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Boycotts

Boycotts. Homespun Movement. One of India’s most famous boycotts was Gandhi’s “homespun” movement. British plantations used Indian people and land to grow cotton but then made clothes in England They Brought the clothes back to sell to Indians at inflated prices

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Boycotts

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  1. Boycotts

  2. Homespun Movement • One of India’s most famous boycotts was Gandhi’s “homespun” movement. • British plantations used Indian people and land to grow cotton but then made clothes in England • They Brought the clothes back to sell to Indians at inflated prices • It was illegal for Indian companies to manufacture and sell clothing that was not made from British cloth! • Gandhi called for a boycott of all British made cloth!

  3. Boycotts • Gandhi urged Indians to stop buying British products • Making homespun cloth became the symbol of his movement

  4. 1920 Gandhi became President of the All-India Home Rule League (AIHRL), which worked towards independence from the British Empire. Soon the AIHRL begins to boycott British-made cloth, spinning their own cloth instead.

  5. Gandhi started a boycott of machine made European clothing, as it caused large scale unemployment in India. He started making hand-made cloth called Khadi that was inexpensive and suitable for poor Indians. Most importantly, it showed Indians how to be self-reliant.  Gandhi worked on his spinning wheel till his last days.

  6. The British would have cotton grown in India, then have it picked by Indians, put on ships, shipped to England, where it would be spun into thread, woven into cloth, shipped back to India and sold to the Indian people for a higher price. In fact, Britain had laws that forced the Indians to buy only this cloth. Gandhi thought “Why should we have to buy back our own cotton cloth? Let’s spin it ourselves!” So he learned how to spin and weave cotton into cloth. He and his followers taught this old fashioned way of spinning and weaving to thousands of others.

  7. This made big news all over the world. People around the world soon began to think that this wasn’t fair either. Even the workers in the cloth factories back in England thought this was not fair. These were the people whose jobs were being lost because of Gandhi and his supporters making their own cloth. Finally the laws about the cloth were changed and Indians were permitted by the British to make their own cloth.

  8. Soon the British weren’t making money off the Indians buying their cloth anymore. The English said they had to buy the English cloth. But Gandhi and his followers refused. Gandhi and hundreds of others were thrown in jail. He would be let out of jail but he would keep spinning and weaving and keep breaking the law and get thrown in jail again and again.

  9. Salt March

  10. Salt Acts 1930 • These laws required that Indians buy salt only from the British government (without refrigeration, salt was crucial to keeping food from spoiling) • Required Indians to pay a sales tax to British on salt as well

  11. Salt March 1930 • The Raj imposed strict controls on salt production and a stiff tax on its sale • Indians were arrested for making or selling salt • This tax on a basic necessity of life was really hard on the poor. • To Gandhi, the salt tax was a symbol of the tyranny of the British rule---like the tea tax on the American colonists • To oppose the British salt tax that was strangling the Indian economy, he organized the Salt March

  12. Salt March, 1930 MakingSalt

  13. The 1930 Salt March • According to law, the British had a monopoly on the manufacture and sale of salt. • Indians were arrested if they tried to make salt. • Gandhi directly defied British law and marched to the ocean to collect salt.

  14. Salt March • Began on March 12, 1930 • Tens of thousands of people cheered as Gandhi walked 390 km from his ashram to Dandi Beach • After morning prayers, Gandhi collected salt on the seashore and proclaimed: “With this, I am shaking the foundations of the British Empire.” • Hearing this, people all across India freely collected and sold salt • Ten of thousands of Indians were brutally arrested by the British police, including 18,000 Indian women • The march was closely covered by the international press making Gandhi famous in Europe and America

  15. Salt March 1930 • In protest Gandhi and his followers walked 240 miles to the coast to make their own salt • demonstrators marched to a British salt processing plant to protest • made salt by evaporating sea water

  16. Salt March 1930 British police attacked protestors with steel clubs Protestors refused to defend themselves: marching peacefully British arrested 60,000 peaceful protestors (including Gandhi) International newspapers covered the event: won worldwide support for Gandhi’s movement

