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'Manabendra Nath Roy' (
March 21,
1887 –
January 25 1954) was an
Bengali Indian revolutionary, philosoper, political theorist and activist as well as the exponent of the philosophy of radical humanism. He was also an international
Communist leader and theorist, though he later denounced communism.
Early days
Born 'Narendra Nath Bhattacharya', Roy joined the revolutionary underground movement for Indian national liberation at the age of 18. He was an associate of the legendary Indian revolutionary, Jatindranath Mukherjee or
Bagha Jatin, who attempted, in 1915, an armed insurrection against the
British, which was crushed. In April 1915, during the First World War, Roy (by using the fictitious name Charles A. Martin) left for
Batavia, and then to
Shanghai, seeking German arms for Indian revolutionaries. But the intended delivery of the arms was not a success. Not losing heart, Roy, during the next two years, toured in search of armed assistance for Indian revolution in Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Mexico, the Philippines, and the USA. He admits having been "tormented by a psychological conflict between an emotion (loyalty to old comrades) and an intelligent choice of a new ideal. I could not forget the injunction of the only man [
Bagha Jatin ] I ever obeyed almost blindly.(...) The affection of the older man appealed: 'Come back soon, with or without arms.' The appeal was an order for me. He was our Dada, but the Commander-in-Chief also." In the autumn of 1915, while passing through Manila, Roy received the shocking news of
Bagha Jatin's ''heroic death''. Out of a purely emotional reaction ("Jatinda's death must be avenged"), with time Roy had come to realise that he "admired Jatinda because he personified, perhaps without knowing it, the best of mankind. The corollary to that realisation was that Jatinda's death would be avenged if I worked for the ideal of establishing a social order in which the best in man could be manifest."
[1] Elsewhere, Roy claimed
Bagha Jatin to be a ''karmayogin'' in the sense of a ''humanist'' ("Jatinda was the first humanist in modern India"). While in
Palo Alto, Roy changed his name from Charles A. Martin to Manabendra Nath Roy to evade British intelligence.
International revolutionary
Like
Marx he was both an activist and a philosopher; in fact
Lenin called him "the Oriental Marx".
Roy played a leading role in revolutionary movements in
Mexico, the
Middle East, the
Soviet Union,
Indonesia and
China apart from playing a crucial role in forming the emigre
Communist Party of India in
Tashkent (1920).
In Mexico, Roy made friends with Mexican and American political activists and intellectuals, including the then Mexican president, Venustiano Carranza. Roy later became the General Secretary of Socialist Party of Mexico. In March 1919, he also became close to Michael Borodin,
Comintern's emissary to Mexico and founded the
Communist Party of Mexico.
In May 1920, he went to Moscow at the invitation of
Lenin to attend the second congress of Comintern. There he presented a Supplementary Thesis to Lenin's Theses on The National and Colonial Question. Though initially created a stir, his supplemntary thesis was accepted along with the main thesis presented by Lenin.
Roy rose to occupy the highest offices of the Communist International and led the Commintern's delegation to
China (1927). At the same time he authored such Marxist classics as ''India in Transition'' (1922), ''The Future of Indian Politics'' (1926) and ''Revolution and Counter-revolution in China'' (1930); and founded the organ of the emigre Communist Party of India, ''The Vanguard'' (and later ''The Masses'') and edited it for seven years (1922-28).
Denouncing Communism
Roy broke with the
Communist International in
1929 having publicly opposed the
Stalinist line adopted by the Comintern at its Sixth Congress. Returning to India he spent six years in various prisons during which he wrote a 3000-page draft manuscript provisionally titled ''The Philosophical Consequence of Modern Science''. On his release he campaigned against every variety of
authoritarianism, supported the anti-fascist war, drew up a Draft Constitution for free India and the outlines of a decentralist people's plan for economic development.
Radical humanism
Disillusioned with both bourgeois
democracy and
communism, he devoted the last years of his life to the formulation of an alternative philosophy which he called ''Radical Humanism'' and of which he wrote a detailed exposition in ''Reason, Romanticism and Revolution.''
In his monumental biography, Sibnarayan Ray writes: "If Nehru had his problems, so had Roy. From early life his sharp intellect was matched by a strong will and extra-ordinary self-confidence. It would seem that in his long political career there were only two persons and a half who, in his estimate, qualified to be his mentors. The first was Jatin Mukherji (or
Bagha Jatin) from his revolutionary nationalist period; the second was Lenin (...) The half was Josef Stalin..."
[2]
Roy and Second World War
On the onset of the
Second World War he asked the people to stand behind the British to fight against fascism. His line was clearly different from the of the mainstream of the national liberation movement, that was launching the
Quit India movement at that juncture. According to Roy, a victory for the Germany and the
Axis powers would have resulted in the end of democracy worldwide and India would never be independent. In his view to him India was to win her freedom in a free world only. He foresaw that India would attain independence following the defeat of the Axis powers and weakening of the economic base of the British Imperialism.
Bibliography
★
Historical Role of Islam
★ India in Transition (1922)
★ The Future of Indian Politics (1926)
★ Revolution and Counter-revolution in China (1930)
★ India and War
★ Alphabet of Fascist Economy
★ Draft Constitution of Free India
★ People's Freedom
★ Poverty or Plenty
★ The Problems of Freedom
★ INA and the August Revolution
★ Jawaharlal Nehru: The Last Battle for Freedom
★ The Scientific Politics
★ New Orientation
★ The Russian Revolution
★ Beyond Marxism
★ New Humanism
★ Reason, Romanticism and Revolution
External links
★
Historical Role of Islam
★
Article on Roy at Banglapedia
★
Humanist movement
★
Saleel Wagh