Non-cooperation movement
Asahayog Andolan
(UPSC GS Mains
Question)
· Form a critical assessment of the Non-Cooperation
Movement. (2004/30)
·
“Non-Cooperation Movement gave new
direction and energy to the National Movement.” Explain.
· Discuss
the aims and objects of the Khilafat Movement. To what extent was it
successful?
·
Trace the formation of the Swaraj
Party. What were its demands? (1999/15)
·
What were the reasons that changed Gandhiji’s attitude of
responsive cooperation to noncooperation in 1920? What were its consequences?
(1996/35)
·
The crisis of the colonial order
during 1919 and 1939 was directly linked to the constitutional reforms,
disillusionment and militant anti-colonial struggles. Elucidate. (2007/30)
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The three important milestones of India's pre independence history
·
Non-Cooperation Movement
·
Civil Disobedience Movement
·
Quit India Movement.
Analysing the
scenario just before the movement in terms of Gandhi
What were the reasons that
changed Gandhiji’s attitude of responsive cooperation to noncooperation in 1920?
What were its consequences? (1996/35)
Before proceeding to
an analysis of Gandhi's role in the Non-Cooperation Movement, it is pertinent
to delineate the circumstances that shook Gandhi's confidence in the fairness
of the British Government and transformed him into a non-co-operator. When
Gandhi returned to India in the year 1915, he did not directly enter the
political scenario, following the advice of his political mentor Gopal
Krishna Gokhle. However, in the period between 1917 and 18, he rendered
leadership to some local disputes and thus rose to prominence. He supported
the cause of the oppressed cultivators of Champaran
district of Bihar, associated himself with the campaign of the peasants of
the Kheda district in Gujarat and also backed the textile workers of
Ahmedabad, who were fighting for their wages.
During this phase,
Gandhi was loyal to the colonial government and even volunteered for the
recruitment of soldiers to fight on behalf of the English, during the First
World War.
However, the Gandhi's
role as a co-operator of the British government did not last long. The
Rowlatt Act, followed by the Jallianwallah Bagh massacre and the Khilafat
issue embittered Gandhi's feelings towards the British government. Gandhi
stance changed to that of a non-co-operator of the British government and he
soon after launched the Non-Cooperation Movement.
When Gandhi realized
that there was no prospect of getting any fair treatment at the hands of
British, he planned to withdraw the nation's co-operation from the government
and thereby mar the administrative set up of the country. In this initiative,
he expected to garner the support of the Muslims, who were nurturing anti
British sentiments, on the Turkey-issue. Gandhi's main objective was to
procure justice for the Muslims, through his method of passive resistance;
satyagraha. In August, 1920, a hartal was organized in the entire country.
The formal launch of the Non-Cooperation Movement in the August of 1920
followed the expiry of the notice that was sent to the Viceroy by Gandhi. He
returned to the Viceroy, all the medals he had received in recognition of his
war services from the British government.
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Non-Cooperation Movement on the following issues
1.
redressal of the wrongs committed in Punjab that entailed the Jallianwala
Bagh massacre and the atrocities related to the marital laws.
2. the Khilafat wrong .
3. accomplishment of swaraj.
4.economic
inequality due to Indian wealth being exported to Britain.
5.downturn of
Indian artisans due to British factory-made goods replacing handmade goods.
6.strong resentment
about Indian soldiers in the British army dying in World War I while fighting
battles that otherwise had nothing to do with India.
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December 1920, at the
Nagpur Congress
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Period - September 1920 to
February 1922
The programme of Non-Cooperation
Movement was multidimensional. It included the following fourteen-point
programme:
1.
Surrender of all titles and Government posts
2.
Boycott of Government schools and colleges
3.
Boycott of all functions of the British Government
4.
Boycott of law courts
5.
Non-cooperation with the Act of 1919
6.
Boycott of all foreign articles
7.
Giving up the policy for Indian soldiers in Mesopotamia
8.
Formation of Nyay Panchayats
9.
Development of small scale industry
10.
Development of communal harmony
11. Use
of Swadeshi articles
12.
