00:00:00
the Year 1857 holds a significant place
00:00:04
in Indian history it witnessed the first
00:00:08
revolt against the mighty British Empire
00:00:10
in India
00:00:12
what started as the Sepoy mutiny soon
00:00:15
spread out like wildfire mainly across
00:00:18
northern and central India
00:00:23
however this parodic revolt failed due
00:00:27
to the lack of coordination and planning
00:00:29
of the revolutionaries
00:00:32
nevertheless technically
00:00:35
revolt of 1857 remains the first ward of
00:00:39
Indian independence
00:00:44
this realization of national identity
00:00:47
was a lengthy process
00:00:51
also informed common people
00:00:55
and revolutionaries to bring about
00:00:57
change
00:00:59
let's study are the consciousness of one
00:01:02
nation emerged in India
00:01:08
in India the rise of nationalism was
00:01:13
intricately linked with the opposition
00:01:15
of colonialism similar to the way it
00:01:17
happened in Vietnam
00:01:20
people realized that they were
00:01:22
experiencing a common suffering under
00:01:25
the oppressive British colonial rule
00:01:28
this understanding brought the different
00:01:31
groups together in the anti-colonial
00:01:33
struggle
00:01:35
however each group developed its own
00:01:39
method of struggle against the British
00:01:41
rule
00:01:44
the event which proved instrumental in
00:01:47
the history of the Indian freedom
00:01:48
struggle was the first world war
00:01:52
India had been forced to take part in
00:01:55
the first world war in which Britain at
00:01:57
fought against Germany
00:02:03
to continue the war
00:02:06
the British had to increase their
00:02:08
defense expenditure and so Levite new
00:02:12
taxes on Indians to amass money
00:02:16
they introduced income tax and increase
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the custom duties
00:02:27
the rise in taxes had an adverse effect
00:02:30
on the common people who were forced to
00:02:32
live a life of extreme hardship
00:02:36
another factor which infuriated common
00:02:39
people was the forced recruitment of
00:02:41
rural people into the army to fight in
00:02:45
the First World War
00:02:48
that situation worsened during 1918 when
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India was hit by crop failure and
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shortage of food grains
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to make matters worse
00:03:03
the crop failure was further followed by
00:03:06
famines and outbreak of influenza
00:03:12
this harsh social and political
00:03:14
situation set the stage for the
00:03:18
beginning of the nationalist struggle in
00:03:19
India
00:03:22
the Indian freedom movement gained
00:03:24
momentum with the coming of Mohandas
00:03:27
Karamchand Gandhi later known as Mahatma
00:03:31
Gandhi
00:03:34
you merged on the national scene in
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January 1915
00:03:41
he had successfully tested novel ideas
00:03:44
of non-violence and anti-colonial
00:03:47
struggle in South Africa
00:03:51
hotma Gandhi brought the directionless
00:03:54
revolutionaries of India on a common
00:03:57
platform
00:04:01
social groups to rise above petty
00:04:03
differences of caste creed
00:04:07
religion
00:04:09
region and work single-mindedly towards
00:04:13
the common goal of freedom
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Albert Einstein won
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and about Mahatma Gandhi that
00:04:27
generations to come
00:04:29
it maybe will scarce believe that such
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one is this ever in flesh and blood
00:04:36
walked upon this earth
00:04:39
it has indeed unique in history how
00:04:42
Gandhian tools such as satyagraha and
00:04:46
non-violence shattered the confidence of
00:04:49
the mighty British Empire
00:04:53
after coming back from South Africa in
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January 1915 mahatma gandhi infused a
00:05:01
new life into the indian freedom
00:05:03
movement
00:05:05
he had successfully used satyagraha and
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non-violence for mass agitation to
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combat racism in South Africa
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what exactly does the word satyagraha
00:05:21
mean
00:05:23
it is made up of two Hindi words Satya
00:05:26
on truth
00:05:29
and agraja meaning appeal
00:05:34
so satyagraha literally means an appeal
00:05:39
for truth
00:05:40
satyagraha is passive resistance used
00:05:44
powerfully to appeal to the conscience
00:05:47
of the oppressor
00:05:50
interestingly
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[Music]
00:05:52
Angra ha lies in the song force or moral
00:05:57
paw and not in the application of brute
00:06:00
force
00:06:02
Mahatma Gandhi had rightly stated it is
00:06:06
certain that India cannot rival Britain
00:06:08
or Europe in force of arms
00:06:12
the British worship the war God and
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think can all of them become as they're
00:06:18
becoming bearers of arms
00:06:22
hundreds of millions in India can never
00:06:24
carry arms they have made the religion
00:06:28
of non-violence their own
00:06:31
