From 1915 to 1918, Mahatma Gandhi seemed to hover
uncertainly on the periphery of Indian politics, declining to join any
political agitation, supporting the British war effort in World War, and even
recruiting soldiers for the British Indian Army.
At the same time, he did not flinch from criticizing
the British officials for any acts of high-handedness or from taking up the
grievances of the long-suffering peasantry in Bihar and Gujarat. Not until
February 1919, provoked by the British insistence on pushing through the
Rowlatt Bills, which empowered the authorities to imprison without trial those
suspected of sedition, in the teeth of Indian opposition, did Mahatma Gandhi
reveal a sense of estrangement from the British Raj.
He announced a satyagraha struggle. The result was a
virtual political earthquake that shook the subcontinent in the spring of 1919.
The violent outbreaks that followed, leading, among other incidents, to the
killing by British-led soldiers of nearly 400 Indians attending a meeting at
Amritsar in the Punjab and the enactment of martial law--prompted him to stay
his hand. But within a year he was again in a militant mood, having in the
meantime been irrevocably alienated by British insensitiveness to Indian
feeling on the Punjab tragedy and Muslim resentment on the peace terms offered
to Turkey following World War I.
By the autumn of 1920, Mahatma Gandhi was the
dominant figure on the political stage, commanding an influence never attained
by any political leader in India or perhaps in any other country. He
refashioned the 35-year-old Indian National Congress into an effective
political instrument of Indian nationalism: from a three-day Christmas-week
picnic of the upper middle class in one of the principal cities of India, it
became a mass organization with its roots in small towns and villages.
Gandhi's message was simple. It was not British guns
but imperfections of Indians themselves that kept their country in bondage. His
program of nonviolent noncooperation with the British government included
boycott not only of British manufactures but of institutions operated or aided
by the British in India, legislatures, courts, offices, schools.
This program electrified the country, broke the
spell of fear of foreign rule, and led to arrests of thousands of satyagrahis,
who defied laws and cheerfully lined up for prison.
Mahatma Gandhi also tried to draw the warring
communities out of their suspicion and fanaticism by reasoning and persuasion.
And finally, after a serious communal outbreak, he undertook a three-week fast
in the autumn of 1924 to arouse the people into following the path of
nonviolence. During the mid-1920s Mahatma Gandhi took little interest in active
politics and was considered a spent force. But in 1927 the British government
appointed a constitutional reform commission under Sir John Simon, a prominent
English lawyer and politician, that did not contain a single Indian. When the
Congress and other parties boycotted the commission, the political tempo rose.
After the Calcutta Congress in December 1928, where Mahatma Gandhi moved the
crucial resolution demanding dominion status from the British government within
a year under threat of a nation-wide nonviolent campaign for complete
independence, he was back at the helm of the Congress Party. In March 1930, he
launched the satyagraha against the tax on salt, which affected the poorest
section of the community. One of the most spectacular and successful campaigns
in Mahatma Gandhi's nonviolent war against the British Raj, it resulted in the
imprisonment of more than 60,000 persons. A year later, after talks with Lord
Irwin, he accepted a truce, called off civil disobedience, and agreed to attend
the Round Table Conference in London as the sole representative of the Indian
National Congress. The conference, which concentrated on the problem of the
Indian minorities rather than on the transfer of power from the British, was a
great disappointment to the Indian nationalists. Moreover, when Mahatma Gandhi
returned to India in December 1931 he found his party facing an all-out
offensive from Lord Irwin's successor, Lord Willingdon, who unleashed the
sternest repression in the history of the nationalist movement. Mahatma Gandhi
was once more imprisoned, and the government tried to insulate him from the
outside world and to destroy his influence. This was not an easy task. Mahatma Gandhi
soon regained the initiative, in September 1932, while still a prisoner, he
embarked on a fast to protest against the British government's decision to segregate
the untouchables by allotting them separate electorates in the new
constitution. The fast produced an emotional upheaval in the country, an
alternative electoral arrangement was jointly and speedily devised by the
leaders of the Hindu community and the untouchables and endorsed by the British
government.
The fast became the starting point of a vigorous
campaign for the removal of the disabilities of the untouchables whom Mahatma Gandhi
renamed Harijans, In 1934 Mahatma Gandhi resigned not only as the leader but
also as a member of the Congress Party. He had come to believe that its leading
members had adopted nonviolence as a political expedient and not as the
fundamental creed it was for him. In place of political activity he now
concentrated on his "constructive programme" of building the nation
"from the bottom up"--educating rural India, which accounted for 85
percent of the population; continuing his fight against untouchability;
promoting handspinning, weaving, and other cottage industries to supplement the
earnings of the underemployed peasantry; and evolving a system of education
best suited to the needs of the people. Mahatma Gandhi himself went to live at
Sevagram, which became the centre of his program of social and economic uplift.
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