NEHRU AND CHINA
TAN YUN-SHAN
As the names of Lord
Buddha and the Bodhisattavas of ancient India, three names of modern India are very
well-known to the Chinese people, namely, Mahatma Gandhi, Gurudeva
Tagore, and Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru.
Gandhi was the most
revered, Tagore the most adored, Nehru remains the most beloved of all. The
Chinese people revere the Mahatma as a saint, adore the Gurudeva
as a teacher, but regard the Pandit as a friend and
brother of their own. Or, to be more accurate, to the Chinese people, Tagore
was like a mother, Gandhi a father, and Nehru a darling.
Indeed, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru possessed many characteristics
which the Chinese have had themselves, and which they cherish. We really feel
that he is more lovely, more humane, more social, more
friendly and more considerate than any other foreigner. And yet he is so
dignified and majestic that he commands the respect and admiration
of all people, especially the Chinese, besides their love and affection for
him. In other words, he has gained the heart of the citizens of the world in
general, and of the Chinese in particular.
When we look at him with
a long Chinese gown in a photo taken together with the Chinese Generalissimo
and Madame Chiang, published in his book China,
Spain and the War, but for his
Gandhi-cap we can hardly distinguish him from a Chainese.
Like the visit of the
Poet Rabindranath Tagore to China
in 1924, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru’s visit to China in 1939
has been a great event in Sino-Indian history. The warm and genuine reception
that the Chinese people and their National Government accorded to him exceeded
any given to foreign guests in recent times.
As Pandit
Nehru has himself recorded, when he arrived in Chunking, the wartime capital of
China,
he was greeted by thousands of people including many political, cultural,
educational, social and also military leaders. At the aerodrome, “there was a
brief speech of welcome and presentation of bouquets, and then we passed along
a line of girls and boys in some kind of uniform who greeted me with rhythmic
waving of flags. Then to a boat to cross the river.” (China,
Spain and the War, p. 44.) The whole
city of Chungking
was decorated with flags, flowers and festoons, and the streets lined by people
when he passed by. One thing to be specially noted here is that this was the
first time that the Chinese people hoisted their national flag in welcoming a
foreign guest.
Although his visit to China was a very short one and was limited to
two or three cities, due to the war situation of that country and urgent call
from India,
the impression he left with the Chinese people has been lasting. The goodwill
and hospitality of the Chinese people was no doubt very splendid and touching.
As Pandit Nehru himself
said:
“Abundant goodwill and
hospitality met me everywhere, and soon I realised
that this had far more than personal significance. I was looked upon as a
representative of India, of
the Congress, although I had no such official status, and the people of China were
anxious and eager to make friends with the Indian people and to develop
contacts with them. Nothing could have pleased me better, for that also was my
heart’s desire.
“And so I came back after
thirteen days, reluctantly, and yet inevitably, for the call of India in these
days of crisis was imperative. But that brief stay had been worth while for me certainly, and possibly for India
and China.”
(China, Spain and the War, PP. 24-25)
Yes, this brief stay for
thirteen days of Pandit Nehru in China will
always be remembered, and that Pandit Nehru, I am
sure, will himself never forget it. There is even now a very sincere hope and
wish of the Chinese people that there would be another chance and opportunity
for them to welcome the Indian national leader once again to China, and to get
him to stay there for a much longer period and to visit many more cities and
places.
The world of to-day is
full of snobbishness and flattery. People ingratiate themselves with the strong
and the rich and look down upon the weak and the poor. They blindly or even
slavishly worship force and power and foolishly or rather pitiably ignore human
feeling and justice and dignity. When Mussolini and his Italy were
strong, people praised and admired them. When Hitler and Germany were in
power, people admired and adored them. When the Japanese militarists and Japan were in a
mighty position, people extolled and eulogised them.
Now people have changed their attitude towards these figures and countries. Now
they come to laud Soviet Russia and Comrade Stalin. But Pandit
Jawaharlal Nehru did not, and does not, and will never do these. The Chinese
people also did not and do not, and will never do these.
Just
the opposite. When Abyssinia was trodden under the iron
heel of Mussolini and the Italian Fascists, Jawaharlal lost no time to condemn
the wanton actions of Mussolini and the Fascists, and expressed his sympathy
with the Abyssinian people. When Czechoslovakia was invaded by
Hitler and the German Nazis, he immediately did the same. When the people of
the Spanish Republic were distressed during the
Civil War, Jawaharlal went to their help. And when the Japanese Militarists
invaded China, and China was in a
very difficult position, again he did the same. It is a fact that it was
Jawaharlal Nehru, along with Rabindranath Tagore, who first and foremost
condemned the foolish and suicidal Japanese aggression upon China, and declared his whole-hearted sympathy
with the Chinese people in this country, India, where pro-Japanese feeling
had been strong for some time.
