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80
Years Ago in India
Gandhi
returns to India (see South Africa for his early life) with his
wife and children in 1915. Here it was not long before he was
taking the lead in the long struggle for independence from Britain.
He never wavered in his unshakable belief in nonviolent protest
and religious tolerance. He was called Mahatma, which means the
"noble- hearted". When Muslim and Hindu compatriots
committed acts of violence, whether against the British who ruled
India, or against each other, he fasted until the fighting ceased.
He was killed by an assassin at the age of 79 in 1948.
During the First World War, 500,000 Indians fought for Britain,
and India donated £100 million to the imperial war chest.
It was a huge human and financial sacrifice, but when peace came
in 1918, the British refused to relax their tight control of India.
Gandhi mistrusted European style industrialization, and part of
his strategy to force Britain to give up its control of India
was economic. He wanted the common people of India, most of whom
were desperately poor, to become self-sufficient through the encouragement
of local and traditional industries, such as the production of
cotton cloth. A second strategy to undermine British control of
the economy was through boycotts of British manufactured goods.
Part of this strategy was the hartal. This was a traditional demonstration
of mourning or disapproval where all shops, businesses and schools
were closed to allow people to join mass, public demonstrations.
Gandhi called for an India-wide hartal on April 6, 1919, but in
some locations anti-European feeling boiled over into violence.
Some of the worst violence happened in Punjab province where riots
broke out which Gandhi could not halt.
Some Europeans were killed in the city of Amritsar. The British
reaction was equally violent leading to the 1919 Amritsar massacre,
one of the most publicized atrocities committed by the British
in India. Army units, including Gurkhas from Nepal, were called
in to crush the rioters. The total of dead is not known for sure,
but the British admitted to close to 400 Indians had been killed.
The massacre showed everyone that British rule rested only on
military force.
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25
years ago / 50 years ago / 80
years ago / 125 years
ago / 150 years ago
250 years ago / 400
years ago / 700 years ago / 1,200
years ago
1,500 years ago / 2,000
years ago / 3,000 years ago /
4,000 years ago / 5,000
years ago / 10,000 years ago