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India: Political History
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The first advanced Indian settlements were in the Indus River Valley.
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Marco Polo visited India briefly in his travels between China and Europe in the 1200s. Marco! Polo!
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In 1498, Portuguese explorer Vasco de Gama arrived in India. This started Europe’s regular contact with India, based on trade.
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The British set up East India Tea Company to compete with the Portuguese traders in the early 1600s.
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You’ve already heard of the British East India Tea Company.
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Starting with trade, the British eventually took over political control of India.
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By 1921, the British Empire stretched around the globe.
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The British military controlled India
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while the British colonists in India lived in wealth and luxury.
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India was an exotic playground for the British.
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Many Indians rebelled against British control through the years.
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But none of the rebellions succeeded until a skinny little Indian lawyer got involved. His name was Mohandas Gandhi.
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Born in India, he attended law school in England.
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He then set up a law firm in British- controlled South Africa.
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He quickly discovered that Indians were “Coloured” in South Africa, and that he had limited rights.
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During his 21 years in South Africa, he helped organize educated local Indians to protest against racist laws. Gandhi was arrested several times for these protests.
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In South Africa, he developed the belief that protests should NOT be violent. He taught that even when attacked, protesters should remain peaceful.
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and returned to India. In 1914, he and his wife left South Africa
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For several years in India, he organized non-violent resistance to the British government.
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India had many different languages. Gandhi was Hindu. And while most people were Hindu, there were many Muslims. Gandhi taught the importance of working together.
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Many photographs show Gandhi spinning his own thread. He asked Indians to make their own cloth so they wouldn’t have to pay for expensive British cloth.
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At 60 years old, Gandhi organized a 240-mile March to the Sea to gather their own salt – in defiance of British salt laws.
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As British soldiers watched, the Indian protesters gathered their own raw salt and converted it to cooking salt on the beach.
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The British arrested Gandhi and 60,000 others.
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But Gandhi was popular with many British, and the British government was tired of struggling to control India.
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Just one year after the March to the Sea, Gandhi was out of prison and invited to talks in London on the future independence of India.
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The British welcomed him as an international hero.
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One concern the British had was whether or not the Muslims and Hindus of India could work together. A plan was made to “partition” (divide) land for Muslims.
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These talks led to India’s eventual independence in 1947.
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India’s plan for a peaceful “partitioning” of India and Pakistan did not work out.
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Resentments and mistrust led to violence between India’s Muslims and Hindus.
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In just 2 months, people had to move to “their” side of the new border.
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In the chaos of massive moving, many people lost most of their possessions and violence broke out along the border crossings.
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(Still today, there is conflict between Pakistan and India about which country should own Kashmir.)
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Just days after India’s independence, Gandhi was shot by a Hindu radical.
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India and the world mourned his death.
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This is what Gandhi left behind when he died.
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His body was cremated – an India tradition. At Gandhi’s request, his ashes were divided and sent to 20 different regions of India, where they were scattered in India’s rivers.
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Gandhi is remembered as a national hero in India today.
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In a gentle way, you can shake the world. Gandhi quotes:
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I am prepared to die, but there is no cause for which I am prepared to kill. You must be the change you want to see in the world. Prayer is not asking. It is a longing of the soul. It is daily admission of one's weakness.
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Fear has its use but cowardice has none. Learn as if you would live forever, live as if you would die tomorrow. I will not let anyone walk through my mind with dirty feet.
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‘An eye for an eye’ makes the whole world blind.
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EXTRA CREDIT: Find 3 adults who agree with at least one of Gandhi’s quotes (from your notes). Ask each adult these questions and YOU write down each one’s responses: 1. Which quote do you most agree with? 2. Give one example of how (or reason why) that quote is true for you. (due by this Friday)
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