So also did the Chinese
people. When India
was under the dominion of a foreign power, the Chinese people were always
sympathetic towards the Indian brethren. They aspired for India’s freedom
as for their own. They did never look down upto India because
she was under the foreign yoke. They always regarded India
as a religious, cultural and spiritual home, whether India was politically free or not.
They did never think of India’s
weakness, still never did they try to find fault with the Indian nation. They
respect and admire Indian leaders simply for their personality, their character
and their virtues, not for their fame or position, or influence or power. I
remember, when Generalissimo and Madame Chiang met Gandhiji in the Birla Palace,
Calcutta, the
first words the Generalissimo said to his interpreter were: “Tell Gandhiji, I
am very happy to meet him; we regard him as our own National Father, Dr. Sun Yat-Sen”. When His Excellency Dr. Tai Chi-Tao first met
Gandhiji at Sevagrem, he said exactly the same.
The Generalissimo’s
farewell message to India
during his visit to this country in 1942, was very
well known to and read by all the Indian people. My own humble article “An
Appeal to Conscience” written in September 1942, which appeared as a statement
in almost all the newspapers of India through the United Press, and published
as a special article in the Modern Review (Calcutta) and the Blitz (Bombay)
and later on included in my book, China, India and the War,
edited and published by the China Press (Calcutta), was also very well received
by my Indian friends. In spite of the disgust and dislike of our British
friends and ally, we strongly appealed for India’s independence. We did all
these for reasons of sympathy, for the sense of love, affection and justice we
had for India
and our Indian brethren. We never thought of any advantage or disadvantage. Now
what we said and appealed have all come to be facts and we are very happy. We
equally rejoiced with our Indian brethren at India’s independence and freedom.
We share their joy and happiness and wish them every
prosperity.
The Chinese proverb says:
“A friend in need, a friend indeed”. To China Jawaharlal Nehru is really such a
friend. Now, China
is again passing through a dangerous crisis. People thought that China is going
to be ruined and finished and with no hope of revival or regeneration. The same
country which they used to extol much a few years back, they look down upon and
disdain now. The same man whom they used to praise as the greatest personality
and statesman of the Far East some time ago,
they criticise and ridicule and even scandalise now. They use all kinds of satiric and sarcastic
words and irony to describe the affairs of China. They quote China for all
bad examples. I am sure Pandit Nehru would never do
this, and my Indian friends would not do this.
Is China really
going to be ruined and finished? Will China remain under the present
condition and lose her position and glory in the world for ever? I can
definitely say “No”· China
had survived countless crises and perils, witnessed numerous vicissitudes of
countries and peoples of the world in her long recorded history of five
thousand years. Whatever may be the present situation, whatever may be the
political changes in the world, China
will always be there, the Chinese nation and their culture and wisdom will
always be there. So also will be India and the Indian nation from the
historical point of view, a few years or a few decades, or even a few centuries
of prosperity or poverty, of power or weakness, is nothing, especially in a
history as long as China’s. Let me quote Pandit Nehru
again:
“The present will pass
and merge into the future, and India
will remain and China
will remain, and the two will work together for their own good and the good of
the world”. (China, Spain and the War, p. 18).
Less than two months
back, when the Annual Meeting of the General Assembly of the Sino-Indian
Cultural Society in India
was held at Santiniketan on December 24, 1948, the
Prime Minister of free India,
the same Jawaharlal, again sent his sympathetic and inspiring message, which
reads:
“I send my greetings to
the Meeting of the General Assembly of the Sino-Indian Cultural Society. The
bonds that have held China
and India
together in the past were far deeper and more abiding than political bonds can
be. Whatever the future may bring to our respective countries, I have no doubt
that these cultural bonds should and will continue. The Sino-Indian Cultural
Society represents these, and I wish it all success”.
O, beloved Panditji! We shall ever cherish and appreciate your noble
thoughts. That is why the Chinese people specially love you, admire you, and
adore you among all their friends.
On the auspicious
occasion of Pandit Nehru’s 61st birthday, let the
Chinese people pray together with their Indian brethren for his good health and
long life. For with him is linked not only the fate of India, but also that of Asia
and the peace of the world.
Long live Jawaharlal! Jai
Hind!
February 16, 1949.
Art galleries and museums
in
a City are like window
which
look out on the broader,
richer and deeper things of
life.
Speech, Madras, 27 November 1951.
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