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Mahatma Gandhi October 2, 1869 – January 30, 1948 Born and raised in a Hindu family in Bombay Presidency – Father was a senior government official 1888:

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Presentation on theme: "Mahatma Gandhi October 2, 1869 – January 30, 1948 Born and raised in a Hindu family in Bombay Presidency – Father was a senior government official 1888:"— Presentation transcript:

1 Mahatma Gandhi October 2, 1869 – January 30, 1948 Born and raised in a Hindu family in Bombay Presidency – Father was a senior government official 1888: Went to London to study law 1893: Moved to South Africa to work in an Indian law firm

2 Gandhi in South Africa Spent 21 years working in South Africa Considered wealthy Muslim leaders & impoverished Hindu laborers all Indian – Believed “Indianness” goes beyond religion or caste – Understood complexities of religion and class systems of India through the Indians in Africa. Faced discrimination and prejudice while in South Africa

3 Gandhi in South Africa Stayed in India to help Indians in South African fight against discrimination – Founded Natal Indian Congress (1894) Created unified Indian political force 1906: First act of non-violent protest – New law required Indian colonies to register – Gandhi urged Indians to fight the law by refusing to register or burn registration cards – Thousands were jailed, beaten, or shot

4 Gandhi in India Returns to India in 1915 – Part of Indian National Congress Made to allow a greater level of government ‘sharing’ between Indians and British Soon became more radical, opposing the British moving towards independence – Gandhi Lead non-violent protest that helped peasants find relief from high taxes and forced cash crop production of British government Became leader of INC in 1920 – Goal: use non-violence & non-cooperation to attain full independence for India

5 Amritsar Massacre April 13, 1919 Amritsar: holy city of Sikhism – Many recent demonstrations caused British to ban gatherings in the city 15,000-20,000 people gathered at Jallianwala Bagh to for religious festival Fear of rebellion caused British general to order 50 riflemen to shoot into the crowd – Shots lasted for 10 minutes – 1650 rounds fired – According to British:~400 killed – According to Indians: ~1000 killed

6 Gandhi’s Plan for Swaraj Swaraj: complete individual, spiritual, political independence Non-violence extended into swadeshi policy – Boycott of foreign made goods, especially British – Included boycotts of British institutions & courts, and abandonment of all British titles Swadeshi gained popularity, but not all had the same discipline of non-violence as Gandhi…

7 Chauri Chaura February 5, 1922: 2,000 protesters marched towards Chauri Chaura center to protest against police brutality. Police fired warning shots above the crowd – In response, crowd threw stones at officers Police opened fire on crowd – Crowd infuriated, attacked police, torched police shelter

8 Response Gandhi fasted for 5 days – Felt he was wrong to push mass swaraj movement without training people in non-violence INC halted the mass noncooperation campaign Gandhi was arrested for treason – Sentenced to 6 years in jail

9 Another Push for Independence 1928: Gandhi called for the British government to grant India “Dominion Status” – Would become self-governing colony – Threatened a new campaign of non-cooperation – No British response January 26, 1930: Indian National Congress celebrates India’s Independence Day

10 Salt March British Salt Acts prohibited Indians from collecting or selling salt – All salt had to be bought from Britain – British had very high tax on salt March 12, 1930: Gandhi began the 388 kilometer journey to the sea to make his own salt – Hundreds of thousands joined in the civil disobedience – Over 60,000 arrested – Gandhi arrested May 5; campaign continued

11 Salt March As Salt March grew, additional marches & peaceful protests also continued. After Gandhi’s arrest, an Indian poet lead 2,500 protesters on a march toward a salt depot – Approached 400 policemen – Policemen beat the unarmed, nonviolent protesters with clubs None fought back

12 Gandhi-Irwin Pact British Viceroy, Lord Irwin, released Gandhi from prison – The two had 8 meetings, lasted 24 hours total Pact released all political prisoners in exchange for civil obedience – Signed March 1931

13 Focus on Untouchability 1932: British government set up a separate electorate for the Untouchables of India – Gandhi fasted for 6 days Yerwada Pact ended fast: reserved seats in the electorate for the “Depressed Class” 1933: toured India to help end untouchability

14 Quit India: World War II Gandhi felt India could not support a war being fought for “democratic freedom” when India, itself, was denied freedom. – Declares British should “Quit India” – Called on Congressmen and Indians to maintain a “do or die” mentality for independence Between 1939-1941 more than 100,000 Indians are jailed, injured, and killed by police for engaging in “Quit India” protests.

15 Break before Independence 1942: Muslims in India begin to align themselves with the British – Feared their interests would be ignored by Hindu majority of INC – Tensions grew between Muslims and Hindus in India Gandhi & INC: Quit India; Muslim League: Divide India, then Quit – Many riots between groups until Independence

16 Indian Independence: 1947 India Independence Act – Created two new independent nations: India and Pakistan 10-12 million people moved from one side of the newly created border to the other Violence and riots during displacement killed up to a million people Gandhi wanted independence, but did not want India “carved up” and divided


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