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Title: Regarding Suicide Author: Bhagat Singh Date: 1930 Language: en Topics: suicide, letter, India Source: http://www.shahidbhagatsingh.org/index.asp?link=regarding_suicide Notes: [Hearing of the case was over. Judgement was expected any day. Sukhdev expected life transportation for him. To him the idea of remaining in jail for 20 years was repulsive. He wrote to Bhagat Singh that in case he (Sukhdev) is convicted for life he will commit suicide. He stood for release or death; no middle course. Bhagat Singh’s reaction to Sukhdev’s letter was very sharp. Serve, suffer and live to struggle for the cause — that was his stand. “Escaping from hardships is cowardice”, he said. This letter privides one more window to peep into the martyr’s mind.]
DEAR BROTHER,
I have gone through your letter attentively and many times. I realise
that the changed situation has affected us differently. The things you
hated outside have now become essential to you. In the same way, the
things I used to support strongly are of no significance to me any more.
For example, I believed in personal love, but now this feeling has
ceased to occupy any particular position in my heart and mind. While
outside, you were strongly opposed to it but now a drastic change and
radicalisation is apparent in your ideas about it. You experience it as
an extremely essential part of human existence and you have found a
particular kind of happiness in the experience.
You may still recollect that one day I had discussed suicide with you.
That time I told you that in some situations suicide may be justifiable,
but you contested my point. I vividly remember the time and place of our
conversation. We talked about this in the Shahanshahi Kutia one evening.
You said in jest that such a cowardly act can never be justified. You
said that acts of this kind were horrible and heinous, but I see that
you have now made an about-turn on this subject. Now you find it not
only proper in certain situations but also necessary, even essential. My
opinion is what you had held earlier, that suicide is a heinous crime.
It is an act of complete cowardice. Leave alone revolutionaries, no
individual can ever justify such an act.
You say you fail to understand how suffering alone can serve the
country. Such a question from a person like you is really perplexing,
because how much thoughtfully we loved the motto of the Naujawan Bharat
Sabha — “to suffer and sacrifice through service”. I believe that you
served as much as was possible. Now is the time when you should suffer
for what you did. Another point is that this is exactly the moment when
you have to lead the entire people.
Man acts only when he is sure of the justness of his action, as we threw
the bomb in the Legislative Assembly. After the action, it is the time
for bearing the consequences of that act. Do you think that had we tried
to avoid the punishment by pleading for mercy, we would have been more
justified? No, this would have had an adverse effect on the masses. We
are now quite successful in our endeavour.
At the time of our imprisonment, the condition for the political
prisoners of our party were very miserable. We tried to improve that. I
well you quite seriously that we believed we would die very shortly.
Neither we were aware of the technique of forced feeding nor did we ever
think of it. We were ready to die. Do you mean to say that we were
intending to commit suicide? No. Striving and sacrificing one’s life for
a superior ideal can never be called suicide. We are envious of the
death of our Comrade Yatindra Nath Das. Will you call it suicide?
Ultimately, our sufferings bore fruit. A big movement started in the
whole of the country. We were successful in our aim. Death in the
struggles of this kind is an ideal death.
Apart from this, the comrades among us, who believe that they will be
awarded death, should await that day patiently when the sentence will be
announced and they will be hanged. This death will also be beautiful,
but committing suicide — to cut short the life just to avoid some pain —
is cowardice. I want to tell you that obstacles make a man perfect.
Neither you nor I, rather none of us, have suffered any pain so far.
That part of our life has started only now.
You will recollect that we have talked several times about realism in
the Rusian literature, which is nowhere visible in our own. We highly
appreciate the situations of pain in their stories, but we do not feel
that spirit of suffering within ourselves. We also admire their passion
and the extraordinary height of their characters, but we never bother to
find out the reason. I will say that only the reference to their resolve
to bear pain has produced the intensity, the suffering of pain, and this
has given great depth and height to their characters and literature. We
become pitiable and ridiculous when we imbibe an unreasoned mysticism in
our life without any natural or substantial basis. People like us, who
are proud to be revolutionary in every sense, should always be prepared
to bear all the difficulties, anxieties, pain and suffering which we
invite upon ourselves by the struggles initiated by us and for which we
call ourselves revolutionary.
I want to tell you that in jail, and in jail alone, can a person get an
occasion to study empirically the great social subjects of crime and
sin. I have read some literature on this and only the jail is the proper
place for the self-study on all these topics. The best parts of the
self-study for one is to suffer oneself.
You know it that the suffering of political prisoners in the jails of
Russia caused, in the main, the revolution in the prison-administration
after the overthrow of Czardom. Is India not in need of such persons who
are fully aware of this problem and have personal experience of these
things? It will not suffice to say that someone else would do it, or
that many other people are there to do it. Thus, men who find it quite
dishonourable and hateful to leave the revolutionary responsibilities to
others should start their struggle against the existing system with
total devotion. They should violate these rules but they should also
keep in mind the propriety, because unnecessary and improper attempts
can never be considered just. Such agitations will shorten the process
of revolution. All the arguments which you gave to keep yourself aloof
from all such movement, are incomprehensible to me. Some of our friends
are either fools or ignorant. They find your behaviour quite strange and
incomprehensible. (They themselves say they cannot comprehend it because
you are above and very far from their understanding.)
