Nationalism in India PDF
Nationalism in India PDF
Nationalism in India PDF
CLASS 10
HISTORY
KV KOPPAL
BY MR. BIKRANT
LINK OF EXPLAINED VIDEOS
• https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL4yccyJI-
MJLbICojM_TjHA9XY7Q_Uwte
RISE OF NATIONALIM IN INDIA:
REASON
• The growth of modern nationalism.
• The anti-colonial movement.
• People began discovering their unity in the process of their struggle with
colonialism.
• The sense of being oppressed under colonialism
A BRIEF OVERVIEW:TIMELINE
1885 AD: Establishment of Indian national congress IMPACT: WORLD WAR (1914 – 1918)
customs duties were raised and
income tax introduced.
1915 AD :Arrival of Mahatma Gandhi Increased price of Grains
•On 9th January from South Africa High Defence Expenditure
•Trav elled across India Forced recruitment of Indians in
Army
Deaths of Indian Army
in 1918-19 and 1920-21, crops
failed in many parts of India,
People hoped that their hardships would end after the war was over. But that did not happen.
So a new leader appeared and suggested a new mode of struggle.
THE IDEA OF SATYAGRAHA
• The idea of satyagraha emphasized the power of truth and
the need to search for truth. It suggested that if the cause
was true, if the struggle was against injustice, then physical
force was not necessary to fight the oppressor.
• This could be done by appealing to the conscience of the
oppressor, Instead of being forced to accept truth through
the use of violence.
THE THREE MOVEMENT
1916 : Indigo Movement
• It gave the government enormous powers to repress political activities, and allowed
detention of political prisoners without trial for two years.
• Mahatma Gandhi wanted non-violent civil disobedience against such unjust laws, which
would start with a hartal on 6 April.
• Local leaders were picked up from Amritsar, and Mahatma Gandhi was barred from
entering Delhi.
• On 10 April, the police in Amritsar fired upon a peaceful procession, provoking widespread
attacks on banks, post offices and railway stations.
• The import of foreign cloth halved between 1921 and 1922, its value dropping from
Rs 102 crore to Rs 57 crore.
• In many places merchants and traders refused to trade in foreign goods.
LIMITATION OF THE MOVEMENT IN THE TOWNS
• But at the same time he asserted that India could be liberated only by the use
of force, not non-violence.
• The Gudem rebels attacked police stations, attempted to kill British officials and
carried on guerrilla warfare for achieving swaraj. Raju was captured and
executed in 1924, and over time became a folk hero.
SWARAJ IN THE PLANTATIONS
IMPORTANT QUESTIONS TILL NOW
1. What was the impact of first world war on Indians?
2. Describe the three successful movement led by Mahatama Gadhi in his early
years in India.
3. Explain the idea of Satyagarh.
4. Discuss the infamous incident of Jallianwal bagh.
5. What was Rowlatt Act. How the people of India reacted against it?
6. Briefly explain the Khilafat issue?
7. Explain the opportunity used by Mahatma Gandhi to bring Hindu and Muslim
together against British Govt.
8. How the NCM was organised in town and cities? Write the limitation of NCM in the
cities.
9. Explain the Role of Alluri Sitaraman RajuIn Andhra pradesh during Non cooperation
movement
10. “ The plantation workers in Assam had their own understanding of mahatma gahi
and the notion of Swaraj/Independence.” Support the statement.
1922 : Chauri Chaura Incident – NCM Called off
Simmon Commission came to India to review the 1919 Act under the joint chairmanship of the
distinguished Liberal lawyer, Sir John Simon, and Clement Attlee
SIMON COMMISSION
• the Simon Commission was greeted with the slogan ‘Go back Simon’.
• All parties, including the Congress and the Muslim League, participated in
the demonstrations.
• In an effort to win them over, the viceroy, Lord Irwin, announced in October
1929, a vague offer of ‘dominion status’ for India in an unspecified future,
and a Round Table Conference to discuss a future constitution.
