Towards the end of the First World War, various forces were at work in India and on the international scene. After the end of the war, there was a resurgence of nationalist activity in India and in many other colonies in Asia and Africa.
The Indian struggle against imperialism took a decisive turn towards a broad-based popular struggle with the emergence of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi on the Indian political scene.
Why Nationalist Resurgence Now
After the war, the conditions in India and influences from abroad created a situation that was ready for a national upsurge against foreign rule.
Post-War Economic Hardships
(i) Industry- First, an increase in prices, then a recession coupled with increased foreign investment brought many industries to the brink of closure and loss.
(ii) Workers and Artisans- This section of the populace faced unemployment and bore the brunt of high prices.
(iii) Peasantry- Faced with high taxation and poverty, the peasants waited for a lead to protest.
(iv) Soldiers- Soldiers who returned from battlefields abroad gave an idea of their experience to the rural folk.
(v) Educated Urban Classes- This section was facing unemployment as well as suffering from an acute awareness of racism in the attitude of the British.
Expectations of Political Gains for Cooperation in the War
After the war, there were high expectations of political gains from the British government and this too contributed towards the charged atmosphere in the country.
Nationalist Disillusionment with Imperialism Worldwide
- During the war, the Allied powers pledged the colonies a future of democracy and self-determination to win their support.
- However, post-war, it became evident that these promises were not going to be fulfilled.
- The imperialist powers, instead of granting independence, actually strengthened their control over the colonies, dividing them among themselves.
- This exposed the hypocrisy of the Allies and undermined the belief in the superiority of the white colonial powers.
- Consequently, after the war, there was a surge in nationalist movements in various Asian and African countries, as people sought independence and self-rule.
Question for Spectrum Summary: Emergence of Gandhi
Try yourself:
What was one of the drawbacks of the Franchise system in India?Explanation
- The drawback of the Franchise system in India was that the electorate was very limited.
- The central legislature had an electorate of only around one-and-a-half million, while the population of India was approximately 260 million.
- This limited electorate meant that only a small portion of the population had the right to vote and participate in the political process.
- This lack of inclusivity and representation was a significant drawback of the Franchise system in India.
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Impact of Russian Revolution (7 November,1917)
- The Bolshevik Party, led by Vladimir Lenin, overthrew the Russian Czar and created the Soviet Union, the first socialist state.
- They gave up Russia's claims in China and Asia, allowed former colonies to decide their fate, and treated different nationalities equally within the Soviet Union.
- The October Revolution showed that when people are organized and determined, they can challenge even powerful rulers.
- The carrot was represented by the insubstantial Montagu-Chelmsford Reforms, while measures such as the Rowlatt Act represented the stick.
- In line with the government policy contained in Montagu's statement of August 1917, the government announced further constitutional reforms in July 1918, known as Montagu- Chelmsford or Montford Reforms. Based on these, the Government of India Act, 1919 was enacted.
Main Features
The Main Features of the Montford Reforms were as follows.
Provincial Government—Introduction of Dyarchy
I. Executive
- Dyarchy, i.e., the rule of two—executive councillors and popular ministers— was introduced. The governor was to be the executive head of the province.
- Subjects were divided into two lists: ‘reserved' and ‘transferred' subjects.
- The reserved subjects were to be administered by the governor through his executive council of bureaucrats, and the transferred subjects were to be administered by ministers nominated from among the elected members of the legislative council.
- The ministers were to be responsible to the legislature and had to resign if a no-confidence motion was passed against them by the legislature, while the executive councillors were not to be responsible to the legislature.
- In case of failure of constitutional machinery in the province, the governor could take over the administration of transferred subjects.
- The secretary of state for India and the governor-general could interfere in respect of reserved subjects while in respect of the transferred subjects, the scope for their interference was restricted.
II. Legislature
- Provincial legislative councils were further expanded and 70 per cent of the members were to be elected.
- The system of communal and class electorates was further consolidated.
- Women were also given the right to vote.
- The legislative councils could initiate legislation but the governor’s assent was required. The governor could veto bills and issue ordinances.
- The legislative councils could reject the budget but the governor could restore it, if necessary.
- The legislators enjoyed freedom of speech.
Central Government—Still Without Responsible Government
I. Executive
- The governor-general was to be the chief executive authority.
- There were to be two lists for administration— central and provincial.
- In the viceroy’s executive council of eight, three were to be Indians. The governor-general retained full control over the reserved subjects in the provinces.
- The governor-general could restore cuts in grants, certify bills rejected by the central legislature and issue ordinances.
II. Legislature
- A bicameral arrangement was introduced. The lower house or Central Legislative Assembly would consist of 145 members and the upper house or Council of State would have 60 members.
