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Nationalism in India
The First World War, Khilafat And Non-Cooperation
Effects of First World War: The War led to a
huge increase in defence expenditure. This was financed by war loans and by increasing
taxes. Customs duties were raised and income tax was introduced to raise extra
revenue. Prices of items increased during the war years. The prices doubled
between 1913 and 1918. The common people were the worst sufferers because of
price rise. Forced recruitment of rural people in the army was another cause of
widespread anger among people.
Crop failure in many parts of India resulted
in acute shortage of food. Influenza epidemic further aggravated the problem.
According to 1921 census, about 12 to 13 million people died because of famines
and epidemic.
The Idea of Satyagraha
Mahatma Gandhi advocated a novel method
of mass agitation; called satyagraha. This method was based on the idea that if
someone is fighting for a true cause, there is no need to take recourse to
physical force to fight the oppressor. Gandhi ji believed that a satyagrahi
could win a battle through non-violence, i.e. without being aggressive or
revengeful.
Some early satyagraha movements organized by Gandhi:
a. Peasants’
movement in Champaran in 1916.
b. Peasants’
movement in Kheda in 1917.
c. Mill
workers’ movement in Ahmadabad in 1918.
The Rowlatt Act(1919):
The
Rowlatt Act was passed by the Imperial Legislative Council in 1919. The Indian
members did not support the Act, but it was passed; nevertheless. The Act gave
enormous powers to the government to repress political activities. It allowed
detention of political prisoners without trial for two years.
On
6th April, 1919; Gandhiji launched a nationwide satyagraha against the proposed
Rowlatt Act. The call of strike on 6th April got huge response. People came out
in support in various cities, shops were shut down and workers in railway
workshops went on strike. The British administration decided to clamp down on
the nationalists. Several local leaders were arrested. Mahatma Gandhi was
barred from entering Delhi.
Jallianwalla Bagh
On 10th April 1919; in Amritsar; the police fired upon a peaceful
procession. This provoked widespread attacks on government establishments.
Martial law was imposed in Amritsar and the command of the area was given to
General Dyer.
The infamous Jallianwalla Bagh massacre took place on 13th April; the day
on which Baisakhi is celebrated in Punjab. A crowd of villagers came to
participate in a fair in Jallianwalla Bagh. This was enclosed from all sides
with narrow entry points. General Dyer blocked the exit points and opened fire
on the crowd. Hundreds of people were killed in the incident. Public reaction
to the incident took a violent turn in many north Indian towns. The government
was quite brutal in its response. Things took highly violent turn. Mahatma
Gandhi called off the movement as did not want violence to continue.
Need of Wider Spread of Movement: The Rowlatt satyagraha was limited
mainly to the cities and towns. Mahatma Gandhi felt the need of a more
broad-based movement in India. He was convinced that it could be only possible
by bringing the Hindus and Muslims on a common platform.
Khilafat Movement
The Khilafat issue gave him the opportunity to bring the Hindus
and Muslims on a common platform. The Ottoman Turkey was badly defeated in the
First World War. There were rumours about a harsh peace treating likely to be
imposed on the Ottoman emperor; who was the spiritual head of the Islamic world
(the Khalifa). A Khilafat committed was formed in Bombay in March 1919 to
defend the Khalifa. This committee had leaders like the brothers Muhammad Ali
and Shaukat Ali. They also wanted Mahatma Gandhi to take up the cause to build
a united mass action. At the Calcutta session of the Congress in September
1920, the resolution was passed to launch a non-cooperation movement in support
of Khilafat and also for swaraj.
Non-Cooperation Movement
In
his famous book Hind Swaraj (1909) Mahatma Gandhi declared that British rule
was established in India with the cooperation of Indians, and had survived only
because of this cooperation. If Indians refused to cooperate, British rule in
India would collapse within a year, and swaraj would come. Gandhiji believed
that if Indians begin to refuse to cooperate, the British rulers will have no
other way than to leave India.
Some of the proposals of non-cooperation movement:
- Surrender the titles
which were awarded by the British government.
- Boycott civil
services, army, police, courts, legislative councils and schools.
- Boycott foreign
goods.
- Launch full civil
disobedience campaign, if the government persisted with repressive
measures.
Differing
Strands within the Movement: The Non-Cooperation-Khilafat Movement began in
January 1921. Various social groups participated in this movement, each with
its own specific aspiration. All of them responded to the call of Swaraj, but
the term meant different things to different people.
The Movement in the Towns:
- The movement started
with good participation from the middle-class in the cities.
- Thousands of students
left government-controlled schools and colleges, headmasters and teachers
resigned, and lawyers gave up their legal practices.
- The council elections
were boycotted in most provinces except Madras. In Madras, the Justice
Party, the party of the non-Brahmans, felt that entering the council was
one way of gaining some power – something that usually only Brahmans had
access to.
- Foreign goods were
boycotted, liquor shops picketed, and foreign cloth burnt in huge
bonfires. The import of foreign cloth halved between 1921 and 1922, its
value dropping from Rs 102 crore to Rs 57 crore. The boycott of foreign
cloths helped in increasing the demand of cloths made in India.
Reasons for Slowdown of Movement:
- Khadi was more
expensive than mill-made cloth. The poor people could not afford to buy
khadi.
- Boycott of British
institutions posed a problem of lack of alternative Indian institutions.
Such institutions were slow to come up. Students and teachers began coming
back schools. Similarly, lawyers resumed their work in the courts.
Rebellion
in the Countryside: From the cities, the Non-Cooperation Movement spread to the
countryside. It drew into its fold the struggles of peasants and tribals which
were developing in different parts of India in the years after the war.
Awadh
The peasants’ movement in Awadh was led
by Baba Ramchandra. He was a sanyasi who had earlier worked in Fiji as an indentured
labourer. The peasants were against the high rents and may other cess which
were demanded by talukdars and landlords. The peasants demanded reduction of
revenue, abolition of begar, and social boycott of oppressive landlords.
Jawaharlal Nehru began touring the
villages in June 1920. He tried to understand the problems of the peasants.
Oudh Kisan Sabha was set up by October. It was headed by Jawaharlal Nehru, Baba
Ramchandra and a few others. By associating itself with the peasants’ movement,
Congress was able to integrate the movement in Awadh with a wider
non-cooperation movement. At many places, people stopped paying rents by
invoking the name of the Mahatma.
Tribal Peasants
Tribal
peasants gave their own interpretation of Mahatma Gandhi and the idea of
swaraj. The tribals were prevented from entering the forests to graze cattle,
or to collect fruits and firewood. The new forest laws were a threat to their
livelihood. The government forced them to do begar on road construction.
Many
rebels from the tribal areas became non-violent and often carried guerilla
warfare against the British officials.
Swaraj in the Plantations
The plantation workers were not permitted to leave the tea
gardens without permission; as per the Indian Emigration Act of 1859. When the
news of Non-Cooperation Movement spread to the plantations, many workers began
to defy the authorities. They left plantations and headed towards their homes.
But they got stranded on the way because of a railway and steamer strike. They
were caught by the police and brutally beaten up.
Many analysts are of the opinion that the vision of the movement
was not properly defined by the Congress. Different people interpreted the term
‘swaraj’ in their own ways. For them, swaraj meant an end to all their problems.
However, people from various strata of society began to chant the name of
Gandhi and the slogan of Swatantra Bharat. In some way or the other, they were
trying to relate to the wider movement which was beyond their comprehension.
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