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Leaders of many struggling countries in Asia, locked in the battle
for freedom, were conscious of the fact that their struggle was a
part of the general struggle in all colonial countries. They
extended support to each other. Sun Yatsen once offered to make over
the funds he had collected for revolutionary struggle in China to
the Philippine revolutionaries and was willing to postpone the
uprisings he had planned in China so that the cause of independence
of the Philippines could be furthered. Perhaps more than any other
country, the Indian National Congress leadership was clear from a
very early stage in demonstrating solidarity with the other
struggling, colonial peoples. This feeling of oneness and of a
common struggle was instinctively felt by Dadabhai Naoroji,
Bannerjee, Gokhale, Tilak, Lajpat Rai and other leaders of the time.
Under the leadership of Gandhiji and Jawaharlal Nehru, this became a
matter of faith as well as of policy.
Vocal Support
With each passing day the Congress became more and more firm and
vocal in its support to the struggle for independence of other
suppressed countries and sharper in its condemnation of imperialism
in other colonial countries. One would recall the rare, enlightened
stand on the part of nationalist struggle, when far from feeling
elated over the British annexing Burma and making it a part of
India, the Congress berated the British action as imperialist
expansion and supported the struggle of the Burmese people for
independence. In 1921 the Congress passed a resolution conveying
felicitations to the people of Burma on their struggle for
independence and declared that a free India would favour Burma's
independence from India. Gandhiji made India's position very clear
when he said that Burma "never was" and "never should be" a part of
India and that the annexation of Burma was indefensible.
Much before that nationalist leadership had condemned the British
policy of expansion at India's frontiers and saddling India with a
large standing army and huge military expenditure. As early as
1878-80, the national leaders opposed the Afghan war waged by the
British and Surrendranath Bannerjee described it as "one of the most
unrighteous wars that have blackened the pages of history". In 1897
the Congress President, G. Sankaran Nair, advocated a peaceful
policy for India in order to ensure an environment of peace around
India's frontiers to enable her to undertake internal development.
Similarly the Nationalist leaders opposed military ventures and
imperialist conquests and the use of Indian armymen and resources
for waging such imperialist wars in other parts of Asis and Africa.
They know that it was the same phenomenon of imperialism. In 1882
the British with the participation of the so-called "Government of
India" despatched a military expedition to Egypt to suppress and
smother the nationalist struggle there. Rightly did the nationalist
opinion condemn it as immoral and aggressive, a war meant to serve
British imperialist interests. Subsequently the Congress extended
support to the Irish nationalists as well as the nationalist
struggle in Egypt.
Yet another instance was the struggle in China. China had fallen a
prey to a consortium of powers, at one time dominated by Britain and
after the first world war came the iron fist of Japanese
imperialism. At the same time the country was bedevilled by
warlordism in league with various imperialist powers and
consequently by constant warfare. China had become the "sickman of
Asia", a play thing of foreign powers, foreign business interests
and foreign missionaries, mostly in collusion with one another, and
of the internal forces of reaction, feudalism and military satraps.
The people were groaning under this duel suppression. A reorganized
Nationalist Party led by Sun Yatsen began the struggle against
foreign imperialism and native warlordism and launched the Nathern
Expedition from Canton in 1925 for the unification of China and the
restoration of Chinese sovereignty and territorial integrity. The
Congress lent full support to the nationalist struggle in China and
sharply condemned the use of Indian troops in China. Gandhiji
condemned this use of Indian soldiers in shooting and killing
Chinese students as a demonstration of the fact that India is being
kept under subjugation, not merely for the exploitation of India
herself, but that it enables Great Britain to exploit the great and
ancient Chinese people".
Process of Awakening
Jawaharlal Nehru further spurred this process of awakening and the
sentiment of solidarity with the colonial peoples. Indeed Jawaharlal
became the conscience of the struggle of the colonial people. It is
well-known that on behalf of the Indian National Congress,
Jawaharlal attended the International Congress against Colonial
Oppression and Imperialism in Brussels in February 1927 and
subsequently the Congress was affiliated to the League against
Imperialism and for National Independence as an associate member.