- The Council of State had a tenure of 5 years and had only male members, while the Central Legislative Assembly had a tenure of 3 years.
- The legislators could ask questions and supplementary, pass adjournment motions and vote a part of the budget, but 75 per cent of the budget was still not votable.
- On the home government (in Britain) front, the Government of India Act, 1919 made an important change— the Secretary of State for India was henceforth to be paid out of the British exchequer.
Question for Spectrum Summary: Emergence of Gandhi
Try yourself:
What was the main feature of the Montagu-Chelmsford Reforms?Explanation
- The main feature of the Montagu-Chelmsford Reforms was the introduction of dyarchy in the provincial government.
- Dyarchy refers to the rule of two, with executive councillors and popular ministers sharing power.
- The governor was the executive head of the province, and subjects were divided into reserved and transferred lists.
- Reserved subjects were administered by the governor through his executive council, while transferred subjects were administered by ministers nominated from the elected members of the legislative council.
- The ministers were responsible to the legislature, while the executive councillors were not.
- In case of failure of constitutional machinery, the governor could take over the administration of transferred subjects.
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Drawbacks
- Franchise was very limited. The electorate was extended to some one-and-a-half million for the central legislature, while the population of India was around 260 million, as per one estimate.
- At the centre, the legislature had no control over the viceroy and his executive council.
- Division of subjects was not satisfactory at the centre.
- Allocation of seats for the central legislature to the provinces was based on the importance of provinces— for instance, Punjab’s military importance and Bombay’s commercial importance.
- At the level of provinces, the division of subjects and parallel administration of two parts was irrational and, hence, unworkable. Subjects like irrigation, finance, police, press and justice were 'reserved’.
- The provincial ministers had no control over finances and the bureaucrats; this would lead to constant friction between the two.
Ministers were often not consulted on important matters too; in fact, they could be overruled by the governor on any matter that the latter considered special.
Congress’s Reaction
- The Congress met in a special session in August 1918 at Bombay under Hasan Imam's presidency and declared the reforms to be "disappointing" and “unsatisfactory”
- The Montford reforms were termed “unworthy and disappointing—a sunless dawn by Tilak, even as Annie Besant found them “unworthy of England to offer and India to accept''
Making of Gandhi
Early Career and Experiments with Truth in South Africa
- Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was born on October 2, 1869 in Porbandar in the princely state of Kathiawar in Gujarat.
- After studying law in England, Gandhi went to South Africa on May 24, 1898. He stayed there till 1914 after which he returned to India.
- The Indians in South Africa consisted of three categories—one, the indentured Indian labourers; two, the merchants; and three, the ex-indentured labourers.
- Moderate Phase of Struggle (1894-1906)- To unite different sections of Indians, Gandhi set up the Natal Indian Congress and started a paper Indian Opinion.
- The phase of Passive Resistance or Satyagraha (1906-1914)- The second phase, which began in 1906, was characterized by the use of the method of passive resistance or civil disobedience, which Gandhi named satyagraha.
- Satyagraha against Registration Certificates (1906)- Gandhi formed the Passive Resistance Association to conduct the campaign of defying the law and suffering all the penalties. Thus was born satyagraha or devotion to truth, the technique of resisting adversaries without violence.
- Campaign against Restrictions on Indian Migration- The earlier campaign was widened to include protests against new legislation imposing restrictions on Indian migration.
- Campaign against Poll Tax and Invalidation of Indian Marriages
- Protest against Transvaal Immigration Act- The Indians protested the Transvaal Immigration Act, by illegally migrating from Natal into Transvaal. Even the viceroy, Lord Hardinge, condemned the repression and called for an impartial enquiry.
- Compromise Solution- After a series of negotiations involving Gandhi, Lord Hardinge, C.F. Andrews, and General Smuts, they reached an agreement in which the South African government agreed to meet the main demands of the Indian community. This included concerns about the poll tax, registration certificates, and marriages conducted according to Indian customs. Additionally, the government promised to address the matter of Indian immigration in a considerate way.
Gandhi's Experience in South Africa
- Gandhi found that the masses had an immense capacity to participate in and sacrifice for a cause that moved them.
- He was able to unite Indians belonging to different religions and classes, and men and women alike under his leadership.
- He also came to realise that at times leaders have to make decisions unpopular with their enthusiastic supporters.
- He was able to evolve his style of leadership and politics and new techniques of struggle on a limited scale, untrammelled by the opposition of contending political currents.
Gandhi's Technique of Satyagraha
Gandhi evolved the technique of Satyagraha during his stay in South Africa. It was based on truth and non-violence.
- A satyagrahi was not to submit to what he considered as wrong but was to always remain truthful, non-violent and fearless.
