Lehs 303
Lehs 303
Lehs 303
Fig. 11.1
People gather on the banks of the Sabarmati River to hear Mahatma Gandhi speak before starting
out on the Salt March in 1930
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Source 1
Charkha
Mahatma Gandhi was profoundly critical of the modern age in which machines
enslaved humans and displaced labour. He saw the charkha as a symbol of a
human society that would not glorify machines and technology. The spinning
wheel, moreover, could provide the poor with supplementary income and
make them self-reliant.
What I object to, is the craze for machinery as
such. The craze is for what they call labour-
saving machinery. Men go on “saving labour”,
till thousands are without work and thrown
on the open streets to die of starvation. I want
to save time and labour, not for a fraction of
mankind, but for all; I want the concentration
of wealth, not in the hands of few, but in
the hands of all.
YOUNG INDIA, I3 NOVEMBER 1924
Khaddar does not seek to destroy all
machinery but it does regulate its use and
check its weedy growth. It uses machinery
for the service of the poorest in their own
cottages. The wheel is itself an exquisite
piece of machinery.
Fig. 11.5 YOUNG INDIA, 17 M ARCH 1927
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Why was salt the symbol of protest? This is what Mahatma Gandhi wrote:
The volume of information being gained daily shows how wickedly the salt tax has
been designed. In order to prevent the use of salt that has not paid the tax which is at
times even fourteen times its value, the Government destroys the salt it cannot sell
profitably. Thus it taxes the nation’s vital necessity; it prevents the public from
manufacturing it and destroys what nature manufactures without effort. No adjective
is strong enough for characterising this wicked dog-in-the-manger policy. From
various sources I hear tales of such wanton destruction of the nation’s property in all
parts of India. Maunds if not tons of salt are said to be destroyed on the Konkan coast.
The same tale comes from Dandi. Wherever there is likelihood of natural salt being
taken away by the people living in the neighbourhood of such areas for their personal
use, salt officers are posted for the sole purpose of carrying on destruction. Thus
valuable national property is destroyed at national expense and salt taken out of the
mouths of the people.
The salt monopoly is thus a fourfold curse. It deprives the people of a valuable easy
village industry, involves wanton destruction of property that nature produces in
abundance, the destruction itself means more national expenditure, and fourthly, to
crown this folly, an unheard-of tax of more than 1,000 per cent is exacted from a
starving people.
This tax has remained so long because of the apathy of the general public. Now that
it is sufficiently roused, the tax has to go. How soon it will be abolished depends upon
the strength the people.
THE COLLECTED WORKS OF MAHATMA GANDHI (CWMG), VOL . 49
Ü Why was salt destroyed by the colonial government? Why did Mahatma Gandhi
consider the salt tax more oppressive than other taxes?
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Source 4
CWMG, VOL. 49
Ü What does the
speech tell us about
how Gandhiji saw the As with Non-cooperation, apart from the officially
colonial state? sanctioned nationalist campaign, there were numerous
other streams of protest. Across large parts of India,
peasants breached the hated colonial forest laws that kept
them and their cattle out of the woods in which they had
once roamed freely. In some towns, factory workers went
on strike while lawyers boycotted British courts and
students refused to attend government-run educational
institutions. As in 1920-22, now too Gandhiji’s call had
encouraged Indians of all classes to make manifest their
own discontent with colonial rule. The rulers responded
by detaining the dissenters. In the wake of the Salt March,
nearly 60,000 Indians were arrested, among them, of
course, Gandhiji himself.
The progress of Gandhiji’s march to the seashore can
be traced from the secret reports filed by the police officials
deputed to monitor his movements. These reproduce the
speeches he gave at the villages en route, in which he
called upon local officials to renounce government
employment and join the freedom struggle. In one village,
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Wasna, Gandhiji told the upper castes that “if you are
out for Swaraj you must serve untouchables. You won’t
get Swaraj merely by the repeal of the salt taxes or
other taxes. For Swaraj you must make amends for the
wrongs which you did to the untouchables. For Swaraj,
Hindus, Muslims, Parsis and Sikhs will have to unite.
These are the steps towards Swaraj.” The police spies
reported that Gandhiji’s meetings were very well
attended, by villagers of all castes, and by women as
well as men. They observed that thousands of volunteers
were flocking to the nationalist cause. Among them
were many officials, who had resigned from their posts
with the colonial gover nment. Writing to the
government, the District Superintendent of Police
remarked, “Mr Gandhi appeared calm and collected.
