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Home Explore Lokmanya Tilak. A Biography

Lokmanya Tilak. A Biography

Published by THE MANTHAN SCHOOL, 2021-03-27 06:18:42

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their refusal to take their seats in Parliament and their efforts to organise their own government. He wanted to imitate some of their ways in such a way as to suit Indian conditions and he advocated his doctrine of responsive co-operation. He wanted to work the reforms and send such representatives to the legislature as would accept the creed and discipline of the Congress. In case the government refused to co-operate, Tilak had in mind direct action — boycott, passive resistance, etc. Events have proved that this line was followed by the Congress in later days — the Swarajya Party worked in the council and when a clash with the government became inevitable, the Congress resorted to civil disobedience. Lokmanya Tilak looked upon Satyagraha as a means, and it was only later on that it developed as a philosophy of life in the hands of Mahatma Gandhi. Though Lokmanya differed from the Mahatma, he had conceded to the latter’s point of view at Amritsar by accepting his resolution condemning the excesses of the people during the riots in Punjab. It is idle speculation to discuss how Tilak would have reacted to the policy and programme advocated by Gandhiji. It is also unfair to apply post-Gandhian and post-Marxian tests to Tilak’s political ideas and programmes. He started the arduous journey of his political life when the political movement in India was in its infancy, he strengthened it, gave a tremendous impetus to it and created conditions under which the British Government had to accept at least theoretically India’s claims for a responsible government. Throughout his life, he held the torch of his country’s honour aloft and when death laid its icy hands on him, he must have said with satisfaction, “The long day’s task is done and I must sleep.” From all this emerges the picture of an individual with intensely human qualities, whose passion in life was the emancipation of his country and whose life was a dedication to this cause. A Vedantic by instinct and training, he was a true democrat. He looked upon democracy not as just a form of government but a faith which decided one’s attitude to others. He did not accept it as an imitation of the west. He sought its basis in Hindu philosophy, for had not the great Upanishads taught that each soul is equal before God? His popularity, therefore, sat easily on him and he remained simple, friendly and intensely human, in spite of the halo of greatness that surrounded him. His flashes of humour, genial and spontaneous, broke through the hard crust of his rugged exterior. A strong- willed and spirited individual, once a thought had crystallised itself, he brooked no opposition and was ruthless in his criticism. For all that, he did not wish anything for himself but his anxiety was all for the cause for which he fought. In

spite of his political preoccupation, he drank deep at the spring of Indian culture. How he wanted to transcend the limitations set on the national movement owing to the political conditions, was evinced on a number of occasions and, above all, when he suggested that Tagore — the full-bloomed flower of Indian genius — should be requested to become the president of the Congress. He must have foreseen the day when culture and not political ideal would become the main- spring of Indian life.

PART II The urges which found expression in India’s struggle for freedom were not just material urges; they were an outcome of the cultural traditions and were a part of the Indian Renaissance movement. Indian Renaissance began with Raja Ram Mohan Roy. He saw the need of modernising Indian culture and of bringing it to the level of western culture. He believed that the basis for Indian Renaissance could be found in the ancient Vedantic doctrine. This Vedanta, according to him, was the universal element of religion to be found in Indian culture. Ram Mohan Roy believed that humanity will have to evolve a universal religion and for that purpose all religions in the world will have to discard idolatry and superstitious growths in order to purify themselves. He also realised that Hindu culture will have to undergo a social and religious transformation and establish social equality between man and woman and between the various castes and communities of India. He, therefore, made efforts to remove the superstitious religious practices like idolatry and inhuman religious practices like ‘Sati.’ Thus, there were two trends in his thought with regard to the immediate work of an Indian reformer. The first was to revive the Vedanta doctrine in its pure form and the other was to westernise the Indian culture to some extent, by absorbing the progressive principles which the western nations were adopting for the transformation of their social structure. He was particularly influenced by the ideals of liberty, equality and fraternity. These two trends in his thoughts may be called the national and the universal elements. The subsequent development of this phase of the Renaissance movement was not able to successfully synthesise the two elements and within forty years, in Bengal, it was split up into two or three sects and lost its hold. A movement cannot grow in an uninterrupted manner and society is swayed by diverse forces giving rise to different movements. In England ‘the Renaissance’ was followed by ‘the Reformation.’ In India of modern times the movement of cultural renaissance was followed by the revivalist movement, which was fundamentally different from the former owing to the different urges which prompted it. This phase in India’s cultural life may be said to have begun since the times of Ramkrishna Paramhansa and it reached its zenith with the triumphal tours of Vivekananda in America and England. During this phase the