Mahatma Gandhi successfully organized
00:06:35
satyagraha movements in different parts
00:06:38
of India
00:06:41
19:16 he visited the poor peasants of
00:06:45
Champaran district in Bihar
00:06:54
the British used to force the peasants
00:06:58
of Champaran
00:06:59
cultivate a cash crop called indigo
00:07:02
which was a popular dye used by textile
00:07:06
industries
00:07:08
the sale of indigo earned the British
00:07:11
huge profits in the international market
00:07:16
not from the oppression meted out to
00:07:17
them and mingle wages peasants could not
00:07:22
use the land used for indigo cultivation
00:07:25
for any other food crop
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this led to a shortage of food grains
00:07:33
in 1917 Mahatma Gandhi visited the Kedar
00:07:38
district in Gujarat
00:07:40
these villagers were also stricken with
00:07:43
poverty and social evils
00:07:48
had seen a terrible famine and people
00:07:51
were demanding waving of taxes
00:07:55
the British government however made
00:07:57
matters worse by increasing the taxes
00:08:03
Mahatma Gandhi along with Sardar
00:08:06
Vallabhbhai Patel garnered mass support
00:08:09
and organized a satyagraha against the
00:08:13
tax burden
00:08:16
another satyagraha movement was
00:08:19
organized by Mahatma Gandhi in a mother
00:08:22
bod in 1918 to support the demands of
00:08:26
the cotton mill workers
00:08:30
the dispute had developed after the mill
00:08:33
owners withdrew the special allowance
00:08:36
given to the workers for working during
00:08:38
the plague epidemic
00:08:41
supported by Mahatma Gandhi the workers
00:08:45
demanded a 35% increase in salary
00:08:49
- its refused by the mill owners
00:08:53
Mahatma Gandhi then organized satyagraha
00:08:57
protests and strikes with the laborers
00:09:01
after days of protests mill owners
00:09:04
relented and granted a 20% increase in
00:09:09
salaries along with other medical and
00:09:12
educational benefits
00:09:15
successful implementation of satyagraha
00:09:19
motivated the Indians and also paved the
00:09:22
way for the other nationalist movements
00:09:24
in future the success of satyagraha
00:09:28
movements in Champaran
00:09:30
kada and Emma the bond gave a boost to
00:09:33
the morale of the oppressed Indians
00:09:36
threatened by the growth of satyagraha
00:09:38
the British decided to exert more
00:09:41
control over public activities as a
00:09:45
result they proposed the Rowlett act in
00:09:49
1919 named after its chairman Sir Sidney
00:09:54
Rowlett
00:09:55
the Rowlett act was aimed to curb the
00:09:58
political activities in the country it
00:10:01
equipped the courts with the power to
00:10:03
detain political prisoners without trial
00:10:06
for two years Mahatma Gandhi opposed the
00:10:10
Rowlett Act by starting a peaceful
00:10:13
satyagraha
00:10:15
he suggested a civil disobedience
00:10:18
beginning with the heart doll on 16
00:10:21
floor 1919
00:10:24
it was followed by rallies
00:10:27
strikes by railway workers and closing
00:10:30
down of shops
00:10:32
sum it up the day-to-day work across the
00:10:34
country was brought to a grinding halt
00:10:38
the British were threatened that this
00:10:41
mass movement could break all lines of
00:10:43
communications in the country and so
00:10:46
they decided to suppress the
00:10:48
Nationalists
00:10:50
a result several local leaders were
00:10:53
arrested and Mahatma Gandhi was
00:10:56
prohibited from entering Delhi
00:10:59
in Amritsar
00:11:01
police opened fire on a peaceful
00:11:04
procession
00:11:06
angered by this brutal action people
00:11:10
attacked bangs
00:11:13
offices and railway stations
00:11:17
consequently martial law was imposed in
00:11:21
Amritsar under the command of general
00:11:24
Dyer
00:11:26
the event that took place on 13th April
00:11:29
1919 is always remembered for the most
00:11:33
heinous aggression of the British
00:11:36
unaware of the martial law several
00:11:39
villagers had gathered at the
00:11:42
Jallianwala Bagh in Amritsar to attend a
00:11:45
cattle fair on the occasion of Pi sake
00:11:49
to crush the multitudes of people and
00:11:52
create terror
00:11:55
dier came to the ground with 50 armed
00:11:58
soldiers
00:12:01
he blocked all the entry points to the
00:12:03
ground and without any prior warning
00:12:07
opened fire on the hapless crowd
00:12:11
the firing stopped only when the
00:12:14
ammunition ended leaving hundreds of
00:12:17
people including women and children dead
00:12:20
and wounded
00:12:24
the jellien one about massacre triggered
00:12:27
many protests strikes
00:12:30
clashes with policemen and attacks on
00:12:33
government buildings
00:12:35
across North India
00:12:38
the British government dealt with these
00:12:40
protests with an iron hand
00:12:44
they humiliated the Satyagraha s-- by
00:12:47
ordering them to rub their noses on the
00:12:49
ground and forcing them to salute the
00:12:52
British officials finally bombing of
00:12:55
villages late Mahatma Gandhi were drawn
00:12:58
to satyagraha against the Rowlett act
00:13:01
the satyagraha against the Rowlett act
00:13:05
was successful but it did not reach
00:13:07
masses in the rural areas
00:13:11
Mahatma Gandhi wanted a mass movement
00:13:14
that would involve people from all
00:13:16
religious communities across the country
00:13:21
