Remembering Bipin Chandra Pal (Bengali: বিপিন - TopicsExpress



          

Remembering Bipin Chandra Pal (Bengali: বিপিন চন্দ্র পাল; November 7, 1858–May 20, 1932), was an Indian nationalist. He was among the triumvirate of Lal Bal Pal. Bipin Chandra Pal was born in Poil Village, Habiganj District, Bengal state of British India now part of Bangladesh, in a wealthy Hindu Vaishnava family. His father was Ramchandra Pal, a Persian scholar and small landowner. His son was Niranjan Pal, one of the founders of Bombay Talkies. He studied and taught at the Church Mission Society College (now the St. Pauls Cathedral Mission College), an affiliated college of the University of Calcutta. B.C. Pal is known as the Father of Revolutionary Thoughts in India and was one of the freedom fighters of India. He was a radical. Bipin Chandra Pal was a teacher, journalist, orator, writer and librarian, he was famous as one of the triumvirate of three hard faction patriots of the Congresses - the Pal of Lal Bal Pal. The trio was responsible for initiating the first popular upsurge against British colonial policy in the 1905 partition of Bengal, before the advent of Mohandas K. Gandhi into Indian politics. Pal was also the founder of the journal Vande Mataram. Even though he understood the positive aspects of Empire as a `not a great idea, the `Federal-idea is greater.B C Pal, Nationality and empire, Swaraj, April, 1909 In both public and private life he was radical. He married a widow (he had to sever ties to his family for this). At the time of B. G. Tilaks (Bal) arrest and government repression in 1907, he left for England, where he was briefly associated with the radical India House and founded the Swaraj journal. However, political repercussions in the wake of Curson Wyllies assassination in 1909 by Madanlal Dhingra lead to the collapse of this publication, driving Pal to penury and mental collapse in London.Owen 2007, p. 73 In the aftermath, he totally moved away from his extremist phase and even nationalism, as he contemplated an association of free nations as the great federal-idea. His plea for a transcendence to a broader entity than nation derived from the notion of the sociability of human beings, which he thought would create a common bond between nations.Territorial vs extra-territorial patriotism, The Bengali, Feb. 3, 1925Union of East and West, The Bengalee, October 22Suffergate Revolution, Hindu, April–May 1913 He was among the first to criticize Gandhi or the Gandhi cult since it `sought to replace the present government by no government or by the priestly autocracy of the Mahatma.The Hindu, English supplement, March 5, 1932 His criticism of Gandhi was persistent beginning with Gandhis arrival in India and open in 1921 session of the Indian National Congress he delivered in his presidential speech a severe criticism of Gandhis ideas as based on magic rather than logic, addressing Gandhi: You wanted magic. I tried to give you logic. But logic is in bad odour when the popular mind is excited. You wanted mantaram, I am not a Rishi and cannot give Mantaram...I have never spoken a half-truth when I know the truth.... I have never tried to lead people in faith blind-folded,Magic preferred to Logic, The Statesman, March 29, 1921 for his priestly, pontifical tendencies, his alliance with pan-Islamism during the Khilafat movement, which led to Pals eclipse from political life from 1922 till his death in 1932 under conditions of abject poverty. Comparing Gandhi with Leo Tolstoy during the year he died, Pal noted that Tolstoy was an honest philosophical anarchist while Gandhi remained in his eyes as a papal autocratHindu, vol46, March 12, 1932, p.12Mr Gandhi : Politician or Prophet?, The Bengalee, September 17, Editorial, 1924Open letter to Gandhiji, The Englishman, May 7, 1924 Firm and ethically grounded, not only did he perceive the Congress Babel in terms of its shortsightedness in late 1920s or, Congress as an instance of repudiating debts folly, composed of a generation that knows no Joseph, Pals critical comments should be located in context, since nobody can jump out of his skin of time. An estimation of Bipin Chandra Pals entire corpus and the depth of his published writing cannot produce a fair idea or provide due justice if that is produced with the benefit of post-independence hindsight. Though there are many articles and books written about him from India and Europe, most of which is not hagiographical, his pen played not an inconsiderable part in the political and social ferments that have stirred the aters of Indian life, as the Earl of Ronaldshay wrote in 1925, what Jawaharlal Nehru said in a speech during Pals birth centenary in 1958 surmises a great man who functioned on a high level on both religious and political planesHindustan Standard, November 8, 1958 opens a gate for enquiring this high-minded yet anomalous persona. The trio had advocated radical means to get their message across to the British, like boycotting British manufactured goods, burning Western clothes made in the mills of Manchester or Swadeshi and strikes and lockouts of British owned businesses and industrial concerns. His family were members of Brahmo Samaj and he came under the influence of eminent Bengali leaders of his time such as Keshab Chandra Sen and Sibnath Sastri but not as a hero-worshipper or somebody looking for a guru for guidance. He was imprisoned for six months on the grounds of his refusal to give evidence against Sri Aurobindo in the Vande Mataram sedition case. He died on May 20, 1932. He was an extremist voice in the party. Source: Wikipedia
Posted on: Wed, 06 Nov 2013 14:42:35 +0000

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