Gandhi
Gandhi
Gandhi
Gandhi
This module has been designed to accompany the film Gandhi (1982).
Ask students what they know about India. Where is it? What is the culture like?
Have students brainstorm anything they know. Write their answers on the board.
Do another brainstorm about Gandhi. Who was he? What did he do? Again, write
the students’ answers on the board.
1.2: Vocabulary
With students, read through the vocabulary definitions in Worksheet 1. Discuss each
word as it appears in the background information to make sure students fully
understand the meanings.
Answers:
1. F – India is a mostly Hindu country.
2. T
3. F – The caste system still exists, but caste-based discrimination is against the law.
4. F – British colonial rule lasted almost 100 years.
5. T
6. F – The Indian independence movement succeeded in 1947.
7. F – There was already racial separation in South Africa before apartheid.
8. T
Teacher’s Notes
2. While You Watch
2.1: Discrimination in South Africa 00.00 – 20.24
Give copies of Worksheet 2: While You Watch to your students, or write the
questions for 2.1 on the board. Play the film to 20.24.
Answers to 2.1
Exercise A:
1. The man on the train tells Gandhi that there are “no coloured attorneys in South Africa.”
2. Gandhi and Mr. Khan decide to protest discrimination against Indians.
3. Gandhi encourages the crowd to burn their passes.
4. A British policeman beats Gandhi while he burns the passes.
5. General Smuts meets with Mr. Walker, an American journalist.
6. Charlie Andrews is a British missionary who visits Gandhi.
7. When Gandhi arrives at his office, he is told that the pass laws will be changed.
Exercise B:
1.
a) Mr. Singh
b) Gandhi was shocked to hear of such inhuman treatment, and angry at the
discrimination.
c) Gandhi is surprised because he is a well-educated lawyer, like the other Indian man he
is speaking to, but they are still considered inferior and not allowed to walk with
white men in the street. Gandhi received his law degree in England, yet the British
discriminate against him in South Africa. Gandhi thinks this treatment is unjust.
2.
a) Mr. Khan
b) A barrister is a lawyer who represents clients in court.
c) Mr. Khan is encouraging Gandhi to protest against the discrimination against
Indians. Mr. Khan is agreeing to join Gandhi in his protests.
Answers to 2.2
Exercise A:
1. Mr. Walker, the journalist.
2. Because in India, cleaning the latrine is the work of the “untouchables.”
3. The Indian miners.
4. Because all the protesters lie down.
5. General Smuts agrees to cancel the new laws and free the protesters, but all future Indian
immigration will stop.
Teacher’s Notes
Exercise B:
1. T
2. F – The new laws say that a policeman may enter an Indian house and demand to see the
card of any Indian woman living there.
3. F – Gandhi says they should be non-violent and not cooperate.
4. T
5. F – When Charlie Andrews speaks about Gandhi during his sermon at church, the people
do not want to listen, and most of them leave.
6. T
Exercise C:
1.
a) Gandhi.
b) Gandhi explains that non-violent civil disobedience means that you must be willing
to die for the cause. It also means that the British will not be able to get what they
want — they want obedience, not dead bodies.
2.
a) Ba said this to Gandhi.
b) Gandhi was angry because Ba said she would not clean the latrine (toilet). She said it
is the work of the untouchables. Gandhi gets angry because he wants to erase the idea
of “untouchables” and he wants everyone to be equal.
Exercise D:
1. Students should discuss if they think it is brave or foolish to not fight back when someone
hurts you, and what makes non-violent non-cooperation effective.
2. Students should discuss traditions they have, and how they would feel if they realised the
traditions were not fair.
Teacher’s Notes
Exercise B:
1. Nehru
2. Professor Gokhale
3. Jinnah
4. Gandhi
5. Patel
Exercise B:
1. Because their British landlords ordered them to grow certain crops such as indigo, but
then the British stopped buying the indigo. The farmers were left with crops they could
not sell, no money to eat, and no money to pay rent to the British landowners.