  17. Salt March Monument

  18. Gandhi picks up a grain of salt in defiance of British law.

  19. On the beach at Dandi, the end of the Salt March

  20. Impact of the Salt March • Six weeks later, hundreds of marchers attempted to take over the Dharasana Salt Works outside of Bombay • The international press reported on the clash • “Police charged the marchers, swinging their clubs and belaboring the raiders on all sides. The volunteers made no resistance. As the police swung hastily with their sticks, the natives simply dropped in their tracks. Less than 100 yards away I could hear the dull impact of clubs against bodies. The watching crowds gasped, or sometimes cheered, as the volunteers crumpled before the police without even raising their arms to ward off the blows.”

  21. Impact of the Salt March • Professor Richard Johnson wrote, “It is widely believed that the Salt Campaign turned the tide in India. All the violence was committed by the British and their Indian soldiers. The legitimacy of the Raj was never reestablished for the majority of Indians and an ever increasing number of British subjects.” • The independence struggle had become a mass movement

  22. Quit India Campaign

  23. QuitIndiaCampaign • Quit India Movement - The Quit India Movement was a civil disobedience movement launched in India in August 1942 in response to Gandhi’s call for immediate independence. • The All India Congress Committee proclaimed a mass protest demanding what Gandhi called "an orderly British withdrawal" from India. • The call for determined, but passive resistance appears in his call to Do or Die, issued on 9th August at the Gowalia Tank Maidan in Mumbai in the year 1942. • Hubli - Hubli, also called Hubballi, is a major city in the state of Karnataka, India. • The name Hubballi literally means "flowering creeper" in Kannada. • The twin cities of Hubli and Dharwad, collectively referred to as "Hubli-Dharwad", is the second-largest in Karnataka after Bengaluru. • The city of Hubli, situated about 20 km south-east of Dharwad, is the commercial centre and business hub of the North Karnataka region.

  24. “Quit India” Campaign • At the end of WWII, Britain saw that it could still control India, but only by force. • In response, Gandhi began another satyagraha campaign. • He said there must be mass civil disobedience across India in order to push the British out • Gandhi announced the “Quit India” Campaign in August 1942 • He said: “ I want freedom immediately, this very night, before dawn, if it can be had. Congress must win freedom or be wiped out in the effort. We shall either free India or die in the attempt.”

  25. Quit India Campaign • Indianswereboilingwith rage against the British rule and the tyranny of the British and the QuitIndiamovementfuelledthose feelings verystrongly. • The entire city of Hubli wasfilledwith people participating in the QuitIndiamovement and placards, posters couldbeseeneverywheredepictingthis. • Thousands of people hadgathered in Durgadbail, the city square echoing the call of QuitIndia.

  26. Quit India Campaign • On 7 to 8 August 1942, the All India Congress Committee met in Bombay and ratified the 'Quit India' resolution. Gandhi called for 'Do or Die'. • The next day, on 9 August 1942, Gandhi, members of the Congress Working Committee and other Congress leaders were arrested by the British Government under the Defence of India Rules.

  27. Quit India Campaign • The Working Committee, the All India Congress Committee and the four Provincial Congress Committees were declared unlawful associations under the Criminal Law Amendment Act of 1908. • The assembly of public meetings were prohibited under rule 56 of the Defence of India Rules. • The arrest of Gandhi and the Congress leaders led to mass demonstrations  throughout India. Thousands were killed and injured in the wake of the 'Quit India' movement.

  28. Quit India Campaign • Strikes were called in many places. • The British swiftly suppressed many of these demonstrations by mass detentions; more than 100,000 people were imprisoned. • The 'Quit India' movement, more than anything, united the Indian people against British rule. Although most demonstrations had been suppressed by 1944, upon his release in 1944 Gandhi continued his resistance and went on a 21-day fast.

  29. Impact of the “Quit India” Campaign • The next day, Gandhi, Nehru, and other top leaders of the INC were placed in jail and most held until 1944 • The INC was declared illegal and all its funds were frozen. • The INC offices were raided and documents seized. • These actions caused uproar and there were demonstrations all over India.

