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Salt March

The Salt March, also known as the Salt Satyagraha, Dandi March and the Dandi Satyagraha, was an act of nonviolent civil disobedience in colonial India led by Mahatma Gandhi. The twenty-four day march lasted from 12 March to 5 April 1930 as a direct action campaign of tax resistance and nonviolent protest against the British salt monopoly. Another reason for this march was that the Civil Disobedience Movement needed a strong inauguration that would inspire more people to follow Gandhi's example. Gandhi started this march with 78 of his trusted volunteers. The march spanned 387 kilometres (240 mi), from Sabarmati Ashram to Dandi, which was called Navsari at that time (now in the state of Gujarat).[1] Growing numbers of Indians joined them along the way. When Gandhi broke the British Raj salt laws at 8:30 am on 6 April 1930, it sparked large scale acts of civil disobedience against the salt laws by millions of Indians.[2]

Salt March
Gandhi leading his followers on the famous Salt March to abolish the British Salt Laws.
Date12 March 1930 — 6 April 1930
LocationSabarmati, Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India

After making the salt by evaporation at Dandi, Gandhi continued southward along the coast, making salt and addressing meetings on the way. The Congress Party planned to stage a satyagraha at the Dharasana Salt Works, 40 km (25 mi) south of Dandi. However, Gandhi was arrested on the midnight of 4–5 May 1930, just days before the planned action at Dharasana. The Dandi March and the ensuing Dharasana Satyagraha drew worldwide attention to the Indian independence movement through extensive newspaper and newsreel coverage. The satyagraha against the salt tax continued for almost a year, ending with Gandhi's release from jail and negotiations with Viceroy Lord Irwin at the Second Round Table Conference.[3] Although over 60,000 Indians were jailed as a result of the Salt Satyagraha,[4] the British did not make immediate major concessions.[5]

The Salt Satyagraha campaign was based upon Gandhi's principles of non-violent protest called satyagraha, which he loosely translated as "truth-force".[6] Literally, it is formed from the Sanskrit words satya, "truth", and agraha, "insistence". In early 1920 the Indian National Congress chose satyagraha as their main tactic for winning Indian sovereignty and self-rule from British rule and appointed Gandhi to organise the campaign. Gandhi chose the 1882 British Salt Act as the first target of satyagraha. The Salt March to Dandi, and the beating by the colonial police of hundreds of nonviolent protesters in Dharasana, which received worldwide news coverage, demonstrated the effective use of civil disobedience as a technique for fighting social and political injustice.[7] The satyagraha teachings of Gandhi and the March to Dandi had a significant influence on American activists Martin Luther King Jr., James Bevel, and others during the Civil Rights Movement for civil rights for African Americans and other minority groups in the 1960s.[8] The march was the most significant organised challenge to British authority since the Non-cooperation movement of 1920–22, and directly followed the Purna Swaraj declaration of sovereignty and self-rule by the Indian National Congress on 26 January 1930.[9] It gained worldwide attention which gave impetus to the Indian independence movement and started the nationwide Civil Disobedience movement which continued until 1934 in Sabarmati, Ahemdabad, Gujarat, India.

Civil disobedience movement

 
Mahatma Gandhi and Sarojini Naidu during the March.

At midnight on 31 December 1929, the INC (Indian National Congress) raised the tricolour flag of India on the banks and the Ravi at Lahore. The Indian National Congress, led by Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru, publicly issued the Declaration of sovereignty and self-rule, or Purna Swaraj, on 26 January 1930.[10] (Literally in Sanskrit, purna, "complete," swa, "self," raj, "rule," so therefore "complete self-rule".) The declaration included the readiness to withhold taxes, and the statement:

We believe that it is the inalienable right of the Indian people, as of any other people, to have freedom and to enjoy the fruits of their toil and have the necessities of life, so that they may have full opportunities for growth. We believe also that if any government deprives a people of these rights and oppresses them the people have a further right to alter it or abolish it. The British government in India has not only deprived the Indian people of their freedom but has based itself on the exploitation of the masses, and has ruined India economically, politically, culturally, and spiritually. We believe, therefore, that India must sever the British connection and attain Purna Swaraji or complete sovereignty and self-rule.[11]

The Congress Working Committee gave Gandhi the responsibility for organising the first act of civil disobedience, with Congress itself ready to take charge after Gandhi's expected arrest.[12] Gandhi's plan was to begin civil disobedience with a satyagraha aimed at the British salt tax. The 1882 Salt Act gave the British a monopoly on the collection and manufacture of salt, limiting its handling to government salt depots and levying a salt tax.[13] Violation of the Salt Act was a criminal offence. Even though salt was freely available to those living on the coast (by evaporation of sea water), Indians were forced to buy it from the colonial government.

Choice of salt as protest focus

Initially, Gandhi's choice of the salt tax was met with incredulity by the Working Committee of the Congress,[14] Jawaharlal Nehru and Divyalochan Sahu were ambivalent; Sardar Patel suggested a land revenue boycott instead.[15][16] The Statesman, a prominent newspaper, wrote about the choice: "It is difficult not to laugh, and we imagine that will be the mood of most thinking Indians."[16]

The British colonial administration too was not disturbed by these plans of resistance against the salt tax. The Viceroy himself, Lord Irwin, did not take the threat of a salt protest seriously, writing to London, "At present, the prospect of a salt campaign does not keep me awake at night."[17]

However, Gandhi had sound reasons for his decision. An item of daily use could resonate more with all classes of citizens than an abstract demand for greater political rights.[18] The salt tax represented 8.2% of the British Raj tax revenue, and hurt the poorest Indians the most significantly.[19] Explaining his choice, Gandhi said, "Next to air and water, salt is perhaps the greatest necessity of life." In contrast to the other leaders, the prominent Congress statesman and future Governor-General of India, C. Rajagopalachari, understood Gandhi's viewpoint. In a public meeting at Tuticorin, he said:

Suppose, a people rise in revolt. They cannot attack the abstract constitution or lead an army against proclamations and statutes ... Civil disobedience has to be directed against the salt tax or the land tax or some other particular point – not that; that is our final end, but for the time being it is our aim, and we must shoot straight.[16]

Gandhi felt that this protest would dramatise Purna Swaraj in a way that was meaningful to every Indian. He also reasoned that it would build unity between Hindus and Muslims by fighting a wrong that touched them equally.[12]

After the protest gathered steam, the leaders realised the power of salt as a symbol. Nehru remarked about the unprecedented popular response, "it seemed as though a spring had been suddenly released."[16]

Satyagraha

Gandhi had a long-standing commitment to nonviolent civil disobedience, which he termed satyagraha, as the basis for achieving Indian sovereignty and self-rule.[20][21] Referring to the relationship between satyagraha and Purna Swaraj, Gandhi saw "an inviolable connection between the means and the end as there is between the seed and the tree".[22] He wrote, "If the means employed are impure, the change will not be in the direction of progress but very likely in the opposite. Only a change brought about in our political condition by pure means can lead to real progress."[23]

Satyagraha is a synthesis of the Sanskrit words Satya (truth) and Agraha (insistence on). For Gandhi, satyagraha went far beyond mere "passive resistance" and became strength in practicing nonviolent methods. In his words:

Truth (satya) implies love, and firmness (agraha) engenders and therefore serves as a synonym for force. I thus began to call the Indian movement Satyagraha, that is to say, the Force which is born of Truth and Love or nonviolence, and gave up the use of the phrase "passive resistance", in connection with it, so much so that even in English writing we often avoided it and used instead the word "satyagraha" ...[24]

His first significant attempt in India at leading mass satyagraha was the non-cooperation movement from 1920 to 1922. Even though it succeeded in raising millions of Indians in protest against the British-created Rowlatt Act, violence broke out at Chauri Chaura, where a mob killed 22 unarmed policemen. Gandhi suspended the protest, against the opposition of other Congress members. He decided that Indians were not yet ready for successful nonviolent resistance.[25] The Bardoli Satyagraha in 1928 was much more successful. It succeeded in paralysing the British government and winning significant concessions. More importantly, due to extensive press coverage, it scored a propaganda victory out of all proportion to its size.[26] Gandhi later claimed that success at Bardoli confirmed his belief in satyagraha and Swaraj: "It is only gradually that we shall come to know the importance of the victory gained at Bardoli ... Bardoli has shown the way and cleared it. Swaraj lies on that route, and that alone is the cure ..."[27][28] Gandhi recruited heavily from the Bardoli Satyagraha participants for the Dandi march, which passed through many of the same villages that took part in the Bardoli protests.[29] This revolt gained momentum and had support from all parts of India.

Preparing to march

On 5 February, newspapers reported that Gandhi would begin civil disobedience by defying the salt laws. The salt satyagraha would begin on 12 March and end in Dandi with Gandhi breaking the Salt Act on 6 April.[30] Gandhi chose 6 April to launch the mass breaking of the salt laws for a symbolic reason—it was the first day of "National Week", begun in 1919 when Gandhi conceived of the national hartal (strike) against the Rowlatt Act.[31]

Gandhi prepared the worldwide media for the march by issuing regular statements from the Ashram, at his regular prayer meetings, and through direct contact with the press. Expectations were heightened by his repeated statements anticipating arrest, and his increasingly dramatic language as the hour approached: "We are entering upon a life and death struggle, a holy war; we are performing an all-embracing sacrifice in which we wish to offer ourselves as an oblation."[32] Correspondents from dozens of Indian, European, and American newspapers, along with film companies, responded to the drama and began covering the event.[33]

For the march itself, Gandhi wanted the strictest discipline and adherence to satyagraha and ahimsa. For that reason, he recruited the marchers not from Congress Party members, but from the residents of his own ashram, who were trained in Gandhi's strict standards of discipline.[34] The 24-day march would pass through 4 districts and 48 villages. The route of the march, along with each evening's stopping place, was planned based on recruitment potential, past contacts, and timing. Gandhi sent scouts to each village ahead of the march so he could plan his talks at each resting place, based on the needs of the local residents.[35] Events at each village were scheduled and publicised in Indian and foreign press.[36]

On 2 March 1930 Gandhi wrote to the Viceroy, Lord Irwin, offering to stop the march if Irwin met eleven demands, including reduction of land revenue assessments, cutting military spending, imposing a tariff on foreign cloth, and abolishing the salt tax.[12][37] His strongest appeal to Irwin regarded the salt tax:

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 sovereignty and self-rule movement is essentially for the poorest in the land, the beginning will be made with this evil.[38]

As mentioned earlier, the Viceroy held any prospect of a "salt protest" in disdain. After he ignored the letter and refused to meet with Gandhi, the march was set in motion.[39] Gandhi remarked, "On bended knees, I asked for bread and I have received stone instead."[40] The eve of the march brought thousands of Indians to Sabarmati to hear Gandhi speak at the regular evening prayer. American academic writing for The Nation reported that "60,000 persons gathered on the bank of the river to hear Gandhi's call to arms. This call to arms was perhaps the most remarkable call to war that has ever been made."[41][42]

March to Dandi

Original footage of Gandhi and his followers marching to Dandi in the Salt Satyagraha

On 12 March 1930, Gandhi and 78 satyagrahis, among whom were men belonging to almost every region, caste, creed, and religion of India,[43] set out on foot for the coastal village of Dandi in Navsari district of Gujarat, 385 km from their starting point at Sabarmati Ashram.[30] The Salt March was also called the White Flowing River because all the people were joining the procession wearing white Khadi.