2. Charlie looks sad and a little confused, but he seems to understand Gandhi’s reasons.
3. Gandhi asks them to gather a lot of evidence so they can win a court case against the
British landowners.
4. The farmers want rebates on the rent they paid, the freedom to choose the crops they grow,
and a part-Indian commission that will listen to their farming problems.
5. Because if all the Indians stop working to pray and fast, everything in India will come to
a halt. This will have the effect of a general strike.
6. Because he fears rioting. He agrees to release Gandhi on the condition that Gandhi makes
a speech about non-violence.
7. He says that he was trying to teach all of India “a lesson.” He says it is irrelevant that
there were women and children at the rally.
Exercise C:
Students should discuss the strength required to continue a campaign of non-violence when
the response is so savage and violent. Let students discuss the contrast between the Indian
strategy and the British strategy.
Teacher’s Notes
2.5: Violent Non-cooperation 1.34.30 – 1.58.32
Play the film to 1.58.32. If students don’t have Worksheet 2, write the exercises on
the board before you play the film.
Answers to 2.5
Exercise A:
1. Gandhi encourages Indians to burn their British-made clothing and wear only homespun.
2. An English woman comes to live with Gandhi and Ba, and Gandhi calls her Mirabehn.
3. A protest supporting Gandhi’s Home Rule campaign turns violent when a mob sets the
police station on fire and murders 22 local policemen.
4. Gandhi decides to fast until the protesters end their protests.
5. “There have been tyrants and murderers, and for a time they can seem invincible. But in
the end they always fall,” Gandhi says.
6. After the protests end, policemen come to the ashram to arrest Gandhi for sedition.
7. In court, Gandhi says, “…I believe non-cooperation with evil is a duty. And that British
rule of India is evil.”
Exercise B:
1.
a) Students should discuss the value of moving forward vs. the value of maintaining
non-violence.
b) The campaign has gained so much momentum and people have already sacrificed so
much. They are afraid that they will never get this much support again if they stop
the campaign now.
c) Students should discuss whether this is noble, brave, or foolish.
2.
a) Students should discuss the unique strategy of non-violence.
b) The King of England.
c) Students should discuss the contrast between Gandhi’s philosophy of non-violence
and the recent violence in the protest.
Answers to 2.6
Exercise A:
1. d
2. b
3. a
4. c
5. a
Teacher’s Notes
Exercise B:
5, 3, 7, 1, 6, 4, 2
Exercise C:
1. The hot climate of India makes salt very important for health. When salt taxes made salt
too expensive for many Indians, people began suffering from salt deficiencies. By putting
a high tax on salt, the British were controlling a very important part of Indian health.
2. Because the British appear to be unable to control the protests. After Gandhi’s march,
Indians began making and selling salt without licences, defying the British laws. This
made the campaign very effective.
3. Students should discuss what he learned by travelling, and why he was needed in India.
Answers to 2.7
Exercise A:
1. b
2. d
3. d
4. c
5. a
Exercise B:
1. Lord Irwin
2. Jinnah
3. Gandhi
4. Margaret Bourke-White
5. Ba
6. Doctor
Teacher’s Notes
2.8: Hindu vs. Muslim 2.34.10 – 3.04.20 (end)
Play the film to the end. If students don’t have Worksheet 2, write the exercises on
the board before you play the film.
Answers to 2.8
Exercise A:
1. T
2. F – Jinnah says that freedom of Muslims is more important than India’s independence.
3. F – Gandhi goes to meet with Jinnah.
4. T
5. F – Muslims go to Pakistan, and Hindus stay in India.
6. T
7. F – Hindu thugs lay down their weapons at Gandhi’s feet.
8. T
Exercise B:
1. Jinnah wants partition because he believes there will be civil war if Muslims and Hindus
are together in an independent India. He believes that Muslims will not have enough
rights in a mostly Hindu country.
2. People are rioting in the streets because Gandhi is staying at the home of a Muslim, and
the policeman says he does not have enough forces to stop the riots.
3. Gandhi begins to fast again to protest the violence between Hindus and Muslims.
4. Because he says he will go to Hell, but not with Gandhi’s death on his soul (since Gandhi
is fasting to stop the violence).
