• The Emergence of Nationalism:
(i) India was the people of India and all the people irrespective of class, colour, caste, creed, language or gender are Indians.
(ii) The awareness of being Indian and that its resources and systems were meant for all of them led to see the trace nature and role of British in India.
(iii) The political associations came into being in the 1870s and 1880s.
(iv) Poona Sarvajanik Sabha and many such associations functioned in specific parts of country their goals were stated as the goals of all the people of India.
(v) They worked with the idea that the people should be sovereign – a modern consciousness and a key feature of nationalism.
(vi) The Arms Act was passed in 1878, disallowing Indians from possessing arms.
(vii) The Vernacular Act which allowed the government to confiscate the assets of newspapers including their printing presses if the newpapers published anything that was found ‘objectionable’.
(viii) In 1883 Lord Ripon’s Law Member, Sir Courtenay llbert introduced a bill called llbert Bill.
(ix) The bill provided for the trail of British or European persons by Indians, and sought equality between British and Indian judges in the country.
(x) The bill caused widespread agitation among the Whites who strongl opposed the bill and forced the government to withdraw it.
(xi) The Indian National Congress was established in 1885. It included 72 delegates from different parts of the country which included leaders like DadaBhai Naoroji, W.C. Bonnerji, Surendranath Bannerji, Romesh Chandra Dutt, S. Subramania Iyer, Pherozeshah Mehta and Badruddin Tyabji.
• A Nation in the Making:
(i) In the first twenty years Congress was ‘moderate’ in its objectives and methods.
(ii) A greater voice for Indians in the government and in administration was their demand.
(iii) It demanded the separation of judiciary from the executive, the repeal of Arms Act and freedom of speech and expression.
(iv) It also demanded the separation of judiciary from the executive, the repeal of Arms Act and freedom of speech and expression.
(v) The early Congress raised a number of economic issues. It declared that British rule had led to poverty and famines, increase in land revenue had impoverished peasants and Zamindars and there was food shortage because of exports and grains to Europe.
• Freedom is Our Birth Right:
(i) In Bengal, Maharashtra and Punjab, leaders such as Bipin Chandra Pal, Bal Gangadhar
Tilak and Lala Lajpat Rai popularly known as ‘Lal, Bal, Pal’, strongly criticized the policies of the colonial government.
(ii) They demanded ‘Swaraj’. Tilak declared, ‘Freedom is my birth right and I shall have it’.
(iii) In 1905, Viceroy Curzon announced the partition of the biggest province British of India, Bengal which included Bihar and parts of Orrisa.
(iv) The partition of Bengal infuriated people all over India. Both, the moderates and the radicals protested the partition.
(v) Large public meetings and demonstrations were organized and this led to be birth of Swadeshi Movement.
• The Growth of Mass Nationalism:
(i) After 1919 the struggle against Britain rule gradually became a mass movement, involving peasants, tribals, students and women in large numbers and factory workers.
(ii) The first World War broke out in 1914 and altered the economic and political situation in India
(iii) India was dragged into the war and this led to a huge rise in defence expenditure of the government of India.
(iv) Increased military expenditure and the demands for war supplies led to a sharp rise in prices which create great difficulties for the common people.
(v) The war lead the British to expand their army. The government forced the villages in India to send their soldiers for an alien cause.
• The Advent of Mahatma Gandhi:
(i) Mahatma Gandhi was born on 2nd October 1869 at Porbandar in Gujarat.
(ii) He studied law in England and went to South Africa to practice law and stayed there for 20 years.
(iii) He emerged as a mass leader of India.
(iv) In South Africa, Gandhiji struggle for the Indians in non-violent marches against racist restrictions and had earned great respect and popularity both at national and international level.
(v) Mahatma Gandhi spent his initial years in India travelling throughout the country, understanding the people, their needs and the overall situation.
(vi) Gandhiji launched local movements in Champaran, Kheda and Ahmedabad in which he received success.
• The Rowlatt Satyagraha:
(i) In 1919, the government passe the Rowlatt Act and empowered the provincial governmetns to search any place and arrest any person whom it suspected without a warrant.
(ii) Gandhiji launched a Satyagraha against the Rowlatt Act which curbed the fundamental rights such as the freedom of expression and strengthened police powers.
(iii) Mahatma Gandhi and Mohammad Ali Jinnah criticized the act as ‘devilish’ and tyrannical.