• This did not satisfy the Congress leaders. The radicals within the Congress,
led by Jawaharlal Nehru and Subhas Chandra Bose, became more
assertive.
• The liberals and moderates, who were proposing a constitutional system
within the framework of British dominion, gradually lost their influence.
1928 : Nehru Report by Indians( Motilal Nehru) 11 POINT DEMAND
Prohibit intoxicants,
liquor
If the demands were not fulfilled by 11 March, the Congress would launch a civil disobedience campaign.
TOWARDS CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE MOVEMENT
• Mahatma Gandhi started his famous salt march accompanied by 78 of his trusted
volunteers.
• The march was over 240 miles, from Gandhiji’s ashram in Sabarmati to the Gujarati
coastal town of Dandi.
• The volunteers walked for 24 days, about 10 miles a day.
• Thousands came to hear Mahatma Gandhi wherever he stopped, and he told them
what he meant by swaraj and urged them to peacefully defy the British.
• On 6 April he reached Dandi, and violated the law, manufacturing salt by boiling sea
water.
• Thousands in different parts of the country broke the salt law, manufactured salt
and demonstrated in front of government salt factories.
• As the movement spread, foreign cloth was boycotted, and liquor shops were
picketed.
• Peasants refused to pay revenue and chaukidari taxes, village officials resigned, and
in many places forest people violated forest laws – going into Reserved Forests to
collect wood and graze cattle.
ACTION BY BRITISH AGAINST CDM
• The colonial government began arresting the Congress leaders one by one. This led
to violent clashes in many palaces.
• When Abdul Ghaffar Khan, a devout disciple of Mahatma Gandhi, was arrested in
April 1930, angry crowds demonstrated in the streets of Peshawar, facing armored
cars and police firing. Many were killed.
• A month later, when Mahatma Gandhi himself was arrested, industrial workers in
Sholapur attacked police posts, municipal buildings, lawcourts and railway stations –
all structures that symbolized British rule.
Participants of
CDM
Industrialist/Business
Rich Peasants Poor Peasants Workers
Men
RICH PEASANTS
• In the countryside, rich peasant communities – like the Patidars of Gujarat and the Jats of Uttar
Pradesh – were active in the movement.
• Being producers of commercial crops, they were very hard hit by the trade depression and falling
prices.
• As their cash income disappeared, they found it impossible to pay the government’s revenue
demand.
• These rich peasants became supporters of the Civil Disobedience Movement.
• For them the fight for swaraj was a struggle against high revenues.
• But they were deeply disappointed when the movement was called off in 1931 without the revenue
rates being revised.
• So when the movement was restarted in 1932, many of them refused to participate.
POOR PEASANTS
• The poorer peasantry were not just interested in the lowering of the revenue
demand but also wanted that the unpaid rent to the landlord to be remitted.
• Many of them were small tenants cultivating land they had rented from landlords.
• As the Depression continued and cash incomes reduced, the small tenants found it
difficult to pay their rent.
• They joined a variety of radical movements, often led by Socialists and Communists.
• The Congress was unwilling to support ‘no rent’ campaigns in most places because
they don’t want to upset Indian landlords.
• So the relationship between the poor peasants and the Congress remained
uncertain.
INDUSTRIALIST/BUSINESS MEN
• They wanted protection against imports of foreign goods, and a rupee-sterling foreign exchange ratio to
discourage imports.
• To organize business interests, they formed the Indian Industrial and Commercial Congress in 1920 and the
Federation of the Indian Chamber of Commerce and Industries (FICCI) in 1927. Led by prominent
industrialists like Purshottamdas Thakurdas and G. D. Birla,
• Meaning of Swaraj for Industrialist: a time when they can trade without restrictions on business and trade.
• But after the failure of the Round Table Conference, business groups were no longer uniformly enthusiastic.
• They were apprehensive of the spread of militant activities, and worried about prolonged disruption of
business, as well as of the growing influence of socialism amongst the younger members of the Congress.
WORKERS
• Did not participate in large numbers, except in the Nagpur region.
• As the industrialists came closer to the Congress, workers stayed aloof.