5. Gandhi tells the man to find a Muslim child whose parents have been killed, and then to
raise that child — as a Muslim.
Exercise C:
1. Students should discuss if minorities deserve special attention to make sure they are not
overlooked.
2. Students should discuss the difficulty of attaining an independence that is not the
independence Gandhi imagined.
3. You can tell students that the man who assassinated Gandhi was a Hindu extremist who
thought Gandhi was weakening India by trying to help Pakistan. Students should discuss
their views on what Gandhi accomplished.
Teacher’s Notes
3. After You Watch
3.1: Compare and Contrast
Exercise A: Racial Segregation
As a class, compare the racial segregation in South Africa with the Hindu caste
system that defines a group of people as “untouchables.” People are born with their
race, and in India many are born into a caste, or into a the caste system. Discuss the
similarities and differences between the two systems. For example, the racial
segregation in South Africa was enforced by the English, but in India, the caste
system is enforced by Indians. Is it possible to say that one is more just, or are they
equally unjust?
Ask students to talk about other examples of racial segregation. You can ask students
to write a diary entry from the perspective of an “untouchable.”
3.2: Heroes
Write the following definition on the board:
hero: a person who is greatly admired for their courage, achievements,
or honorable qualities.
It is often easy to forget that heroes are human. Discuss the following questions with
students:
1. Do you think even heroes have weaknesses and make mistakes? When people
talk about a hero, why do they sometimes not talk about these?
2. Some critics say that Gandhi was racist towards black people, that his views on
modern medicine were irrational and hypocritical, and that his role in winning
Indian independence has been greatly exaggerated. These criticisms were not
shown in the movie. Why is it important to show many sides of a hero, including
the criticisms?
3. People have also criticized Gandhi’s response to World War II and the Nazis.
Although the Nazis were committing genocide and killed 6 million Jews, Gandhi
opposed the war and suggested that the Jews should accept their death as
martyrs in order to win God’s love. Is nonviolence always the right answer? Are
there situations when violence is the best way?
Teacher’s Notes
Worksheet 1: Background Information
Historical Photos of Gandhi
Student’s Worksheet
India
India is a country in South Asia that shares borders with Bangladesh, Burma,
Nepal, Bhutan, China, and Pakistan. India has the second-largest population
of all countries in the world
(about 1.15 billion people), and it
is the world’s largest democracy.
India has a caste system, which is a hierarchy that defines people’s rank in
society and sometimes restricts their opportunities and relationships.
Although discrimination based on someone’s caste is now against the law in
India, it remains a strong force today, especially in rural areas. The
“untouchables,” or Dalits, are people at the bottom of India’s caste system.
In the 16th century, European countries began creating trading posts and
colonies in India. The British East India Company, an English company that
was originally set up to trade with India, began to steadily take control of
India beginning in the early 1700s. In 1857, the British East India Company
controlled most of India, but some of their actions led to a rebellion
(sometimes called the Indian Mutiny or the First War of Independence). The
rebellion was strong, but it failed in the end. To increase British control in the
region, the British government colonised all of India.
Student’s Worksheet
The British occupation lasted nearly a century. The major struggle for
independence, led by Mohandas Gandhi, lasted from 1916 until 1947. The
movement Gandhi led was characterized by non-violent civil disobedience,
and he campaigned for other goals in
addition to independence: women’s
rights, reducing poverty, improving
Hindu-Muslim relations, ending the idea
of “untouchability,” and increasing
economic self-sufficiency. Gandhi’s first
major campaign was the Non-
cooperation Movement in 1922. He then
led the Dandi Salt March to protest the
British tax on salt in 1930. In 1942, the
widespread campaign for England to
“Quit India” began, eventually leading to
independence in 1947. Although the
British put Gandhi in prison many times,
it only made his movement even more
popular with Indians. He became a
political and spiritual leader who is still
celebrated worldwide.
