell you that this re-division is impossible,
then no Democracy can be made to work equitably in India.
Better put back the hands of clock and bring in one efficient,
impartial, stern but benevolent dictatorship.
V. What Should the Englishmen Do?
So there is no remedy as far as thought devoid of fiery
imagination can go penetrating the details of human affairs
in India and the details that have been here for centuries
as rigid facts. I now come to what the Englishman should
do under the circumstances. To be brief, if he is a Cromwell,
he should frankly say not only to India but say so in the
face of the nations of the world: "O, Indians! do your
damnedest, we will govern you as we like. Go away. On what
grounds and in what way is India more specially yours than
ours? Aryans conquered it, they have gone. We occupied it
when you were all fighting amongst yourselves, we will occupy
it as long as we can. Come. We will die to a man and govern
you as best we choose." After this proclamation, he,
the Cromwell, will guide the Government of India on a new
basis of that benevolent and biasless autocracy of his Puritan
type. Abolish all religious superstition, all social inequities,
all backward tendencies of these diseased people by law
put into force at the point of the bayonet. Guru Gobind
Singh made a living people out of these willy nilly johnies
by a moral power. Let his idea be now carried out by a military
power. The write of "Mother India" has written
scandalously, as Gandhi says like a drain inspector. But
what use is writing "Unhappy India" and "Father
India" in reply? We must frankly admit all those shames
are inherent in the constitution of our society and admit
that we are mostly as she says. The way out of it is not
any reply to her but change like the one coming over Afghanistan
and Turkey. Let military law do with us what so far moral
law has not been able to do.
And if he is Bentham, or a Burke, then certainly he shall
make no compromise with miserable political conditions in
India as the Nehru Committee has done in a most miserable
way, and as they expect and wish you might follow. It is
an enslaved country from centuries and all these communal
conditions have come about under encouragement of one kind
or another from the subtle tone of administrative machinery.
Also, denominational education of Aligarh, Benares, Lahore
and Amritsar have added fuel to the fire. The lure of coveted
Government services and powers of municipal chairs and authority
of District Boards have added to the flame. As a straight
forward Englishman, bent upon doing substantial service
to the people of India, in helping them to Self-Government
and Independence, you must discourage all such conditions
that have artificially created partialities shown at different
times to one or the other community are responsible for
these miseries.
Due to these partialities shown directly or indirectly the
people surmise that your policy is divide and rule. You
must put a stop to all this nonsense. In the new Constitution,
there shall be no compromise of any kind with one community
or the other. Your Constitution must afford equal opportunities
to all who live under it. The truly Democratic Constitution
should not allow one community to get into power and work
mischief through the democratic institutions to crush the
other. In the grant of your New Constitution, the right
of all people should be equal in the eye of law. Public
services shall not be demoralized by selection of candidates
on any communal basis. No more shall English servants of
the Crown take sides. Deterring punishments shall be freely
meted out to those who might in any way corrupt the services.
The crux of the introduction of the truly democratic Government
in the country is the question of franchise and such franchise
that would automatically and mechanically make the electorate
non-communal. You are expected by afflicted lovers of the
progress of the Indian peoples to determine it under the
Indian conditions. I may just suggest that the question
of franchise cannot be properly settled nor a non-communal
general electorate be made possible and efficiently workable
without taking away the great errors of history which have
been made by your countrymen in making provinces and sub-divisions
in India. The Nehru Committee has taken lying down the arbitrary
and imaginary administrative lines that are supposed to
divide one province from the other. Wipe out the provinces
as they are for a universal franchise based on equitable
ground by which no one community should be able to dominate.
So far imagination has been lacking in removing these errors
because your nation went on adding one province after another
to their Empire and went on making little bits into separate
administrative units. Under pre-Reform autocracy, such divisions
worked fairly well. And any divisions could work well under
a strong Central Government. With the democratic institutions
and the Provincial Autonomies coming in, these divisions
need another casting. And the principle of dividing provinces
on the communal basis is axing the very root of the political
progress in the country. It is simply unstatesman-like to
treat Sindh, North-Western Frontier and Bengal as the Moslem-majority
provinces when these provinces can be either split or lumped
up into better working divisions than the present ones.
The real work of genius should be the system of conditioning
the franchise in such a way as to balance power. As long
as the military power and the army are with the Central
Government, this balance of power can be effectively secured
in all the new Harmony Presidencies. It goes without saying
that for a real and effective change some hard discipline
is essential for some time to let the new change settle
to function properly.
I would suggest not only to make the Constitution impartial
and non-communal but to so divide India administratively
that the joint electorate may be possible on non-communal
basis in a fool proof way. The franchise should be granted
under certain limits of revenue-paying capacity, education
and the human substance, also on soldier yielding capacities
of different peoples. With the new division of most harmonious
provinces and with the new limits of franchise, the elected
bodies would be coming forth to work the new constitution
in a non-communal manner befitting sensible men and true
citizens. My point is to so redivide the country that there
may be a fairly balanced opportunity for all communities
and castes and the franchise may be so limited and elastic
that best representatives of all communities may have equal
chances. Thus, either bring in true Western condition of
running the democratic institutions by completely ignoring
the communal differences not in a theoretical way but in
a practical manner, considering the local conditions of
prejudice and ignorance and tenant slavery or go back to
benevolent autocracy of a dictator. The latter is impossible
now. It would be ridiculous in the eyes of the civilized
world if you do not grant us Dominion Status forthwith.
Therefore the only possible alternative is to give a fool-proof
franchise to secure the balance of the political power that
manifests itself most acutely and effectively in the selection
of the state servants. If this is done, the various minorities
may also be let alone to take care of themselves.
Conclusion
In conclusion, I would request you not to be so small as
to be partial in any way to any community and not to be
so large as to give over India into the hands of one powerful
community and thus reduce the other minor communities to
eternal slavery even under democratic Institutions. By cutting
up the country into Muslim provinces and Hindu provinces,
you would be only introducing a slow eating consumption
of civil anarchy which could kill the weaker communities.
Where the Hindus prevail, Muslims shall suffer and where
the Muslims prevail, the Hindus shall suffer. And as I have
already said virile communities like that of the Sikhs may
risk to fight to death at ask for a purely Sikh province.
The moment is great and the English people have to show
a political imagination which they have not shown so far.
I pray the Highest in you may help you to rise to your full
moral stature and you may be able to surprise the Indians
with your New Constitution. Give a franchise on the new-India-nation-making
basis and let the limits of the franchise be such as no
one community may swamp the majority votes. It is simply
unwise to build the New Constitution on the population basis.
It is the worth that counts. A race horse is worth a million
of donkeys. And in determining these limits, your genius
has to come into full play. Wipe out by your Constitution
the Hindu and the Muslim as such and bring in conditions
in which the "Indian" may become possible, who
may truly represent the dumb driven masses of India.
The Nehru Committee has drafted a Compromise Constitution
on the crater of an active volcano.
I, therefore, appeal to you to recommend a Non-communal
Constitution. Secure the economic Independence for us as
it is being achieved, say in Australia. Reduce the bewildering
varieties of Government services and the Neroic cost of
administration. Let the tiller of the soil be relieved of
excessive taxation by reducing the overhead charges to a
minimum. Only then will the economic condition of tillers
of the soil go up and a real middle class of the wealth-creative
laborers come into being.
Your sincerely,
Puran Singh
P.O. Chak No. 73/19.
(Via Nankana Sahib, N.W. Ry., Punjab)
21st October, 1928.
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