• But some workers did participate in the CDM, selectively adopting some of
the ideas of the Gandhian programme, like boycott of foreign goods, as
part of their own movements against low wages and poor working
conditions.
• There were strikes by railway workers in 1930 and dockworkers in 1932. In 1930
thousands of workers in Chotanagpur tin mines wore Gandhi caps and
participated in protest rallies and boycott campaigns.
• But the Congress was reluctant to include workers’ demands as part of its
programme of struggle. (Why)
WOMEN PARTICIPATION IN CDM
• large-scale participation of women in protest marches, manufactured salt, and
picketed foreign cloth and liquor shops. Many went to jail.
• In urban areas these women were from high-caste families; in rural areas they came
from rich peasant households.
• This increased public role did not change in the position of women in society.
Gandhiji was also convinced that it was the duty of women to look after home and
hearth(furnace), be good mothers and good wives.
• And for a long time the Congress was reluctant to allow women to hold any position
of authority within the organization. (only symbolic presence.)
THE LIMITS OF CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE
• Not all social groups were participated in CDM, Like Untouchables, Muslim
community
• The Congress had ignored the Dalits, for fear of offending the Sanatanis.
• Participation of Muslim community was less:-
• From the mid-1920s the Congress came to be more visibly associated with openly Hindu religious nationalist groups
like the Hindu Mahasabha.
• Relations between Hindus and Muslims worsened(Hindu-Muslim communal clashes and riots)
• Md. Ali Jinnah’s demand of separate electorate or Reserved seats in Central Assembly and representation in
proportion to population in the Muslim-dominated provinces (Bengal and Punjab).(1928- M.R. Jayakar of the Hindu
Mahasabha strongly opposed)
Second Phase of CDM was vey weak as many people didn’t participated
MAHATMA GANDHI V/S D.R AMBEDKAR’S ABOUT DALITS:-
Mahatama Gandhi
Swaraj would not come for a hundred years if untouchability was not eliminated.
He called the ‘untouchables’ harijan,
Organised satyagraha to secure them entry into temples, and access to public wells, tanks, roads and schools
He himself cleaned toilets to dignify the work of the bhangi (the sweepers)
persuaded upper castes to change their heart and give up ‘the sin of untouchability’
• He believed that separate electorates for dalits would slow down the process of their integration into society.
Dr. Bhimrao Ambedkar and other Dalit leaders
• Demanding reserved seats in educational institutions, and a separate electorate that would choose dalit
members for legislative councils. (Political Empowerment), So limited participation, particularly in the
Maharashtra and Nagpur region
• Dr B.R. Ambedkar clashed with Mahatma Gandhi at the second Round Table Conference by demanding
separate electorates for Dalits. The Demand was accepted by British govt. M.G began a fast unto death.
• Ambedkar ultimately accepted Gandhiji’s position and the result was the Poona Pact of September
1932.(Reserved seats in provincial and central legislative councils, but they were to be voted in by the
general electorate)
DIFFRENCE BETWEEN N.C.M AND C.D.M
Non cooperation movement Civil disobedience Movement
2. Muslim participation was high because of Muslim participation was very low
Khilafat issue
4. Movement was aimed at dominion status The objective of the Movement was to attain
purnaswaraj.
THE SENSE OF COLLECTIVE BELONGING
• Nationalism spreads when people begin to believe that they are all part of the same
nation(collective belonging)
• This sense of collective belonging came through :-
• The experience of united struggles.
• History and fiction, folklore and songs, popular prints and symbols, all played a part in the making of
nationalism.
• Nation symbolized in a figure or image. People can identify the nation.
• Nationalists began recording folk tales sung by bards and they toured villages to gather folk songs and legends.
• During the Swadeshi movement in Bengal, a tricolour flag (red, green and yellow) was designed.
• Instill a sense of pride in the nation through rich Indian history(The British saw Indians as backward and
primitive, incapable of governing themselves.)
• The The image of bharat mata was first created by Abanindranath
Tagore in the 1870s.
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