paved the way for the non-cooperation
00:13:24
movement which was conceptualized by
00:13:27
Gandhiji to bring all Indians together
00:13:30
to work for a single national movement
00:13:33
the success of satyagraha movements in
00:13:36
Champaran
00:13:37
kada and Emma the bond gave a boost to
00:13:40
the morale of the oppressed Indians
00:13:43
threatened by the growth of satyagraha
00:13:45
the British decided to exert more
00:13:48
control over public activities as a
00:13:52
result they proposed the Rowlett Act in
00:13:56
1919 named after its chairman Sir Sidney
00:14:01
Robert
00:14:03
the Rowlett act was aimed to curb the
00:14:05
political activities in the country it
00:14:08
equipped the courts with the power to
00:14:10
detain political prisoners without trial
00:14:13
for two years Mahatma Gandhi opposed the
00:14:17
Rowlett Act by starting a peaceful
00:14:20
satyagraha
00:14:22
he suggested a civil disobedience
00:14:25
beginning with the heart all on 6th in
00:14:28
floor 1919
00:14:31
followed by rallies
00:14:34
strikes by railway workers and closing
00:14:37
down of shops to sum it up the
00:14:40
day-to-day work across the country was
00:14:43
brought to a grinding halt
00:14:46
the British were threatened that this
00:14:48
mass movement could break all lines of
00:14:50
communications in the country and so
00:14:53
they decided to suppress the
00:14:55
nationalists
00:14:57
a result several local leaders were
00:15:00
arrested and Mahatma Gandhi was
00:15:03
prohibited from entering Delhi
00:15:06
in Amritsar
00:15:08
police opened fire on a peaceful
00:15:11
procession
00:15:13
angered by this brutal action people
00:15:17
attacked bangs
00:15:20
offices and railway stations
00:15:24
sequentially martial law was imposed in
00:15:28
Amritsar under the command of general
00:15:31
Dyer
00:15:33
the event that took place on 13th April
00:15:36
1919 is always remembered for the most
00:15:39
any aggression of the British
00:15:43
unaware of the martial law several
00:15:47
villagers had gathered at the
00:15:49
Jallianwala Bagh in Amritsar to attend a
00:15:52
cattle fair on the occasion of Pi sake
00:15:57
to crush the multitudes of people and
00:15:59
create terror
00:16:02
dier came to the ground with 50 armed
00:16:05
soldiers
00:16:08
he blocked all the entry points to the
00:16:10
ground and without any prior warning
00:16:15
and fire on the hapless crowd
00:16:18
the firing stopped only when the
00:16:21
ammunition ended leaving hundreds of
00:16:24
people including women and children dead
00:16:28
and wounded
00:16:31
the jellien wanna bark massacre
00:16:33
triggered many protests strikes
00:16:37
clashes with policemen and attacks on
00:16:40
government buildings
00:16:42
across North India
00:16:45
the British government dealt with these
00:16:47
protests with an iron hand
00:16:51
they humiliated the Satyagraha s-- by
00:16:54
ordering them to rub their noses on the
00:16:56
ground and forcing them to salute the
00:16:59
British officials finally bombing of
00:17:02
villages made Mahatma Gandhi were drawn
00:17:05
to satyagraha against the Rowlett act
00:17:08
the satyagraha against the wrong lat act
00:17:12
was successful but it did not reach
00:17:14
masses in the rural areas
00:17:18
Mahatma Gandhi wanted a mass movement
00:17:21
that would involve people from all
00:17:24
religious communities across the country
00:17:28
paved the way for the non-cooperation
00:17:31
movement which was conceptualized by
00:17:34
Gandhiji to bring all Indians together
00:17:37
to work for a single national movement
00:17:39
the non-cooperation khalifa --the
00:17:42
movement began in full swing in 1921
00:17:46
amidst a lot of action and to mart many
00:17:50
diverse regional groups joined this
00:17:53
movement to meet their specific
00:17:54
objectives
00:17:58
in the towns people responded all
00:18:01
heartedly to the call of Swaraj
00:18:04
the movement witnessed active
00:18:06
participation by people from all
00:18:08
sections of society
00:18:11
many students teachers and headmasters
00:18:15
of government-controlled colleges joined
00:18:18
the movement
00:18:20
lawyers also give up their legal
00:18:22
practice boycotted courts and joined in
00:18:28
during this time
00:18:30
most of the Indian provinces boycotted
00:18:33
the council elections except Madras
00:18:38
meanwhile people picketed the liquor
00:18:42
shops and boycotted foreign goods and
00:18:44
cloth at many places foreign clothes
00:18:48
were burnt in huge bonfires
00:18:52
foreign cloth import haft between 1921
00:18:56
and 1922
00:18:59
and dropped from 102 crore rupees to 57
00:19:04
crore rupees
00:19:05
the use of domestic goods aswath a she
00:19:07
was encouraged by Mahatma Gandhi
00:19:12
some Indian traders also rejected
00:19:15
foreign goods and foreign trade
00:19:19
gradually the demand for Indian plot
00:19:21
increased and the vanishing textile
00:19:24
industry of India got a new lease of
00:19:26
life
00:19:29
although the non-cooperation movement
00:19:31
had begun with an active response from
00:19:34
the people it slowed down after a while
00:19:38
let's understand why
00:19:41
the replacement for foreign plot
00:19:43
Viscardi which was quite expensive and
00:19:46
beyond the reach of the common masses
00:19:50
owing to the lack of alternative
00:19:53
began to buy the milk plot again