According to The Statesman, the official government newspaper which usually played down the size of crowds at Gandhi's functions, 100,000 people crowded the road that separated Sabarmati from Ahmedabad.[44][45] The first day's march of 21 km ended in the village of Aslali, where Gandhi spoke to a crowd of about 4,000.[46] At Aslali, and the other villages that the march passed through, volunteers collected donations, registered new satyagrahis, and received resignations from village officials who chose to end co-operation with British rule.[47]

As they entered each village, crowds greeted the marchers, beating drums and cymbals. Gandhi gave speeches attacking the salt tax as inhuman, and the salt satyagraha as a "poor man's struggle". Each night they slept in the open. The only thing that was asked of the villagers was food and water to wash with. Gandhi felt that this would bring the poor into the struggle for sovereignty and self-rule, necessary for eventual victory.[48]

Thousands of satyagrahis and leaders like Sarojini Naidu joined him. Every day, more and more people joined the march, until the procession of marchers became at least 3 km long.[49] To keep up their spirits, the marchers used to sing the Hindu Bhajan Raghupati Raghava Raja Ram while walking.[50] At Surat, they were greeted by 30,000 people. When they reached the railhead at Dandi, more than 50,000 were gathered. Gandhi gave interviews and wrote articles along the way. Foreign journalists and three Bombay cinema companies shooting newsreel footage turned Gandhi into a household name in Europe and America (at the end of 1930, Time magazine made him "Man of the Year").[48] The New York Times wrote almost daily about the Salt March, including two front-page articles on 6 and 7 April.[51] Near the end of the march, Gandhi declared, "I want world sympathy in this battle of right against might."[52]

Upon arriving at the seashore on 5 April, Gandhi was interviewed by an Associated Press reporter. He stated:

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.[53][54]

The following morning, after a prayer, Gandhi raised a lump of salty mud and declared, "With this, I am shaking the foundations of the British Empire."[19] He then boiled it in seawater, producing illegal salt. He implored his thousands of followers to likewise begin making salt along the seashore, "wherever it is convenient" and to instruct villagers in making illegal, but necessary, salt.[55] The others followed him and Sarojini Naidu addressing Gandhi, shouted 'Hail, law breaker'. In a letter to her daughter, Naidu remarked:

The little law breaker is sitting in a state of ‘Maun’ [silence] writing his article of triumph for Young India and I am stretched on a hard bench at the open window of a huge room that has 6 windows open to the sea breeze. As far as the eye can see there is a little Army—thousands of pilgrims who have been pouring in since yesterday to this otherwise deserted and exceedingly primitive village of fishermen.[56]

After the Gandhi broke the salt laws, about 700 telegrams were sent out from the post office nearest to Dandi, at Jalalpur. Most of them were by the journalists, who were there to break this news.[57]

First 79 Marchers

79 marchers accompanied Gandhi on his march. Most of them were between the ages of 20 and 30. These men hailed from almost all parts of the country. The march gathered more people as it gained momentum, but the following list of names consists of Gandhi himself and the first 78 marchers who were with Gandhi from the beginning of the Dandi March until the end. Most of them simply dispersed after the march was over.[58][59]

Number Name Age Province (British India) State (Republic of India)
1 Mahatma Gandhi 61 Porbandar State Gujarat
2 Pyarelal Nayyar 30 Punjab
3 Chhaganlal Naththubhai Joshi 35 Unknown Gujarat
4 Pandit Narayan Moreshwar Khare 42 Bombay Bombay Presidency
5 Ganpatrao Godse 25 Bombay Bombay Presidency
6 Prithviraj Laxmidas Asar 19 Western India States Agency Gujarat
7 Mahavir Giri 20 Darjeeling Bengal Presidency
8 Bal Dattatreya Kalelkar 18 Bombay Bombay Presidency
9 Jayanti Nathubhai Parekh 19 Unknown Gujarat
10 Rasik Desai 19 Unknown Gujarat
11 Vitthal Liladhar Thakkar 16 Unknown Gujarat
12 Harakhji Ramjibhai 18 Unknown Gujarat
13 Tansukh Pranshankar Bhatt 20 Unknown Gujarat
14 Kantilal Harilal Gandhi 20 Unknown Gujarat
15 Chhotubhai Khushalbhai Patel 22 Unknown Gujarat
16 Valjibhai Govindji Desai 35 Unknown Gujarat
17 Pannalal Balabhai Jhaveri 20 Gujarat
18 Abbas Varteji 20 Gujarat
19 Punjabhai Shah 25 Gujarat
20 Madhavjibhai Thakkar 40 Gujarat
21 Naranjibhai 22 Western India States Agency Gujarat
22 Maganbhai Vohra 25 Western India States Agency Gujarat
23 Dungarsibhai 27 Western India States Agency Gujarat
24 Somalal Pragjibhai Patel 25 Gujarat
25 Hasmukhram Jakabar 25 Gujarat
26 Daudbhai 25 Gujarat
27 Ramjibhai Vankar 45 Gujarat
28 Dinkarrai Pandya 30 Gujarat
29 Dwarkanath 30 Bombay Presidency
30 Gajanan Khare 25 Bombay Presidency
31 Jethalal Ruparel 25 Western India States Agency Gujarat
32 Govind Harkare 25 Bombay Presidency
33 Pandurang 22 Bombay Presidency
34 Vinayakrao Apte 33 Bombay Presidency
35 Ramdhirrai 30 United Provinces
36 Bhanushankar Dave 22 Gujarat
37 Munshilal 25 United Provinces
38 Raghavan 25 Madras Presidency
39 Shivabhai Gokhalbhai Patel 27 Gujarat
40 Shankarbhai Bhikabhai Patel 20 Gujarat
41 Jashbhai Ishwarbhai Patel 20 Gujarat
42 Sumangal Prakash 25 United Provinces
43 Thevarthundiyil Titus 25 Madras Presidency Kerala
44 Krishna Nair 25 Madras Presidency Kerala
45 Tapan Nair 25 Madras Presidency Kerala
46 Haridas Varjivandas Gandhi 25 Gujarat
47 Chimanlal Narsilal Shah 25 Gujarat
48 Shankaran 25 Madras Presidency Kerala
49 Yarneni Subrahmanyam 25 Madras Presidency
50 Ramaniklal Maganlal Modi 38 Gujarat
51 Madanmohan Chaturvedi 27 Rajputana Agency
52 Harilal Mahimtura 27 Bombay Presidency
53 Motibas Das 20 Bihar and Orissa Province
54 Haridas Mazumdar 25 Gujarat
55 Anand Hingorani 24 Bombay Presidency
56 Mahadev Martand 18 Mysore
57 Jayantiprasad 30 United Province
58 Hariprasad 20 United Provinces
59 Girivardhari Chaudhary 20 Bihar and Orissa Province
60 Keshav Chitre 25 Bombay Presidency
61 Ambalal Shankarbhai Patel 30 Gujarat
62 Vishnu Pant 25 Bombay Presidency
63 Premraj 35 Punjab
64 Durgesh Chandra Das 44 Bengal Bengal
65 Madhavlal Shah 27 Gujarat
66 Jyoti Ram Kandpal 30 United Provinces
67 Surajbhan 34 Punjab
68 Bhairav Dutt Joshi 25 United Provinces
69 Lalji Parmar 25 Gujarat
70 Ratnaji Boria 18 Gujarat
71 Vishnu Sharma 30 Bombay Presidency
72 Chintamani Shastri 40 Bombay Presidency
73 Narayan Dutt 24 Rajputana Agency
74 Manilal Mohandas Gandhi 38 Gujarat
75 Surendra 30 United Provinces
76 Hari Krishna Mohani 42 Bombay Presidency
77 Puratan Buch 25 Gujarat
78 Kharag Bahadur Singh Thapa 25 Dehradun United Provinces
79 Shri Jagat Narayan 50 United Provinces

A memorial has been created inside the campus of IIT Bombay honouring these Satyagrahis who participated in the famous Dandi March.[60]

Mass civil disobedience

 
Gandhi at a public rally during the Salt Satyagraha.

