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The Surat Congress
WHEN
the All-India Congress Committee first betrayed its charge and degraded itself
from the position of a high arbiter and guide in all national affairs to that of
a party machine subservient to a single political tactician, we said that there
were but two courses open to us, either to refuse to accept a party trick
engineered in defiance of justice, decency and all the common rules of public
procedure and to hold our own Congress at Nagpur, or to go in force to Surat
and, if we could not swamp the Congress, at least to show that into whatever
farthest nook or corner of India Sir Pherozshah Mehta might fly for refuge, he
could not get rid of the presence of Nationalism, to fling ourselves at once on
Gujerat and organise Nationalism there, so that the Loyalist's chosen haven of
refuge might become another place of shipwreck. In any case, we said, we must
have a Conference of Nationalists this year and organise Nationalism all over
the country. We have not concealed our opinion that the session at Nagpur would
be the preferable course, as being both the most logical and the manliest and
involving the least waste of energy now and in future. But such a course was out
of the question unless all could agree upon it, and this was not found possible.
Especially when Mr. Tilak and Lala Lajpat Rai, fresh from his exile, were in
favour of attending the Surat session, there could be no further question of our
course. It has been decided, then, to attend the Surat Congress in what force we
can muster at this short notice and do our best to hold the ground we have
gained, as well as to see that certain questions which were held over last year
are not held over again. A Nationalist Conference has also been arranged by the
efforts of the Nationalists at Surat and arrangements will be made for
Nationalist delegates, a ticket of one rupee being issued to each delegate for
the recovery of expenses.
We call upon Nationalists in Calcutta and the Mofussil, who are at all
desirous of the spread of Nationalist principles and
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Nationalist
practice all over India, to make ready at whatever inconvenience and, if they
find it humanly possible, go to Surat to support the Nationalist cause. We are
aware of the tremendous difficulties in our way. Surat is far-distant, the
expenses of such a journey are almost prohibitive, for only a small percentage
of our party are men of means, and the time for preparation is almost nil. And
yet we must go. What is a Nationalist good for if he cannot make up by his
enthusiasm and energy for his other deficiencies, if he cannot make nothing of
difficulties and turn the impossible into the possible? It is to sweep away
difficulties and to strike the word impossible out of the Indian's dictionary
that our party has arisen. The leaders of the Deccan call us; Lala Lajpat Rai, a
name now made sacred to us all, is waiting to see the first fruit of his
sufferings in the increase of patriots wedded to the principles for professing
and practising which he has suffered, and the people of Gujerat are waiting
eagerly for our advent. If Bengal goes there in force it will, we believe, set
flowing such a tide of Nationalism as neither bureaucrats nor Bombay Loyalists
are prepared to believe possible. The Christmas concessions given by the Railway
companies reduce the expense to a minimum and for those who travel by the
intermediate, Rs. 75 at the outside should be enough. For we are going not as
holiday sight-seers making a national occasion an excuse for a Christmas jaunt
and we do not demand comfort on the way or luxuries when we arrive. We must go
as poor men whose wealth is our love for our Motherland, as missionaries taking
nothing with them but the barest expenses of the way, as pilgrims travelling to
our Mother's temple. We have a great work to do and cannot afford to be
negligent and half-hearted. Be sure that this year 1907 is a turning-point of
our destinies, and do not imagine that the session of the Surat Congress will be
as the sessions of other years. Let us fear to miss by absenting ourselves the
chance of helping to put in one of the keystones of the house we are building
for our Mother's dwelling in. the future, the house of her salvation, the house
of Swaraj.
Bande
Mataram,
December 13, 1907
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