- A satyagrahi works on the principles of withdrawal of cooperation and boycott. Methods of satyagraha include non-payment of taxes, and declining honours and positions of authority.
- A satyagrahi should be ready to accept suffering in his struggle against the wrongdoer. This suffering was to be a part of his love for truth.
- While carrying out his struggle against the wrong-doer, a true satyagrahi would have no ill feeling for the wrong-doer; hatred would be alien to his nature.
- A true satyagrahi would never bow before the evil, whatever the consequence.
- Only the brave and strong could practise satyagraha;
Gandhi in India
- Gandhi came back to India in January 1915 after gaining recognition for his efforts in South Africa.
- Instead of immediately diving into politics, he toured the country for a year to understand the people's conditions.
- He refrained from taking any political stance and was skeptical about moderate politics and the popular Home Rule agitation, thinking it wasn't the right time during the ongoing war.
- Gandhi believed in the power of non-violent satyagraha to achieve nationalist goals. He committed to not joining any political organization unless it also endorsed non-violent satyagraha.
- In 1917 and 1918, Gandhi participated in struggles in Champaran, Ahmedabad, and Kheda, laying the groundwork for the later Rowlatt Satyagraha.
Question for Spectrum Summary: Emergence of Gandhi
Try yourself:
What was one of the drawbacks of the franchise under the Montagu-Chelmsford Reforms?Explanation
- The drawback of the franchise under the Montagu-Chelmsford Reforms was that it was very limited.
- The electorate for the central legislature was extended to only around one-and-a-half million, while the population of India was estimated to be around 260 million.
- This limited franchise meant that a large portion of the population did not have representation in the central legislature, leading to a lack of inclusivity and representation.
- This limitation was considered unsatisfactory and disappointing by the Congress, as stated in the passage.
- Therefore, Option A is the correct answer as it accurately reflects one of the drawbacks of the franchise under the Montagu-Chelmsford Reforms.
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Champaran Satyagraha (1917)—First Civil Disobedience
- The European planters had been forcing the peasants to grow indigo on 3/20 part of the total land (called tinkathia system). The peasants were forced to sell the produce at prices fixed by the Europeans.
- When Gandhi, joined now by Rajendra Prasad, Mazharul- Haq, Mahadeo Desai, Narhari Parekh, and J.B. Kripalani, reached Champaran to probe into the matter, the authorities ordered him to leave the area at once.
- This passive resistance or civil disobedience of an unjust order was a novel method at that time. The government appointed a committee to go into the matter and nominated Gandhi as a member.
- Gandhi was able to convince the authorities that the tinkathia system should be abolished and that the peasants should be compensated for the illegal dues extracted from them.
- As a compromise with the planters, he agreed that only 25 per cent of the money taken should be compensated.
Ahmedabad Mill Strike (1918)— First Hunger Strike
- In March 1918, Gandhi intervened in a dispute between cotton mill owners of Ahmedabad and the workers over the issue of discontinuation of the plague bonus.
- The workers of the mill turned to Anusuya Sarabhai for help in fighting for justice. Anusuya Sarabhai was a social worker who was also the sister of Ambalal Sarabhai, one of the mill owners and the president of the Ahmedabad Mill Owners Association (founded in 1891 to develop the textile industry in Ahmedabad).
- Gandhi asked the workers to go on a strike and demand a 35 per cent increase in wages instead of 50 per cent.
- Gandhi advised the workers to remain non-violent while on strike.
- The strike was withdrawn. In the end, the tribunal awarded the workers a 35 per cent wage hike.
Kheda Satyagraha (1918)—First Non- Cooperation
- Because of the drought in 1918, the crops failed in the Kheda district of Gujarat.
- According to the Revenue Code, if the yield was less than one-fourth of the normal produce, the farmers were entitled to remission.
- Gandhi asked the farmers not to pay the taxes.
- Patel along with his colleagues organized the tax revolt which the different ethnic and caste communities of Kheda supported.
Gains from Champaran, Ahmedabad and Kheda
- Gandhi demonstrated to the people the efficacy of his technique of satyagraha.
- He found his feet among the masses and came to have a surer understanding of the strengths and weaknesses of the masses.
- He acquired the respect and commitment of many.
Rowlatt Act, Satyagraha, Jaliianwala Bagh Massacre
The Rowlatt Act
- Two bills were introduced in the Imperial Legislative Council.
- One of them was dropped, but the other— an extension to the Defence of India Regulations Act 1915—was passed in March 1919.
- It was what was officially called the Anarchical and Revolutionary Crimes Act but popularly known as the Rowlatt Act.
- It was based on the recommendations made by the Rowlatt Commission, headed by the British judge, Sir Sidney Rowlatt, to investigate the 'seditious conspiracy' of the Indian people.