00:19:57
similarly no Indian alternatives for the
00:20:01
British institutions had been set up so
00:20:03
far there for the students and teachers
00:20:07
came back to their respective schools
00:20:09
and colleges and the lawyers rejoined
00:20:12
the courts the non-cooperation movement
00:20:16
also spread to the rural areas and
00:20:19
coincided with the protests of peasants
00:20:22
and tribals
00:20:25
in a word Baba Rajendra
00:20:29
an aesthetic and a former indentured
00:20:32
Libra in Fiji led the peasant movement
00:20:37
this movement was against Talib gars and
00:20:40
landlords whom had pressed peasants by
00:20:44
demanding high rents and several taxes
00:20:48
they forced the peasants to do a guard
00:20:50
or labour without any payment
00:20:54
the peasant movement demanded revenue
00:20:57
reduction abolition of Baker and social
00:21:01
boycott of oppressive landlords
00:21:05
some village panchayats started naidu be
00:21:09
buns and stopped basic services of the
00:21:12
washer men and barbers to the landlords
00:21:17
in October 1920
00:21:21
Kisan Sabha was set up handed by
00:21:24
Jawaharlal Nehru Baba Chandra to address
00:21:28
the grievances of the peasants
00:21:34
for a bigger impact the Congress decided
00:21:37
to
00:21:38
integrate the peasant movement of our
00:21:40
word with the non-cooperation movement
00:21:44
however the peasant movement did not
00:21:47
grow as expected
00:21:49
developed a violent streak as the
00:21:52
peasants attacked houses of the
00:21:54
landlords and looted markets some of
00:21:57
them misused Mahatma Gandhi's name and
00:22:00
claimed that he had asked to not pay
00:22:02
taxes and divided the land amongst the
00:22:05
poor similarly
00:22:09
boom hills of Andhra Pradesh
00:22:12
tribal peasants misinterpreted the
00:22:15
meaning of Swaraj
00:22:17
the tribals had suffered a lot of
00:22:19
oppression at the hands of the British
00:22:22
as a result they staged a rebellion
00:22:25
under the leadership of a man called a
00:22:27
Lodi Sitaram Raju
00:22:33
he was inspired by Mahatma Gandhi and a
00:22:36
non-cooperation movement
00:22:40
however some of his thoughts were vastly
00:22:44
different from the Gandhian ideals of
00:22:46
non-violence
00:22:48
he believed that freedom could be
00:22:51
acquired by force and not through long
00:22:53
violence
00:22:55
to achieve Swaraj the rebels of good
00:22:59
them hills attacked British officials
00:23:01
and carried on guerrilla warfare
00:23:05
in 1924 larger was executed by the
00:23:09
British
00:23:11
acquired the position of a hero in the
00:23:13
tribal folk law
00:23:18
undoubtedly
00:23:21
raishin movement was unique as
00:23:24
two groups ascribed their own meaning to
00:23:26
the movement and Swaraj
00:23:31
the non-cooperation movement was
00:23:33
conceptualized as a nonviolent
00:23:37
resistance of the British rule
00:23:40
however as the movement spread across
00:23:43
the country
00:23:46
developed a violent streak
00:23:49
the peasants in Ovid and the tribals in
00:23:51
Andhra Pradesh had interpreted the
00:23:54
concept of Swaraj in their own way
00:23:58
let's now find out how the plantation
00:24:01
workers in Assam understood the meaning
00:24:03
of Swaraj
00:24:08
these workers work
00:24:10
under very strict rules and regulations
00:24:14
inland immigration act of 1859 forbade
00:24:18
the plantation workers to leave the tea
00:24:21
gardens without permission
00:24:24
in fact they were seldom allowed to go
00:24:28
back to their homes
00:24:30
naturally for the homesick workers the
00:24:34
non-cooperation movement implied the
00:24:38
time to break the rigid confinement of
00:24:40
the plantations
00:24:43
inspired by the non-cooperation movement
00:24:46
thousands of workers disobeyed the
00:24:49
British authorities and left the
00:24:51
plantations to go back to their homes
00:24:56
they were also under the impression that
00:24:57
in Gandhi Raj all of them would be
00:25:00
granted land in their respective
00:25:02
villages
00:25:05
however the journey of the workers was
00:25:08
disrupted due to railway and streamer
00:25:12
strikes
00:25:14
eventually
00:25:16
the police got them and beat them
00:25:18
mercilessly
00:25:20
the Congress had never expected the
00:25:23
non-cooperation movement to develop in
00:25:25
this violent manner
00:25:28
the plantation workers had ascribed
00:25:30
their own meaning to Swaraj different
00:25:33
from that of the Congress
00:25:36
they felt that Swaraj marked an era
00:25:38
where their sufferings would end
00:25:42
interestingly while supporting the
00:25:45
non-cooperation movement and invoking
00:25:47
the ideas of Gandhiji the plantation
00:25:50
workers unknowingly became a part of the
00:25:53
larger freedom struggle you're looking
00:25:56
at guru-murthy or eleven statues
00:26:01
magnificent sculptures situated in Delhi
00:26:05
that commemorate the famous Dandi March
00:26:08
by Mahatma Gandhi
00:26:14
let's learn about the events that
00:26:16
happened before the March
00:26:19
in 1922 an act of violence that
00:26:23
completely shocked Mahatma Gandhi and
00:26:25
other Congress leaders was the chowder
00:26:29
chowder incident
00:26:33
in charge ara a penis demonstration to
00:26:37
pick it a liquor shop turned violent
00:26:42
the crowd policeman opened fire
00:26:46
in this fighting
