[The
other jarring point in the book is the short shrift that Mishra gives to
‘radical’ freedom-fighter Aurobindo Ghose, who later metamorphosed into a
spiritual leader and came to be known as Sri Aurobindo. He does acknowledge
Aurobindo’s eminence, but only just, picking some of his sundry quotes like,
“Bengalis were drunk with the wine of European civilisation”. It is not a
remark that must have made him popular in his home State, and perhaps explains
why he has been gently set aside when the country’s history is discussed.
Apparently, for the author — like for the British — Sri Aurobindo was a mere
footnote in the pages of history, while the likes of Rabindranath Tagore were
the central figures.
It
is true that Tagore influenced the country’s political philosophy immensely,
but he had one ‘advantage’ which Sri Aurobindo lacked: A greater acceptability
in the West following the Nobel Prize for literature that he won. Suddenly, he
was an international figure and had a global platform to propagate his views.
Still, it cannot be forgotten — and Mishra ought to have taken it into account
— that Aurobindo’s contribution was not merely restricted to political
awakening; he showed the path to ‘intellectual spiritualism’. That legacy still
lives on in the Auroville Ashram in Puducherry. RAJESH SINGH The
alternative truth PIONEER Sunday Edition Agenda BOOKS SATURDAY, 15 SEPTEMBER 2012]
[Autobiographical
Notes_Vol-36 VOLUME 36: THE COMPLETE WORKS OF SRI AUROBINDO NOTE ON THE TEXTS PART TWO:
LETTERS OF HISTORICAL INTEREST […] Most of the
letters included in Part Two of the present volume were written before 1927.
Those that were written after that date are parts of sequences that began
earlier, or deal with special subjects, such as Indian politics. […]
Letters
and Telegrams to Political and Professional Associates, 1906 1926. In August 1906
Sri Aurobindo began work as principal of the Bengal National
College and as an
editorial writer for the daily newspaper Bande Mataram. In May 1908
he was arrested in connection with the Alipore Bomb Case. A year later he was
released. In 1910 he settled in Pondicherry
and cut off all direct connection with the freedom movement, though he
continued to be regarded by the British government as a dangerous
revolutionary. For a while he remained in indirect contact with the movement
through Motilal Roy of Chandernagore.
To
Bipin Chandra Pal. 1906. Bipin (also spelled "Bepin") Chandra Pal
(1858 1932) was a nationalist speaker and writer. Sri Aurobindo apparently
wrote this note to him in September or October 1906. At this time, Pal was
editor-in-chief of the nationalist newspaper Bande Mataram and
Sri Aurobindo was its chief writer. This note was put in as evidence in the
Alipore Bomb Trial (1908 9). The original has been lost. The text is
reproduced here from a "paperbook" or printed transcript of the
documentary evidence. […]Page – 574
To
K. R. Appadurai. 13 April 1916. Appadurai was the brother-in-law of the poet
Subramania Bharati. Bharati was living as a refugee in French Pondicherry at
the time this letter was written. The "Mr. K. V. R" to whom Sri
Aurobindo refers was K. V. Rangaswami Iyengar, who sometimes helped him out
financially. […] Page – 580
To
Joseph Baptista. 5 January 1920. Joseph Baptista (1864 1930) was a barrister and
nationalist politician who was associated with Bal Gangadhar Tilak. In 1919 a
group of nationalists of Bombay
who took their inspiration from Tilak decided to form a party and to bring out
an English daily newspaper. They deputed Baptista to write to Sri Aurobindo and
offer him the editorship of the paper. Sri Aurobindo wrote this letter in
reply.
To
Balkrishna Shivaram Moonje. B. S. Moonje (1872 1948) was a medical
practitioner and political activist of Nagpur .
When Sri Aurobindo knew him in 1907 8, Moonje was one of the leaders of the
Nationalist or Extremist Party. (Later he helped to found the Hindu Mahasabha;
see Sri Aurobindo's telegram to Moonje in Part Three, under "On the Cripps
Proposal".) Sri Aurobindo stayed with Moonje when he visited Nagpur in January 1908.
Twelve years later, Moonje and others invited Sri Aurobindo to preside over the
forthcoming Nagpur
session of the Indian National Congress. In letter [1] , dated 30 August 1920,
Sri Aurobindo set forth his reasons for declining this honour. [2] In this
telegram, date-stamped on arrival 19 September 1920, he reiterated his
decision.
To
Chittaranjan Das. 18 November 1922. A barrister of Calcutta who became famous for successfully
defending Sri Aurobindo in the Alipore Bomb Case (1908 9), Chittaranjan Das
(1870 1925) later entered politics and became the leader of the Swarajya
Party, which advocated entering the government's legislative assemblies in
order to "wreck them from within". Sri Aurobindo wrote this letter to
Das on the same day that he wrote another to his brother Barin (see the first
letter under "To Barindra Kumar Ghose and Others" in Section Two
below).
To
Shyamsundar Chakravarty. 12 March 1926. Shyamsundar Chakravarty (sometimes spelled
Chakrabarti or Chakraborty) (1869 1932) was a nationalist writer and orator.
When Sri Aurobindo was editor-in-chief of the nationalist newspaper Bande
Mataram, Chakravarty was one of its main writers. Eighteen years later he
became editor of the Bengalee, a moderate nationalist newspaper of Calcutta . At that time he
wrote to Sri Aurobindo inviting him to send contributions. This letter is Sri
Aurobindo's reply. The original manuscript is not available. The text is
reproduced from an old typed copy.]
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