South Africa
South Africa is a country on the southern tip of Africa. South Africa is also
very ethnically diverse, and there are 11 official languages. There was strong
racial separation under Dutch and British colonial rule that required all black
and Indian people to carry passes everywhere they went. The pass laws did
not allow them to enter areas where white people lived, and they needed a
signed pass to travel to another district.
After the National Party was elected in 1948, they made a system of legal
racial separation called apartheid to enforce the racial segregation that already
existed. The apartheid laws aimed to separate blacks, whites, “coloured”
(mixed race), Indians and Asians. Areas for white people were off-limits for
other racial groups, mixed marriage was not allowed, and there was
discrimination in education and jobs. Apartheid was in place from 1948 until
1994, even though there was strong opposition both in South Africa and
around the world.
Student’s Worksheet
Useful Vocabulary:
caste system: a system of dividing segregation: the enforced separation of
Indian society into classes of social different racial groups in a country or
status that each person inherits from community.
his/her family. apartheid: a system of racial
commission: a group of people officially segregation or discrimination in South
responsible for a certain task. Africa.
civil rights: the rights of citizens to pass laws: laws in South Africa that
have political and social freedom and segregated the population and placed
equality. strict limits on the movements of non-
ashram: a place for religious living or white people. Non-white people in
creating a special community. South Africa were required to carry
Originated in India in the Hindu pass books that gave them permission
tradition. to travel outside their home towns.
These laws were one of the main
non-cooperation: refusing to obey a law features of apartheid.
or policy as a way to protest.
homespun cloth: cloth that is made on a
civil disobedience: refusing to obey loom at home.
certain laws to pay taxes and fines, as
a form of peaceful political protest. miner: a person who works in a mine
to find metal and minerals
strike: when workers refuse to work, in underground.
order to protest against rules made by
their employers. indigo: a tropical plant used to create a
dark blue dye.
general strike: a strike of workers in all
or most industries. rebate: a partial refund to someone
who has paid too much money for tax
boycott: refusing to buy something as a or rent.
form of protest. Also, refusing to obey
a policy or take part in an event as a sedition: speech or action that
form of protest. encourages people to rebel against the
rulers of a country or place.
untouchables: people outside the caste
system, with very low social status. viceroy: a ruler in a colony who
represents a colonial power.
partition: dividing a country into
separate parts.
Student’s Worksheet
Worksheet 2: While You Watch
2.1: Discrimination in South Africa 00.00 – 20.24
Exercise A: Complete the following sentences with words from the box.
Charlie Andrews British Mr. Walker pass laws South Africa coloured
Mr. Khan passes Smuts missionary Indians journalist
1. The man on the train tells Gandhi that there are “no ___________ attorneys
in ___________.”
2. Gandhi and ___________ decide to protest discrimination against
___________.
3. Gandhi encourages the crowd to burn their ___________.
4. A ___________ policeman beats Gandhi while he burns the passes.
5. General ___________ meets with ___________, an American ___________.
6. ___________ is a British ___________ who visits Gandhi.
7. When Gandhi arrives at his office, he is told that the ___________ will be
changed.
Exercise B: Read the quotations and discuss the questions in groups or as a class.
1. “Mr. Gandhi, you look at Mr. Khan and see a successful Muslim trader. The
South Africans see him simply as an Indian. And the vast majority of Indians —
mostly Hindu like yourself — were brought here to work the mines and harvest
the crops — and the Europeans don't want them doing anything else.”
a) Who said this?
b) How do you think Gandhi felt when he heard this?
c) Why is Gandhi surprised by the discrimination against Indians?
2. “I rather like the idea of an Indian barrister in South Africa. I'm sure our
community could keep you in work for some time, Mr. Gandhi — even if you
caused a good deal of trouble… Especially if you caused a good deal of trouble.”
a) Who said this?
b) What is a “barrister”?
c) What kind of trouble does he want Gandhi to cause?
Student’s Worksheet
2.2: Protests for Indian Civil Rights 20.25 – 41.19
Exercise C: Read the quotations and answer the questions in groups or as a class.
