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KARMAYOGIN
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A WEEKLY REVIEW
OF
National Religion, LiteratureScience,
Philosophy, &c, i
Vol. 1.
VE
8th SHRABAN 1316.
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No. 5.
OL
FACTS AND OPINIONS. A disturbod often 'catch at tend- ordinary deinand for co-operation encies in the air to give a fictitious
which he makes upon the people of dignity and sensational interest
this count It is natural that The Indiscretions of Sir Edward. to actions really dictated by the Government should desire co-opera
The speech of Sir Edward Baker exaggerated feelings common to tion on the part of the people in the Bengal Council last wock these nervous disorders. Melanial
and under normal circumstances was one of those indiscre- Dhingra evidently considered that
it is not necessary to ask for it ; it tions which statemen occasionally Sir William Curzon-Wyllie was
is spontaneously given. The circumcomunit and invariably repent, but his personal enemy trying to klie- stances in India are not normal. which live in their vults long nate his family and interfore with
When a Government expects co-opafter the immedinte occasion has his personal freedom and dignity.
eration, it is because it cither boon forgotten. The wpich is a mas Tonn ordinary man those iden
represents the nation or of indiscretion from beginning would not have occurred or, if they is in the habit of consulting its to end. It# first crror was to rise had occurred, would not have ex. wishes, The Government in India to the bait of Mr. Madhurudan Das' cited homicidal feelings. But in dis- does not représent the nation, and grotesquely violent porch on the turbed minds such exaggerated in Bengal at least it has distinctly London murdens and anaume #poli- emotions and their resultant set itself against its wishes. It tical significance in the net of the acts are only too comipon. Unless has driven the Partition through young man Dhingra. The theory and until somothing fresh trans- against the most passionate and of a conspiracy behind this act is, we pires, no one has a right to nasume universal ngitation the country has believe, generally rejected in Eng- that the murder was a political ever witnessed. It has ithelf to land. It is not supported by a scrap S wination, much lete the overt bafflo the Swadeshi-Buyratt agitawf evidence and is repudiated by act of a political conspimey. Anglo- tion. It has adoptel wist that the Lundon police. A much more Indinn papers of the vinlent type movement all but the inltitate menskilful detective body than any whose utterances are distorted by sures of repression. Vir deporta we have in India and, needle fear and hatred of Indian aspim tions including in the ar, po sovitul to say, much more rolinble in the
tions, may nshume that of which of the most roditeland blameless inatter of scrupulousness and inte. there in Do proof,- nothing better leaders of the priestad to their grity. It is the opinion of the London cnn be expected of them. But for debit 'nccount'urrar Even in police that the act wae dictated by
the ruler of province not only to giving the new 'forn, inconclusiv personal resentment and not by pol. maka the sumption publicly but and in some of Mir iemetaner Wical motiven. It is not enough to urge 'toBase "pon it and threat of an un- detrimental to the ho CNH of in answer that the young man who procedented charcter against the country, it has b TXIOUR to committed this ruthless act him, whole e
Indiscretion let it be known that it's not yieldnell alleges political motives. His which pape mempure.
ing to the Wishes 1 pcoplo but Mini insist that he is s'port of the demand for co-operation. Boting bits own, 'tic motion. Berotio maniac, and it is a matter The socond crying indiscretion in Against wuch
and prinMi common knowledge that natures Sir Edward's sproch is the extrciple of administra 3 people of '.