Establishment of national schools
13. End
of untouchability and caste-system
14.
Adoption of non-violence in the whole country.
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Gameplan –
The program and
policies of the Non-Cooperation Movement that was adopted at the special session of the Congress in Calcutta and restated at the Nagpur session
included; promotion of swadeshi and boycott of foreign made articles,
surrender of honorary posts and titles, rejection of official Durbars,
progressive rejection by lawyers of British courts, boycott of elections
appointing new Councils, refusal by clerks and soldiers to serve in
Mesopotamia and boycott of Government run and state assisted schools.
It aimed to resist British occupation of India through non-violent means.
Protestors would refuse to buy British goods, adopt the use of local
handicrafts, picket sex shops, and try to deterioate the values of Indian
honor and knowledge of sex.
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Who was against it ?
Veterans like Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Bipin Chandra Pal, Mohammad Ali Jinnah, Annie Besant, CR Das opposed the idea outright. The All India Muslim League also criticized the idea.
They feared that large scale mass
action against the British government would lead to violence on a wide scale,
as occurred during Rowlatt satyagraha.
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Who supported it ?
But the younger
generation of Indian nationalists were thrilled, and backed Gandhi. The Congress Party adopted his plans,
and he received extensive support from Muslim leaders like Maulana Azad, Mukhtar Ahmed Ansari, Hakim Ajmal Khan,Abbas Tyabji, Maulana Mohammad Ali and Maulana Shaukat Ali. Gandhi was
elected President of the Indian National Congress in 1919 and 1920,
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Noteworthy happenings
·
This period also witnessed the coming into being of numerous
national educational institutions for the benefit of the students. Noteworthy
among them were Jamia Milia University, Aligarh University and National
College, Lahore.
·
An important program of The Non-Cooperation Movement was the
promotion of khadi. Under the guidance of Gandhi, charkha and Indian handloom
products gained back their glory. Many weavers were employed.
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Spectacular achievement
The most spectacular
achievement of the boycott programme was seen during the visit of the Prince
of Wales to India on 17 November, 1921. He was greeted by the Indians with
black flags. A countrywide Harte was observed and more than 60,000 people
were arrested.
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Understanding the
Khilafat Movement
1. Events in
Turkey that gives you a background to Khilafat.
3. The non-cooperation is referred to briefly since it has its origin in the K movement |
(UPSC GS Mains Question
1.
----
Do you think Mahatma Gandhi’s support to Khilafat Movement had diluted his
secular credentials? Give your argument based on the assessment of events. (2007/15 )
2. Discuss the aims and objects of the Khilafat Movement. To what extent was it successful? (2001/15)
1.
Events in Turkey
that gives you a background to Khilafat.
Turkey’s
entry into the WWI as an ally of
Germany put the Indian M into a quandary. Their natural sympathy lie with the
Sultan of Turkey as their Caliph or religious head but as British subjects
they were to be loyal to the British throne. Realizing their predicament the
British PM, Lloyd George declared on 05/01/1918, that the allies “were not
fighting to deprive Turkey of the rich and renowned lands of Asia Minor and
Thrace which are predominantly Turkish in race”. These assurances led the
Indian M to believe that whatever happened, the territorial integrity and
independence of Turkey, so far as her Asiatic dominions would be maintained.
However, what happened was different. Thrace was presented to Greece while
the Asiatic portions of Turkey passed to England and France. Thus Turkey was
dispossessed of her homelands and the Sultan deprived of all real authority. Indian
M regarded this as a great betrayal and carried on agitations through out
1919 but to no effect.
At the same time, Mustufa Kemal Pasha a highly gifted leader
rose in Turkey brushed aside the weak regime of the Caliph and resolved to
make a new, powerful Turkey on modern nationalistic lines. Aware that the
Caliph was the religious leader of the Arab world he decided to get rid his
country of Arabism and liberate it from the stronghold of the maulvis and
mullahs.
