Collated by Tusar Nath Mohapatra
Bhagat Singh did not "disown" Sri Aurobindo in a personal sense, but he fundamentally rejected his later spiritual path and the ideology of spiritual nationalism in favour of atheistic Marxism. [1]
In his seminal essay Why I Am An Atheist, written in 1930 while in prison, Bhagat Singh explained his intellectual break from the spiritual-revolutionary tradition. His reasons included: [1, 2]
- Rejection of Mysticism: While Bhagat Singh deeply respected the bravery of the earlier revolutionaries, including Sri Aurobindo and his brother Barindra Kumar Ghosh, he came to view their reliance on "divine help" or "mysticism" as a sign of intellectual weakness or a lack of self-reliance.
- The Burden of Suffering: Bhagat Singh argued that a compassionate, omnipotent God could not exist alongside the widespread injustice and suffering he saw in the world. He critiqued the idea that the nation was a "divine mother" (as Aurobindo had proposed), viewing it instead through the lens of class struggle and economic exploitation.
- Shift to Scientific Socialism: Influenced by Marxist literature, Singh believed that progress required "merciless criticism and independent thinking". He argued that any man standing for progress must challenge "every item of the old faith," specifically targeting the spiritual justifications for nationalism that leaders like Aurobindo had championed.
- Atheism as Self-Reliance: He believed that the idea of God was a "consolation" for those who lacked the courage to face reality alone. By rejecting God and the spiritual path, he sought to show that a revolutionary's actions should be driven by a purely humanistic and scientific commitment to the masses, not by a search for spiritual salvation. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]
Ultimately, while the HRA/HSRA inherited the militant spirit of Aurobindo's early years, Bhagat Singh systematically stripped that movement of its religious and spiritual undertones to transform it into a secular, socialist struggle.
Would you like to know more about the specific philosophers Bhagat Singh cited in his arguments against spiritualism?
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The divergence of M.N. Roy, Subhas Chandra Bose, and Bhagat Singh from Sri Aurobindo follows a chronological shift from Nationalism to Global Materialism (Marxism/Atheism) or Pragmatic Activism.
While all three began within the revolutionary-nationalist framework Sri Aurobindo helped build (1902–1910), their paths diverged as his moved toward spiritual evolution and theirs toward secular liberation.
Chronology of Divergence
| Leader [1, 2, 3] | Year of Significant Divergence | Nature of Divergence |
|---|---|---|
| M.N. Roy | 1917–1920 | Moved from militant nationalism to Marxism while in Mexico/Russia. He replaced Aurobindo's "Mother India" spiritualism with Class Struggle. |
| Bhagat Singh | 1924–1930 | Transitioned from the HRA (spiritual-revolutionary) to the HSRA (socialist). He explicitly critiqued "spiritual nostrums" in his 1930 essay Why I Am An Atheist. |
| Subhas Bose | 1935–1941 | Maintained respect for Aurobindo but rejected his "withdrawal" from active life. The final split occurred in 1941 over Bose's alliance with the Axis Powers. |
M.N. Roy (The Intellectual Shift)
M.N. Roy (born Narendra Nath Bhattacharya) had the most direct link, having studied at the National College under Sri Aurobindo's tutelage. [4]
- Early Revolutionary (1904–1915): Roy was a key member of the Jugantar group, the militant wing Sri Aurobindo guided.
- Marxist Divergence (1917): While searching for arms in Mexico, Roy converted to Marxism, founding the first Communist Party outside Russia. He argued that national liberation was meaningless without economic revolution for the masses.
- World War II Alignment: Curiously, in 1940, Roy and Sri Aurobindo aligned again—both supported the Allied forces against the Axis, a stance that distanced them both from the mainstream Indian National Congress. [5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
Subhas Chandra Bose (The Strategic Shift)
Bose’s divergence was about methodology, not a total rejection of the philosophy.
- Early Admiration (1913–1921): Bose viewed Aurobindo as a "legendary figure" and a "spiritual guru" who reconciled Spirit and Matter.
- The "Active Life" Critique (1926–1935): In letters to Dilip Kumar Roy, Bose argued that Aurobindo's seclusion was "one-sided" and that a guru must lead the masses in the physical world.
- Final Political Split (1940s): During WWII, Sri Aurobindo publicly condemned Bose’s alliance with Japan as a "crime against the Motherland," fearing it would lead to a "renewed servitude". [1, 10, 11, 12]
Bhagat Singh (The Ideological Break)
Bhagat Singh’s divergence was the most radical, moving from Spiritual Heroism to Scientific Atheism.
- Evolution (1924–1928): He started in the HRA, which was steeped in the "spiritual-revolutionary" tradition. By 1928, he pushed to add "Socialist" to the name, signaling a move toward secular politics.
- Final Break (1930): While in jail, he concluded that religious and spiritual interpretations of nationalism (like Aurobindo's) were a "consolation" for the weak and that the revolution required a strictly materialist basis. [13]
Would you like to explore the specific letters where Sri Aurobindo defended his wartime support of the British against the views of these leaders?
[13] https://byjus.com
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