Lokmanya Bal
Gangadhar Tilak - A Brief Biography Bal Gangadhar Tilak's contribution to
modern India stands on par with that of Mahatma Gandhi's. Tilak
was a great Sanskrit scholar and astronomer. He fixed the origin
and date of Rigvedic Aryans, which was highly acclaimed and
universally accepted by orientalists of his time.
His role in Congress and advocating Home Rule for India were
enormous. His newspaper (Kesari) founded in 1881 is going strong
even today. Hundreds of schools in India were result of
his vision. We owe the mass celebration of the
Ganesh festival (see: Ganesh
Chaturthi) only to Tilak. He was Guru to Savarkar and hundreds of nationalists and thousands of Indians. Actually
he set up the platform for Gandhiji's leadership. Although
Gandhi accepted Gokhale as his mentor, in practice, he adopted
all of Tilak's ideas of Swadeshi and of social reform.
In 1920, when Tilak passed away, 200,000 mourners assembled on
Chowpati beach of Bombay, without a single untoward incident. It
is very hard to condense the great man's contribution to our
country, but I have made an attempt below.
"Swaraj is my birthright
and I shall have it!" were the fiery words of Tilak which
roused a sleeping nation to action, making Indian people aware
of their political plight under a foreign rule.
Tilak did not question the British Sovereignty nor his demands
rebellious or revolutionary. All he was asking was favorable
conditions in India, to enable people to learn to govern
themselves. May be all over the world, the separatist forces
should follow his vision and define freedom as ability to govern
one's land. But the handful rulers who ruled India's
millions thought otherwise. They thought that Tilak was whipping
a rebellion and he was imprisoned twice; two years for the first
and six during the second. They said, he had committed treason.
Born in Ratnagiri, a small
coastal town in 1856 in a middle class family, Tilak had to fend
himself for college education. At an early age he was convinced
that the educational system the British provided for the Indians
was not at all adequate. After graduation and a law degree, he
helped found a school which laid emphasis on nationalism.
He started a news paper 'Kesari' which tried to teach
Indians of their glorious past and reminded them to be self
reliant (Swadeshi).
The British used all the native
raw materials to run their factories in England and sold the
finished products to India, keeping the India an ever dependant
country. In the process, all the self-employing industries of
India like spinning, weaving, glass making, sugar ,dyeing, paper
making were destroyed. People became destitute for no fault of
theirs to help an empire become richer and stronger.
Tilak tried to breathe life
into the moribund nation through four mantras. (1). Boycott of
foreign goods (2) National Education (3) Self Government (4)
Swadeshi or self reliance. He realized that mere protest against
British rule was not going to help and insisted on native
production and reliance. "We have no arms, but there is no
necessity. But our strong political weapon is boycott (of
foreign goods) Organize your powers and then go to work so
that they cannot refuse you what you demand" - he told the
masses.
It is strange that the British
read treason in these words. He founded Deccan Education Society
to give better education as per the country's needs. He wrote
scathing articles over inhuman punishment meted out to the
nationalist youth who protested the division of Bengal (VangaBhanga).
Indian newspapers were not to criticize the British policy in
those days and two articles titled "Has the Government lost
its head ?" and "To Rule is not to wreak
vengeance" appearing in Kesari landed him in jail, after a
namesake trial. For the first time in British history,
intellectuals in England (including the great orientalist, Max
Muller) were able to convince the Government that the trial was
unfair. But the second time (1908) was no different. Tilak
advocated his own case and when the judgment of six years of
black-waters (kalapani) imprisonment was pronounced, he gave the
famous statement :
" All I wish to say is that in spite of the verdict of the
jury, I maintain my innocence. There are higher powers that rule
the destiny of men and nations. It may be the will of Providence
that the cause I represent may prosper by suffering than by
remaining free"
Tilak was immensely popular
through writing and through social work. His idea of national
festivals took shape in Shivaji Utsav and Ganesh Utsav which
were instrumental in bringing people together culturally -
irrespective of their caste and creed. His trial and punishment
led to national upheaval. But the British were careful enough to
arrange everything in secret and the judgment was
delivered at midnight and Tilak was taken under military vigil
to be deported to Burma (present Myanmar, which was also
under British control)
At 52, a diabetic and ailing
Tilak wrote his famous commentary on Bhagavad-Gita, the sacred
book of Hindus. He stressed that Gita taught action
(karma), nothing but action. Religion or spiritual message were
secondary and the need of the hour was to arise and fight. This
was Lord Krishna's message to Arjuna. Tilak's wife, his
companion of 45 years died at Pune and the news reached
him in Madalay prison Burma only after a week. He had
sacrificed his personal life, his profession, name and fame for
the sake of the country.
By the time Tilak completed his
six year prison term, he was the unquestioned leader of the
Indians - the uncrowned king. He was known as the Tilak Maharaj.
It is strange co-incidence that
the last Burmese king Theba had to spend his last days in
solitary confinement in Ratnagiri and this 'uncrowned king' from
Ratnagiri had to spend prison days in Burma!
There was unprecedented
jubilation after Tilak was free and back in India. Civil
resistance, the concept of Swaraj, and nationalism had
taken deep roots. Tilak's suffering did not go in vain. A band
of leaders, full of zeal for nationalism and self-sacrifice was
coming up. National schools were coming up in all corners of
India. He paved the way for Khadi (hand woven cloth), picketing
against foreign goods and alcoholism. His death in 1920 brought
Mahatma Gandhi on the scene and Gandhiji gave a concrete shape
to Tilak's ideas of Swadeshi.
The court which convicted Tilak
bears a plaque that says, " The action of Tilak has been
justified as the right of every individual to fight for his
country. Those two convictions have gone into oblivion- oblivion
reserved by history for all unworthy deeds". |