Jawaharlal was electred one of the Presidents of the Brussels
Conference along with such world luminaries as Albert Einstein,
Madam Sun Yatsen, Romain Rolland and others and was later made a
member of the Executive Council of the League. In his speeches at
this time Jawaharlal dwelt on the nature of imperialism as an
advanced stage of capitalism and his dominant theme was the common
struggle of colonial countries and the need to stand by one another.
Who can fail to remember the movement launched by Gandhiji in 1920
in support of the muslims of Turkey that came to be known as the
Khilafat Movement? This was also the time when the Congress was
transformed from "an annual reunion of politicians to ventilate
Indian grievances" into a deliberative but also a mass body
determining national policies and controlling and directing their
execution. The All India Congress Committee was reorganized on a
population basis; provincial committees were formed on a linguistic
basis; and the Congress Working Committee was created.
In 1918 the allies were swept to victory. Germany had been defeated.
Turkey and surrendered and the Ottoman Empire had collapsed. The
Arabs were incited by the British to revolt against the Caliph and
the Greeks to claim a coastal strip that, included Smyrna. The
British had gone back on their own pledges, given by Asquith and
Lloyd George about the integrity of the Turkish dominion and
Independence of Muslim territories. It was on the strength of these
pledges that the Muslim Indian troops had participated in the war
against the Turkish Muslim army. But now the British threatened the
total disintegration of Turkey and the loss of Muslim holy places.
The Muslims in India were agitated. The Muslim League leader Dr.
Ansari demanded the maintenance of the integrity and independence of
the Muslim states and the restoration of Jazirat-ul-Arab (the Arab
region) containing the holy places of Islam to the Caliph. Hakim
Ajmal Khan, Chairman of the Reception Committee of the Congress in
1918 expressed similar sentiments.
Support to Khilafat Movement
Gandhiji extended full support to the Khilafat Movement and decided
to lead a non-cooperation movement against the British Government.
He said in an article in 'Yong India', "I am bound as an Indian to
share the sufferings and trials of fellow Indians. If I deem the
Mohammedan to be my brother, it is my duty to help him in his hour
of trial to the best of my ability, if his cause commends itself to
me as just." Gandhiji came down severely on Montagne and on the
British rule in its indifference to the feelings of the Muslims all
over the world, and particuarly in India." To my amazement and
dismay I have discovered that the present representatives of the
Empire have become dishonest and unscrupulous," he wrote, "They have
no regard for the wishes of the people of India and they count the
honour of India as of little importance. I can no longer retain
affection for a Government so evilly manned as it is today".
Solidarity with the Oppressed
There was not a struggle for freedom and liberation that did not get
the support of the Congress. Jawaharlal stood in the forefront in
the denunciation of imperialism and fascism. From Spain to Ethiopia
Jawaharlal carried the message of the Congress of complete
solidarity with the oppressed countries. As he put it in 1939: "The
frontiers of our struggle lie not only in our own country but in
Spain and China also". Indeed Jawaharlal wanted to personally and
physically serve in the Spanish struggle against fascism and it was
only the demands of the independence struggle in India that held him
back.
The invasion of Ethiopia (then called Abbeysinia) by fascist Italy
under Mussolini in 1936 ranged the Congress fully behind the
Ethiopian people. The Congress observed an "Ethiopia Day" and
carried on the work of mobiliation against imperialism and fascism.
Jawaharlal had gone to Europe and when on his return journey, the
plane touched Rome for a stop-over, an insistent request came down
from Mussolini to meet him, but Jawaharlal wanted to have nothing to
do with a dictator who was enslaving the people of Ethiopia.
Similarly, in regard to the Japanese invasion of China, the Congress
expressed deep anguish at this brutal invesion and expressed
solidarity with the Chinese people with concrete steps. The Congress
organized a boycott of Japanese goods throughout the country and
held meetings and demonstrations against Japanese imperialism and in
support of the struggle of the Chinese people. Later, the Congress
sent a medical mission to China as a token of its support in the war
against Japanese imperialism. This the Congress stood
shoulder-to-shoulder with the people of other colonial countries and
in full solidarity with their struggle.
- V. P. Dutt
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