- The act allowed political activists to be tried without juries or even imprisoned without trial. It allowed the arrest of Indians without a warrant on the mere suspicion of ‘treason’.
- The law of habeas corpus, the basis of civil liberty, was sought to be suspended. The object of the government was to replace the repressive provisions of the wartime Defence of India Act (1915) by a permanent law.
Satyagraha Against the Rowlatt Act
First Mass Strike - Gandhi called the Rowlatt Act the “Black Act'’. There was a radical change in the situation by now.
- The masses had found a direction; now they could act’ instead of just giving verbal expression to their grievances.
- From now onwards, peasants, artisans and the urban poor were to play an increasingly important part in the struggle.
- The orientation of the national movement turned to the masses permanently.
- Satyagraha was to be launched on April 6, 1919 but before it could be launched, there were large-scale violent, anti-British demonstrations.
Jallianwala Bagh Massacre (April 13, 1919)
- On April 9, two nationalist leaders, Saifuddin Kitchlew and Dr Satyapal, were arrested by the British officials without any provocation except that they had addressed protest meetings, and taken to some unknown destination.
- This caused resentment among the Indian protestors who came out in thousands on April 10 to show their solidarity with their leaders. Soon the protests turned violent because the police resorted to firing in some of the protestors were killed.
- By then the city had returned to calm and the protests that were being held were peaceful.
- Dyer, however, proclaimed on April 13 (which was also Baisakhi) forbidding people from leaving the city without a pass and from organising demonstrations or processions or assembling in groups of more than three.
- On Baisakhi day, a large crowd of people mostly from neighbouring villages, unaware of the prohibitory orders in the city, gathered in the Jallianwala Bagh, a popular place for public events, to celebrate the Baisakhi festival.
- The troops surrounded the gathering under orders from General Dyer blocked the only exit point and opened fire on the unarmed crowd.
- According to official British Indian sources, 379 were identified dead, and approximately 1,100 were wounded.
- Indian National Congress, on the other hand, estimated more than 1,500 were injured, and approximately 1,000 were killed. But it is precisely known that 1650 bullets were fired into the crowd.
- Gandhi gave up the title of Kaiser-i-Hind, bestowed by the British for his work during the Boer War.
- Gandhi was overwhelmed by the atmosphere of total violence and withdrew from the movement on April 18, 1919.
- According to the historian, A.P.J Taylor, the Jallianwala Bagh massacre was the “decisive moment when Indians were alienated from British rule’.
Question for Spectrum Summary: Emergence of Gandhi
Try yourself:
Gandhi's involvement in which event led to the first hunger strike?Explanation
- Gandhi intervened in the dispute between cotton mill owners and workers in Ahmedabad.
- The workers sought help from Anusuya Sarabhai.
- Gandhi advised the workers to go on a strike and remain non-violent.
- The strike was successful and the workers were awarded a 35% wage hike.
- Therefore, Gandhi's involvement in the Ahmedabad Mill Strike led to the first hunger strike.
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The Hunter Committee of Inquiry
- On October 14, 1919, the Government of India announced the formation of the Disorders Inquiry Committee, which came to be more widely and variously known as the Hunter Committee/Commission.
- The purpose of the commission was to “investigate the recent disturbances in Bombay, Delhi and Punjab, about their causes, and the measures taken to cope with them’.
- There were three Indians among the members, namely, Sir Chimanlal Harilal Setalvad, Vice-Chancellor of Bombay University and advocate of the Bombay High Court; Pandit Jagat Narayan, lawyer and Member of the Legislative Council of the United Provinces; and Sardar Sahibzada Sultan Ahmad Khan, lawyer from Gwalior State.
- Dyer is reported to have explained his sense of honour by saying, “I think it quite possible that I could have dispersed the crowd without firing but they would have come back again and laughed, and I would have made, what I consider, a fool of myself.”
- The government had passed an Indemnity Act for the protection of its officers. The “white washing bill" as the Indemnity Act was called, was severely criticised by Motilal Nehru and others.
- In the House of Commons, Churchill (no lover of Indians) condemned what had happened at Amritsar. He called it “monstrous”.
- A former prime minister of Britain, H.H. Asquith called it “one of the worst outrages in the whole of our history”.
- The honouring of Dyer by the priests of Sri Darbar Sahib, Amritsar, was one of the reasons behind the intensification of the demand.
Congress View
The Indian National Congress formed a committee, which included Motilal Nehru, C.R. Das, Abbas Tyabji, M.R. Jayakar, and Gandhi, to express their perspective. The Congress criticized Dyer's actions in Punjab as inhuman and opposed the introduction of martial law, stating that it was unjustified.