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Nationality and Empire - A Running Study of Some Current Indian Problems

1916

And this is perhaps the greatest difficulty in the way of building up a real Federation of the British Empire : for to do so would mean the concession of equal rights and freedom to the Indian and the Egyptian with the British the Irish. [...] But the moment the trends of world-politics on the one side and the course of public thought and agitation in these coutries on the other indicate the risks of continuing this policy Great Britain will not hesitate for a moment to throw all her colour-conceit and race-pride to the winds and assuming an attitude of noble generosity concede to the Indian and Egyptian all the rights of imperia [...] XXVii reconstitution of the different members of the United Kingdom itself will mean the certainty of the latter being more or less completely dominated in the Council of the Empire by the representatives of the Colonies. [...] It means the substitution of peace and order for disorder and anarchy the replacement of the rule of might by the law of right the progress of the people from savagery to 'civilisation. [...] But the detachment of the head of the family from the passions and prejudices of the individual members of it and equally the almost absolute merging of his own individual ends aid interests in the general ends and inteests of the family preserves the real value of the synthesis.
history
Pages
451
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.143055
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-xxxv Bipin Pal view
Chapter I Problem of Nationality and Empire
1-20 unknown view
Chapter II Hindu Nationalism : What it Stands for
21-48 unknown view
Chapter III The Positive Value of Nationalism
49-72 unknown view
Chapter IV Nationalism and Politics
73-112 unknown view
Chapter V The Present Indian Problem
113-139 unknown view
Chapter VI National Independence or Imperial Feedaration ?
140-161 unknown view
Chapter VII “Provincial Autonomy” and the Despatch of 1911
162-182 unknown view
Chapter VIII The Delhi Transfer
183-193 unknown view
Chapter IX Indian “Council-Reforms” and Indian Culture
194-218 unknown view
Chapter X Lord Morley’s “Reforms”
219-231 unknown view
Chapter XI The Executive Government of India
232-238 unknown view
Chapter XII Fight Against Anarchism in India
239-248 unknown view
Chapter XIII The Problem of Political Crimes in India
249-297 unknown view
Chapter XIV An Indian Boy-Scout Movement
298-315 unknown view
Chapter XV Crime and Karma
316-328 unknown view
Chapter XVI The New Education Policy
329-354 unknown view
Chapter XVII India and Imperial Preference
355-361 unknown view
Chapter XVIII Pan-Islamism
362-390 unknown view
Index
391-416 unknown view

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