(iv) In April 1919, a nation-wide hartal was launched and government used brutal measures to suppress them. The Jallianwala Bagh massacre inflicted by General Dyer in Amritsar on Baisakhi day was a part of this repression.
• Khilafat Agitation and the Non-Cooperation Movement:
(i) In 1920, the British imposed a harsh treaty on the Turkish Sultan or Khalifa and he was deprived of his political powers and authority.
(ii) The Khilafat Movement was launched by Mohammad Ali and Shaukat Ali who wished to initated a full-fledged Non-Cooperation Movement against the British under the leadership of Gandhiji and demanded Swaraj.
(iii) In 1921-22, the Non-Cooperation Movement gained momentum, Thousands of students left government controlled schools and colleges. Many lawyers such as Moti Lal Nehru, C.R. Das, C. Rajagopalachari and Asaf Ali gave up their practices.
(iv) British titles were surrendered and legislatures boycotted. People lit public bonfires of foreign cloth.
• People’s Initiatives:
(i) In Kheda, Gujarat, Patidar peasants organized non-violent campaigns against the high revenue demand of the British.
(ii) In coastal Andhra and interior Tamil Nadu, liquor shops were picketed.
(iii) In Bengal, the Khilafat-Non-Cooperation alliance gave enormous communal unity and strength to the national movement.
(iv) In Punjab, thhe Akali agitation of the Sikhs sought to remove corrupt mahants- supported by the British from their gurudwaras.
• The People’s Mahatma:
(i) People thought of Gandhiji as a kind of messiah, as someone who could help them to overcome their misery and poverty.
(ii) Gandhiji wished to build class unity, not class conflict, still peasants could imagine that he could help them in their fight against zamindars and agricultural labourers believed he would provide them land.
• The Happenings of 1922-29:
(i) In February 1922 a crowd of peasants set fire to a police station in Chauri Chaura, Gandhiji called off the Non-Cooperation Movement.
(ii) Chittranjan Dass and Motilal Nehru argued that the party should fight elections to the councils and enter them in order to influence government policies.
(iii) Civil disobedience Movement was launched in 1930 under the leadership of Gandhiji.
(iv) The formation of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and the Communist Party of India were the two important development of the mid-1920s.
(v) The Congress resolved to fight for ‘Purna Swaraj’ in 1929 under the presidentship of Jawaharlal Nehru and 26 January 1930 was observed as ‘Independence Day’ all over the country.
• The March to Dandi:
(i) In 1930, Gandhiji started the march to break the Salt Law. According to this law the state had a monopoly on the manufacture and sale of salt.
(ii) Gandhiji and his followers marched from Sabarmati Ashram to the coastal town of Dandi where they broke the Salt law by gathering natural salt found on the sea-shore are boiling sea water to produce salt.
(iii) The combined struggles of the Indian people bore fruit when the Government of India Act of 1935 prescribed provincial autonomy and the government announced election to the provincial legislature in 1937.
(iv) The Second World War broke out in September 1939. The Congress leaders were ready to support the British war effort. But in return they wanted that India be granted Independence after the war. The British refused to concede the demand and the Congress ministers resigned in protest.
• Quit India and Later:
(i) Mahatma Gandhi decided to initiate a new phase of movement against the British in the middle of the Second World War which was Quit India Movement.
(ii) The first response of the British was severe repression and the end of 1943 over 90,000 people were arrested, and around 1,000 killed in police firing.
• Towards Independence and Partition:
(i) In 1940, the Muslim League had moved a resolution demanding ‘Independent States’ for Muslims in the north-western and eastern areas of the country.
(ii) The provincial elections of 1937 seemed to have convinced the League that Muslims were a minority, and they would always have to play second fiddle in any democratic structure.
(iii) The Congress’s rejection of the League’s desire to form a joint Congress-League government in the United Provinces in 1937 also annoyed the League.
(iv) In 1945, after the end of the war, the British opened negotiations between the Congress, the League and themselves for the Independence of India. The talks failed because the league accelerated the demand for Pakistan.
(v) In Marc 1946 the British cabinet sent a three-member mission to Delhi to examine this demand. 16 August 1946 was declared as the ‘Direct Action Day’ by the league.
(vi) On 3 June 1947, the Partition Plan was announced and Pakistan came into existence. The joy of our country’s Independence from British rule came mixed with the pain and violence of Partition.
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