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Encyclopedia > Salt March
Scenes during Gandhi's famous march, on foot to the sea coast at Dandi, on the eve of the Salt Satyagraha, 1930

The Salt Satyagraha, also known as the Salt March To Dandi, was an act of protest against the British salt tax in colonial India. Mahatma Gandhi led fellow Indians from Sabarmati Ashram to Dandi in Gujarat. The march lasted from March 12 to April 6, 1930. Scenes during Gandhis famous march, on foot to the sea coast at Dandi, on the eve of the Salt Satyagraha, 1930. ... Scenes during Gandhis famous march, on foot to the sea coast at Dandi, on the eve of the Salt Satyagraha, 1930. ... 2003 GMO USDA protest Protest expresses relatively overt reaction to events or situations: sometimes in favour, more often opposed. ... In 1498, the Portuguese set foot in Goa. ... Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (October 2, 1869 – January 30, 1948) (Devanagari: मोहनदास करमचन्द गांधी), called Mahatma Gandhi, was the charismatic leader who brought the cause of Indias independence from British colonial rule to world attention. ... Sabarmati Ashram was established by Mahatma Gandhi in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India. ... Dandi is a small village in Gujarat, India. ... Gujarat (ગુજરાત in Gujarati) is the most industrialized state in India after Maharashtra and is located in western India, bordered by Pakistan to the northwest and Rajasthan to the north. ... March 12 is the 71st day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (72nd in Leap years). ... April 6 is the 96th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (97th in leap years). ... 1930 is a common year starting on Wednesday. ...

Contents

Background

At midnight on December 31, 1929, the Indian National Congress unfurled the flag of independence on the banks of Ravi at Lahore. The Indian National Congress, led by Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru, issued the Declaration of Independence on January 26. The Congress placed the responsibility of initiating civil disobedience on the All India Congress Committee. This campaign also had to achieve the secularization of India, uniting Hindus and Muslims. Mahatma Gandhi was convinced that non-violent civil disobedience would form the basis for any subsequent protest. December 31 is the 365th day of the year (366th in leap years) in the Gregorian Calendar. ... 1929 was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will take you to calendar). ... Election symbol of the Congress Election symbol of the Congress The Indian National Congress (also known as the Congress Party) is the largest subscription-based organisation in the world. ... Ravi could refer to any of these : Ravi, a Hindu solar deity. ... Lahore (لاةور) is a major city in Pakistan that is the capital of the province of Punjab. ... Jawaharlal Nehru (जवाहरलाल नेहरू, Javāharlāl Nehrū) (November 14, 1889 – May 27, 1964), also called Pandit (Teacher) Nehru, was the leader of the socialist wing of the Indian National Congress during and after Indias struggle for independence from the British Empire. ... January 26 is the 26th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar. ... Civil disobedience encompasses the active refusal to obey certain laws, demands and commands of a government or of an occupying power without resorting to physical violence. ... This article is about the Hindu religion; for other meanings of the word, see Hindu (disambiguation). ... A Muslim is a believer in or follower of Islam. ...


Beginning in February, Mahatma's thoughts swayed towards the British tax on salt, one of many economic means used to generate revenue that supported British colonial rule. Gandhi decided to make the salt tax the focal point of non-violent political protest. The British monopoly on the salt trade in India dictated that the sale or production of salt by anyone but the British government was a criminal offense punishable by law. Salt was readily accessible to laborers in the coastal area, but they were instead forced to pay money for a mineral which they could easily collect themselves for free. Gandhi's choice met the important criterion of appealing across regional, class, and ethnic boundaries. Everyone needed salt, and the British taxes on it had an impact on all of India. A tax is an involuntary fee paid by individuals or businesses to a state, or to functional equivalents of a state, including tribes, secessionist movements or revolutionary movements. ... Sodium chloride, also known as common salt, table salt, or halite, is a chemical compound with formula NaCl. ... In business, revenue is the amount of money that a company actually receives from its activities, mostly from sales of products and/or services to customers. ... The British Raj is an informal term for the period of British colonial rule of most of the Indian subcontinent, or present-day India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. ... Nonviolent resistance (or nonviolent action) is the practice of applying power to achieve socio-political goals through symbolic protests, economic or political noncooperation, civil disobedience and other methods, without the use of physical violence. ... In economics, a monopoly (from the Greek monos, one + polein, to sell) is defined as a persistent market situation where there is only one provider of a kind of product or service. ... Although India occupies only 2. ...


