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Published byGwenda Henry Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapter 29: The Countries of South Asia Section 1: Road to Independence Pg. 607-608
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British Rule: Improvements Ended slavery Improved schools Built railroads
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Indian Textile Industry Before British rule, India had a very successful textile industry Britain wanted to use India as a market for their machine-made textiles Colonialism Imported raw cotton from India Made it into cloth in Britain Shipped finished product back to India Millions of Indian textile workers lost their jobs
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Colonialism and Inequality British did not treat Indians as equals In the government and in the army, British officials were in all positions of power Indians could only serve under British officials
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Resistance to British Rule Late 1880s: Nationalism 1885: Indian National Congress 1906: Muslim League Western ideas spreads among India’s middle class Individual rights Self-government
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Mohandas Gandhi
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Nonviolent Resistance Boycott British clothing Government agencies, such as courts of law Noncooperation Indians in public office resigned Indian children were withdrawn from government schools Indians sat in streets to block traffic Civil Disobedience Salt march Refusal to pay British taxes
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1930: Salt March India is a peninsula: surrounded on 3 sides by water Ocean: Salt water Britain taxed salt even though it was native to India Illegal for Indians to collect their own salt
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Independence Movement Mass movement Millions of Indians Gandhi: committed to nonviolence Some protests led to riots Hundreds of people were killed or hurt 1935: Britain was forced to allow self-rule in certain provinces in India
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Questions 1.What 3 types of nonviolent resistance did Gandhi and his followers use? 2.Why was nonviolent resistance successful? 3.What advantages did the Indian Independence Movement have? 4.Why do you think Gandhi labeled the acts of nonviolent resistance as “weapons” against British rule?
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