Indian Vedanta doctrine was revived and given a new orientation. It was linked with Indian nationalism and the superiority of Indian culture over the western European culture began to be stressed. Tilak and his contemporary nationalist political leaders like Lala Lajpat Rai and Bipin Chandra Pal also took up this Vedantic outlook as the basis of their nationalism. Simultaneously with this change of attitude in India, a similar change was taking place in western European ideas in philosophy, western European philosophy had begun to move in the direction of idealism and nationalism as against the rationalism and humanism of the liberals. The pragmatic philosophy of William James had a religious slant and he accepted the potentiality of Vedanta to evolve a science of religious experience. In England, Hegelian idealistic thought began to dominate at the end of the 19th century. In France, Bergson began to preach the doctrine of intuition and questioned the self-sufficiency of reason and the material determinism. All this confirmed the Indian nationalists in their faith that the spiritual outlook of Indian culture was once again going to prevail in the world and that a new turn would be given to human culture by the resurgent Asiatic nations. This self-confidence of the Indian nationalists with regard to the ancient culture continued to grow during the first twenty years of the 20th century and they looked upon the First World War as the destined end of European supremacy and an opportunity for Asiatic nations to come to the forefront and to inaugurate a new epoch of human culture. Tilak made a very great contribution to this phase of India’s cultural life, through his work, both in academic and political spheres. It would be unjust to say merely that Tilak contributed to this phase. It is necessary to state his position in metaphysics, ethics and sociology. Comte stated that the human mind in its evolution has passed through three stages: (i) Theological, ( ii) metaphysical, and (iii) positive; and of these stages, according to Comte, the positive stage was the final and the most evolved. Tilak disagreed with Comte and maintained that the metaphysical stage was the final stage, as in it there is a realisation that thought has the power to go beyond experience and to form certain conceptions; but while insisting on the necessity of metaphysics, he admitted that it was imperfect. Herein, he followed Spencer. But whereas Spencer took an agnostic position, Tilak acknowledged the validity of mystic experience. While discussing the ethical problems, Tilak, like Comte, mentioned the three different attitudes, viz., (i) materialist, (ii) theological, and (iii) spiritual. Tilak

discarded the materialist approach, because he believed that mechanical determinism was the final phase of materialism and he argued that mechanical determinism was thoroughly inconsistent with any ethics. Tilak pointed out that Mill, who was a Utilitarian, had to admit that there was a qualitative distinction between different kinds of happiness. Tilak accepted the social aspect of ethics as pointed out by Mill and he fervently advocated the idea of Lokasangraha in Gita- Rahasya. He, at the same time, emphasised the need of discarding egotism and laid stress on ‘disinterested action.’ He pointed out that in Hindu philosophy the emphasis was laid on salvation and in western philosophy, on promoting social good, and further declared that the Bhagavadgita was a higher synthesis as it advocated the ideal of Lokasangraha by Sthitaprajnas (action for social good by those who have attained philosophic calm owing to their unattached attitude). Tilak admitted that disinterested service of humanity was the future form of religion. His attitude may therefore be summed up as ‘spiritual humanism’ and if he had divorced metaphysics from ethics, his attitude would have been termed as ‘rational humanism.’ In respect of sociology, he accepted the basis of ethical and metaphysical ideas which he advocated. He, therefore, held that society should be based on social duty and that all have equal dignity and equal reward, viz. salvation. He therefore time and again made a reference to He accepted the material inequality in society on the ground that people with their attachment to life needed incentives. Tilak pointed out that Vedanta advocated the concept of equality, but the metaphysical ideal could not be a reality in society, because the selfishness of the average individual could not be eradicated. Tilak argued that a sociologist had to be a realist and justified the concept of four Varnas in the Smritis. In support of his view, he made a reference to the opinion of Comte that society’s structure in future will require a four-estate system of which the first position would be occupied by the scientists and by those who guide the industry; this class would be future substitutes for the priestly order of the middle ages. The Smritikars, thus, could not practise the ideals preached in the Upanishads. Tilak also defended the Mahayana Sect in Buddhism which according to him was more realistic than Buddhism or Jainism, which emphasised equality. He similarly approved of the realistic approach of St. Paul. It can thus be seen that in his sociological ideals he was a pragmatíst and argued that ideals would have to be modified in the light of experience. This attitude was in sharp contrast with that of Agarkar, who therefore always said to Tilak: “You are a Mimansaka.” The obvious implication was that Tilak had not the makings

