Civil Disobedience Movement: Political Activity, Gandhi’s Eleven Demands

April 8, 2024 7020 0

Introduction

The Civil Disobedience Movement was a significant event in India’s struggle for independence against British colonial rule. Initiated by Mahatma Gandhi in 1930, it aimed to peacefully resist unjust British laws and policies through nonviolent means such as protests, boycotts, and acts of civil disobedience. This mass movement mobilized people from all walks of life across the country, uniting them in a collective effort to challenge British authority and demand self-governance for India.

Political Activity in 1929

  • Gandhi’s Travels: Gandhi’s extensive travel aimed at preparing for direct political action, encouraging youth readiness, organizing village constructive work, and addressing specific grievances.
  • Gandhi initiated the cloth boycott campaign in Calcutta (March 1929).
    • Congress Working Committee (CWC) formed a Foreign Cloth Boycott Committee.
  • The Meerut Conspiracy Case (March) added to political tension.
  • Bomb Explosion: By Bhagat Singh and B.K. Dutt in the Central Legislative Assembly (April).
  • Labour Government: Led by Ramsay MacDonald came to power in England (May), with Wedgewood Benn becoming the Secretary of State for India.

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  • Irwin’s Declaration (October 31, 1929)
    • Collaborative Initiative: A joint effort by the Labour government and Conservative viceroy, Lord Irwin, aimed to restore faith in British policy towards India.
    • Lack of Immediate Implementation: Stated that Dominion status was implicit in the Declaration of 1917. 
      • However, no specific time frame was provided for achieving Dominion status, offering no new or immediate change.
  • Delhi Manifesto (November 2, 1929)
    • It was a conference of national leaders that issued demands for attending the Round Table Conference.
      • Round Table Conference: This should act as a constituent assembly to formulate a constitution for implementing Dominion status.
      • Congress should have majority representation at the conference.
      • General amnesty for political prisoners and a conciliatory policy were requested.
  • Gandhi, Motilal Nehru, and others met Lord Irwin in December 1929;
    • Leaders sought assurance from Irwin that the Round Table Conference‘s purpose was to draft a constitutional scheme for Dominion status.
    • Rejection of Delhi Manifesto Demands: Irwin rejected the demands of the Delhi Manifesto, stating the conference’s purpose was not to draft a constitutional scheme.

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  • Lahore Congress and Purna Swaraj (December 1929)
    • Jawaharlal Nehru became the President of the Lahore session of Congress in December 1929, backed by Gandhi despite opposition from most Provincial Congress Committees.
    • Nehru declared an open conspiracy to free the country from foreign rule and invited all countrymen to join. 
    • He stated his socialist and republican beliefs, advocating for the abolition of kings, princes, and industrial king’s power over people’s lives. And emphasized peaceful mass movements as essential for liberation.
  • Decisions at the Lahore Session
    • Round Table Conference was boycotted.
    • Declaration of complete independence as Congress’s goal.
    • Launch of Civil Disobedience: Authorization was given to the Congress Working Committee to launch civil disobedience, including non-payment of taxes, and urged legislators to resign.
    • January 26, 1930 was fixed as the first Independence (Swarajya) Day, to be celebrated everywhere.
  • Flag Hoisting: December 31, 1929: On the banks of River Ravi, Jawaharlal Nehru hoisted the newly adopted tricolour flag of freedom amid slogans of Inquilab Zindabad.
    • Inquilab Zindabad, which can be translated as “Long Live Revolution” was coined by Moulana Hasrat Mohani in the year 1921.
  • January 26, 1930: Independence Pledge (Supposed to have been drafted by Gandhi)
    • Points highlighted in the pledge included the inalienable right to freedom, British exploitation, economic ruin, cultural and spiritual impact, denial of political rights, and preparation for civil disobedience for Purna Swaraj.