He is gathering more strength as he proceeds.”
The progress of the Salt March can also be traced
from another source: the American newsmagazine,
Time. This, to begin with, scorned at Gandhiji’s looks,
writing with disdain of his “spindly frame” and his
Fig. 11.8
“spidery loins”. Thus in its first report on the march, After Mahatma Gandhi’s
Time was deeply sceptical of the Salt March reaching release from prison in January
its destination. It claimed that Gandhiji “sank to 1931, Congress leaders met at
the ground” at the end of the second day’s walking; Allahabad to plan the future
the magazine did not believe that “the emaciated course of action.
saint would be physically able to go much further”. You can see (from right to left)
Jawaharlal Nehru, Jamnalal
But within a week it had changed its mind. The Bajaj, Subhas Chandra Bose,
massive popular following that the march had Gandhiji, Mahadev Desai
garnered, wrote Time, had made the British rulers (in front), Sardar Vallabh
“desperately anxious”. Gandhiji himself they now Bhai Patel.
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Source 5
saluted as a “Saint” and “Statesman”, who was using
The problem with “Christian acts as a weapon against men with
separate electorates Christian beliefs”.
3.2 Dialogues
At the Round Table The Salt March was notable for at least three reasons.
Conference Mahatma Gandhi First, it was this event that first brought Mahatma
stated his arguments against Gandhi to world attention. The march was widely covered
separate electorates for by the European and American press. Second, it was
the Depressed Classes: the first nationalist activity in which women
Separate electorates participated in large numbers. The socialist activist
to the “Untouchables” Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay had persuaded Gandhiji not
will ensure them to restrict the protests to men alone. Kamaladevi was
bondage in perpetuity herself one of numerous women who courted arrest by
… Do you want the breaking the salt or liquor laws. Third, and perhaps
“Untouchables” to
most significant, it was the Salt March which forced
remain “Untouchables”
upon the British the realisation that their Raj would
for ever? Well, the
separate electorates not last forever, and that they would have to devolve
would perpetuate some power to the Indians.
the stigma. What is To that end, the British government convened a series
needed is destruction of “Round Table Conferences” in London. The first meeting
of “Untouchability”, was held in November 1930, but without the pre-eminent
and when you have political leader in India, thus rendering it an exercise in
done it, the bar- futility. Gandhiji was released from jail in January 1931
s i n i s t e r, w h i c h h a s and the following month had several long meetings with
been imposed by an
the Viceroy. These culminated in what was called
insolent “superior”
the “Gandhi-Irwin Pact’, by the terms of which civil
class upon an “inferior”
class will be destroyed. disobedience would be called off, all prisoners released,
When you have and salt manufacture allowed along the coast. The pact
destroyed the bar- was criticised by radical nationalists, for Gandhiji was
sinister to whom will unable to obtain from the Viceroy a commitment to
you give the separate political independence for Indians; he could obtain merely
electorates? an assurance of talks towards that possible end.
A second Round Table Conference was held in London
in the latter part of 1931. Here, Gandhiji represented the
Congress. However, his claims that his party represented
all of India came under challenge from three parties:
from the Muslim League, which claimed to stand for the
interests of the Muslim minority; from the Princes, who
claimed that the Congress had no stake in their territories;
and from the brilliant lawyer and thinker B.R. Ambedkar,
who argued that Gandhiji and the Congress did not really
represent the lowest castes.
The Conference in London was inconclusive, so
Gandhiji returned to India and resumed civil
disobedience. The new Viceroy, Lord Willingdon, was
deeply unsympathetic to the Indian leader. In a private
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Source 6
Ambedkar on separate
electorates
In response to Mahatma
Gandhi’s opposition to the
demand for separate electorates
for the Depressed Classes,
Ambedkar wrote:
Here is a class which is
undoubtedly not in a
position to sustain itself in
the struggle for existence.
The religion, to which they
are tied, instead of providing
them an honourable place,
brands them as lepers, not
fit for ordinary intercourse.
