JAT-PAT-TODAK MANDAL OF LAHORE-XXV
I have kept
you too long. It is time I brought this address to
a close. This would have been a convenient point
for me to have stopped. But this would probably be my last address
to a Hindu audience on a subject vitally
concerning the Hindus. I would therefore like, before I close,
to place before the Hindus, if they will allow me,
some questions which I regard as vital and invite them seriously to consider the
same.
In the first
place, the Hindus must consider whether it is sufficient to take the placid view of the anthropologist that there is nothing to be said about the beliefs, habits, morals and outlooks on life, which obtain among the different peoples of the world except that they often differ ;
or whether it is not necessary to make an attempt
to find out what kind of morality, beliefs, habits
and outlook have worked best and have enabled
those who possessed
them to flourish, to go strong, to people the earth and to have dominion over it. As is observed
by Prof. Carver, "
Morality and religion, as the organised expression of moral
approval and disapproval, must be regarded as
factors in the struggle for existence as truly as
are weapons for offence and defence, teeth and
claws, horns and hoofs, furs and feathers. The social group, community, tribe or nation, which
develops an unworkable scheme of morality or
within which those social acts which weaken it and unfit it for survival, habitually create the sentiment of approval, while those which would
strengthen and enable it to be expanded habitually
create the sentiment of disapproval, will eventually be eliminated. It is its habits of approval or disapproval
(these are the results of religion and morality)
that handicap it, as really as the possession of
two wings on one side with none on. the other will handicap the colony of flies. It would be as futile in the one
case as in the other to argue, that one system is just
as good as another." Morality and religion, therefore, are not mere
matters of likes and dislikes.
You may dislike exceedingly a scheme of morality, which, if universally practised within a nation, would
make that nation the strongest nation on the face of the earth. Yet in spite of
your dislike such a nation will become strong. You
may like exceedingly a scheme of morality and an
ideal of justice, which if universally practised within a nation, would make it enable to hold
its own in the struggle with other nations. Yet in spite of your admiration
this nation will eventually
disappear. The Hindus must, therefore, examine their religion
and then morality in terms
of their survival value.
Secondly, the Hindus must
consider whether they should conserve the whole of their social heritage or
select what is helpful and transmit to future generations
only that much and no more. Prof, John Dewey., who was my teacher and to whom I owe so much, has said : " Every society
gets encumbered with what is trivial, with dead
wood from the past, and with what is positively perverse... As a society becomes more enlightened, it realizes that it is responsible not to conserve and transmit, the whole of its
existing achievements, but only such as make for a better future society." Even Burke in
spite of the vehemence with which he
opposed the principle of change embodied in the
French Revolution, was compelled to admit that "
a State without the means of some change is without
the means of its conservation. Without such means it might even
risk the loss of that
part of the constitution which it wished the most religiously to preserve, '' What Burke said of a State applies equally to a society.
Thirdly, the Hindus must consider whether they must
not cease to worship the past as supplying its ideals.
The beautiful effect
of this worship of the
past are best summed up by Prof. Dewey when he says : " An individual can live only in the present. The present is not just something which comes after the past ; much less something produced by it. It is what life is in leaving
the past behind it. The study
of past products will
not help us to understand the present. A knowledge of the past and its heritage is of great significance when it enters into the present, but not otherwise. And the mistake of making
the-records and remains of the past the main material of education is that it tends to make the past a rival of the present and the present a more or less futile imitation of the past." The principle, which makes little of the present act of living and growing, naturally looks upon the
present as empty and upon
the future as remote. Such a principle is inimical
to progress and is an hindrance to a strong and a steady current of life.
Fourthly, the Hindus
must consider whether the time has not come for them to recognize that there is
nothing fixed, nothing eternal, nothing sanatan;
that everything is changing, that change is the
law of life for individuals as well as for society. In a changing society, there must be a constant revolution of old values and the Hindus
must realize that if there
must be standards to measure the acts of men there
must also be a readiness to revise those standards.
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