On February 5, newspapers reported that Gandhi would begin civil disobedience by defying the salt laws. February 5 is the 36th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar. ... For other meanings of the word salt see table salt or salt (disambiguation). ...


Led by an inner voice during this period of strategic uncertainty, Gandhi used the British Government's salt tax as a catalyst for a major satyagraha campaign. See Satyagraha (opera) for an account of the opera of that title by Philip Glass. ...


One of Gandhi's principal concepts, "satyagraha" goes beyond mere "passive resistance"; by adding the Indian word "Agraha" (persuasion) to "Satya" (Truth). For him, it was crucial that Satyagrahis found strength in their non-violent methods: "Truth (Satya) implies Love, and Firmness (Agraha) engenders and therefore serves as a synonym for force… that is to say, the Force which is born of Truth and Love or Non-violence… [If] we are Satyagrahis and offer Satyagraha, believing ourselves to be strong… we grow stronger and stronger everyday. With our increase in strength, our Satyagraha too becomes more effective, and we would never be casting about for an opportunity to give it up." --Gandhi


Protesting the salt tax as an injustice to the people of India was an ingenious choice because every peasant and every aristocrat understood the necessity of salt in everyday life. It was also a good choice because it did not alienate Congress moderates while simultaneously being an issue of enough importance to mobilize a mass following.


The March

In an effort to amend the salt tax without breaking the law, on March 2, 1930 Gandhi wrote to the Viceroy, Lord Irwin: "If my letter makes no appeal to your heart, on the eleventh day of this month I shall proceed with such co-workers of the Ashram as I can take, to disregard the provisions of the Salt Laws. I regard this tax to be the most iniquitous of all from the poor man's standpoint. As the Independence movement is essentially for the poorest in the land, the beginning will be made with this evil." March 2 is the 61st day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (62nd in leap years). ... A viceroy is somebody who governs a country or province as a substitute for the monarch. ... Edward Frederick Lindley Wood, 1st Earl of Halifax, known as Lord Irwin from 1926 until 1934, (1881-1959) was a British Conservative politician. ... Ashrams in ancient India, were Hindu hermitages where sages used to live in peace and tranquility amidst nature. ...


On March 12, 1930, Gandhi and approximately 78 male satyagrahis set out, on foot, for the coastal village of Dandi some 240 miles from their starting point in Sabarmati, a journey which was to last 23 days. Virtually every resident of each city along this journey watched the great procession, which was at least two miles in length. On April 6th, Gandhi raised a lump of mud and salt (some say just a pinch, some say just a grain) and declared, "With this, I am shaking the foundations of the British Empire." He then boiled it in seawater to make the commodity which no Indian could legally produce--salt. March 12 is the 71st day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (72nd in Leap years). ... See Satyagraha (opera) for an account of the opera of that title by Philip Glass. ... Dandi is a small village in Gujarat, India. ... Sabarmati river is a river in Western India. ...


Upon arriving at the seashore he spoke to a reporter: "God be thanked for what may be termed the happy ending of the first stage in this, for me at least, the final struggle of freedom. I cannot withhold my compliments from the government for the policy of complete non interference adopted by them throughout the march .... I wish I could believe this non-interference was due to any real change of heart or policy. The wanton disregard shown by them to popular feeling in the Legislative Assembly and their high-handed action leave no room for doubt that the policy of heartless exploitation of India is to be persisted in at any cost, and so the only interpretation I can put upon this non-interference is that the British Government, powerful though it is, is sensitive to world opinion which will not tolerate repression of extreme political agitation which civil disobedience undoubtedly is, so long as disobedience remains civil and therefore necessarily non-violent .... It remains to be seen whether the Government will tolerate as they have tolerated the march, the actual breach of the salt laws by countless people from tomorrow. I expect extensive popular response to the resolution of the Working Committee (of the Indian National Congress)."