Mass civil disobedience spread throughout India as millions broke the salt laws by making salt or buying illegal salt.[19] Salt was sold illegally all over the coast of India. A pinch of salt made by Gandhi himself sold for 1,600 rupees (equivalent to $750 at the time). In reaction, the British government arrested over sixty thousand people by the end of the month.[53]

What had begun as a Salt Satyagraha quickly grew into a mass Satyagraha.[61] British cloth and goods were boycotted. Unpopular forest laws were defied in the Bombay, Mysore and Central Provinces. Gujarati peasants refused to pay tax, under threat of losing their crops and land. In Midnapore, Bengalis took part by refusing to pay the chowkidar tax.[62] The British responded with more laws, including censorship of correspondence and declaring the Congress and its associate organisations illegal. None of those measures slowed the civil disobedience movement.[63]

There were outbreaks of violence in Calcutta (now spelled Kolkata), Karachi, and Gujarat. Unlike his suspension of satyagraha after violence broke out during the Non-co-operation movement, this time Gandhi was "unmoved". Appealing for violence to end, at the same time Gandhi honoured those killed in Chittagong and congratulated their parents "for the finished sacrifices of their sons ... A warrior's death is never a matter for sorrow."[64]

During the first phase of the Indian civil disobedience movement from 1929 to 1931, the second MacDonald ministry headed by Ramsay MacDonald was in power in Britain. The attempted suppression of the movement was presided over by MacDonald and his cabinet (including the Secretary of State for India, William Wedgwood Benn).[65] During this period, the MacDonald ministry also oversaw the suppression of the nascent trade unionist movement in India, which was described by historian Sumit Sarkar as "a massive capitalist and government counter-offensive" against workers' rights.[66]

Qissa Khwani Bazaar massacre

 
Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan with Mahatma Gandhi

In Peshawar, satyagraha was led by a Muslim Pashtun disciple of Gandhi, Ghaffar Khan, who had trained 50,000 nonviolent activists called Khudai Khidmatgar.[67] On 23 April 1930, Ghaffar Khan was arrested. A crowd of Khudai Khidmatgar gathered in Peshawar's Qissa Kahani (Storytellers) Bazaar. The 2/18 battalion of the Royal Garhwal Rifles were ordered to open fire with machine guns on the unarmed crowd, killing an estimated 200–250 people.[68] The Pashtun satyagrahis acted in accord with their training in nonviolence, willingly facing bullets as the troops fired on them.[69] One British Indian Army soldier, Chandra Singh Garhwali and some other troops from the renowned Royal Garhwal Rifles regiment refused to fire at the crowds. The entire platoon was arrested and many received heavy sentences, including life imprisonment.[68]

Vedaranyam salt march

 
C. Rajagopalachari leading the march

While Gandhi marched along India's west coast, his close associate C. Rajagopalachari, who would later become India's first Indian Governor-General, organized the Vedaranyam salt march in parallel on the east coast. His group started from Tiruchirappalli, in Madras Presidency (now part of Tamil Nadu), to the coastal village of Vedaranyam. After making illegal salt there, he too was arrested by the British.[16]

Women in civil disobedience

The civil disobedience in 1930 marked the first time women became mass participants in the struggle for freedom. Thousands of women, from large cities to small villages, became active participants in satyagraha.[70] Gandhi had asked that only men take part in the salt march, but eventually women began manufacturing and selling salt throughout India. It was clear that though only men were allowed within the march, that both men and women were expected to forward work that would help dissolve the salt laws.[71] Usha Mehta, an early Gandhian activist, remarked that "Even our old aunts and great-aunts and grandmothers used to bring pitchers of salt water to their houses and manufacture illegal salt. And then they would shout at the top of their voices: 'We have broken the salt law!'"[72] The growing number of women in the fight for sovereignty and self-rule was a "new and serious feature" according to Lord Irwin. A government report on the involvement of women stated "thousands of them emerged ... from the seclusion of their homes ... in order to join Congress demonstrations and assist in picketing: and their presence on these occasions made the work the police was required to perform particularly unpleasant."[73] Though women did become involved in the march, it was clear that Gandhi saw women as still playing a secondary role within the movement, but created the beginning of a push for women to be more involved in the future.[71]

"Sarojini Naidu was among the most visible leaders (male or female) of pre-independent India. As president of the Indian National Congress and the first woman governor of free India, she was a fervent advocate for India, avidly mobilizing support for the Indian independence movement. She was also the first woman to be arrested in the salt march."[attribution needed][74]

Impact

British documents show that the British government was shaken by Satyagraha. Nonviolent protest left the British confused about whether or not to jail Gandhi. John Court Curry, an Indian Imperial Police officer from England, wrote in his memoirs that he felt nausea every time he dealt with Congress demonstrations in 1930. Curry and others in British government, including Wedgwood Benn, Secretary of State for India, preferred fighting violent rather than nonviolent opponents.[73]

Dharasana Satyagraha and aftermath

Gandhi himself avoided further active involvement after the march, though he stayed in close contact with the developments throughout India. He created a temporary ashram near Dandi. From there, he urged women followers in Bombay (now Mumbai) to picket liquor shops and foreign cloth. He said that "a bonfire should be made of foreign cloth. Schools and colleges should become empty."[64]

For his next major action, Gandhi decided on a raid of the Dharasana Salt Works in Gujarat, 40 km south of Dandi. He wrote to Lord Irwin, again telling him of his plans. Around midnight of 4 May, as Gandhi was sleeping on a cot in a mango grove, the District magistrate of Surat drove up with two Indian officers and thirty heavily armed constables.[75] He was arrested under an 1827 regulation calling for the jailing of people engaged in unlawful activities, and held without trial near Poona (now Pune).[76]

The Dharasana Satyagraha went ahead as planned, with Abbas Tyabji, a seventy-six-year-old retired judge, leading the march with Gandhi's wife Kasturba at his side. Both were arrested before reaching Dharasana and sentenced to three months in prison. After their arrests, the march continued under the leadership of Sarojini Naidu, a woman poet and freedom fighter, who warned the satyagrahis, "You must not use any violence under any circumstances. You will be beaten, but you must not resist: you must not even raise a hand to ward off blows." Soldiers began clubbing the satyagrahis with steel tipped lathis in an incident that attracted international attention.[77] United Press correspondent Webb Miller reported that:

Not one of the marchers even raised an arm to fend off the blows. They went down like ten-pins. From where I stood I heard the sickening whacks of the clubs on unprotected skulls. The waiting crowd of watchers groaned and sucked in their breaths in sympathetic pain at every blow. Those struck down fell sprawling, unconscious or writhing in pain with fractured skulls or broken shoulders. In two or three minutes the ground was quilted with bodies. Great patches of blood widened on their white clothes. The survivors without breaking ranks silently and doggedly marched on until struck down ... Finally the police became enraged by the non-resistance ... They commenced savagely kicking the seated men in the abdomen and testicles. The injured men writhed and squealed in agony, which seemed to inflame the fury of the police ... The police then began dragging the sitting men by the arms or feet, sometimes for a hundred yards, and throwing them into ditches. [78]

Vithalbhai Patel, former Speaker of the Assembly, watched the beatings and remarked, "All hope of reconciling India with the British Empire is lost forever."[79] Miller's first attempts at telegraphing the story to his publisher in England were censored by the British telegraph operators in India. Only after threatening to expose British censorship was his story allowed to pass. The story appeared in 1,350 newspapers throughout the world and was read into the official record of the United States Senate by Senator John J. Blaine.[80]

Salt Satyagraha succeeded in drawing the attention of the world. Millions saw the newsreels showing the march. Time declared Gandhi its 1930 Man of the Year, comparing Gandhi's march to the sea "to defy Britain's salt tax as some New Englanders once defied a British tea tax".[81] Civil disobedience continued until early 1931, when Gandhi was finally released from prison to hold talks with Irwin. It was the first time the two held talks on equal terms,[82] and resulted in the Gandhi–Irwin Pact. The talks would lead to the Second Round Table Conference at the end of 1931.

Long-term effect

 
A 2005 stamp sheet of India dedicated to the Salt March

The Salt Satyagraha did not produce immediate progress toward dominion status or self-rule for India, did not elicit major policy concessions from the British,[83] or attract much Muslim support.[84] Congress leaders decided to end satyagraha as official policy in 1934, and Nehru and other Congress members drifted further apart from Gandhi, who withdrew from Congress to concentrate on his Constructive Programme, which included his efforts to end untouchability in the Harijan movement.[85] However, even though British authorities were again in control by the mid-1930s, Indian, British, and world opinion increasingly began to recognise the legitimacy of claims by Gandhi and the Congress Party for sovereignty and self-rule.[86] The Satyagraha campaign of the 1930s also forced the British to recognise that their control of India depended entirely on the consent of the Indians – Salt Satyagraha was a significant step in the British losing that consent.[87]

Nehru considered the Salt Satyagraha the high-water mark of his association with Gandhi,[88] and felt that its lasting importance was in changing the attitudes of Indians:

Of course these movements exercised tremendous pressure on the British Government and shook the government machinery. But the real importance, to my mind, lay in the effect they had on our own people, and especially the village masses ... Non-cooperation dragged them out of the mire and gave them self-respect and self-reliance ... They acted courageously and did not submit so easily to unjust oppression; their outlook widened and they began to think a little in terms of India as a whole ... It was a remarkable transformation and the Congress, under Gandhi's leadership, must have the credit for it.[89]

More than thirty years later, Satyagraha and the March to Dandi exercised a strong influence on American civil rights activist Martin Luther King Jr., and his fight for civil rights for blacks in the 1960s:

Like most people, I had heard of Gandhi, but I had never studied him seriously. As I read I became deeply fascinated by his campaigns of nonviolent resistance. I was particularly moved by his Salt March to the Sea and his numerous fasts. The whole concept of Satyagraha (Satya is truth which equals love, and agraha is force; Satyagraha, therefore, means truth force or love force) was profoundly significant to me. As I delved deeper into the philosophy of Gandhi, my skepticism concerning the power of love gradually diminished, and I came to see for the first time its potency in the area of social reform.[8]

Re-enactment in 2005

To commemorate the Great Salt March, the Mahatma Gandhi Foundation re-enacted the Salt March on its 75th anniversary, in its exact historical schedule and route followed by the Mahatma and his band of 78 marchers. The event was known as the "International Walk for Justice and Freedom". What started as a personal pilgrimage for Mahatma Gandhi's great-grandson Tushar Gandhi turned into an international event with 900 registered participants from nine nations and on a daily basis the numbers swelled to a couple of thousands. There was extensive reportage in the international media.