00:26:48
a few satyagraha z' got killed while
00:26:51
some of them got injured
00:26:54
the agitated crowd set the police
00:26:57
station on fire where the policeman had
00:26:59
locked themselves
00:27:03
incident several policemen were burnt
00:27:05
alive
00:27:07
shocked by such widespread violence in
00:27:10
February 1922 Mahatma Gandhi decided to
00:27:16
take back the non-cooperation movement
00:27:21
at this time
00:27:23
a lot was going on within the Congress
00:27:25
as well
00:27:28
tired of math struggle
00:27:30
some congress leaders wanted to
00:27:32
participate in the election to the
00:27:34
provincial councils
00:27:37
by joining these councils Congress
00:27:40
leaders hope to have deci in the British
00:27:43
policies
00:27:45
opposed the wrong policies and suggests
00:27:48
reforms
00:27:50
to argue for Indian representation in
00:27:53
the council's moti Lal Nehru and
00:27:57
Chittaranjan das formed the Swaraj party
00:28:01
within the Congress in 1922
00:28:06
however young leaders such as Java
00:28:10
Harlan aru and Subash Chandra Bose
00:28:14
opposed the formation of this party and
00:28:17
stressed on full independence based on
00:28:20
socialist ideas they demanded a radical
00:28:24
mass movement
00:28:27
in the 1920s
00:28:29
two factors influenced the growth of the
00:28:32
national movement the worldwide economic
00:28:35
depression and the
00:28:38
formation of the Simon Commission under
00:28:41
Sir John Simon
00:28:43
with the economic depression by 1930
00:28:47
the prices had hit an all-time low this
00:28:51
impacted the exports of agricultural
00:28:53
Goods and peasants found it difficult to
00:28:56
sell their produce and gather money for
00:29:00
revenue
00:29:02
the Simon Commission was a statutory
00:29:04
Commission which aimed at looking into
00:29:08
the constitutional system of India and
00:29:10
suggests changes
00:29:12
it was an all-white Commission without
00:29:15
any Indian representation
00:29:18
in 1928 when Simon Commission came to
00:29:22
India all parties such as the Congress
00:29:26
and the Muslim leagues protested against
00:29:30
it
00:29:31
to pacify the leaders Lord Irwin the
00:29:36
Viceroy gave a vague offer of Dominion
00:29:39
status to India and also proposed a
00:29:42
roundtable conference
00:29:45
the Congress leaders were not happy with
00:29:47
these proposals
00:29:49
in the Lajo session of the Congress in
00:29:52
1929 jawaharlal nehru declared the
00:29:57
demand for Patna Suraj a full
00:30:00
independence
00:30:03
the call of Purna Swaraj did not create
00:30:05
much enthusiasm among people
00:30:09
therefore Mahatma Gandhi felt the need
00:30:13
to express the idea of freedom using
00:30:15
issues from everyday life
00:30:19
Mahatma Gandhi discovered that salt was
00:30:23
the common unifying factor
00:30:26
it was a common ingredient in the food
00:30:28
of both the rich and the poor Mahatma
00:30:33
Gandhi viewed the tax on salt and the
00:30:36
monopoly of the government on its
00:30:38
production as a downright oppressive
00:30:42
Salt Satyagraha in a way became the
00:30:45
symbol of national unity
00:30:49
on 31st of January 1930 he sent a letter
00:30:54
to Lord
00:30:55
Irvin stating eleven wide-ranging
00:30:58
demands of various classes of India
00:31:02
he also stated the launch of civil
00:31:05
disobedience in case the demands of
00:31:08
people were not met by the 11th of March
00:31:12
when Irvin refused to negotiate Mahatma
00:31:16
Gandhi launched assault march from
00:31:19
Sabarmati ashram to the coastal town of
00:31:23
dandy in Gujarat Dandi March served as a
00:31:28
good communication platform as Mahatma
00:31:31
Gandhi stopped at villages and told
00:31:34
people about his vision of Swaraj
00:31:38
he encouraged people to fight for Swaraj
00:31:41
and opposed the British in a non-violent
00:31:44
manner
00:31:47
Mahatma Gandhi and volunteers marched
00:31:50
for around 24 days and reached Dundee on
00:31:55
6th of April
00:31:58
Mahatma Gandhi broke the salt law and
00:32:01
Indians manufactured salt by boiling
00:32:04
seawater
00:32:06
this marked the beginning of the civil
00:32:09
disobedience movement we can see a lot
00:32:12
of differences between
00:32:14
non-cooperation and civil disobedience
00:32:16
movement
00:32:18
the non-cooperation movement aimed at
00:32:22
bringing the British government to a
00:32:23
standstill by refusing to cooperate with
00:32:27
them the civil disobedience movement was
00:32:31
more assertive and aimed at non
00:32:34
cooperation with the British as well as
00:32:37
an open violation of oppressive British
00:32:40
laws
00:32:42
under the leadership of Mahatma Gandhi
00:32:45
the civil disobedience movement spread
00:32:49
across the country like wildfire
00:32:52
he encouraged people to fight for Swaraj
00:32:55
and opposed to British rule in a
00:32:58
non-violent manner
00:33:02
got worried by the growing popularity of
00:33:04
the movement
00:33:06
and so they began arresting all
00:33:08
prominent Congress leaders
00:33:13
1930
00:33:15
Abdul Ghaffar Khan
00:33:18
a political and spiritual leader and
00:33:20
follower of Gandhiji was arrested
00:33:26
angry people took out demonstrations and
00:33:29
protests to oppose cover cons arrests
00:33:35
the Asian
00:33:36
the police opened fire in which many
00:33:39
people got killed
