Gandhian Era: Champaran to Civil Disobedience & Round Table Conferences
Expert Answer & Key Takeaways
Covers Gandhi's early satyagrahas (Champaran, Kheda, Ahmedabad), Rowlatt Act, Jallianwala Bagh, Khilafat & Non-Cooperation (1920-22), Simon Commission, Nehru Report, Dandi March, Civil Disobedience (1930-34), and Round Table Conferences. UPSC CSE essential.
1. Gandhi's Return & Early Satyagrahas
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (1869–1948) returned to India from South Africa in January 1915 on the advice of Gopal Krishna Gokhale. In South Africa he had developed Satyagraha (truth-force/soul-force) as a political weapon.
Satyagraha Principles: Non-violence (Ahimsa) + Voluntary suffering + Civil disobedience of unjust laws.
A. Champaran Satyagraha (1917) — First Satyagraha in India:
- Champaran district, Bihar — against British planters' Tinkathia system (forced indigo cultivation on 3/20th of peasants' land at below-market prices).
- Gandhi arrived April 1917 despite British orders; conducted thorough investigation.
- Result: Bihar Agrarian Act (1917) — Tinkathia system abolished. Gandhi's first victory in India. Rajendra Prasad and J.B. Kripalani participated.
B. Kheda Satyagraha (1918):
- Kheda district, Gujarat — crop failure; peasants demanded suspension of land revenue.
- Non-payment campaign by peasants.
- Result: Government quietly exempted poor peasants from payment. Vallabhbhai Patel participated actively.
C. Ahmedabad Mill Strike (1918):
- Workers demanded 35% wage increase; owners offered 20%.
- Gandhi's first hunger strike (fast-unto-death) in India — owners relented.
- Result: Arbitration; workers got 35% wage increase.
2. Rowlatt Act, Jallianwala Bagh & Khilafat
Rowlatt Act (March 1919):
- Formally: Anarchical and Revolutionary Crimes Act (1919) — based on Rowlatt Committee Report (1918).
- Allowed arrest and detention without trial for up to 2 years.
- Indians called it "No Vakil, No Appeal, No Daleel" (No Lawyer, No Appeal, No Argument).
- Gandhi called for hartal (general strike) on April 6, 1919 — massive response across India.
Jallianwala Bagh Massacre (April 13, 1919):
- Amritsar, Punjab — Vaisakhi festival day; peaceful crowd of ~20,000 in an enclosed garden.
- Brigadier-General Reginald Dyer ordered troops to open fire without warning.
- Official figures: 379 killed, 1,137 wounded. Actual estimates: ~1,000 killed.
- Firing for 10 minutes until ammunition exhausted. Martial Law declared in Punjab. Humiliating "crawling order" imposed.
- Rabindranath Tagore renounced his knighthood. Gandhi renounced his war medals.
- Hunter Committee (1919) investigated. Dyer censured but not criminally punished.
- Significance: Permanently alienated Gandhi from any trust in British justice — transformed him from a believer in British fairness to an irreconcilable opponent.
Khilafat Movement (1919–22):
- Led by Muhammad Ali and Shaukat Ali (Ali Brothers) to protect the Ottoman Caliph.
- Gandhi supported it wholeheartedly to forge Hindu-Muslim unity — linked it with Non-Cooperation.
- Collapsed after Kemal Atatürk abolished the Caliphate (1924) in Turkey.
3. Non-Cooperation Movement (1920–22)
Launch: Special Calcutta Session (September 1920) and Nagpur Session (December 1920) — INC formally adopted. Goal: Swaraj within one year.
Programme:
- Surrender titles and honours.
- Boycott civil services, police, army, legislatures.
- Boycott British courts — use panchayats.
- Boycott government schools/colleges — national institutions established (Kashi Vidyapeeth, Bihar Vidyapeeth, Jamia Millia Islamia founded).
- Boycott foreign cloth — promote khadi and charkha.
First truly mass-based movement:
- Lawyers (Motilal Nehru, Patel, C.R. Das, Rajendra Prasad) quit practice.
- Foreign cloth imports halved within two years.
- Women participated massively for the first time.
Chauri Chaura Incident (February 5, 1922):
- Chauri Chaura, Gorakhpur (UP) — a crowd attacked and burned a police station, killing 22 policemen.
- Gandhi immediately called off the entire movement — country not ready for non-violent discipline.
- Leaders furious — Motilal Nehru, C.R. Das felt it was premature.
- Gandhi arrested March 1922 — sentenced to 6 years, served 2.
Significance: Though it failed to achieve Swaraj in one year, it was the most significant mass movement India had seen. Congress transformed from an elite talking shop to a genuine mass organization.
4. Simon Commission, Nehru Report & Civil Disobedience
Simon Commission (1927–28):
- Indian Statutory Commission — seven members, all British, no Indian.
- Led by Sir John Simon. Boycotted by all parties: "Simon Go Back!"
- Lala Lajpat Rai led protest in Lahore (October 30, 1928) — lathi-charged; died of injuries November 17, 1928.
- Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev, and Rajguru shot Deputy Superintendent Saunders (December 17, 1928) in revenge. Hanged March 23, 1931.
Nehru Report (1928):
- All-Parties Conference; committee chaired by Motilal Nehru.
- Key demands: Dominion Status (not full independence); joint electorates (no separate electorates); fundamental rights.
- Jinnah objected → proposed "Fourteen Points" (March 1929) → broke with Congress.
Lahore Session (December 1929):
- Presided by Jawaharlal Nehru (age 40 — youngest INC president).
- Declared Purna Swaraj (Complete Independence) as goal.
- January 26, 1930 — first Independence Day (now Republic Day).
Dandi March / Salt March (March 12 – April 6, 1930):
- Gandhi walked 241 miles from Sabarmati Ashram to Dandi (Gujarat coast) with 79 followers.
- Broke the Salt Law on April 6, 1930 — launched Civil Disobedience Movement.
- C. Rajagopalachari led march in Tamil Nadu; Sarojini Naidu led raid on Dharasana Salt Works.
- Women participated massively — a major historical shift.
Gandhi-Irwin Pact (March 5, 1931):
- Congress suspended CDM; British released political prisoners (except those convicted of violence — Bhagat Singh NOT released).
- Gandhi to attend Second Round Table Conference (London, Sept–Dec 1931) — no result.
Round Table Conferences:
- 1st RTC (1930–31): Congress boycotted. No result.
- 2nd RTC (1931): Gandhi attended alone. Ambedkar demanded separate electorates for Depressed Classes.
- 3rd RTC (1932): Congress boycotted. Communal Award (August 1932) by Ramsay MacDonald — separate electorates for Depressed Classes.
- Gandhi fast-unto-death against Communal Award.
- Poona Pact (September 24, 1932) between Gandhi and Ambedkar: Reserved seats (more in number) instead of separate electorates.
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