2. The Khilafat movement.
Under
the leadership of the Ali brothers they approached King Abdul Azeez of Arabia
to become the new Caliph. The King had the Indians in a corner by asking them
“If it is Islam that you are zealous about, why do not you join hands with
Gandhi and free India of the Brit rule. That’s what Islam teaches. You come
to me as a slave of the Brits and it seems to me that you have come to lead
me into a Brit trap”. Next the leaders approached Reza Shah, the ruler of
Iran. But Shah proud of his Aryan tradition, evinced little interest.
In 1921, Muhammad Ali had written a letter to the Amir of
Afghanistan inviting him to invade India. The Brits got scent of this and
arrested the Ali brothers. On his written assurance that he was no opponent
of the Brits he was released. In 1921, when the Khilafat agitation was at its
peak, Ali again sent a wire to the Amir urging him not to enter into any
agreement with the Brits. When Ali was taken to task by the Congress leaders
he showed Swami Shraddananada (renowned Arya Samaj leader) a hand written
draft of the wire.
-----------------------------------------------------------
It was also the first time that
the Muslims had remembered the Hindus. Said Maulana Abdul Bari at the Khilafat Conference “The Muslims honor would be at stake if
they forget the co-operation of the Hindus. I for my part will say that we should stop cow-killing, because we are
children of the same soil”.
----------------------------------------------------------Gandhiji into the picture !!
The
Swami writes “What was my astonishment when I saw the draft of the same
self-same telegram in the peculiar handwriting of the Father of the
non-violent non-cooperation movement”. Writing in the Young India in May 1921 Gandhi said,
“I would, in a sense,
certainly assist the Amir of Afghanistan if he
waged war against the British govt. It is no part of the duty
of a non-violent non-cooperator to assist the govt against war made upon it
by others. I would rather see India perish at the hands of the Afghans than
purchase freedom from Afghan invasion at the cost of her honor. To have India
defended by an unrepentant govt that keeps the Khilafat and Punjab wounds
still bleeding is to sell India’s honor”. Gandhi was criticized by Lala
Lajpat Rai and B C Pal for his statements. Thus it is interesting to note
that the Hindu Congress leaders took up the case of the Caliph when the
Muslim world itself had refused to do so.
·
Gandhi had equated the Khilafat
movement with India’s freedom movement.
·
But ,Gandhi failed to realize
that the Pan-Islamic idea, which inspired the K movement, cut at the very
root of Indian nationality.
(Mohammed Ali Jinnah
---- opposed Mahatma Gandhi's association with the Khilafat
movement )
3. The non-cooperation is referred to briefly since it has
its origin in the K movement.
· It is proved
beyond doubt that the reason for the 1920 Non Cooperation Movement was
incidents in Turkey and not the massacre of Indians in Punjab.
· Remember that
Gandhi had taken the Khilafat decision independent of the Congress before its
session.
· Bottom line
is – Khilafat was the reason for the Non-cooperation movement. It
was ratified by the Congress after the movement had started. Swaraj was
incorporated later. The term was not corned by Gandhi for which we need to go
back to the Partition of Bengal in 1905. We owe the word to Bengalis for
popularizing it although it was used by men like Swami Dayananda earlier.
4. The Moplah
rebellion in Kerala is a result of the K movement.
The Moplahs are a band of
fanatic Muslims who have descended from the Arabs who settled in the Malabar
Coast in about the 8th or 9th century A.D and married mostly Indian wives.
They had over the years acquired an unenviable notoriety for crimes
perpetuated under the impulse of religious frenzy. They were responsible for
35 minor outbreaks during the Brit rule, the most terrible being the one that
took place in August 1921.
Mrs Annie Besant, “Malabar has taught what
Islamic rule means and we do not want to see another specimen of Khilafat Raj
in India”.
At the annual session of the
Khilafat Conference in 1923, Shaukat Ali, President of the session praised
the Moplahs while conceding some Hindus had suffered at their hands, he said
the while chapter was a closed book since they had a duty to the brave
Moplahs.
5.Hindu-Muslim unity!
The Khilafat Committee died a
natural death after the abolition of the Caliphate by Kemal Pasha in 1924.