00:33:42
at some places soldiers had also staged
00:33:46
resistance against the British regime
00:33:51
for example
00:33:53
in 1930 the soldiers of the girl world
00:33:57
rifles had refused to open fire at an
00:34:00
unarmed crowd of peaceful satyagraha
00:34:03
'he's in Peshawar
00:34:07
in May 1930 when Mahatma Gandhi got
00:34:12
arrested several industrial workers in
00:34:16
Shona poor attacked the government
00:34:18
buildings and offices
00:34:23
frightened and shaken
00:34:26
the British government responded with
00:34:28
the policy of brutal repression and
00:34:30
arrested thousands of satyagraha and
00:34:34
even attacked children and women
00:34:39
on seeing the widespread violence
00:34:42
Mahatma Gandhi decided to call off the
00:34:45
civil disobedience movement in 1931
00:34:50
this decision disheartened the people
00:34:53
who were taking part in the movement
00:34:55
with a lot of zest
00:34:59
on the 5th of March 1931
00:35:03
Mahatma Gandhi entered into a pact with
00:35:06
Lord Irvin the Viceroy of India
00:35:11
this fact is known as the Gandhi Irvan
00:35:15
pact
00:35:17
as per the pact
00:35:20
he agreed to participate in the
00:35:22
roundtable conference to be held in
00:35:24
London
00:35:27
on the other hand the British government
00:35:29
agreed to free the prisoners
00:35:35
31
00:35:37
Mahatma Gandhi visited London but he
00:35:40
came back disheartened as the
00:35:42
negotiations did not reach any final
00:35:45
decision
00:35:48
on his arrival in India
00:35:51
he found that the repression of the
00:35:53
British government had taken a new turn
00:35:58
several Congress leaders such as Joe
00:36:01
Hudlin arrow and Abdul Ghaffar Khan had
00:36:05
been arrested
00:36:09
over the British had declared the
00:36:12
Congress an illegal party and clamped
00:36:15
down on all protests public meetings and
00:36:20
demonstrations
00:36:23
this made Mahatma Gandhi relaunch the
00:36:27
civil disobedience movement
00:36:30
time though not many people participated
00:36:33
in it
00:36:35
consequently
00:36:38
movement completely lost its momentum by
00:36:41
1934 several people from different
00:36:45
sections of society had participated in
00:36:47
the civil disobedience movement to meet
00:36:50
their specific objectives
00:36:54
each group interpreted the meaning of
00:36:56
Swaraj in their own way
00:37:00
the rich peasant communities of Kudarat
00:37:02
and yupi were badly affected by the
00:37:06
economic depression and the resultant
00:37:09
fall in agricultural prices
00:37:13
they demanded the British government to
00:37:15
wave off the revenue but the government
00:37:18
refused to do so
00:37:23
the fight for Swaraj was a fight against
00:37:26
revenues
00:37:28
they were very enthusiastic about the
00:37:30
civil disobedience movement
00:37:37
however when the movement was abruptly
00:37:41
called off by Mahatma Gandhi in 1931
00:37:45
without any revision of the revenue
00:37:48
rates they were very disappointed
00:37:50
as a result they did not participate in
00:37:56
the civil disobedience movement when it
00:37:58
was relaunched in 1932
00:38:02
the perceptions of the poor peasantry
00:38:05
about Swaraj were also very different
00:38:10
these peasants were generally tenants
00:38:13
who had taken land from the landlords on
00:38:15
rent they grappled with the problem of
00:38:19
paying rent during the time of
00:38:21
depression and wanted the Congress to
00:38:24
help them in rem eating their unpaid
00:38:27
rent the Congress on the other hand was
00:38:33
uncertain about supporting them in their
00:38:35
no rent campaign as it could spoil their
00:38:39
ties with the landlords and rich
00:38:41
peasants who were funding the party
00:38:43
expenses consequently the poor peasants
00:38:49
did not share a strong relationship with
00:38:51
the Congress the business class had a
00:38:55
different take on the civil disobedience
00:38:57
movement and Swaraj they had reaped huge
00:39:02
profits during the first world war and
00:39:04
now wanted to expand their business but
00:39:08
this stringent colonial laws were
00:39:11
obstructing their way in an effort to
00:39:14
get the business class together
00:39:17
Indian Industrial and Commercial
00:39:19
Congress was formed in 1920 and the
00:39:24
Federation of the Indian Chamber of
00:39:26
Commerce and industries in 1927
00:39:32
these organizations were headed by
00:39:36
prominent business personalities of that
00:39:38
time such as pull shoot them thus Tucker
00:39:42
Das and GD Birla who attacked the
00:39:46
colonial economic policies during the
00:39:50
first civil disobedience movement they
00:39:53
provided financial assistance to the
00:39:55
Congress and refused to buy or sell
00:39:58
foreign goods to the business class
00:40:03
Swaraj was an ideal situation favorable
00:40:08
for the growth of their business
00:40:11
however the failure of the second
00:40:15
roundtable conference hugely
00:40:17
disappointed the business class they
00:40:21
were also watered with the growth of the
00:40:23
socialist and militant ideas in the
00:40:27
young Congress members and feared that
00:40:29
such developments were not conducive for
00:40:32
their business
00:40:38
the young revolutionaries with the
00:40:40
radical socialist outlook believed that
00:40:44
non-violence was not the way to achieve
00:40:46
