The History Book

(Tina Sui) #1
299
See also: The formation of the Royal African Company 176–79 ■ The Siege
of Lucknow 242 ■ Nkrumah wins Ghanaian independence 306–07

Mohandas Gandhi


The Indian national leader
known as Mahatma, meaning
“great soul,” Mohandas
Gandhi (1869–1948) led his
country to independence
from Great Britain. He came
from a Hindu family and
studied law in England before
spending 20 years in South
Africa trying to secure rights
for the Indians living there.
Gandhi’s involvement
in Indian politics began in
1919, and he soon became the
unquestioned leader of the
independence movement.
He preached the doctrine
of Satyagraha (soul force,
or passive resistance) which
he applied against the British
with great effect. He adopted
a simple life believing in the
virtue of small communities
and campaigned against
Indian industrialization.
Gandhi’s life work was
crowned in 1947, when India
finally won independence,
but the concessions he had
made to the Muslims led
to his assassination the
following year by a Hindu
fanatic, who blamed him for
the partition of India, although
Gandhi himself bitterly
opposed the dismemberment
of the subcontinent.

itself was split between northwest
and northeast, because both wings
had a Muslim majority. Immediately,
millions of Muslims trekked to West
and East Pakistan (the latter now
known as Bangladesh), while
millions of Hindus and Sikhs headed
towards the newly independent
India. Thousands never reached it,
and many died from malnutrition
and disease. Across India there
were outbreaks of sectarian
violence, with Hindus and Sikhs on
one side and Muslims on the other.
By 1948, as the great migration
drew to a close, more than 15
million people had been uprooted,
and between 1 million and 2 million
were dead. India was independent

and India’s Muslims had their
own independent state, but
freedom came at a great cost.

The road to independence
The spirit of nationalism in India
gained ground in the mid-19th
century and was strengthened in
1885 by the formation of the Indian
National Congress (INC). During
World War I, expectations for greater
self-governance were raised when
Britain promised to deliver self-rule
in return for India’s contribution
to the war effort. But Britain
envisaged a gradual progress
toward self-government, beginning
with the Government of India Act
(1919), which created an Indian ❯❯

THE MODERN WORLD


Indian independence is achieved,
and the country is split in two.

Gandhi
attracts
millions with
his call for
non-violent
disobedience.

The Muslim
population
clamors for an
independent
state of their
own.

Economically
weakened by
World War II,
Britain is unable
to defend
its empire.

Indian nationalists demand independence from Britain.

Britain makes some concessions,
but they don’t go far enough.

US_298-301_Indian_Independence.indd 299 15/02/2016 16:45

Free download pdf