The Hindu-Muslim unity brought about by Gandhi in 1920-21 was artificial in
character and did not produce any real change of heart. It was based on
common hatred for the Brits, for different reasons though, by the Muslims on
account of the treatment meted out to the Caliphate, by the Hindus for
Swaraj. The so-called Nationalists Muslims who had joined Gandhi in 1921 were
really Pan-islamists who merely exploited Gandhi for securing redress of the
Khilafat wrong. As soon as the Khilafat agitation came to an end, they showed
their true colors.
Muhammad Ali, who was Gandhi’s trusted during the first Satyagraha campaign refused to join him in the second campaign in 1930. At a meeting of the All India Muslim Conference at Bombay held in April 1930, attended by over 20,000 Muslims he said “We refuse to join Mr Gandhi, because his movement is not a movement for the complete independence of India but for making the seventy million of Indian Musalmans dependants of the Hindu Mahasabha”. | ||
Suspension
On February 5, 1922, in the Chauri Chaura, after violent clashes
between the local police and the protesters in which three protesters were
killed by police firing, the police chowki (station) was set on fire by the
mob, killing 22 of the police occupants.
Gandhi went on for a 3 days fast to appeal to the Indians to
stop all resistance and the movement was called off.
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Why Gandhiji suspended it ?
Gandhi felt that the revolt was veering off-course, and was
disappointed that the revolt had lost its non-violent nature. He did not want
the movement to degenerate into a contest of violence, with police and angry
mobs attacking each other back and forth, victimizing civilians in between.
Gandhi appealed to the Indian public for all resistance to end, went on a
fast lasting 3 weeks, and called off the mass civil disobedience movement.
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Effect
·
Its immediate suspension
diminished the public enthusiasm. The boycott of the educational institutions
and law courts was not successful in the long run.
·
At the A.I.C.C. meeting
there was wide scale opposition to the calling off of the non-cooperation
duly supported by nationalists all over India. There is no doubt that the
suspension of the non-cooperation movement had the disastrous effect of
developing a spirit of frustration, and this may be regarded as the main
cause of political inertia that followed. As very often happens, pent-up
energy found an outlet in the Hindu-Muslim riots that followed in the next
few years. The Govt correctly gauged the situation,
took full advantage of Gandhi’s unpopularity, was tried and sentenced to six
years simple imprisonment.
·
Failure of
Non-Cooperation Movement yield Revolutionary movement by Youngsters
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Why Swaraj Party ?
Gandhi and most of the Congress Party rejected the provincial
and central legislative councils created by the British to offer some
participation for Indians. They argued that the councils were rigged with
un-elected allies of the British, and too un-democratic and simply rubber stamps of the Viceroy.
In
December 1922, Chittaranjan Das, N.C. Kelkar and Motilal Nehru formed the Congress-Khilafat
Swarajaya Party with Das as the president and Nehru as one of the
secretaries. Other prominent leaders included Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy and Subhas Chandra Bose of Bengal, Vithalbhai Patel and
other Congress leaders who were becoming dissatisfied with the Congress. The
other group was the 'No-Changers',who had accepted Gandhis' decision to
withdraw the movement.
Now both the Swarajists and the No-Changers were engaged in
fierce political struggle. But both were determined to avoid the disastrous
experience of the 1907 split at Surat. On the advice of Gandhi, the two
groups decided to remain in the Congress but to work in their separate ways.
There was no basic difference between the two.
Swarajist
members were elected to the councils. Vithalbhai
Patel became the President of the Central Legislative Assembly.
However, the legislatures had very limited powers, and apart from some heated
parliamentary debates, procedural stand-offs with British authorities, the
core mission of obstructing British rule failed.
With the death of Chittaranjan Das in 1925, and with Motilal
Nehru's return to the Congress the following year, the Swaraj party was
greatly weakened.
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Historians take on the movement
·
Contemporary
historians and critics suggest that the movement was successful enough to
break the back of British rule, and possibly even result in the independence
most Indians strove for until 1947
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·
But many
historians and Indian leaders of the time also defend Gandhi's judgment. If
he had not stopped the revolts, India could have descended into a chaotic
rebellion which would have alienated common Indians and impress only violent
revolutionaries.
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