Launch of Civil Disobedience Movement

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Gandhi’s Eleven Demands

Issues of General Interest Specific Bourgeois Demands Specific Peasant Demands
  • Reduce expenditure on army and civil services by 50 per cent.
  • Introduce total prohibition
  • Carry out reforms in the Criminal Investigation Department (CID). 
  • Change Arms Act allowing popular control of issue of firearms licenses.
  • Release political prisoners.
  • Accept Postal Reservation Bill.
  • Reduce rupee-sterling exchange ratio to 1s 4d
  • Introduce textile protection.
  • Reserve coastal shipping for Indians.
  • Reduce land revenue by 50 per cent.
  • Abolish salt tax and the government’s salt monopoly.
  • Empowerment of Gandhi to Initiate CDM: The Congress Working Committee, dissatisfied with the government’s lack of response to their demands, empowered Gandhi to initiate the Civil Disobedience Movement
    • Gandhi chose salt as the focal point for the movement, solidifying the decision by the end of February.
      • On March 2, 1930, Gandhi communicated his strategic initiative to the Viceroy.
      • The plan involved leading a 240-mile march with 78 members from Sabarmati Ashram through Gujarat villages. 
      • Upon reaching Dandi (a village near Surat) on the coast, they would defy the salt law by collecting salt from the beach.
      • Symbolic breaking of the salt law by Gandhi at Dandi on April 6, marking the launch of the Civil Disobedience Movement.
      • Civil disobedience actions included picketing foreign liquor and cloth shops, refusal to pay taxes, lawyers giving up practice, boycott of law courts, and government servants resigning.
  • Spread of Salt Law Disobedience
    • Gandhi’s action at Dandi initiated nationwide defiance of salt laws.
    • Nehru’s arrest led to massive demonstrations in Madras, Calcutta, and Karachi.
    • Gandhi’s arrest came on May 4, 1930, when he led a raid on Dharasana Salt Works on the west coast.
    • Congress sanctioned non-payment of revenue, no-chowkidara-tax campaign, and violation of forest laws in different regions.
    • Consequent upon the breaking of Salt Law by Indian people, the Indian National Congress was declared illegal by the colonial rulers. [UPSC 2019]

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Regional Movements during Civil Disobedience

Tamil Nadu
  • Salt marches led by C. Rajagopalachari on the Tanjore coast (from Tiruchirapalli to Vedaranniyam). [UPSC 2015]
  • The march was followed by extensive picketing of foreign cloth shops and a growing anti-liquor campaign in regions like Coimbatore, Madura, and Virdhanagar.
  • A police force was employed to break the Choolai Mills strike.
  • Unemployed weavers attacked liquor shops and police pickets in Gudiyattam, while rioting occurred among peasants facing economic hardships in Bodinayakanur.
Malabar
  • Salt marches organized by K. Kelappan; P. Krishna Pillai defended the national flag against police actions. Kelappan is also famous for Vaikom Satyagraha.
Andhra Region
  • District salt marches were organized in east and west Godavari, Krishna, and Guntur district.
  • Establishment of Sibirams i.e military-style camps, defiance by merchants and dominant castes.
  • Mass support like that in the non-cooperation movement was missing.
Orissa
  • Effective salt satyagraha organized by Gopalbandhu Chaudhari in coastal regions of Balasore, Cuttack, and Puri districts.
Assam
  • Failed to reach previous heights due to conflicts between communities.
  • Cunningham Circular: Successful student strike against the Cunningham Circular, which banned students’ participation in politics.
  • Chandraprabha Saikiani, in December 1930, incited the aboriginal Kachari villages to break forest laws, which was, however, denied by the Assam Congress leadership.
Bengal
  • Split in Bengal Congress: The Bengal Congress split between factions led by Subhas Chandra Bose and J.M. Sengupta, engaged in the Calcutta Corporation election, causing a disconnect between Calcutta’s Bhadralok leaders and rural masses. 
  • Communal Riots: Occurred in Dacca and Kishoreganj, with limited Muslim participation. 
  • Despite this, Bengal saw the highest number of arrests and significant violence, particularly in Midnapur, Arambagh, and rural areas, where movements centered around salt satyagraha and chaukidari tax emerged. 
  • Concurrently, Surya Sen’s Chittagong revolt group conducted a raid on two armouries.
Bihar
  • Champaran and Saran were the first two districts to start salt satyagraha. In Patna, Nakhas Pond was chosen as a site to make salt and break the salt law under Ambika Kant Sinha.
  • Salt satyagraha followed by a powerful No-chaukidari tax agitation.
Chhotanagpur
  • Bonga Majhi and Somra Majhi, influenced by Gandhism, led a movement in Hazaribagh, which combined socio-religious reform along ‘sanskritising’ lines.
  • Instances of lower-class militancy and socio-religious reforms; Santhals engaged in illegal liquor distillation.
Peshawar
  • Khan Abdul Gaffar Khan, known as Badshah Khan or Frontier Gandhi, undertook educational and social reform work among the Pathans.
  • Gaffar Khan published the first Pushto political monthly, Pukhtoon.
  • He organized the volunteer brigade ‘Khudai Khidmatgars,’ popularly known as the ‘Red-Shirts.‘ 
  • The ‘Red-Shirts’ were pledged to the freedom struggle and committed to non-violence.
  • It was here that a section of Garhwal Rifles soldiers refused to fire on an unarmed crowd.
Sholapur
  • Fierce response to Gandhi’s arrest, the establishment of a parallel government led to martial law.
Dharasana
  • Sarojini Naidu, Imam Sahib, and Manilal Gandhi led a raid met with brutal police lathi-charge, sparking nationwide emulation.
  • Web Miller, an American journalist, reported on Dharasana Salt Satyagraha.
Gujarat
  • The impact of the movement was evident in areas like Anand, Borsad, and Nadiad in Kheda district, Bardoli in Surat district, and Jambusar in Bharuch district. 
  • A resolute no-tax movement unfolded, featuring a refusal to pay land revenue
Maharashtra, Karnataka, Central Provinces
  • These areas saw defiance of forest laws such as grazing and timber restrictions and public sale of illegally acquired forest produce.
United Provinces
  • A no-revenue campaign was organized, urging zamindars to withhold payment of revenue to the government. 
  • Simultaneously, a no-rent campaign targeted tenants against zamindars, transforming into a de facto no-rent movement as most zamindars were loyalists. 
  • The momentum increased notably in October 1930, particularly in Agra and Rai Bareilly.
Manipur and Nagaland
  • Rani Gaidinliu, a 13-year-old Naga spiritual leader, raised revolt. She was sentenced to life imprisonment and was released in 1946 by the then interim government.
  • Impact of Civil Disobedience Movement: Decline in foreign cloth imports, loss of government income from liquor, excise, and land revenue and  Boycott of Legislative Assembly elections and widespread mass mobilization through various means like Prabhat pheries, Vanar senas, etc.
  • Gandhi-Irwin Pact/Delhi Pact (1931)
    • On January 25, 1931, Gandhi and all other members of the Congress Working Committee (CWC) were released.
    • It was signed on March 5, 1931, in Delhi, where the Viceroy was representing the British Indian Government, and Gandhi was representing the Indian people. 
    • This pact placed the Congress on an equal footing with the government.