1. “Because they may torture my body, may break my bones, even kill me... They will
then have my dead body — not my obedience.”
a) Who said this?
b) What does this mean?
2. “You are human – only human.”
a) Who said this?
b) Why did Gandhi get so angry in this scene?
Student’s Worksheet
2.3: Understand the Poor of India 41.20 – 1.02.04
Exercise A: Complete the following sentences with words from the box.
Exercise B: Match the quotation with the person who said it.
Student’s Worksheet
2.4: Resistance Begins 1.02.05 – 1.31.03
Exercise A: Put the following events in order.
1. Gandhi tells Charlie Andrews that their partnership must end, because
Indians alone must accomplish the independence movement.
2. General Dyer is questioned at a commission of inquiry.
3. An old peasant man asks Gandhi for help because he and the other
farmers are starving and poor.
4. At Jinnah’s house, Gandhi proposes that they organize a national day of
prayer and fasting.
5. Gandhi and his associates gather enough evidence for the tenant farmers
to win their demands from the British landowners.
6. General Dyer and his troops kill over 1,000 Indians at a non-violent rally.
After the massacre, Gandhi and the Indian Congress are even more
determined to win independence through non-violence. Do you think non-
violence can work if the British respond with brutality and murder? How
would you feel if you were part of the non-violent Indian independence
movement?
Student’s Worksheet
2.5: Violent Non-cooperation 1.34.30 – 1.58.32
Exercise A: Complete the following sentences with words from the box.
Student’s Worksheet
2.6: The Salt March 1.58.33 – 2.18.59
Student’s Worksheet
2.7: A Time of Loss 2.19.00 – 2.34.09
Exercise A: Answer the following questions.
1. Why does Lord Irwin invite Gandhi to London?
a) To visit the King’s palace.
b) To discuss the possible independence of India.
c) To escape the violence in India.
d) To teach at a university.
2. At the train station, a British officer asks Gandhi about his speech. Gandhi replies
that he will speak about the value of goat’s milk in daily diet, and also about:
a) Indian miners.
b) Factory working conditions.
c) Farmer’s rights.
d) Being against World War II.
5. Why must Gandhi and Ba stay at the Aga Khan palace where they are in prison?
a) Because Ba has major heart problems and cannot leave.
b) Because Gandhi refuses to move.
c) Because the officer wants to guard them.
d) Because Ba refuses to move.
Exercise B: Match the quotation with the person who said it.
Student’s Worksheet
2.8: Hindu vs. Muslim 2.34.10 – 3.04.20 (end)
Exercise A: True or False? If false, write the correct sentence.
1. Viceroy Mountbatten says he will help bring India to independence.
2. Jinnah says that independent India is more important than freedom of
Muslims.
3. Gandhi refuses to meet with Jinnah.
4. Gandhi asks Jinnah to be the first prime minister.
5. Muslims stay in India and Hindus leave for Pakistan.
6. There is Muslim-Hindu fighting at the India-Pakistan border.
7. Muslim thugs lay down their weapons at Gandhi’s feet.
8. Gandhi plans to go to Pakistan.
2. When Gandhi, Nehru, and Patel are discussing the violence between
Muslims and Hindus, Gandhi leaves the room because he doesn’t want to
hear more.
a) How do you think Gandhi feels at that moment?
b) Do you think Gandhi has a duty to solve the problems?
c) How would you feel in Gandhi’s situation?
3. Gandhi is killed less than five months after India becomes independent.
a) Why do you think he was killed?
b) Do you think Gandhi was successful in the end?
Student’s Worksheet
Plot Summary
Gandhi begins in 1948, showing Mahatma Gandhi’s assassination and state
funeral in New Delhi, India.
The next scene goes back in time to 1893. Gandhi is a young Indian attorney
who is thrown off a train. The conductor tells him “coloured” people are not allowed
to travel first class. Gandhi is shocked to learn about the discrimination against
Indian immigrants, and he joins with an Indian businessman, Mr. Khan, to protest.