of a prophet. Lokmanya’s Letter and Gandhiji’s Comment With regard to social change, Tilak maintained that it should be brought about through the agency of the Rishis or Sthitaprajnas. He argued that ordinary people had interested motives and a change brought by them would not necessarily be beneficial to society. Persons who were acting in a disinterested way, would, on the other hand, work always for social good and therefore should be entrusted with the task of shaping the destinies of society. It may therefore be said that though Tilak was a democrat, his ideal in fact was a democracy controlled by the intellectual aristocrat. Gandhiji who always acknowledged the greatness of the heritage given to India by Lokmanya had an attitude quite different from him. It was the attitude of a saint and in this respect it would be interesting to refer to a letter written by Tilak and Gandhiji’s comments on it. Lok. Tilak’s Letter: To The Editor, Young India, Ahmedabad. Dear Sir, I am sorry to see that in your article on ‘Reform Resolution’ in the last issue, you have represented me as holding that I considered ‘everything fair in polities.’ I write this to you to say that my view is not correctly represented herein. Politics is a game of worldly people and not of ‘Sadhus’ and instead of the maxim as preached by Buddha, I prefer to rely on the maxim of Shri Krishna That explains the whole difference and also the meaning of my phrase ‘responsive co-operation.’ Both methods are equally honest and righteous but the one is more suited to this world than the other. Any further explanation about the difference will be found in my Gita- Rahasya. Poona City Yours etc. 18-1-1920 B. G. TILAK

Gandhiji’s Comment: I naturally feel the greatest diffidence about joining issue with the Lokmanya in matters involving questions of interpretations of religious works. But there are things in or about which instinct transcends even interpretation For me there is no conflict between the two texts quoted by the Lokmanya. The Buddhist text lays down an eternal principle. The text from the Bhagavadgita shows to me how the principle of conquering hate by love, untruth by truth, can and must be applied. If it be true that God metes out the same measures to us that we mete out to others, it follows that if we would escape condign punishment, we may not return anger for anger but gentleness even against anger. And this is the law not for the unworldly but essentially for the worldly. With deference to the Lokmanya, I venture to say that it betrays mental laziness to think that the world is not for Sadhus. The epitome of all religions is to promote Purushartha, and Purushartha is nothing but a desperate attempt to become Sadhu, i.e. to become a gentleman in every sense of the term. Finally when I wrote the sentence about ‘everything being fair in polities’, according to the Lokmanya’s creed, I had in mind his oft-repeated quotation To me it enunciates bad law. And I shall not despair of the Lokmanya with all his acumen agreeably surprising India one day with a philosophical dissertation proving the falsity of the doctrine. In any case I pit the experience of a third of a century against the doctrine underlying The true law is M. K. GANDHI Gandhiji did not subscribe to the belief that the ideal of equality, or for that matter, any ideal such as non-violence, would have to be modified in practice. Gandhiji accepted the two main propositions of Lokmanya that ethics must have a spiritual basis and that the validity of mystic experience has to be acknowledged. He, however, laid less stress on knowledge and more on intuition. Whereas Gandhiji talked of the purity of heart, Tilak always referred to the pure reason (Shuddha Buddhi). It is futile to sum up two great personalities in so brief a manner. The problem as to what extent Gandhiji shared the ideals of Lokmanya Tilak and to what extent he carried on the mission of Lokmanya, has been discussed by a number of eminent persons. But we can turn to the best of them all, Gandhiji himself:

“A strange anonymous letter has been received by me admiring me for having taken up a cause that was dearest to Lokmanya’s heart, telling me that his spirit was residing in me, that I must prove a worthy follower of his.... I cannot claim the honour of being a follower of the late Lokmanya. I admire him like millions of his countrymen for his indomitable will, his vast learning, his love of his country and above all, the purity of his private life and great sacrifice. Of all the men of modern times he captivated most the imagination of the people. He breathed into us the spirit of Swaraj. No one perhaps realised the evil of the existing system of government as Tilak did. And in all humility I claim to deliver his message to the country as truly as the best of his disciples. But I am conscious that my method is not Tilak’s method.... And his last word to me in the presence of several friends just a fortnight before his death was, that mine was an excellent method if the people could be persuaded to take to it. But he said he had doubts.... Nor am I unaware of my limitations. I can lay no claim to scholarship, I have not his powers of organisation, I have no compact disciplined party to lead and having been an exile for twenty-three years I cannot claim the experience that Lokmanya had of India. Two things we had in common in the fullest measure love of the country and the steady pursuit of Swaraj.”


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