The participants halted at Dandi on the night of 5 April, with the commemoration ending on 7 April. At the finale in Dandi, the prime minister of India, Dr Manmohan Singh, greeted the marchers and promised to build an appropriate monument at Dandi to commemorate the marchers and the historical event. The route from Sabarmati Ashram to Dandi has now been christened as the Dandi Path and has been declared a historical heritage route.[90][91]

India issued a series of commemorative stamps in 1980 and 2005, on the 50th and 75th anniversaries of the Dandi March.[92]

Memorial

The National Salt Satyagraha Memorial, a memorial museum, dedicated to the event was opened in Dandi on 30 January 2019.

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ "Salt March". Oxford Encyclopedia of the Modern World. Oxford University Press. 2008. ISBN 978-0-19-517632-2. Retrieved 4 January 2021.
  2. ^ "Mass civil disobedience throughout India followed as millions broke the salt laws", from Dalton's introduction to Gandhi's Civil Disobedience, Gandhi and Dalton, p. 72.
  3. ^ Dalton, p. 92.
  4. ^ Johnson, p. 234.
  5. ^ Ackerman, p. 106.
  6. ^ "Its root meaning is holding onto truth, hence truth-force. I have also called it Love-force or Soul-force." Gandhi (2001), p. 6.
  7. ^ Martin, p. 35.
  8. ^ a b King Jr., Martin Luther; Carson, Clayborne (1998). The Autobiography of Martin Luther King, Jr. Warner Books. p. 23. ISBN 978-0-446-67650-2.
  9. ^ Eyewitness Gandhi (1 ed.). London: Dorling Kinderseley Ltd. 2014. p. 44. ISBN 978-0241185667. Retrieved 3 September 2015.
  10. ^ Wolpert, Stanley A. (2001). Gandhi's passion : the life and legacy of Mahatma Gandhi. Oxford University Press. pp. 141. ISBN 019513060X. OCLC 252581969.
  11. ^ Wolpert, Stanley (1999). India. University of California Press. p. 204. ISBN 978-0-520-22172-7.
  12. ^ a b c Ackerman, p. 83.
  13. ^ Dalton, p. 91.
  14. ^ Dalton, p. 100.
  15. ^ "Nehru, who had been skeptical about salt as the primary focus of the campaign, realized how wrong he was ..." Johnson, p. 32.
  16. ^ a b c d e Gandhi, Gopalkrishna. "The Great Dandi March — eighty years after", The Hindu, 5 April 1930
  17. ^ Letter to London on 20 February 1930. Ackerman, p. 84.
  18. ^ Gross, David M. (2014). 99 Tactics of Successful Tax Resistance Campaigns. Picket Line Press. p. 64. ISBN 978-1490572741.
  19. ^ a b c Gandhi and Dalton, p. 72.
  20. ^ "Gandhi's ideas about satyagraha and swaraj, moreover, galvanised the thinking of Congress cadres, most of whom by 1930 were committed to pursuing sovereignty and self-rule by nonviolent means." Ackerman, p. 108.
  21. ^ Dalton, pp. 9–10.
  22. ^ Hind Swaraj, Gandhi and Dalton, p. 15.
  23. ^ Forward to the volume of Gokhale's speeches, "Gopal Krishna Gokahalenan Vyakhyanao" from Johnson, p. 118.
  24. ^ Satyagraha in South Africa, 1926 from Johnson, p. 73.
  25. ^ Dalton, p. 48.
  26. ^ Dalton, p. 93.
  27. ^ Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi 41: 208–209
  28. ^ Dalton, p. 94.
  29. ^ Dalton, p. 95.
  30. ^ a b "Chronology: Event Detail Page". Gandhi Heritage Portal. 15 June 2012. Retrieved 16 August 2018.
  31. ^ Dalton, p. 113.
  32. ^ Dalton, p. 108.
  33. ^ Dalton, p. 107.
  34. ^ Dalton, p. 104.
  35. ^ Dalton, p. 105.
  36. ^ Ackerman, p. 85.
  37. ^ "The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi". Gandhi Heritage Portal. Retrieved 16 August 2018.
  38. ^ Gandhi's letter to Irwin, Gandhi and Dalton, p. 78.
  39. ^ Majmudar, Uma; Gandhi, Rajmohan (2005). Gandhi's Pilgrimage of Faith: From Darkness To Light. New York: SUNY Press. p. 184. ISBN 978-0-7914-6405-2.
  40. ^ "Parliament Museum, New Delhi, India – Official website – Dandi March VR Video". Parliamentmuseum.org. Retrieved 1 August 2012.
  41. ^ Miller, Herbert A. (23 April 1930) "Gandhi's Campaign Begins", The Nation.
  42. ^ Dalton, p. 107
  43. ^ "Dandi march: date, history facts. All you need to know". Website of Indian National Congress. 25 October 2018. Retrieved 27 August 2020.
  44. ^ Weber, p. 140.
  45. ^ The Statesman, 13 March 1930.
  46. ^ "The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi". Gandhi Heritage Portal. Retrieved 16 August 2018.
  47. ^ Weber, pp. 143–144.
  48. ^ a b Ackerman, p. 86.
  49. ^ "The March to Dandi". English.emory.edu. Retrieved 1 August 2012.
  50. ^ . Library.thinkquest.org. Archived from the original on 30 March 2012. Retrieved 1 August 2012.
  51. ^ Dalton, p. 221.
  52. ^ Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi 43: 180, Wolpert, p. 148
  53. ^ a b Jack, pp. 238–239.
  54. ^ "The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi". Gandhi Heritage Portal. Retrieved 16 August 2018.
  55. ^ Jack, p. 240.
  56. ^ Guha, Ramchandra (2018). Gandhi: The Years That Changed the World. Penguin Allen Lane. p. 336. ISBN 978-0670083886.
  57. ^ Guha, Ramchandra (2018). Gandhi: The Years That Changed the World. Penguin Allen Lane. p. 337. ISBN 978-0670083886.
  58. ^ Sonawala, Dipti Ramesh (9 February 2014). "Mapping the unknown marcher". The Indian Express. Retrieved 16 August 2018.
  59. ^ "Chronology: Event Detail Page". Gandhi Heritage Portal. 15 June 2012. Retrieved 16 August 2018.
  60. ^ "Photos: Remembering the 80 unsung heroes of Mahatma Gandhi's Dandi March". The Indian Express. 9 February 2014. Retrieved 16 August 2018.
  61. ^ "The Salt Satyagraha in the meantime grew almost spontaneously into a mass satyagraha." Habib, p. 57.
  62. ^ Habib, p. 57.
  63. ^ "Correspondence came under censorship, the Congress and its associate organizations were declared illegal, and their funds made subject to seizure. These measures did not appear to have any effect on the movement..." Habib, p. 57.
  64. ^ a b Wolpert, p. 149.
  65. ^ Newsinger, John (2006). The Blood Never Dried: A People's History of the British Empire. Bookmarks Publications. p. 144.
  66. ^ Sarkar, Sumit (1983). Modern India 1885–1947. Basingstoke. p. 271.
  67. ^ Habib, p. 55.
  68. ^ a b Habib, p. 56.
  69. ^ Johansen, Robert C. (1997). "Radical Islam and Nonviolence: A Case Study of Religious Empowerment and Constraint Among Pashtuns". Journal of Peace Research. 34 (1): 53–71 [62]. doi:10.1177/0022343397034001005. S2CID 145684635.
  70. ^ Chatterjee, Manini (July–August 2001). "1930: Turning Point in the Participation of Women in the Freedom Struggle". Social Scientist. 29 (7/8): 39–47 [41]. doi:10.2307/3518124. JSTOR 3518124. ...first, it is from this year (1930) that women became mass participants in the struggle for freedom.... But from 1930, that is in the second non-cooperation movement better known as the Civil Disobedience Movement, thousands upon thousands of women in all parts of India, not just in big cities but also in small towns and villages, became part of the satyagraha struggle.
  71. ^ a b Kishwar, Madhu (1986). "Gandhi on Women". Race & Class. 28 (41): 1753–1758. doi:10.1177/030639688602800103. JSTOR 4374920. S2CID 143460716.
  72. ^ Hardiman, David (2003). Gandhi in His Time and Ours: The Global Legacy of His Ideas. Columbia University Press. p. 113. ISBN 978-0-231-13114-8.
  73. ^ a b Johnson, p. 33.
  74. ^ Arsenault, Natalie (2009). Restoring Women to World Studies (PDF). The University of Texas at Austin. pp. 60–66.
  75. ^ Jack, pp. 244–245.
  76. ^ Riddick, John F. (2006). The History of British India: A Chronology. Greenwood Press. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-313-32280-8.
  77. ^ Ackerman, pp. 87–90.
  78. ^ Webb Miller's report from May 21, Martin, p. 38.
  79. ^ Wolpert, p. 155.
  80. ^ Singhal, Arvind (2014). "Mahatma is the Message: Gandhi's Life as Consummate Communicator". International Journal of Communication and Social Research. 2 (1): 4.
  81. ^ . Time. 5 January 1931. Archived from the original on 24 December 2007. Retrieved 17 November 2007.
  82. ^ Gandhi and Dalton, p. 73.
  83. ^ Ackerman, p. 106: "...made scant progress toward either dominion status within the empire or outright sovereignty and self-rule. Neither had they won any major concessions on the economic and mundane issues that Gandhi considered vital."
  84. ^ Dalton, p. 119-120.
  85. ^ Johnson, p. 36.
  86. ^ "Indian, British, and world opinion increasingly recognized the legitimate claims of Gandhi and Congress for Indian independence." Johnson, p. 37.
  87. ^ Ackerman, p. 109: "The old order, in which British control rested comfortably on Indian acquiescence, had been sundered. In the midst of civil disobedience, Sir Charles Innes, a provincial governor, circulated his analysis of events to his colleagues. "England can hold India only by consent," he conceded. "We can't rule it by the sword." The British lost that consent...."
  88. ^ Fisher, Margaret W. (June 1967). "India's Jawaharlal Nehru". Asian Survey. 7 (6): 363–373 [368]. doi:10.2307/2642611. JSTOR 2642611.
  89. ^ Johnson, p. 37.
  90. ^ "Gandhi's 1930 march re-enacted". BBC News. 12 March 2005. Retrieved 27 December 2007.
  91. ^ Diwanji, Amberish K (15 March 2005). "In the Mahatma's footsteps". Rediff. Retrieved 27 December 2007.
  92. ^ Category:Salt March on stamps. commons.wikimedia.org