Fig. 11.9 Economically, it is a class
At the Second Round Table Conference, London, November 1931 entirely dependent upon
Mahatma Gandhi opposed the demand for separate
the high-caste Hindus for
electorates for “lower castes”. He believed that this would
earning its daily bread with
prevent their integration into mainstream society and
no independent way of living
permanently segregate them from other caste Hindus.
open to it. Nor are all ways
closed by reason of the social
letter to his sister, Willingdon wrote: “It’s a beautiful
prejudices of the Hindus but
world if it wasn’t for Gandhi ... At the bottom of
there is a definite attempt
every move he makes which he always says is all through our Hindu
inspired by God, one discovers the political Society to bolt every possible
manouevre. I see the American Press is saying what door so as not to allow the
a wonderful man he is ... But the fact is that we Depressed Classes any
live in the midst of very unpractical, mystical, and opportunity to rise in the
superstitious folk who look upon Gandhi as scale of life.
something holy, ...” In these circumstances, it
In 1935, however, a new Government of India Act would be granted by all fair-
promised some form of representative government. minded persons that as the
Two years later, in an election held on the basis only path for a community
of a restricted franchise, the Congress won a so handicapped to succeed
comprehensive victory. Now eight out of 11 provinces in the struggle for life against
organised tyranny, some
had a Congress “Prime Minister”, working under the
share of political power in
supervision of a British Governor. order that it may protect itself
In September 1939, two years after the Congress is a paramount necessity …
ministries assumed office, the Second World War
broke out. Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru F ROM DR B ABASAHEB AMBEDKAR,
had both been strongly critical of Hitler and the “W HAT C ONGRESS A N D G ANDHI
Nazis. Accordingly, they promised Congress support HAVE DONE TO THE UNTOUCHABLES”,
to the war effort if the British, in return, promised WRITINGS AND SPEECHES, VOL. 9, P. 312
to grant India independence once hostilities ended.
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302 THEMES IN INDIAN HISTORY – PART III
Fig. 11.10
Mahatma Gandhi and Rajendra
Prasad on their way to a meeting
with the Viceroy, Lord Linlithgow,
13 October 1939
In the meeting the nature of
India’s involvement in the War
was discussed. When negotiations
with the Viceroy broke down, the
Congress ministries resigned.
Ü Discuss...
Read Sources 5 and 6. Write an imaginary dialogue
between Ambedkar and Mahatma Gandhi on the
issue of separate electorates for the Depressed Classes.
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4. Quit India
After the failure of the Cripps Mission, Mahatma Satara, 1943
Gandhi decided to launch his third major movement From the late nineteenth
against British rule. This was the “Quit India” century, a non-Brahman
campaign, which began in August 1942. Although movement, which opposed the
Gandhiji was jailed at once, younger activists caste system and landlordism,
organised strikes and acts of sabotage all over the had developed in Maharashtra.
country. Particularly active in the underground This movement established
resistance were socialist members of the Congress, links with the national
such as Jayaprakash Narayan. In several districts, movement by the 1930s.
such as Satara in the west and Medinipur in the In 1943, some of the
east, “independent” governments were proclaimed. younger leaders in the Satara
The British responded with much force, yet it took district of Maharashtra set up
more than a year to suppress the rebellion. a parallel government ( prati
“Quit India” was genuinely a mass movement, sarkar), with volunteer corps
bringing into its ambit hundreds of thousands of (seba dals) and village
ordinary Indians. It especially energised the young units (tufan dals ). They ran
who, in very large numbers, left their colleges to go people’s courts and organised
to jail. However, while the Congress leaders constructive work. Dominated
by kunbi peasants and
languished in jail, Jinnah and his colleagues in the
supported by dalits, the Satara
Muslim League worked patiently at expanding their
prati sarkar functioned till
influence. It was in these years that the League began
the elections of 1946, despite
to make a mark in the Punjab and Sind, provinces
government repression and,
where it had previously had scarcely any presence. in the later stages, Congress
In June 1944, with the end of the war in sight, disapproval.
Gandhiji was released from prison. Later that year
Fig. 11.12
Women’s procession in
Bombay during the
Quit India Movement
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6. Knowing Gandhi
There are many different kinds of sources from which we can
reconstruct the political career of Gandhiji and the history of
the nationalist movement.
6.1 Public voice and private scripts
One important source is the writings and speeches of Mahatma
Gandhi and his contemporaries, including both his associates
and his political adversaries. Within these writings we need
to distinguish between those that were meant for the public
and those that were not. Speeches, for instance, allow us to
hear the public voice of an individual, while private letters
give us a glimpse of his or her private thoughts. In letters we
see people expressing their anger and pain, their dismay and
anxiety, their hopes and frustrations in ways in which they
may not express themselves in public statements. But we must
remember that this private-public distinction often breaks
down. Many letters are written to individuals, and are therefore
personal, but they are also meant for the public. The language
of the letters is often shaped by the awareness that they may
one day be published. Conversely, the fear that a letter may
get into print often prevents people from expressing their
opinion freely in personal letters. Mahatma Gandhi regularly
published in his journal, Harijan, letters that others wrote to
him. Nehru edited a collection of letters written to him during
the national movement and published A Bunch of Old Letters.
