COLOURED MEN’S BELIEF
TREATED AS INFERIORS. In opening the discussion at a conference at Eastbourne, England, Lord Willing-don asked: “What are to be the relations of white and coloured races in future?"
Coloured races everywhere,, he said, had received eagerly , the gospel of self-determination, and the Great War, which had brought Western civilisation so near to ruin, had strengthened the coloured man’s belief that the white man’s civilisation had many defects. To the coloured man’s resentment at the position of inferiority and the determination that democratic, ideals should be of 1 universal application, had thus been added the belief that the moral basis of Eastern life was in many ways higher and nobler than that of the West. The white man thus had a difficult task if he was to bring healing and contentment to the East. It seemed imperative, he said, that we should discover, if possible, some means by which this problem should be solved by peaceful methods and not by d clash of races, which would be the most ghastly tragedy the world had ever known.
We bad given India the full assurance that the aim of British efforts in their country was to advance them, by progressive stages, to the goal of responsible government, but since the war, owing to certain incidents, the educated people of India were beginning to doubt the sincerity of our assurance. If, he said, the white races would realise the necessity of treating all coloured men in the spirit of absolute equality, he honestly believed that what now appeared an aggressive and unreasonable attitude on the part o. coloured races would entirely change. Mr J. H. Oldham said that little or no convincing evidence existed of show- that racial feeling was due to any inborn repugnance,’and he added: “Let us face the facts squarely. A solid white front inevitably means a solid vellow front and a solid brown front anu a Solid black front, and that in the end t can have only one meaning. It means war. To prevent this men of true vision should refuse to be entangled in the snares of racialism and the purely racial way of looking at questions." Mr Shora Singha, of the Punjab, an organiser of the Student Christian movement in India, stated that there were churches in his country into which Christians could not go because they were not- white. He went on: “Do you realise the ghastliness? The saints and evangelists would find the doors shut in their faces. And we are talking of the Catholic Church."
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Shannon News, 24 December 1925, Page 3
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425COLOURED MEN’S BELIEF Shannon News, 24 December 1925, Page 3
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