Cited sources

Further reading

  • Decourcy, Elisa. "Just a grain of salt?: Symbolic construction during the Indian nationalist movement," Melbourne Historical Journal, 2010, Vol. 38, pp 57–72
  • Gandhi, M. K. (2001). Non-Violent Resistance (Satyagraha). Courier Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-41606-9.
  • Masselos, Jim. "Audiences, Actors and Congress Dramas: Crowd Events in Bombay City in 1930," South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies, April 1985, Vol. 8 Issue 1/2, pp 71–86

External links

  • Newsreel footage of Salt Satyagraha
  • Salt march re-enactment slide show
  • Gandhi's 1930 march re-enacted (BBC News)
  • on 75th anniversary of Dandi March.
  • Dandi March Timeline


salt, march, also, known, salt, satyagraha, dandi, march, dandi, satyagraha, nonviolent, civil, disobedience, colonial, india, mahatma, gandhi, twenty, four, march, lasted, from, march, april, 1930, direct, action, campaign, resistance, nonviolent, protest, ag. The Salt March also known as the Salt Satyagraha Dandi March and the Dandi Satyagraha was an act of nonviolent civil disobedience in colonial India led by Mahatma Gandhi The twenty four day march lasted from 12 March to 5 April 1930 as a direct action campaign of tax resistance and nonviolent protest against the British salt monopoly Another reason for this march was that the Civil Disobedience Movement needed a strong inauguration that would inspire more people to follow Gandhi s example Gandhi started this march with 78 of his trusted volunteers The march spanned 387 kilometres 240 mi from Sabarmati Ashram to Dandi which was called Navsari at that time now in the state of Gujarat 1 Growing numbers of Indians joined them along the way When Gandhi broke the British Raj salt laws at 8 30 am on 6 April 1930 it sparked large scale acts of civil disobedience against the salt laws by millions of Indians 2 Salt MarchGandhi leading his followers on the famous Salt March to abolish the British Salt Laws Date12 March 1930 6 April 1930LocationSabarmati Ahmedabad Gujarat IndiaAfter making the salt by evaporation at Dandi Gandhi continued southward along the coast making salt and addressing meetings on the way The Congress Party planned to stage a satyagraha at the Dharasana Salt Works 40 km 25 mi south of Dandi However Gandhi was arrested on the midnight of 4 5 May 1930 just days before the planned action at Dharasana The Dandi March and the ensuing Dharasana Satyagraha drew worldwide attention to the Indian independence movement through extensive newspaper and newsreel coverage The satyagraha against the salt tax continued for almost a year ending with Gandhi s release from jail and negotiations with Viceroy Lord Irwin at the Second Round Table Conference 3 Although over 60 000 Indians were jailed as a result of the Salt Satyagraha 4 the British did not make immediate major concessions 5 The Salt Satyagraha campaign was based upon Gandhi s principles of non violent protest called satyagraha which he loosely translated as truth force 6 Literally it is formed from the Sanskrit words satya truth and agraha insistence In early 1920 the Indian National Congress chose satyagraha as their main tactic for winning Indian sovereignty and self rule from British rule and appointed Gandhi to organise the campaign Gandhi chose the 1882 British Salt Act as the first target of satyagraha The Salt March to Dandi and the beating by the colonial police of hundreds of nonviolent protesters in Dharasana which received worldwide news coverage demonstrated the effective use of civil disobedience as a technique for fighting social and political injustice 7 The satyagraha teachings of Gandhi and the March to Dandi had a significant influence on American activists Martin Luther King Jr James Bevel and others during the Civil Rights Movement for civil rights for African Americans and other minority groups in the 1960s 8 The march was the most significant organised challenge to British authority since the Non cooperation movement of 1920 22 and directly followed the Purna Swaraj declaration of sovereignty and self rule by the Indian National Congress on 26 January 1930 9 It gained worldwide attention which gave impetus to the Indian independence movement and started the nationwide Civil Disobedience movement which continued until 1934 in Sabarmati Ahemdabad Gujarat India Contents 1 Civil disobedience movement 2 Choice of salt as protest focus 3 Satyagraha 4 Preparing to march 5 March to Dandi 6 First 79 Marchers 7 Mass civil disobedience 7 1 Qissa Khwani Bazaar massacre 7 2 Vedaranyam salt march 7 3 Women in civil disobedience 7 4 Impact 8 Dharasana Satyagraha and aftermath 9 Long term effect 10 Re enactment in 2005 11 Memorial 12 See also 13 References 13 1 Citations 13 2 Cited sources 14 Further reading 15 External linksCivil disobedience movement Edit Mahatma Gandhi and Sarojini Naidu during the March At midnight on 31 December 1929 the INC Indian National Congress raised the tricolour flag of India on the banks and the Ravi at Lahore The Indian National Congress led by Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru publicly issued the Declaration of sovereignty and self rule or Purna Swaraj on 26 January 1930 10 Literally in Sanskrit purna complete swa self raj rule so therefore complete self rule The declaration included the readiness to withhold taxes and the statement We believe that it is the inalienable right of the Indian people as of any other people to have freedom and to enjoy the fruits of their toil and have the necessities of life so that they may have full opportunities for growth We believe also that if any government deprives a people of these rights and oppresses them the people have a further right to alter it or abolish it The British government in India has not only deprived the Indian people of their freedom but has based itself on the exploitation of the masses and has ruined India economically politically culturally and spiritually We believe therefore that India must sever the British connection and attain Purna Swaraji or complete sovereignty and self rule 11 The Congress Working Committee gave Gandhi the responsibility for organising the first act of civil disobedience with Congress itself ready to take charge after Gandhi s expected arrest 12 Gandhi s plan was to begin civil disobedience with a satyagraha aimed at the British salt tax The 1882 Salt Act gave the British a monopoly on the collection and manufacture of salt limiting its handling to government salt depots and levying a salt tax 13 Violation of the Salt Act was a criminal offence Even though salt was freely available to those living on the coast by evaporation of sea water Indians were forced to buy it from the colonial government Choice of salt as protest focus EditInitially Gandhi s choice of the salt tax was met with incredulity by the Working Committee of the Congress 14 Jawaharlal Nehru and Divyalochan Sahu were ambivalent Sardar Patel suggested a land revenue boycott instead 15 16 The Statesman a prominent newspaper wrote about the choice It is difficult not to laugh and we imagine that will be the mood of most thinking Indians 16 The British colonial administration too was not disturbed by these plans of resistance against the salt tax The Viceroy himself Lord Irwin did not take the threat of a salt protest seriously writing to London At present the prospect of a salt campaign does not keep me awake at night 17 However Gandhi had sound reasons for his decision An item of daily use could resonate more with all classes of citizens than an abstract demand for greater political rights 18 The salt tax represented 8 2 of the British Raj tax revenue and hurt the poorest Indians the most significantly 19 Explaining his choice Gandhi said Next to air and water salt is perhaps the greatest necessity of life In contrast to the other leaders the prominent Congress statesman and future Governor General of India C Rajagopalachari understood Gandhi s viewpoint In a public meeting at Tuticorin he said Suppose a people rise in revolt They cannot attack the abstract constitution or lead an army against proclamations and statutes Civil disobedience has to be directed against the salt tax or the land tax or some other particular point not that that is our final end but for the time being it is our aim and we must shoot straight 16 Gandhi felt that this protest would dramatise Purna Swaraj in a way that was meaningful to every Indian He also reasoned that it would build unity between Hindus and Muslims by fighting a wrong that touched them equally 12 After the protest gathered steam the leaders realised the power of salt as a symbol Nehru remarked about the unprecedented popular response it seemed as though a spring had been suddenly released 16 Satyagraha EditMain article Satyagraha Gandhi had a long standing commitment to nonviolent civil disobedience which he termed satyagraha as the basis for achieving Indian sovereignty and self rule 20 21 Referring to the relationship between satyagraha and Purna Swaraj Gandhi saw an inviolable connection between the means and the end as there is between the seed and the tree 22 He wrote If the means employed are impure the change will not be in the direction of progress but very likely in the opposite Only a change brought about in our political condition by pure means can lead to real progress 23 Satyagraha is a synthesis of the Sanskrit words Satya truth and Agraha insistence on For Gandhi satyagraha went far beyond mere passive resistance and became strength in practicing nonviolent methods In his words Truth satya implies love and firmness agraha engenders and therefore serves as a synonym for force I thus began to call the Indian movement Satyagraha that is to say the Force which is born of Truth and Love or nonviolence and gave up the use of the phrase passive resistance in connection with it so much so that even in English writing we often avoided it and used instead the word satyagraha 24 His first significant attempt in India at leading mass satyagraha was the non cooperation movement from 1920 to 1922 Even though it succeeded in raising millions of Indians in protest against the British created Rowlatt Act violence broke out at Chauri Chaura where a mob killed 22 unarmed policemen Gandhi suspended the protest against the opposition of other Congress members He decided that Indians were not yet ready for successful nonviolent resistance 25 The Bardoli Satyagraha in 1928 was much more successful It succeeded in paralysing the British government and winning significant concessions More importantly due to extensive press coverage it scored a propaganda victory out of all proportion to its size 26 Gandhi later claimed that success at Bardoli confirmed his belief in satyagraha and Swaraj It is only gradually that we shall come to know the importance of the victory gained at Bardoli Bardoli has shown the way and cleared it Swaraj lies on that route and