  30. Impact of the “Quit India” Campaign • The demonstrations turned into riots and violence ensued. • Key targets were police offices, government buildings, railway lines, and communication posts • The disruptions slowed down the supplies reaching the British army fighting the Japanese in Burma • More than 1000 were killed and 3000 injured in the riots

  31. Impact of the “Quit India” Campaign • To restore order, the British had to divert 35,000 troops to support the police • Because the British did this, the campaign began to die off by November, and by the end of the year, it was clear that it had failed • By the end of the Second World War, Britain's place in the world had changed dramatically and the demand for independence could no longer be ignored.

  32. Reporter: “Mr. Gandhi, what do you think of Western civilization?” • Gandhi: “I think it would be a very good idea.”

  33. As Gandhi’s movement grew, British officials were forced to meet with him.

  34. Hindus versus Muslims: Partition

  35. Religious Conflict Partition OTHER ____________ = (Christians, Buddhists, etc.) ____________ = 255 Million ____________ = 95 Million HINDU MUSLIM 1940

  36. PROBLEM INDEPENDENT INDIA CANNOT BE RULED BY ALL HINDUS!!!

  37. 1946-1947 This time period was filled with violence between the Hindus and the Muslims. The result: 20000 people either dead or wounded.

  38. Mahatma Gandhi • “Gandhi believed so much in loving tolerance that he hoped it could keep a newly independent India free of religious battles”(Molloy, 112). • Unfortunately, fear and tension are quite common between religious faiths. • Muslim leaders feared oppression from the Hindu majority. • Worked to create the new separate Muslim state of Pakistan. • As a result of this, some Hindu militants wished for revenge.

  39. Hindu- Muslim Conflict • Hindus and Muslims had cooperated in the nationalist movement • G.B. encouraged their divisions to weaken their grip over the region • The Muslim League, led by Muhammad Ali Jinnah, asked for a separate Muslim state • Religious differences caused a clash between the Muslims and Hindus • Also, some Muslims feared for their rights to be dominated by a Hindu majority • Gandhi thought the groups could live together, if they respected each other and treated each other as family • Hindus distrusted the Muslims and looked at them as foreign conquerors • Economic and political differences also increased the tension

  40. August 15, 1947 Gandhi realized his long sought-after goal, which was the independence of India from Great Britain. It was a bittersweet victory for Gandhi because along with India's independence came the partitioning of the country into two separate states: Muslim-based Pakistan and Hindu-based India. He thoroughly opposed this partition. Gandhi did not take part in the celebration of India's independence.

  41. The Subcontinent Divided • 1946: Rioting breaks out between Hindus and Muslims • 1947: the British Parliament tried to prevent civil war by passing the Indian Independence Act • This act partitioned the Indian subcontinent into two independent nations • Pakistan- Muslim ruled by Governor General Jinnah • India – Hindu ruled by Prime Minister Nehru Jinnah Nehru

  42. HINDUS MUSLIMS HINDUS MUSLIMS

  43. One Slight Problem… ►As people move to their new homes, violence erupts

  44. Partition • The division led to increased violence • Both governments on each side stressed a policy of religious toleration, however distrust was deeply rooted • 500,000 people would die as a result • To escape death on both sides, roughly 15 million people migrated to their religious majority country • Gandhi refused to celebrate the independence and in prayer services he recited from the Koran, the Bible, and the Bhagavad-Gita • A Hindu extremist assassinated Gandhi because he believed he betrayed his own people

  45. Although independence from Britain was a joyous occasion, it was marred by violence. Widespread rioting between Hindus and Muslims detracted from what should have been a celebration for India. VIDEO CLIP The majority of Muslims moved to the newly formed Pakistan and most Hindus stayed in India, creating an ever-widening cultural gap. Gandhi began another fast until peace is made between India's Muslims and Hindus. Gandhi’s reaction to the independence and partition of India

  46. Gandhi’s Assassination

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