[Indian Unrest by Valentine Chirol]@TWC D-Link bookIndian Unrest CHAPTER II 24/24
They are by no means obscure papers, and some of them, such as the _Kal_ the _Hind Swarajya_, and especially the _Yugantar,_ which became at one time a real power in Bengal, achieved a circulation hitherto unknown to the Indian Press.
Can any Englishman, however fervent his faith in liberty, regret that some at least of these papers have now disappeared either as the result of prosecutions under the Indian Criminal Code or from the operation of the new Press Law? The mischief they have done still lives and will not be easily eradicated. It is the fashion in certain quarters to reply:--"But look at the Anglo-Indian newspapers, at the aggressive and contemptuous tone they assume towards the natives of India, at the encouragement they constantly give to racial hatred." Though I am not concerned to deny that, in the columns of a few English organs, there may be occasional lapses from good taste and right feeling, such sweeping charges against the Anglo-Indian Press as a whole are absolutely grotesque, and its most malevolent critics would be at a loss to quote anything, however remotely, resembling the exhortations to hatred and violence which have been the stock-in-trade not only of the most popular newspapers in the vernaculars, but of some even of the leading newspapers published in English, but edited and owned by Indians. Even such extracts as I have given above from vernacular newspapers do not by any means represent the lengths to which Indian "extremism" can go.
They represent merely the literature of unrest which has been openly circulated in India.
There is another and still more poisonous form which is smuggled into India from abroad and surreptitiously circulated..
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