that alone is the cure 27 28 Gandhi recruited heavily from the Bardoli Satyagraha participants for the Dandi march which passed through many of the same villages that took part in the Bardoli protests 29 This revolt gained momentum and had support from all parts of India Preparing to march EditOn 5 February newspapers reported that Gandhi would begin civil disobedience by defying the salt laws The salt satyagraha would begin on 12 March and end in Dandi with Gandhi breaking the Salt Act on 6 April 30 Gandhi chose 6 April to launch the mass breaking of the salt laws for a symbolic reason it was the first day of National Week begun in 1919 when Gandhi conceived of the national hartal strike against the Rowlatt Act 31 Gandhi prepared the worldwide media for the march by issuing regular statements from the Ashram at his regular prayer meetings and through direct contact with the press Expectations were heightened by his repeated statements anticipating arrest and his increasingly dramatic language as the hour approached We are entering upon a life and death struggle a holy war we are performing an all embracing sacrifice in which we wish to offer ourselves as an oblation 32 Correspondents from dozens of Indian European and American newspapers along with film companies responded to the drama and began covering the event 33 For the march itself Gandhi wanted the strictest discipline and adherence to satyagraha and ahimsa For that reason he recruited the marchers not from Congress Party members but from the residents of his own ashram who were trained in Gandhi s strict standards of discipline 34 The 24 day march would pass through 4 districts and 48 villages The route of the march along with each evening s stopping place was planned based on recruitment potential past contacts and timing Gandhi sent scouts to each village ahead of the march so he could plan his talks at each resting place based on the needs of the local residents 35 Events at each village were scheduled and publicised in Indian and foreign press 36 On 2 March 1930 Gandhi wrote to the Viceroy Lord Irwin offering to stop the march if Irwin met eleven demands including reduction of land revenue assessments cutting military spending imposing a tariff on foreign cloth and abolishing the salt tax 12 37 His strongest appeal to Irwin regarded the salt tax 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 sovereignty and self rule movement is essentially for the poorest in the land the beginning will be made with this evil 38 As mentioned earlier the Viceroy held any prospect of a salt protest in disdain After he ignored the letter and refused to meet with Gandhi the march was set in motion 39 Gandhi remarked On bended knees I asked for bread and I have received stone instead 40 The eve of the march brought thousands of Indians to Sabarmati to hear Gandhi speak at the regular evening prayer American academic writing for The Nation reported that 60 000 persons gathered on the bank of the river to hear Gandhi s call to arms This call to arms was perhaps the most remarkable call to war that has ever been made 41 42 March to Dandi Edit source source source source source source Original footage of Gandhi and his followers marching to Dandi in the Salt Satyagraha On 12 March 1930 Gandhi and 78 satyagrahis among whom were men belonging to almost every region caste creed and religion of India 43 set out on foot for the coastal village of Dandi in Navsari district of Gujarat 385 km from their starting point at Sabarmati Ashram 30 The Salt March was also called the White Flowing River because all the people were joining the procession wearing white Khadi According to The Statesman the official government newspaper which usually played down the size of crowds at Gandhi s functions 100 000 people crowded the road that separated Sabarmati from Ahmedabad 44 45 The first day s march of 21 km ended in the village of Aslali where Gandhi spoke to a crowd of about 4 000 46 At Aslali and the other villages that the march passed through volunteers collected donations registered new satyagrahis and received resignations from village officials who chose to end co operation with British rule 47 As they entered each village crowds greeted the marchers beating drums and cymbals Gandhi gave speeches attacking the salt tax as inhuman and the salt satyagraha as a poor man s struggle Each night they slept in the open The only thing that was asked of the villagers was food and water to wash with Gandhi felt that this would bring the poor into the struggle for sovereignty and self rule necessary for eventual victory 48 Thousands of satyagrahis and leaders like Sarojini Naidu joined him Every day more and more people joined the march until the procession of marchers became at least 3 km long 49 To keep up their spirits the marchers used to sing the Hindu Bhajan Raghupati Raghava Raja Ram while walking 50 At Surat they were greeted by 30 000 people When they reached the railhead at Dandi more than 50 000 were gathered Gandhi gave interviews and wrote articles along the way Foreign journalists and three Bombay cinema companies shooting newsreel footage turned Gandhi into a household name in Europe and America at the end of 1930 Time magazine made him Man of the Year 48 The New York Times wrote almost daily about the Salt March including two front page articles on 6 and 7 April 51 Near the end of the march Gandhi declared I want world sympathy in this battle of right against might 52 Upon arriving at the seashore on 5 April Gandhi was interviewed by an Associated Press reporter He stated 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 53 54 The following morning after a prayer Gandhi raised a lump of salty mud and declared With this I am shaking the foundations of the British Empire 19 He then boiled it in seawater producing illegal salt He implored his thousands of followers to likewise begin making salt along the seashore wherever it is convenient and to instruct villagers in making illegal but necessary salt 55 The others followed him and Sarojini Naidu addressing Gandhi shouted Hail law breaker In a letter to her daughter Naidu remarked The little law breaker is sitting in a state of Maun silence writing his article of triumph for Young India and I am stretched on a hard bench at the open window of a huge room that has 6 windows open to the sea breeze As far as the eye can see there is a little Army thousands of pilgrims who have been pouring in since yesterday to this otherwise deserted and exceedingly primitive village of fishermen 56 After the Gandhi broke the salt laws about 700 telegrams were sent out from the post office nearest to Dandi at Jalalpur Most of them were by the journalists who were there to break this news 57 First 79 Marchers Edit79 marchers accompanied Gandhi on his march Most of them were between the ages of 20 and 30 These men hailed from almost all parts of the country The march gathered more people as it gained momentum but the following list of names consists of Gandhi himself and the first 78 marchers who were with Gandhi from the beginning of the Dandi March until the end Most of them simply dispersed after the march was over 58 59 Number Name Age Province British India State Republic of India 1 Mahatma Gandhi 61 Porbandar State Gujarat2 Pyarelal Nayyar 30 Punjab3 Chhaganlal Naththubhai Joshi 35 Unknown Gujarat4 Pandit Narayan Moreshwar Khare 42 Bombay Bombay Presidency5 Ganpatrao Godse 25 Bombay Bombay Presidency6 Prithviraj Laxmidas Asar 19 Western India States Agency Gujarat7 Mahavir Giri 20 Darjeeling Bengal Presidency8 Bal Dattatreya Kalelkar 18 Bombay Bombay Presidency9 Jayanti Nathubhai Parekh 19 Unknown Gujarat10 Rasik Desai 19 Unknown Gujarat11 Vitthal Liladhar Thakkar 16 Unknown Gujarat12 Harakhji Ramjibhai 18 Unknown Gujarat13 Tansukh Pranshankar Bhatt 20 Unknown Gujarat14 Kantilal Harilal Gandhi 20 Unknown Gujarat15 Chhotubhai Khushalbhai Patel 22 Unknown Gujarat16 Valjibhai Govindji Desai 35 Unknown Gujarat17 Pannalal Balabhai Jhaveri 20 Gujarat18 Abbas Varteji 20 Gujarat19 Punjabhai Shah 25 Gujarat20 Madhavjibhai Thakkar 40 Gujarat21 Naranjibhai 22 Western India States Agency Gujarat22 Maganbhai Vohra 25 Western India States Agency Gujarat23 Dungarsibhai 27 Western India States Agency Gujarat24 Somalal Pragjibhai Patel 25 Gujarat25 Hasmukhram Jakabar 25 Gujarat26 Daudbhai 25 Gujarat27 Ramjibhai Vankar 45 Gujarat28 Dinkarrai Pandya 30 Gujarat29 Dwarkanath 30 Bombay Presidency30 Gajanan Khare 25 Bombay Presidency31 Jethalal Ruparel 25 Western India States Agency Gujarat32 Govind Harkare 25 Bombay Presidency33 Pandurang 22 Bombay Presidency34 Vinayakrao Apte 33 Bombay Presidency35 Ramdhirrai 30 United Provinces36 Bhanushankar Dave 22 Gujarat37 Munshilal 25 United Provinces38 Raghavan 25 Madras Presidency39 Shivabhai Gokhalbhai Patel 27 Gujarat40 Shankarbhai Bhikabhai Patel 20 Gujarat41 Jashbhai Ishwarbhai Patel 20 Gujarat42 Sumangal Prakash 25 United Provinces43 Thevarthundiyil Titus 25 Madras Presidency Kerala44 Krishna Nair 25 Madras Presidency Kerala45 Tapan Nair 25 Madras Presidency Kerala46 Haridas Varjivandas Gandhi 25 Gujarat47 Chimanlal Narsilal Shah 25 Gujarat48 Shankaran 25 Madras Presidency Kerala49 Yarneni Subrahmanyam 25 Madras Presidency50 Ramaniklal Maganlal Modi 38 Gujarat51 Madanmohan Chaturvedi 27 Rajputana Agency52 Harilal Mahimtura 27 Bombay Presidency53 Motibas Das 20 Bihar and Orissa Province54 Haridas Mazumdar 25 Gujarat55 Anand Hingorani 24 Bombay Presidency56 Mahadev Martand 18 Mysore57 Jayantiprasad 30 United Province58 Hariprasad 20 United Provinces59 Girivardhari Chaudhary 20 Bihar and Orissa Province60 Keshav Chitre 25 Bombay Presidency61 Ambalal Shankarbhai Patel 30 Gujarat62 Vishnu Pant 25 Bombay Presidency63 Premraj 35 Punjab64 Durgesh Chandra Das 44 Bengal Bengal65 Madhavlal Shah 27 Gujarat66 Jyoti Ram Kandpal 30 United Provinces67 Surajbhan 34 Punjab68 Bhairav Dutt Joshi 25 United Provinces69 Lalji Parmar 25 Gujarat70 Ratnaji Boria 18 Gujarat71 Vishnu Sharma 30 Bombay Presidency72 Chintamani Shastri 40 Bombay Presidency73 Narayan Dutt 24 Rajputana Agency74 Manilal Mohandas Gandhi 38 Gujarat75 Surendra 30 United Provinces76 Hari Krishna Mohani 42 Bombay Presidency77 Puratan Buch 25 Gujarat78 Kharag Bahadur Singh Thapa 25 Dehradun United Provinces79 Shri Jagat Narayan 50 United ProvincesA memorial has been created inside the campus of IIT Bombay honouring these Satyagrahis who participated in the famous Dandi March 60 Mass civil disobedience Edit Gandhi at a public rally during the Salt Satyagraha Mass civil disobedience spread throughout India as millions broke the salt laws by making salt or buying illegal salt 19 Salt was sold illegally all over the coast of India A pinch of salt made by Gandhi himself sold for 1 600 rupees equivalent to 750 at the time In reaction the British government arrested over sixty thousand people by the end of the month 53 What had begun as a Salt Satyagraha quickly grew into a mass Satyagraha 