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The foundation of congress was not an isolated phenomenon. It had a long history, beginning from Raja Ram Mohan Roy. It went through various phases and various factors contributed to set political movement on right line. The foundation of congress was climax of political movement on one hand and beginning of freedom struggle on other.
The credit for organizing the first meeting of the Indian National Congress goes to A.O. Hume. He was a retired government servant who had chosen to stay back in India after retirement. He was on very good terms with Lord Ripon and shared his view that the emergence of the educated class should be accepted as a political reality and that timely steps should be taken to provide legitimate outlets to the grievances of this class and efforts be made to satisfy its ambitions. He laboriously consolidated the network of contacts that he had established. Early in December 1884 he reached Bombay to bid farewell to Ripon. He stayed on there for three months and during this period he discussed with the leaders who were influential in the Bombay Presidency the programme of political action to be adopted by the educated Indians.
In March It was decided that a conference of the Indian National Union (initially it was this name that was adopted) would be convened at Poona during the Christmas week. Initially Hume and his group considered Calcutta as the most likely place for the conference. But later they decided upon Poona because it was centrally located and the Executive Committee of the Poona Sarvajanik Sabha expressed readiness to make arrangements for the conference and provide necessary funds.
However, fate deprived Poona of the opportunity to host the first session of the Indian National Congress. The venue had to be shifted to Bombay because of the outbreak of cholera in Poona. The first meeting was held on Monday 28 December 1885 in Gokuldas Tejpal Sanskrit College, Bombay. Womesh Chandra Banerjee was chosen as the president of the First session of Indian National congress. He was one of the first Indian Barristers and one of the foremost legal luminaries in his day. His election established the healthy precedent that the President should be chosen from a province other than the one in which the Congress was being held.
The Presidential Speech of the first Congress President was armed at stating explicitly the scope, character and objectives of the Congress. Moreover, the presidential speech also sought to remove many apprehensions and misgivings which might have arisen in the mind of the people about the exact intentions of the Congress.
The aims and objectives of the Congress were defined very clearly by the President. He described the objectives as.
1. Promotion of personal intimacy and friendship amongst the countrymen.
2. Eradication of all possible prejudices relating to race, creed or provinces.
3. Consolidation of sentiments of national unity.
4. Recording of the opinions of educated classes on pressing problems of the day, and
5 Laying down lines for future course of action in public interest.
Social base of the congress
1. It is often argued that the lawyers dominated the Congress. For example, a noted historian Anil Seal points out that over half the delegates at the first Congress-39 out of 72-were lawyers and that during the decades to come more than one-third of the delegates to every Congress session belonged to the legal professions.
2. The old aristocracy-people like rajas, maharajas, big zamindars and very wealthy merchants were conspicuous by their absence.
3. Nor did the peasants or artisans feel attracted towards it.
The fact that the lawyers predominated cannot be denied. But this is more or less true of political organisations and legislatures everywhere. In India the problem became compounded by the fact that very few careers were open to educated Indians. Therefore, a very big number adopted the legal profession. The old aristocratic class did not participate in the Congress proceedings because it felt threatened by new liberal and nationalist ideas. Though the question of poverty of Indian had been discussed for sometime by various leaders especially Dadabhai Naoroji, no attempt was made to associate the masses with the movement at this stage. This was so because the leaders at this stage thought that the masses are not yet trained in the form of political agitation adopted by the Indian National Congress. The leaders through their memorials, petitions, speeches etc. aimed at making the masses politically conscious. When the Congress came to discuss the condition of the people, it resolved that the first step should be the granting of representative institutions. Given the tactics adopted by the Congress-that of petitioning and drawing attention to grievances by public discussions, this was natural.
Proceedings and resolutions
The proceedings of the Congress were conducted in the most orderly and efficient manner. The resolutions were moved discussed and passed in accordance with strict parliamentary procedure. Each resolution was proposed by a member belonging to one province, then seconded by a member belonging to another province and was supported by members from other provinces. The speeches were marked by moderation, earnestness and expressions of loyalty to the Crown. Historian Briton Martin (New India 1885, Delhi 1970) comments that the first Congress was a distinctly professional affair, which would have been the envy of any comparable political meeting held in England or the United States at that time’.
The first congress adopted nine resolutions.
Viewed in a larger context, the founding of the Indian National Congress was a response to the then existing political and socio-economic conditions which had resulted from long subjection to the alien rule. During the 1880s, as we have seen, the idea of national organisation was very much in the air. In fact, during the last ten days of 1885 as many as five conferences were held in different parts of the country. The Madras Mahajan Sabha held its second annual conference from 22 to 24, December. It was timed as to enable the members of the Sabha to attend the Congress at Poona. The Second Indian National Conference, convened by the Indian Association, met at Calcutta. It merged with the Indian national Congress in 1886. Two other conferences held during the same period were the conferences organised by Eurasians at Jabalpur and by Prayag Central Hindu Samaj at Allahabad. Given the emergence of a countrywide educated class, the ideas they expressed and the organizational developments that had taken place, it was only a matter of time before a national body was created. The Indian National Congress represented the culmination of awareness amongst educated groups of the need to work together for political purposes. It marked the culmination of a long process of evolution of political ideas and a process of organisation which had started from 1830s onwards.
By: Subhash Singh ProfileResourcesReport error
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