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  • Agreements by Irwin
    • Immediate release of non-violent political prisoners [UPSC 2020], 
    • Remission of unpaid fines, 
    • Return of unsold lands, 
    • Lenient treatment of resigned government servants, 
    • Personal consumption salt-making rights in coastal villages, 
    • Permission for peaceful picketing, 
    • Withdrawal of emergency ordinances.
  • Rejections by Irwin: Public enquiry into police excesses and Commutation of Bhagat Singh and comrades’ death sentence. [UPSC 2020]
  • Agreements by Gandhi: Suspension of civil disobedience movement and Participation in the next Round Table Conference on constitutional matters.[UPSC 2020]
  • Comparison with Non-Cooperation Movement
    • Objectives: Civil Disobedience aimed at complete independence, not just redressing specific wrongs or vague swaraj.
    • Methods: Violation of laws from the outset, not just non-cooperation with foreign rule.
    • Protests Involving Intelligentsia: Decline in forms of protests involving lawyers, students, etc.
    • Muslim Participation: Lower compared to Non-Cooperation Movement.
    • Labour Uprising: No major coinciding labour upsurge.
    • Peasant and Business Participation: Massive participation compensated for decline in other areas.
    • Prisoner Count: Three times more imprisoned individuals during Civil Disobedience.
    • Congress Strength: Organizational strength was higher during Civil Disobedience.

Karachi Congress Session (March 1931)

  • It was a special session of the Congress held at Karachi to endorse the Gandhi-Irwin Pact.
  • Resolutions at Karachi
    • While disapproving of and dissociating itself from political violence, the Congress admired the ‘bravery’ and ‘sacrifice’ of Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev, and Rajguru.
    • Reiteration of the goal of Purna Swaraj (complete independence).
    • Fundamental Rights Resolution: Guaranteed free speech, free press, right to form associations, assembly, universal adult franchise, equal legal rights, neutrality of the state in religious matters, free compulsory primary education, and protection of minority culture and language
  • National Economic Programme Resolution: Included substantial reduction in rent/revenue for landholders/peasants, 
    • Exemption from rent for uneconomic holdings, 
    • Relief from agricultural debts, usury control, better work conditions, 
    • Right to form unions for workers/peasants, state ownership/control of key industries, mines, and transport.

 

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Conclusion

  • The Civil Disobedience Movement led by Gandhi, despite facing challenges and setbacks, significantly galvanized India’s struggle for independence. 
  • The Gandhi-Irwin Pact marked a notable moment of negotiation, although it did not fully meet all demands. 
  • The Karachi Congress highlighted the unity and resolve of the Indian National Congress in pursuing freedom through peaceful and democratic means.
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