In fact, if you feel that jail life is really humiliating, why don’t you
try to improve it by agitating? Perhaps, you will say that this struggle
would be futile, but this is precisely the argument which is usually
used as a cover by weak people to avoid participation in every movement.
This is the reply which we kept on hearing outside the jail from the
people who were anxious to escape from getting entangled in
revolutionary movements. Shall I now hear the same argument from you?
What could our party of a handful of people do in comparison to the
vastness of its aims and ideals? Shall we infer from this that we erred
gravely in starting our work altogether? No, inferences of this kind
will be improper. This only shows the inner weakness of the man who
thinks like this.
You write further that it cannot be expected of a man that he will have
the same thinking after going through 14 long years of suffering in the
prison, which he had before, because the jail life will crush all his
ideas. May I ask you whether the situation outside the jail was any bit
more favourable to our ideas? Even then, could we have left it because
of our failures? Do you mean to imply that had we not entered the field,
no revolutionary work would have taken place at all? If this be your
contention, then you are mistaken, though it is right that we also
proved helpful to an extent in changing the environment. But, the, we
are only a product of the need of our times.
I shall even say that Marx — the father of communism — did not actually
originate this idea. The Industrial Revolution of Europe itself produced
men of this kind. Marx was one among them. Of course, Marx was also
instrumental to an extent in gearing up the wheels of his time in a
particular way.
I (and you too) did not give birth to the ideas of socialism and
communism in this country; this is the consequence of the effects of our
time and situations upon ourselves. Of course, we did a bit to propagate
these ideas, and therefore I say that since we have already taken a
tough task upon ourselves, we should continue to advance it. The people
will not be guided by our committing suicides to escape the
difficulties; on the contrary, this will be quite a reactionary step.
We continued our work despite the testing environment of
disappointments, pressures and violence ordained by the jail rules.
While we worked, we were made target of may kinds of difficulties. Even
men who were proud to proclaim themselves to be great revolutionaries,
deserted us. Were these conditions not testing in the extreme? Then,
what was the reason and the logic of continuing our agitation and
efforts?
Does this simple argument not by itself give added strength to our
ideas? And, don’t we have instances of our revolutionary comrades who
suffered for their convictions in jails and are still working on return
from jails? Had Bakunin argued like you, he would have committed suicide
right in the beginning. Today, you find many revolutionaries occupying
responsible posts in the Russian state who had passed the greater part
of their lives in prison, completing their sentences. Man must try hard
to stick to his beliefs. No one can say what future has in store.
Do you remember that when we were discussing that some concentrated and
effective poison should also be kept in our bomb factories, you opposed
it very vehemently. The very idea was repugnant to you. You had no faith
in it. So, what has happened now? Here, even the difficult and complex
conditions do not obtain. I feel revulsion even in discussing this
question. You hated even that attitude of mind which permits suicide.
You will kindly excuse me for saying that had you acted according to
this belie right at the time of your imprisonment (that is, you had
committed suicide by taking poison), you would have served the
revolutionary cause, but at this moment, even the thought of such an act
is harmful to our cause.
There is just one more point which I will like to draw your attention
to. We do not believe in God, hell and heaven, punishment and rewards,
that is in any Godly accounting of human life. Therefore, we must think
of life and death on materialist lines. When I was brought here from
Delhi for the purpose of identification, some intelligence officers
talked to me on this topic, in the presence of my father. They said that
since I did not try to save of my life by divulging secrets, it proved
the presence of an acute agony in my life. They argued that a death of
this kind will be something like suicide. But I had replied that a man
with beliefs and ideal like mine, could never think of dying uselessly.
We want to get the maximum value for our lives. We want to serve
humanity as much as possible. Particularly a man like me, whose life is
nowhere sad or worried, can never think of suicide even, leave alone
attempting it. The same thing I want to tell you now.
I hope you will permit me to tell you what I think about myself. I am
certain of capital punishment for me. I do not expect even a bit of
moderation or amnesty. Even if there is amnesty, it will not be for all,
and even that amnesty will be for other only, not for us; it will be
extremly restricted and burdened with various conditions. For, us
neither there can be any amnesty nor it will ever happen. Even then, I
wish that release calls for us should be made collection and globally.
Along with that, I also wish that when the movement reaches its climax,
we should be hanged. It is my wish that if at any time any honourable
and fair compromise is possible, issue like our case may never obstruct
it. When the fate of the country is being decided, the fate of
individuals should be forgotten. As revolutionaries, we do not believe
that there can be any sudden change in the attitude of our rulers,
particularly in the British race. Such a surprising change is impossible
without through sustained striving, sufferings and sacrifices. And it
shall be achieved. As far as my attitude is concerned, I can welcome
facilities and amnesty for all only when its effect is permanent and
some indelible impressions are made on the hearts of the people of the
country through our hanging. Only this much and nothing more.