61 British cloth and goods were boycotted Unpopular forest laws were defied in the Bombay Mysore and Central Provinces Gujarati peasants refused to pay tax under threat of losing their crops and land In Midnapore Bengalis took part by refusing to pay the chowkidar tax 62 The British responded with more laws including censorship of correspondence and declaring the Congress and its associate organisations illegal None of those measures slowed the civil disobedience movement 63 There were outbreaks of violence in Calcutta now spelled Kolkata Karachi and Gujarat Unlike his suspension of satyagraha after violence broke out during the Non co operation movement this time Gandhi was unmoved Appealing for violence to end at the same time Gandhi honoured those killed in Chittagong and congratulated their parents for the finished sacrifices of their sons A warrior s death is never a matter for sorrow 64 During the first phase of the Indian civil disobedience movement from 1929 to 1931 the second MacDonald ministry headed by Ramsay MacDonald was in power in Britain The attempted suppression of the movement was presided over by MacDonald and his cabinet including the Secretary of State for India William Wedgwood Benn 65 During this period the MacDonald ministry also oversaw the suppression of the nascent trade unionist movement in India which was described by historian Sumit Sarkar as a massive capitalist and government counter offensive against workers rights 66 Qissa Khwani Bazaar massacre Edit Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan with Mahatma Gandhi Main article Qissa Khwani Bazaar massacre In Peshawar satyagraha was led by a Muslim Pashtun disciple of Gandhi Ghaffar Khan who had trained 50 000 nonviolent activists called Khudai Khidmatgar 67 On 23 April 1930 Ghaffar Khan was arrested A crowd of Khudai Khidmatgar gathered in Peshawar s Qissa Kahani Storytellers Bazaar The 2 18 battalion of the Royal Garhwal Rifles were ordered to open fire with machine guns on the unarmed crowd killing an estimated 200 250 people 68 The Pashtun satyagrahis acted in accord with their training in nonviolence willingly facing bullets as the troops fired on them 69 One British Indian Army soldier Chandra Singh Garhwali and some other troops from the renowned Royal Garhwal Rifles regiment refused to fire at the crowds The entire platoon was arrested and many received heavy sentences including life imprisonment 68 Vedaranyam salt march Edit C Rajagopalachari leading the march Main article Vedaranyam March While Gandhi marched along India s west coast his close associate C Rajagopalachari who would later become India s first Indian Governor General organized the Vedaranyam salt march in parallel on the east coast His group started from Tiruchirappalli in Madras Presidency now part of Tamil Nadu to the coastal village of Vedaranyam After making illegal salt there he too was arrested by the British 16 Women in civil disobedience Edit The civil disobedience in 1930 marked the first time women became mass participants in the struggle for freedom Thousands of women from large cities to small villages became active participants in satyagraha 70 Gandhi had asked that only men take part in the salt march but eventually women began manufacturing and selling salt throughout India It was clear that though only men were allowed within the march that both men and women were expected to forward work that would help dissolve the salt laws 71 Usha Mehta an early Gandhian activist remarked that Even our old aunts and great aunts and grandmothers used to bring pitchers of salt water to their houses and manufacture illegal salt And then they would shout at the top of their voices We have broken the salt law 72 The growing number of women in the fight for sovereignty and self rule was a new and serious feature according to Lord Irwin A government report on the involvement of women stated thousands of them emerged from the seclusion of their homes in order to join Congress demonstrations and assist in picketing and their presence on these occasions made the work the police was required to perform particularly unpleasant 73 Though women did become involved in the march it was clear that Gandhi saw women as still playing a secondary role within the movement but created the beginning of a push for women to be more involved in the future 71 Sarojini Naidu was among the most visible leaders male or female of pre independent India As president of the Indian National Congress and the first woman governor of free India she was a fervent advocate for India avidly mobilizing support for the Indian independence movement She was also the first woman to be arrested in the salt march attribution needed 74 Impact Edit British documents show that the British government was shaken by Satyagraha Nonviolent protest left the British confused about whether or not to jail Gandhi John Court Curry an Indian Imperial Police officer from England wrote in his memoirs that he felt nausea every time he dealt with Congress demonstrations in 1930 Curry and others in British government including Wedgwood Benn Secretary of State for India preferred fighting violent rather than nonviolent opponents 73 Dharasana Satyagraha and aftermath EditGandhi himself avoided further active involvement after the march though he stayed in close contact with the developments throughout India He created a temporary ashram near Dandi From there he urged women followers in Bombay now Mumbai to picket liquor shops and foreign cloth He said that a bonfire should be made of foreign cloth Schools and colleges should become empty 64 For his next major action Gandhi decided on a raid of the Dharasana Salt Works in Gujarat 40 km south of Dandi He wrote to Lord Irwin again telling him of his plans Around midnight of 4 May as Gandhi was sleeping on a cot in a mango grove the District magistrate of Surat drove up with two Indian officers and thirty heavily armed constables 75 He was arrested under an 1827 regulation calling for the jailing of people engaged in unlawful activities and held without trial near Poona now Pune 76 Main article Dharasana Satyagraha The Dharasana Satyagraha went ahead as planned with Abbas Tyabji a seventy six year old retired judge leading the march with Gandhi s wife Kasturba at his side Both were arrested before reaching Dharasana and sentenced to three months in prison After their arrests the march continued under the leadership of Sarojini Naidu a woman poet and freedom fighter who warned the satyagrahis You must not use any violence under any circumstances You will be beaten but you must not resist you must not even raise a hand to ward off blows Soldiers began clubbing the satyagrahis with steel tipped lathis in an incident that attracted international attention 77 United Press correspondent Webb Miller reported that Not one of the marchers even raised an arm to fend off the blows They went down like ten pins From where I stood I heard the sickening whacks of the clubs on unprotected skulls The waiting crowd of watchers groaned and sucked in their breaths in sympathetic pain at every blow Those struck down fell sprawling unconscious or writhing in pain with fractured skulls or broken shoulders In two or three minutes the ground was quilted with bodies Great patches of blood widened on their white clothes The survivors without breaking ranks silently and doggedly marched on until struck down Finally the police became enraged by the non resistance They commenced savagely kicking the seated men in the abdomen and testicles The injured men writhed and squealed in agony which seemed to inflame the fury of the police The police then began dragging the sitting men by the arms or feet sometimes for a hundred yards and throwing them into ditches 78 Vithalbhai Patel former Speaker of the Assembly watched the beatings and remarked All hope of reconciling India with the British Empire is lost forever 79 Miller s first attempts at telegraphing the story to his publisher in England were censored by the British telegraph operators in India Only after threatening to expose British censorship was his story allowed to pass The story appeared in 1 350 newspapers throughout the world and was read into the official record of the United States Senate by Senator John J Blaine 80 Salt Satyagraha succeeded in drawing the attention of the world Millions saw the newsreels showing the march Time declared Gandhi its 1930 Man of the Year comparing Gandhi s march to the sea to defy Britain s salt tax as some New Englanders once defied a British tea tax 81 Civil disobedience continued until early 1931 when Gandhi was finally released from prison to hold talks with Irwin It was the first time the two held talks on equal terms 82 and resulted in the Gandhi Irwin Pact The talks would lead to the Second Round Table Conference at the end of 1931 Long term effect Edit A 2005 stamp sheet of India dedicated to the Salt March The Salt Satyagraha did not produce immediate progress toward dominion status or self rule for India did not elicit major policy concessions from the British 83 or attract much Muslim support 84 Congress leaders decided to end satyagraha as official policy in 1934 and Nehru and other Congress members drifted further apart from Gandhi who withdrew from Congress to concentrate on his Constructive Programme which included his efforts to end untouchability in the Harijan movement 85 However even though British authorities were again in control by the mid 1930s Indian British and world opinion increasingly began to recognise the legitimacy of claims by Gandhi and the Congress Party for sovereignty and self rule 86 The Satyagraha campaign of the 1930s also forced the British to recognise that their control of India depended entirely on the consent of the Indians Salt Satyagraha was a significant step in the British losing that consent 87 Nehru considered the Salt Satyagraha the high water mark of his association with Gandhi 88 and felt that its lasting importance was in changing the attitudes of Indians Of course these movements exercised tremendous pressure on the British Government and shook the government machinery But the real importance to my mind lay in the effect they had on our own people and especially the village masses Non cooperation dragged them out of the mire and gave them self respect and self reliance They acted courageously and did not submit so easily to unjust oppression their outlook widened and they began to think a little in terms of India as a whole It was a remarkable transformation and the Congress under Gandhi s leadership must have the credit for it 89 More than thirty years later Satyagraha and the March to Dandi exercised a strong influence on American civil rights activist Martin Luther King Jr and his fight for civil rights for blacks in the 1960s Like most people I had heard of Gandhi but I had never studied him seriously As I read I became deeply fascinated by his campaigns of