Partition and Petition
THERE seems to be a
recrudescence of the and decadent praying mood once again in certain quarters,
and attempts, we understand, are being made to induce the leaders of public opinion in the
mofussil to join the Calcutta clique for sending
a fresh representation to the Secretary of State for India for the revocation or
modification of the Partition of Bengal. The recent reply of the British Prime
Minister to a question put to him by Mr. O’Donnell seems to be partly responsible
for
recrudescence, which, we understand, however, is mainly due
to wire-pulling from Palace Chambers. Some of our own
countrymen now in England also seem to be playing into the
hands of our Parliamentary friends, who are clearly anxious to We have no doubt that it will be so; but why, in the name of commonest political wisdom, we ask, should we be so anxious Page-23 to offer this help to the Government that is clearly seeking an honourable means of retreat from a very difficult and untenable position wherein its own perversity and folly have placed it? We are all anxious to have the Partition revoked, but we are so anxious not because Partition actually works irreparable ill to the country, for the ends of the authors of this evil measure have been completely frustrated already, and the political life of Bengal which it was their avowed intention to weaken or kill, has been made almost infinitely stronger than it ever was before or could possibly be in the near future, – by this very Partition itself. The outraged sentiments of the country have found relief in the consciousness of a new power among the people. Outrages wound only because they are a proof of the weakness and incapacity of the outraged; if this weakness is not felt, and this incapacity fails to be established, the wound also ceases to exist. This has happened in Bengal, and more particularly in East Bengal in connection with this Partition outrage; and there is a growing indifference in the country as regards the fate of this measure. People have found a larger and a more profitable object for their public life. They have commenced to grow into a vivid consciousness of their own strength; and they are, accordingly, growing more and more indifferent to what the Government may or may not do either in regard to this or to any other matter. They know and feel that their fate lies in their own hands, and in the hands of God, who guides the destinies both of individuals and nations. Bande Mataram, September 4, 1906 Page-24 |