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Activity Discussion History When did Gandhi ji returned to India and what was his first step to gain freedom

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  • When did Gandhi ji returned to India and what was his first step to gain freedom

    Posted by Aruja on July 3, 2021 at 12:00 pm

    When did Gandhi ji returned to India and what was his first step to gain freedom?

    Shivani Thakkar replied 3 years, 3 months ago 2 Members · 1 Reply
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  • Shivani Thakkar

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    July 5, 2021 at 12:31 pm
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    Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, known as Mahatma Gandhi or Bapu, was born on 2 October 1869. His or her role and contribution to the liberation movement in India, is not only interesting, but also a unique and instagram-like, since he was the one who woke up from the masses, to the Ahimsa-non-violence; she talked about the importance of independence, and it gave them a sense of freedom. The best and the infallible weapon and called out to them, to the reduction of the age-old chains of slavery. In this article, we will talk about Mahatma Gandhi’s Journey from South Africa to India.

    After a long stay in South Africa, which lasted for about 20 years, he has enjoyed a great deal of respect, as a nationalist, theorist and organiser is from India. He had been invited by Gopal Krishna Gokhale, a senior leader of the Indian National Congress as a member of the Indian National Movement against the tyranny of the British empire handed to him by C. F. Andrews.

    After his return to India, Gokhale a detailed Instagram Gandhi, on the current political situation in India, as well as on the social issues of the day.

    The movement started by Gandhi in India

    1. Champaran in 1917, Was the first step in challenging Plan, and a major revolt in the Indian independence movement. This change was coming to the Uk to power.

    2. Head out In 1918, and was held in support of the farmers, and the Main area. The people of Khedi is not in a position to pay the high taxes in the Uk, due to crop failures, and the bubonic plague.

    3. The Caliphate Movement After the First world War, This movement was organized in order to unite the Hindus and the Muslims will fight against the tyranny of the British, and to call for the two communities to show solidarity and unity. He was criticized by many of the leaders, however, managed to gain the support of the Muslims. However, when the Caliphate of Motion, and suddenly stopped all of his efforts into it, it suddenly disappeared.

    4. The Non-co-operation Movement was launched following the Jallianwala massacre and lasted from 1920 to February 1922, in order to oppose British rule in India through non-violent means”, or with “Ahinsa”. However, this move was completed in February 1922, after the incident at Chauri Chaura, where residents burned a police officers life.

    5. Civil Disobedience Movement: The celebration of the Day of Independence in 1930, it was followed by the launching of the Civil Disobedience Movement under the leadership of Gandhi. It all began with Gandhi’s famous Dandi March”. On March 12, 1930, Gandhi, left, at the state hermitage museum in Ahmedabad, india, in the foothills, along with 78 other members of the Ashram, in Dundee, a small town on the western coast of India, approximately 385 kilometres. She Dundee, on April 6, 1930. There, Gandhi violated the rules of international law. Salt mining was made illegal because it was a state monopoly. Gandhi defied the government by picking up a handful of salt, which was formed as a result of the evaporation of the sea. The negligence on the part of the salt Law, and the Civil Disobedience Movement spreading across the country. The manufacture of salt is spread all over the country, in the first phase of the civil disobedience movement, he was a symbol of the uprising of the state.

    6. Talk about the Conference and the Round Table, and The three Round Table Conferences of 1930-32 were a series of conferences, organized by the British Government and the Indian National Congress, to discuss constitutional reforms in India. During the second conference, he realizes the true intentions of the British.

    7. Gandhi-Irwin Pact, M. K. Gandhi, and was followed by a very formal meeting with the Lord On behalf of the Indian National Congress, to discuss the terms of the constitutional reform process. The pact, and forced the British government to provide a range of demands, which included the withdrawal of all of the judgments and legal proceedings; the release of all political prisoners, return of the seized Satyagarh property, and the securing of salt in a collection or in the mining industry.

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