nonviolent resistance I was particularly moved by his Salt March to the Sea and his numerous fasts The whole concept of Satyagraha Satya is truth which equals love and agraha is force Satyagraha therefore means truth force or love force was profoundly significant to me As I delved deeper into the philosophy of Gandhi my skepticism concerning the power of love gradually diminished and I came to see for the first time its potency in the area of social reform 8 Re enactment in 2005 EditTo commemorate the Great Salt March the Mahatma Gandhi Foundation re enacted the Salt March on its 75th anniversary in its exact historical schedule and route followed by the Mahatma and his band of 78 marchers The event was known as the International Walk for Justice and Freedom What started as a personal pilgrimage for Mahatma Gandhi s great grandson Tushar Gandhi turned into an international event with 900 registered participants from nine nations and on a daily basis the numbers swelled to a couple of thousands There was extensive reportage in the international media The participants halted at Dandi on the night of 5 April with the commemoration ending on 7 April At the finale in Dandi the prime minister of India Dr Manmohan Singh greeted the marchers and promised to build an appropriate monument at Dandi to commemorate the marchers and the historical event The route from Sabarmati Ashram to Dandi has now been christened as the Dandi Path and has been declared a historical heritage route 90 91 India issued a series of commemorative stamps in 1980 and 2005 on the 50th and 75th anniversaries of the Dandi March 92 Memorial EditThe National Salt Satyagraha Memorial a memorial museum dedicated to the event was opened in Dandi on 30 January 2019 See also EditBoston Tea Party Selma to Montgomery marches Suffrage Hikes Gandhi Heritage Portal National Salt Satyagraha MemorialReferences EditCitations Edit Salt March Oxford Encyclopedia of the Modern World Oxford University Press 2008 ISBN 978 0 19 517632 2 Retrieved 4 January 2021 Mass civil disobedience throughout India followed as millions broke the salt laws from Dalton s introduction to Gandhi s Civil Disobedience Gandhi and Dalton p 72 Dalton p 92 Johnson p 234 Ackerman p 106 Its root meaning is holding onto truth hence truth force I have also called it Love force or Soul force Gandhi 2001 p 6 Martin p 35 a b King Jr Martin Luther Carson Clayborne 1998 The Autobiography of Martin Luther King Jr Warner Books p 23 ISBN 978 0 446 67650 2 Eyewitness Gandhi 1 ed London Dorling Kinderseley Ltd 2014 p 44 ISBN 978 0241185667 Retrieved 3 September 2015 Wolpert Stanley A 2001 Gandhi s passion the life and legacy of Mahatma Gandhi Oxford University Press pp 141 ISBN 019513060X OCLC 252581969 Wolpert Stanley 1999 India University of California Press p 204 ISBN 978 0 520 22172 7 a b c Ackerman p 83 Dalton p 91 Dalton p 100 Nehru who had been skeptical about salt as the primary focus of the campaign realized how wrong he was Johnson p 32 a b c d e Gandhi Gopalkrishna The Great Dandi March eighty years after The Hindu 5 April 1930 Letter to London on 20 February 1930 Ackerman p 84 Gross David M 2014 99 Tactics of Successful Tax Resistance Campaigns Picket Line Press p 64 ISBN 978 1490572741 a b c Gandhi and Dalton p 72 Gandhi s ideas about satyagraha and swaraj moreover galvanised the thinking of Congress cadres most of whom by 1930 were committed to pursuing sovereignty and self rule by nonviolent means Ackerman p 108 Dalton pp 9 10 Hind Swaraj Gandhi and Dalton p 15 Forward to the volume of Gokhale s speeches Gopal Krishna Gokahalenan Vyakhyanao from Johnson p 118 Satyagraha in South Africa 1926 from Johnson p 73 Dalton p 48 Dalton p 93 Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi 41 208 209 Dalton p 94 Dalton p 95 a b Chronology Event Detail Page Gandhi Heritage Portal 15 June 2012 Retrieved 16 August 2018 Dalton p 113 Dalton p 108 Dalton p 107 Dalton p 104 Dalton p 105 Ackerman p 85 The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi Gandhi Heritage Portal Retrieved 16 August 2018 Gandhi s letter to Irwin Gandhi and Dalton p 78 Majmudar Uma Gandhi Rajmohan 2005 Gandhi s Pilgrimage of Faith From Darkness To Light New York SUNY Press p 184 ISBN 978 0 7914 6405 2 Parliament Museum New Delhi India Official website Dandi March VR Video Parliamentmuseum org Retrieved 1 August 2012 Miller Herbert A 23 April 1930 Gandhi s Campaign Begins The Nation Dalton p 107 Dandi march date history facts All you need to know Website of Indian National Congress 25 October 2018 Retrieved 27 August 2020 Weber p 140 The Statesman 13 March 1930 The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi Gandhi Heritage Portal Retrieved 16 August 2018 Weber pp 143 144 a b Ackerman p 86 The March to Dandi English emory edu Retrieved 1 August 2012 The Man The Mahatma Dandi March Library thinkquest org Archived from the original on 30 March 2012 Retrieved 1 August 2012 Dalton p 221 Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi 43 180 Wolpert p 148 a b Jack pp 238 239 The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi Gandhi Heritage Portal Retrieved 16 August 2018 Jack p 240 Guha Ramchandra 2018 Gandhi The Years That Changed the World Penguin Allen Lane p 336 ISBN 978 0670083886 Guha Ramchandra 2018 Gandhi The Years That Changed the World Penguin Allen Lane p 337 ISBN 978 0670083886 Sonawala Dipti Ramesh 9 February 2014 Mapping the unknown marcher The Indian Express Retrieved 16 August 2018 Chronology Event Detail Page Gandhi Heritage Portal 15 June 2012 Retrieved 16 August 2018 Photos Remembering the 80 unsung heroes of Mahatma Gandhi s Dandi March The Indian Express 9 February 2014 Retrieved 16 August 2018 The Salt Satyagraha in the meantime grew almost spontaneously into a mass satyagraha Habib p 57 Habib p 57 Correspondence came under censorship the Congress and its associate organizations were declared illegal and their funds made subject to seizure These measures did not appear to have any effect on the movement Habib p 57 a b Wolpert p 149 Newsinger John 2006 The Blood Never Dried A People s History of the British Empire Bookmarks Publications p 144 Sarkar Sumit 1983 Modern India 1885 1947 Basingstoke p 271 Habib p 55 a b Habib p 56 Johansen Robert C 1997 Radical Islam and Nonviolence A Case Study of Religious Empowerment and Constraint Among Pashtuns Journal of Peace Research 34 1 53 71 62 doi 10 1177 0022343397034001005 S2CID 145684635 Chatterjee Manini July August 2001 1930 Turning Point in the Participation of Women in the Freedom Struggle Social Scientist 29 7 8 39 47 41 doi 10 2307 3518124 JSTOR 3518124 first it is from this year 1930 that women became mass participants in the struggle for freedom But from 1930 that is in the second non cooperation movement better known as the Civil Disobedience Movement thousands upon thousands of women in all parts of India not just in big cities but also in small towns and villages became part of the satyagraha struggle a b Kishwar Madhu 1986 Gandhi on Women Race amp Class 28 41 1753 1758 doi 10 1177 030639688602800103 JSTOR 4374920 S2CID 143460716 Hardiman David 2003 Gandhi in His Time and Ours The Global Legacy of His Ideas Columbia University Press p 113 ISBN 978 0 231 13114 8 a b Johnson p 33 Arsenault Natalie 2009 Restoring Women to World Studies PDF The University of Texas at Austin pp 60 66 Jack pp 244 245 Riddick John F 2006 The History of British India A Chronology Greenwood Press p 108 ISBN 978 0 313 32280 8 Ackerman pp 87 90 Webb Miller s report from May 21 Martin p 38 Wolpert p 155 Singhal Arvind 2014 Mahatma is the Message Gandhi s Life as Consummate Communicator International Journal of Communication and Social Research 2 1 4 Man of the Year 1930 Time 5 January 1931 Archived from the original on 24 December 2007 Retrieved 17 November 2007 Gandhi and Dalton p 73 Ackerman p 106 made scant progress toward either dominion status within the empire or outright sovereignty and self rule Neither had they won any major concessions on the economic and mundane issues that Gandhi considered vital Dalton p 119 120 Johnson p 36 Indian British and world opinion increasingly recognized the legitimate claims of Gandhi and Congress for Indian independence Johnson p 37 Ackerman p 109 The old order in which British control rested comfortably on Indian acquiescence had been sundered In the midst of civil disobedience Sir Charles Innes a provincial governor circulated his analysis of events to his colleagues England can hold India only by consent he conceded We can t rule it by the sword The British lost that consent Fisher Margaret W June 1967 India s Jawaharlal Nehru Asian Survey 7 6 363 373 368 doi 10 2307 2642611 JSTOR 2642611 Johnson p 37 Gandhi s 1930 march re enacted BBC News 12 March 2005 Retrieved 27 December 2007 Diwanji Amberish K 15 March 2005 In the Mahatma s footsteps Rediff Retrieved 27 December 2007 Category Salt March on stamps commons wikimedia org Cited sources Edit Ackerman Peter DuVall Jack 2000 A Force More Powerful A Century of Nonviolent Conflict Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 312 24050 9 Dalton Dennis 1993 Mahatma Gandhi Nonviolent Power in Action Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231122375 Gandhi Mahatma Dalton Dennis 1996 Selected Political Writings Hackett Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 87220 330 3 Habib Irfan September October 1997 Civil Disobedience 1930 31 Social Scientist 25 9 10 43 66 doi 10 2307 3517680 JSTOR 3517680 Jack Homer A ed 1994 The Gandhi Reader A Source Book of His Life and Writings Grove Press ISBN 978 0 8021 3161 4 Johnson Richard L 2005 Gandhi s Experiments With Truth Essential Writings By And About Mahatma Gandhi Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 7391 1143 7 Martin Brian 2006 Justice Ignited Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 7425 4086 6 Weber Thomas 1998 On the Salt March The Historiography of Gandhi s March to Dandi India HarperCollins ISBN 978 81 7223 372 3 Wolpert Stanley 2001 Gandhi s Passion The Life and Legacy of Mahatma Gandhi Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 515634 8 Further reading EditDecourcy Elisa Just a grain of salt Symbolic construction during the Indian nationalist movement Melbourne Historical Journal 2010 Vol 38 pp 57 72 Gandhi M K 2001 Non Violent Resistance Satyagraha Courier Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 41606 9 Masselos Jim Audiences Actors and Congress Dramas Crowd Events in Bombay City in 1930 South Asia Journal of South Asian Studies April 1985 Vol 8 Issue 1 2 pp 71 86External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Salt March Newsreel footage of Salt Satyagraha Salt march re enactment slide show Gandhi s 1930 march re enacted BBC News Speech by Prime Minister of India on 75th anniversary of Dandi March Dandi March Timeline Portal Food Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w 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