Sri Aurobindo
Autobiographical Notes
and Other Writings of Historical Interest
Part One. Autobiographical Notes
2. Sri Aurobindo’s corrections of statements in a proposed biography
Political Life, 1893–1910
Start of the Bande Mataram [1]
Sri Aurobindo was now in Calcutta – and he was in his element. He had given up his Baroda job, its settled salary and its seductive prospects; was he taking a blind leap into the dangerous unknown? . . .
Sri Aurobindo was present at the Congress in 1904 and 
again in 1906 and took a part in the counsels of the extremist party and in the 
formation of its fourfold programme – “Swaraj, swadeshi, boycott, national 
education” – which the Moderate leaders after a severe tussle behind the scenes 
were obliged to 

 incorporate in the resolutions 
of 1906. Bepin Pal had just started a daily paper Bande Mataram with only 500 Rs 
in his pocket. Sri Aurobindo took up joint editorship of the journal, edited the 
paper during Bepin Pal’s absence and induced the Nationalist party to take it up 
as their organ and finance it. He called a meeting of the party leaders at which 
it was decided at his instance to give up the behind the scenes jostlings with 
the Moderates, and declare an open war on Moderatism and place before the 
country what was practically a revolutionary propaganda. He gave up his Baroda 
job some time after this; he had taken indefinite leave without pay; for this 
reason he did not take up officially and publicly the editorship of the Bande 
Mataram although after Bepin Pal left that post, he was practically in full 
control of the policy of the paper.
 incorporate in the resolutions 
of 1906. Bepin Pal had just started a daily paper Bande Mataram with only 500 Rs 
in his pocket. Sri Aurobindo took up joint editorship of the journal, edited the 
paper during Bepin Pal’s absence and induced the Nationalist party to take it up 
as their organ and finance it. He called a meeting of the party leaders at which 
it was decided at his instance to give up the behind the scenes jostlings with 
the Moderates, and declare an open war on Moderatism and place before the 
country what was practically a revolutionary propaganda. He gave up his Baroda 
job some time after this; he had taken indefinite leave without pay; for this 
reason he did not take up officially and publicly the editorship of the Bande 
Mataram although after Bepin Pal left that post, he was practically in full 
control of the policy of the paper.