He implored his thousands of followers to begin to make salt wherever, along the seashore, "was most convenient and comfortable" to them. A "war" on the salt tax was to be continued during the National Week, that is, up to the thirteenth of April. There was an also simultaneous boycott of British made cloth/goods. Salt was sold, "illegally", all over the seacoast of India. A pinch of salt from Gandhi himself sold for 1,600 rupees, perhaps $750 dollars at the time. In reaction to this, the British government had incarcerated over sixty thousand people at the end of the month. The Rupee (₨ or Rs. ...


On the night of May 4th, Gandhi was sleeping in a cot under a mango tree, at a village near Dandi. Several ashramites slept near him. Soon after midnight the District Magistrate of Surat drove up with two Indian officers and thirty heavily-armed constables. He woke Gandhi by shining a torch in his face, and arrested him under a regulation of 1827. This article is about the fruit. ... A magistrate is a judicial officer with limited authority to administer and enforce the law. ... Surat is a port city in the Indian state of Gujarat. ... United Kingdom A Constable is a police officer in Britain and most countries with a British colonial history (now mostly members of the Commonwealth of Nations). ...


Aftermath

The effects of the salt march were felt across India. Thousands of people made salt, or bought illegal salt. As the march mobilized many new followers from all of Indian society, it came to the world's attention. Tens of thousands of Indians were arrested for buying and selling salt illegally, however the Viceroy ordered his troops to arrest Gandhi last. After Gandhi's released from prison he continued to work towards Indian independence, which was achieved in August, 1947, but Dandi was a key turning point in that struggle. The Indian independence movement was a series of steps taken in the Indian subcontinent for independence from British colonial rule, beginning with the Rebellion of 1857. ... 1947 was a common year starting on Wednesday (link will take you to calendar). ...


Re-enactment in 2005

To commemorate the Great Salt March, the Mahatma Gandhi Foundation proposed a re-enactment on the 75th anniversary. The event is known as the "International Walk for Peace, Justice and Freedom." Mahatma Gandhi's great-grandson Tushar Gandhi and several hundred fellow marchers are currently following the same route to Dandi and plan to take a similar amount of time to walk it. The start of the march on March 12, 2005 in Ahmedabad was attended by Sonia Gandhi (no familial relations), Chairperson of the National Advisory Council, as well as nearly half of the Indian cabinet, many of whom walked for the first few kilometres. The re-enactment is expected to end on April 7. Tushar Gandhi is a great-grandson of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, the Indian who helped India gain independence. ... Dandi is a small village in Gujarat, India. ... March 12 is the 71st day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (72nd in Leap years). ... 2005 is a common year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar. ... Sonia Gandhi Sonia Gandhi (सोनिया गाँधी) (born December 9, 1946), is an Indian politician and the president of the Indian National Congress (Congress Party). ... The National Advisory Council of India was setup on June 4, 2004 to monitor the implementation of the United Progressive Alliances Common Minimum Programme. ... List of Indian ministers in the current government elected in 2004: Names in italics are women ministers. ... April 7 is the 97th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (98th in leap years). ...


Event Description from saltmarch.org.in:

  • Dates: 12th March 2005 to 7th April 2005.
  • Duration: 27 Days.
  • Start and Finish: Sabarmati Ashram (Ahmedabad) to Mumbai.
  • Walking Distance: 241 miles or 385.6 km in total. Participants will walk an average 9.64 miles per day for 25 days.

See also

The Indian independence movement was a series of steps taken in the Indian subcontinent for independence from British colonial rule, beginning with the Rebellion of 1857. ...

External links

  • How Not To Make A Mockery Of Dandi (http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/msid-1052941,curpg-1.cms) (www.economictimes.com)
  • Salt march slide pack (http://specials.rediff.com/news/2005/mar/15sld1.htm) (Rediff.com)
  • The Salt March (http://www.saltmarch.org.in/home.html)
  • Gandhi's 1930 march re-enacted (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/4342745.stm) (BBC News)
  • Gandhi salt march re-enacted (http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200503/s1322143.htm) (Aust. BC)
  • Now, Dandi looks westward for help (http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/1051722.cms) (TOI)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Articles - Mahatma Gandhi (3412 words)
His longest term of imprisonment began on March 18, 1922 when he was sentenced to six years for civil disobedience - although he served only 2 years of that sentence.
Thousands walked with him to the sea in what came to be known as the Dandi March or the Salt March.
The object was for the people to collect their own salt rather than pay a salt tax to the government.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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