freedom
00:40:49
as a result the Hindustan socialist
00:40:53
Republican Army or HS RA was formed in
00:40:58
1928
00:41:01
Bhagat Singh
00:41:04
das and a joy Ghosh was some of its
00:41:07
prominent leaders
00:41:10
the industrial working class had not
00:41:13
responded to the civil disobedience in a
00:41:15
big way either
00:41:17
they adopted a few Gandhian ideas as
00:41:20
part of their own movement against low
00:41:23
wages and poor working conditions the
00:41:27
Congress however
00:41:28
[Music]
00:41:29
not want to include workers demands in
00:41:32
the movement as they thought it would a
00:41:35
lien ate the industrialists
00:41:38
another main highlight of the civil
00:41:40
disobedience movement was the mass
00:41:42
participation of women
00:41:46
they wholeheartedly supported the
00:41:48
protests
00:41:50
involved in picketing and boycotts and
00:41:53
also helped in manufacturing salt
00:41:59
these women came from both urban and
00:42:01
rural areas
00:42:06
women had begun serving the nation but
00:42:09
this had not brought a revolutionary
00:42:11
change in their social position
00:42:14
on the face of it Congress encouraged
00:42:18
women participation but even Mahatma
00:42:21
Gandhi gave more importance to the
00:42:24
traditional domestic role of women
00:42:27
due to this narrow mindset women did not
00:42:31
hold any position of authority within
00:42:33
the Congress and only acted as mere
00:42:37
symbols
00:42:39
although the civil disobedience movement
00:42:41
witnessed a huge participation it did
00:42:45
not hold the people for too long because
00:42:47
their problems were not addressed by the
00:42:50
movement before independence India had
00:42:53
many provinces with the rise of
00:42:56
nationalism people started believing in
00:42:59
the concept of United India or India as
00:43:03
a nation state people felt a collective
00:43:07
belonging because they had participated
00:43:10
together in freedom struggles such as
00:43:13
the revolt of 1857
00:43:17
civil disobedience movement and the
00:43:20
non-cooperation movement
00:43:23
moreover they had fought against the
00:43:25
common aggressor the British
00:43:28
besides this history and fiction
00:43:33
in folklore
00:43:35
song
00:43:36
popular pictures and symbols also helped
00:43:40
in solidifying unity and the spirit of
00:43:43
nationalism
00:43:46
have learned that in Europe abstract
00:43:49
concept of a nation was personified or
00:43:52
given a human form
00:43:55
just like Maryann in France and Germania
00:43:59
in Germany the Indian nation was
00:44:02
conceptualized visually as Bharat Mata
00:44:05
in the 20th century
00:44:09
the image of Bharat Mata was first
00:44:12
created by bankim chandra Chatrapathi i
00:44:15
he also wrote our national song
00:44:18
vandemataram which was in fact a hymn to
00:44:22
the motherland sung widely during the
00:44:24
Swadeshi movement in bengal
00:44:28
later abandoned Ranaut Tonkov
00:44:32
to the famous image of Bharat Mata
00:44:36
she was an aesthetic figure wearing
00:44:38
Safran colored clothes and carrying a
00:44:40
mother or chain of beats in one hand
00:44:43
which symbolizes her as divine and
00:44:46
spiritual
00:44:48
Oh role as a mother figure a nurturer is
00:44:51
evident
00:44:53
from the cloth
00:44:57
leaves
00:45:00
and scriptures carried by her
00:45:04
the portrayal of Bharat Mata also
00:45:07
underwent a lot of changes take a look
00:45:10
at another picture of Bharat Mata
00:45:12
painted by a benign throne art our God
00:45:15
in 1905
00:45:20
doesn't this portrayal remind you of
00:45:22
Germania just like Germania bharat mata
00:45:26
is holding a flag in her hand
00:45:29
while Germania carries a sword bharat
00:45:33
mata has a trishal on top of the flag
00:45:35
which signifies her readiness to fight
00:45:38
for her honor
00:45:40
Germania is wearing a breastplate with
00:45:43
eagles which is a symbol of the german
00:45:46
strand
00:45:47
similarly Bharat Mata is standing
00:45:50
besides an elephant and lion both are
00:45:54
symbols of power and authority another
00:45:58
process which contributed to the growth
00:46:00
of nationalism was the revival of the
00:46:03
Indian folklore
00:46:05
in the late 19th century the
00:46:08
Nationalists began gathering the
00:46:10
folktales sung by bards in different
00:46:13
parts of India
00:46:15
in Bengal rabindranath tagore led the
00:46:19
folk revival movement by collecting
00:46:22
folklore and songs and ballads in Bengal
00:46:26
while down south the TASIS has three
00:46:29
collected folktales and published series
00:46:33
of four volumes called
00:46:35
the folklore of southern India
00:46:39
nationalists wanted people to take pride
00:46:42
in Indian culture and understand how it
00:46:44
had been destroyed by the British
00:46:48
with the growth of nationalism more
00:46:50
symbols were developed to capture the
00:46:52
spirit of patriotism
00:46:54
one such symbol was the Indian flag the
00:46:58
tri-colored flag was first designed
00:47:00
during the Swadeshi movement in bengal
00:47:04
later on in 1921 Mahatma Gandhi
00:47:08
redesigned the Indian flag with the
00:47:11
spinning wheel or chakra at the center
00:47:14
this flag was often used by nationalists
00:47:17
during protests and marches
00:47:22
the growth of nationalism also happened
00:47:25