Gandhi and Khan organize a protest where they burn the passes that Indians are
required to carry everywhere. The police arrest Khan and beat Gandhi because he
continues to burn the passes one by one. Gandhi refuses to fight back with violence.
The incident is reported in British newspapers.
When Gandhi discovers that General
Smut has passed new laws that violate Indian
civil rights, Gandhi makes a speech to a
crowded audience calling for non-violent
resistance against the new laws. The entire
room rises and promises not to obey the new
laws.
Gandhi leads a strike of Indian
miners, and the British put him in prison
along with thousands of other protesters. In
order to re-open the mines, General Smut
makes an agreement with Gandhi that he will cancel the new laws and free the
protesters, but future Indian immigration will be stopped.
In 1915, Gandhi arrives in Bombay, India to a large welcoming ceremony.
Members of the Indian National Congress Party, including Nehru, Patel, and Jinnah
(who is also leader of the Muslim League), greet Gandhi. Gandhi spends a year
travelling India to understand India better. After seeing widespread poverty, Gandhi
tells the other members of Congress Party that he disapproves of their wealthy
lifestyles. He later makes a speech to say that politicians can only represent India and
challenge the British if they truly understand the lives of the many poor people in
India.
Living a simple life in his ashram, Gandhi becomes more aware of the
poverty caused by British rule. When Gandhi is arrested for encouraging non-violent
non-cooperation with British laws, riots break
out and he is granted bail. Gandhi and his
partners gather a lot of evidence against British
landholders, and the protesting farmers
eventually receive their demands.
In response to proposed laws that would
violate Indian civil rights, Gandhi organizes a
day of fast and prayer. This has the effect of a
mass general strike and brings India to a
complete halt. The British arrest Gandhi again.
They soon agree to release him because of riots, if he will make a speech calling for
non-violence.
General Dyer orders his
troops to open fire on a public, non-
violent meeting, and 1,516 Indian
men, women and children are
killed. With even stronger
determination for Indian
independence, the Congress Party
adopts Gandhi’s policy of non-
violent civil disobedience in 1920.
A British woman called Mirabehn comes to live with him and his wife Ba.
Gandhi calls for a huge crowd to burn their British-made clothing at a peaceful rally,
but the next rally takes a violent turn when the crowd kills a group of local
policemen. Gandhi decides to fast until the protesters will stop their violence, and he
successfully ends the rioting. He is then arrested once again for sedition and
sentenced to six years in prison.
In Porbandar State several years later, New York Times reporter Mr. Walker
arrives in India to follow Gandhi’s movement. Gandhi tells him of his new plan to
protest the British tax on salt manufacture. Gandhi is joined by thousands of people
as he makes a 240-mile march
to the sea, while Walker covers
the story for global media. The
march leads to widespread
manufacture of salt by Indians
without a British licence.
During a non-violent raid on
the Dharasana Salt Works,
many Indian men are badly
beaten by local police. Walker
reports the story to the global
media.
Lord Irwin invites Gandhi to attend an all-government conference in London
to discuss the possibility of Indian independence. The conference ends with no
agreement.
During World War II, Gandhi, his wife, and Nehru are arrested for speaking
out against the war. A photographer from Life magazine, Margaret Bourke-White,
visits Gandhi during his time in prison. His wife, Ba, suffers heart problems and
eventually dies. Gandhi becomes aware of high anti-Hindu feelings among Muslims,
who have been provoked by Jinnah to fear the possibility of a mostly Hindu country.
Once World War II is over, England sends Lord Mountbatten to serve as
India’s new viceroy, and he promises to guide the country to independence. Gandhi
asks Jinnah to become the country’s first prime minister to calm Muslim fears, but
Jinnah argues that an independent Pakistan should be partitioned or else there will
be civil war.
Gandhi agrees to the partition, despite his strong hopes for unity. There are
violent clashes as Muslim refugees head out of India and Indian refugees move from
Pakistan. Gandhi begins another fast in protest of the violence, and he nearly dies
when the fighting finally stops.
Less than a year after India gains independence, Gandhi is assassinated. He is
granted a State funeral, and his ashes are released into the Ganges River.