Source 7
In the 1920s, Jawaharlal Nehru was increasingly influenced by socialism, and he returned
from Europe in 1928 deeply impressed with the Soviet Union. As he began working
closely with the socialists (Jayaprakash Narayan, Narendra Dev, N.G. Ranga and others),
a rift developed between the socialists and the conservatives within the Congress. After
becoming the Congress President in 1936, Nehru spoke passionately against fascism,
and upheld the demands of workers and peasants.
Worried by Nehru’s socialist rhetoric, the conservatives, led by Rajendra Prasad and
Sardar Patel, threatened to resign from the Working Committee, and some prominent
industrialists in Bombay issued a statement attacking Nehru. Both Prasad and Nehru
turned to Mahatma Gandhi and met him at his ashram at Wardha. The latter acted as the
mediator, as he often did, restraining Nehru’s radicalism and persuading Prasad and
others to see the significance of Nehru’s leadership.
In A Bunch of Old Letters, 1958, Nehru reprinted many of the letters that were exchanged
at the time.
Read the extracts in the following pages.
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Source 7 (contd)
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MAHATMA GANDHI AND THE NATIONALIST MOVEMENT 309
Source 7 (contd)
Your letter is touching. You feel the most injured party. The fact is that your colleagues have
lacked your courage and frankness. The result has been disastrous. I have always pleaded
with them to speak to you freely and fearlessly. But having lacked the courage, whenever they
have spoken they have done it clumsily and you have felt irritated. I tell you they have dreaded
you, because of your irritability and impatience with them. They have chafed under your
rebukes and magisterial manner and above all your arrogation of what has appeared to them
your infallibility and superior knowledge. They feel you have treated them with scant courtesy
and never defended them from socialist ridicule and even misrepresentation.
I have looked at the whole affair as a tragi-comedy. I would therefore like you to look at
the whole thing in a lighter vein.
I suggested your name for the crown of thorns (Presidentship of the Congress). Keep it
on, though the head be bruised. Resume your humour at the committee meetings. That is your
most usual role, not that of care-worn, irritable man ready to burst on the slightest occasion.
How I wish you could telegraph me that on finishing my letter you felt as merry as you
were on that new year’s day in Lahore when you were reported to have danced around the
tricolour flag.
You must give your throat a chance.
Love
Bapu
Ü
(a) What do the letters tell us
about the way Congress ideals
developed over time?
(b) What do they reveal about the
role of Mahatma Gandhi within
the national movement?
(c) Do such letters give us any
special insight into the working of
the Congress, and into the nature
of the national movement?
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Source 8
Fortnightly Reports of the Home Department
(Confidential)
FOR THE FIRST HALF OF MARCH 1930 foretold freely but it seems quite possible
that nonfulfilment of the forecast is
The rapid political developments in Gujarat are upsetting plans.
being closely watched here. To what extent and
in what directions they will affect political Madras
condition in this province, it is difficult to surmise The opening of Gandhi’s civil disobedience
at present. The peasantry is for the moment campaign has completely overshadowed all
engaged in harvesting a good rabi; students are other issues. General opinion inclines to
pre-occupied with their impending examinations. regard his march as theatrical and his
programme as impracticable, but as he is
Central Provinces and Berar
held in such personal reverence by the Hindu
The arrest of Mr. Vallabh Bhai Patel caused little public generally, the possibility of arrest
excitement, except in Congress circles, but a which he seems deliberately to be courting
meeting organised by the Nagpur Nagar and its effect on the political situation are
Congress Committee to congratulate Gandhi on viewed with considerable misgiving.
the start of his march was attended by a crowd
of over 3000 people at Nagpur. The 12th of March was celebrated as the
day of inaugurating the civil disobedience
Bengal campaign. In Bombay the celebrations took
The outstanding event of the past fortnight has the form of saluting the national flag in
been the start of Gandhi’s campaign of civil the morning.
disobedience. Mr. J.M. Sengupta has formed an
All-Bengal Civil Disobedience Council, and the Bombay
Bengal Provincial Congress Committee has Press Kesari indulged in offensive language
formed an All Bengal Council of Disobedience. and in its usual attitude of blowing hot and
But beyond forming councils no active steps have cold wrote: “If the Government wants to
yet been taken in the matter of civil disobedience test the power of Satyagraha, both its action
in Bengal. and inaction will cause injury to it. If it
The reports from the districts show that the arrests Gandhi it will incur the discontent
meetings that have been held excite little or no of the nation; if it does not do that, the
interest and leave no profound impression on movement of civil disobedience will go on
the general population. It is noticeable, however, spreading. We therefore say that if the
that ladies are attending these meetings in Government punishes Mr. Gandhi the nation
increasing numbers. will have won a victory, and if it lets him
alone it will have won a still greater victory.”