through the process of reinterpretation
00:47:27
of history
00:47:30
British considered India as a land of
00:47:32
backward people incapable of governance
00:47:36
in response to this mindset the Indians
00:47:40
began exploring glories from their past
00:47:42
and wrote about the ancient times when
00:47:45
India was much developed
00:47:49
however the glories of the past and the
00:47:52
symbols used by the Nationalists such as
00:47:55
Bharat Mata were all very Hindu in atria
00:48:00
consequently people of other religions
00:48:03
and communities felt alienated
00:48:07
although Indians got inspired to fight
00:48:09
for independence at the same time their
00:48:12
religious differences prepared ground
00:48:15
for the division of the country before
00:48:17
independence India had many provinces
00:48:21
with the rise of nationalism people
00:48:24
started believing in the concept of
00:48:26
united India or India as a nation state
00:48:31
people felt a collective belonging
00:48:34
because they had participated together
00:48:37
in freedom struggles such as the revolt
00:48:40
of 1857
00:48:43
civil disobedience movement and the
00:48:46
non-cooperation movement
00:48:49
moreover they had fought against the
00:48:51
common aggressor the British
00:48:54
besides this history and fiction
00:48:59
folklore
00:49:01
song
00:49:02
popular pictures and symbols also helped
00:49:06
in solidifying unity and the spirit of
00:49:09
nationalism
00:49:12
you have learned that in Europe abstract
00:49:15
concept of a nation was personified or
00:49:18
given a human form
00:49:21
just like Maryann in France and Germania
00:49:25
in Germany the Indian nation was
00:49:29
conceptualized visually as Bharat Mata
00:49:31
in the 20th century
00:49:35
the image of Bharat Mata was first
00:49:38
created by bankim chandra Chattopadhyay
00:49:41
he also wrote our national song
00:49:44
vandemataram which was in fact a hymn to
00:49:48
the motherland sun widely during the
00:49:50
Swadeshi movement in bengal
00:49:54
later Abin enthroned art our God created
00:49:58
the famous image of Bharat Mata
00:50:02
she was an aesthetic figure wearing
00:50:04
Safran colored clothes and carrying a
00:50:06
mother or chain of beats in one hand
00:50:09
which symbolizes her as divine and
00:50:12
spiritual
00:50:14
her role as a mother figure a nurturer
00:50:17
is evident
00:50:19
from the cloth
00:50:23
palm leaves
00:50:26
and scriptures carried by her
00:50:31
the portrayal of Bharat Mata also
00:50:33
underwent a lot of changes take a look
00:50:36
at another picture of Bharat Mata
00:50:38
painted by abandoned renard Tagore in
00:50:43
1905
00:50:46
doesn't this portrayal remind you of
00:50:48
Germania
00:50:50
just like Germania bharat mata is
00:50:52
holding a flag in her hand
00:50:55
while Germania carries a sword bharat
00:50:59
mata has a trishul on top of the flag
00:51:01
which signifies her readiness to fight
00:51:04
for her honor
00:51:07
Germania is wearing a breastplate with
00:51:09
eagles which is a symbol of the german
00:51:12
strand
00:51:13
similarly Bharat Mata is standing
00:51:16
besides an elephant and lion both are
00:51:20
symbols of power and authority
00:51:25
another process which contribute
00:51:28
process which contributed to the growth
00:51:31
of nationalism was the revival of the
00:51:33
Indian folklore
00:51:36
in the late 19th century the
00:51:38
Nationalists began gathering the
00:51:40
folktales sung by bards in different
00:51:43
parts of India
00:51:45
in Bengal rabindranath tagore led the
00:51:49
folk revival movement by collecting
00:51:52
folklore and songs and ballads in Bengal
00:51:57
while down south the TASIS has 3
00:52:00
collected folktales and published series
00:52:04
of four volumes called the folklore of
00:52:07
southern India
00:52:09
nationalists wanted people to take pride
00:52:12
in Indian culture and understand how it
00:52:15
had been destroyed by the British
00:52:18
with the growth of nationalism more
00:52:21
symbols were developed to capture the
00:52:23
spirit of patriotism
00:52:24
one such symbol was the Indian flag the
00:52:28
tri-colored flag was first designed
00:52:30
during the Swadeshi movement in bengal
00:52:34
later on in 1921 Mahatma Gandhi
00:52:39
redesigned the Indian flag with the
00:52:42
spinning wheel or chakra at the center
00:52:44
this flag was often used by nationalists
00:52:47
during protests and marches
00:52:53
lism also happened through the process
00:52:56
of reinterpretation of history
00:53:00
British considered India as a land of
00:53:03
backward people incapable of governance
00:53:07
in response to this mindset the Indians
00:53:10
began exploring glories from their past
00:53:12
and wrote about the ancient times when
00:53:15
India was much developed
00:53:20
however the glories of the past and the
00:53:23
symbols used by the Nationalists such as
00:53:26
Bharat Mata were all very Hindu in atria
00:53:30
consequently people of other religions
00:53:33
and communities felt alienated
00:53:37
although Indians got inspired to fight
00:53:40
for independence at the same time their
00:53:43
religious differences prepared ground
00:53:45
for the division of the country
00:53:50
[Music]
00:53:55
[Applause]
00:53:57
[Music]
00:54:04
[Applause]
00:54:09
[Music]
00:54:11
[Applause]
00:54:15
[Music]
00:54:26
you