Bal Gangadhar Tilak (or Lokmanya Tilak, 23 July 1856 – 1
August 1920), born as Keshav Gangadhar Tilak, was an Indian nationalist, teacher, and an
independence activist. He was one third of the Lal Bal
Pal triumvirate. Tilak was the first leader of the Indian Independence Movement. The British colonial authorities
called him "The father of the Indian unrest." He was also conferred
with the title of "Lokmanya", which means
"accepted by the people (as their leader)". Mahatma Gandhi called
him "The Maker of Modern India".
Tilak was one of the first and strongest advocates of Swaraj ("self-rule")
and a strong radical in Indian consciousness. He is known for his quote
in Marathi: "Swarajya is my birthright and I shall have it!". He
formed a close alliance with many Indian National Congress leaders
including Bipin Chandra Pal, Lala
Lajpat Rai, Aurobindo Ghose, V. O. Chidambaram Pillai and Muhammad Ali Jinnah.
Early life
Keshav Gangadhar Tilak was born on 23 July 1856 in an Indian Marathi Hindu Chitpavan
Brahmin family in Ratnagiri,
the headquarters of the Ratnagiri district of present-day Maharashtra. His ancestral
village was Chikhali. His father, Gangadhar Tilak was a
school teacher and a Sanskrit scholar
who died when Tilak was sixteen. In 1871 Tilak was married to Tapibai when he
was sixteen, a few months before his father's death. After marriage, her name
was changed to Satyabhamabai. He obtained his Bachelor of Arts in first class
in Mathematics from Deccan College of Pune
in 1877. He left his M.A. course of study midway to join the LL.B course instead,
and in 1879 he obtained his LL.B degree from Government Law College . After graduating, Tilak started teaching mathematics
at a private school in Pune. Later, due to ideological differences with the
colleagues in the new school, he withdrew and became a journalist. Tilak
actively participated in public affairs. He stated: "Religion and
practical life are not different. The real spirit is to make the country your
family instead of working only for your own. The step beyond is to serve
humanity and the next step is to serve God."
Political career
Tilak had a long political career agitating for Indian autonomy
from the British rule. Before Gandhi, he was the most widely known Indian
political leader. Unlike his fellow Maharashtrian contemporary, Gokhale, Tilak was considered a radical
Nationalist but a Social conservative. He was imprisoned on a number of
occasions that included a long stint at Mandalay. At one stage in his political
life he was called "the father of Indian unrest" by British author
Sir Valentine Chirol.
Indian National Congress
Tilak joined the Indian National Congress in 1890. He opposed its moderate attitude, especially
towards the fight for self-government. He was one of the most-eminent radicals
at the time. In fact, it was the Swadeshi movement of 1905–1907 that
resulted in the split within the Indian National Congress into the Moderates
and the Extremists
Despite being personally opposed to early marriage, Tilak was
against 1891 Age of Consent bill, seeing it as interference with Hinduism and a dangerous
precedent. The act raised the age at which a girl could marry from 10 to
12 years.
Sedition Charges
During his lifetime among other political cases, Bal Gangadhar Tilak
had been tried for Sedition
Charges in three times by British India Government—in
1897, 1909, and 1916. In 1897, Tilak was sentenced to 18 months
in prison for preaching disaffection against the Raj. In 1909, he was again
charged with sedition and intensifying racial animosity between Indians and the
British. The Bombay lawyer Muhammad Ali Jinnah in Tilak's defence could not annul the evidence in Tilak's
polemical articles and Tilak was sentenced to six years in prison in Burma.
Imprisonment in Mandalay
On 30 April 1908, two Bengali youths, Prafulla
Chaki and Khudiram Bose, threw a bomb on a carriage at Muzzafarpur,
to kill the Chief Presidency Magistrate Douglas Kingsford of Calcutta fame, but
erroneously killed two women traveling in it. While Chaki committed suicide
when caught, Bose was hanged. Tilak, in his paper Kesari, defended the
revolutionaries and called for immediate Swaraj or self-rule. The Government
swiftly charged him with sedition. At the
conclusion of the trial, a special jury convicted him by 7:2 majority.
All India Home Rule League
Tilak helped found the All India Home Rule League in 1916–18, with G. S. Khaparde and Annie Besant. After years
of trying to reunite the moderate and radical factions, he gave up and focused
on the Home Rule League, which sought self-rule. Tilak travelled from village
to village for support from farmers and locals to join the movement towards
self-rule. Tilak was impressed by the Russian Revolution, and expressed his admiration for Vladimir Lenin. The
league had 1400 members in April 1916, and by 1917 membership had grown to
approximately 32,000. Tilak started his Home Rule League in Maharashtra, Central
Provinces, and Karnataka and Berar
region. Besant's League was active in the rest part of India.
Religio-Political Views
Tilak sought to unite the Indian population for mass political
action throughout his life. For this to happen, he believed there needed to be
a comprehensive justification for anti-British pro-Hindu activism. For this
end, he sought justification in the supposed original principles of the Ramayana and
the Bhagavad Gita. He named this call to activism
karma-yoga or the yoga of action. In his interpretation, the Bhagavad Gita
reveals this principle in the conversation between Krishna and Arjuna when
Krishna exhorts Arjuna to fight his enemies because it is his duty. In Tilaks
opinion, the Bhagavad Gita provided a strong justification of activism.
However, this conflicted with the mainstream exegesis of the text at the time
which was predominated by renunciate views and the idea of acts purely for God.
This was represented by the two mainstream views at the time by Ramanuja and Adi
Shankara. To find support for this philosophy, Tilak wrote his own
interpretations of the relevant passages of the Gita and backed his views using
Jnanadeva's commentary on the Gita, Ramanuja's critical commentary and his own
translation of the Gita. His main battle was against the renunciate views
of the time which conflicted with worldly activism. To fight this, he went to
extents to reinterpret words such as karma, dharma, yoga as well as the concept
of renunciation itself. Because he found his rationalization on Hindu religious
symbols and lines, he alienated many non-Hindus such as the Muslims who began
to ally with the British for support.
Books
In 1903, he wrote the book The Arctic Home in the Vedas. In it, he argued that the Vedas could
only have been composed in the Arctics, and the Aryan bards
brought them south after the onset of the last ice age. He proposed a new way to determine the exact time of the Vedas.
In "The Orion", he
tried to calculate the time of the Vedas by using the position of
different Nakshatras. The positions of the Nakshtras were described
in different Vedas.
Tilak wrote "Shrimadh Bhagvad Gita Rahasya"
in prison at Mandalay – the analysis of 'Karma Yoga' in the Bhagavad
Gita, which is known to be a gift of the Vedas and the Upanishads.
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