Bihar and Orissa
On the other hand the moderate paper
There is still little to report regarding Congress Vividh Vritt pointed out the futility of the
activity. There is a good deal of talk about a movement and opined that it could not
campaign to withhold payment of the chaukidari achieve the end in view. It, however,
tax, but no area has yet been selected for reminded the government that repression
experiment. The arrest of Gandhi is being would defeat its purpose.
contd
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Source 8 (contd)
FOR THE SECOND HALF OF MARCH 1930 the salt laws on receipt of Mr. Gandhi’s orders are
reported from a number of districts.
Bengal
Interest has continued to centre round Gandhi’s FOR THE FIRST HALF OF APRIL 1930
march to the sea and the arrangements which
he is making to initiate a campaign of civil United Provinces
disobedience. The extremist papers report his Events have moved rapidly during the fortnight.
doings and speeches at great length and make a Apart from political meetings, processions and
great display of the various meetings that are the enrolment of volunteers, the Salt Act has
being held throughout Bengal and the resolutions been openly defied at Agra, Cawnpore, Benaras,
passed thereat. But there is little enthusiasm Allahabad, Lucknow, Meerut, Rae Bareli,
for the form of civil disobedience favoured by Farukhabad, Etawah, Ballia and Mainpuri.
Gandhi …
Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru was arrested at Cheoki railway
Generally people are waiting to see what station early on the morning of April 14 as he was
happens to Gandhi and the probability is that if proceeding to the Central Provinces to attend a
any action is taken against him, a spark will be meeting of Youth League. He was at once taken
set to much inflammable material in Bengal. But direct to Naini Central Jail, where he was tried
the prospect of any serious conflagration is at and sentenced to six months simple imprisonment.
present slight.
Bihar and Orissa
Central Provinces and Berar There have been, or are now materialising,
In Nagpur these meetings were well attended spectacular, but small-scale, attempts at illicit
and most of the schools and colleges were salt manufacture in a few places …
deserted on the 12th March to mark the
inauguration of Gandhi’s march. Central Provinces
The boycott of liquor shops and the In Jubbalpore Seth Govinddass has attempted
infringement of forest laws appear to be the to manufacture chemical salt at a cost many times
most probable line of attack. in excess of the market price of clean salt.
Punjab Madras
It seems not improbable that organised attempts Considerable opposition was shown at
will be made to break the Salt Law in the Vizagapatam to the Police when they attempted
Jhelum district; that the agitation relating to the to seize salt made by boiling sea water, but
non-payment of the water-tax in Multan will elsewhere resistance to the seizure of illicit salt
be revived; and that some movement in has been half hearted.
connection with the National Flag will be started
Bengal
probably at Gujranwala.
In the mufassal efforts have been made to
United Provinces manufacture illicit salt, the main operation
Political activity has undoubtedly intensified areas being the districts of 24-Parganas and
during the last fortnight. The Congress party feels Midnapore.
that it must do something spectacular to sustain Very little salt has actually been manufactured
public interest. Enrolment of volunteers, and most of it has been confiscated and the
propaganda in villages, preparations for breaking utensils in which it was manufactured destroyed.
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Ü Read the Fortnightly Reports carefully. Remember they are extracts from
confidential reports of the colonial Home Department. These reports did not always
accept what the police reported from different localities.
(1) How do you think the nature of the source affects what is being said in these
reports? Write a short note illustrating your argument with quotations from the
above text.
(2) Why do you think the Home Department was continuously reporting on what
people thought about the possibility of Mahatma Gandhi’s arrest? Reread what
Gandhiji said about the question of arrests in his speech on 5 April 1930 at Dandi.
(3) Why do you think Mahatma Gandhi was not arrested?
(4) Why do you think the Home Department continued to say that the march was not
evoking any response?
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Timeline
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