Unit 2.2 Changing Political Relationships (COMPLETE) Flashcards

1
Q

What three things led Gandhi to change his mind and to develop the idea of swaraj (self rule)?

A
  • The Rowlatt Acts, aimed to continue repressive wartime measures.
  • April 1919 Amritsar Massacre and its endorsement by large sections of the British community in India.
  • Paris peace conferences.
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2
Q

Why would the Paris peace conference lead to Gandhi’s development of swaraj?

A
  • An outcome was that Turkey had to pay indemnity and lose its territories.
  • Confirmed the fears of Indian Muslims that white Europeans and Americans had little concern for Islamic nations.
  • Made Gandhi realise that it could increase the idea of separateness amongst Muslims.
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3
Q

What did non-cooperation entail?

A
  • Boycott elections to the new legislative assemblies.
  • Withhold taxes.
  • Refuse to buy imported goods.
  • Remove children from government schools.
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4
Q

What were the successes of Gandhi’s non-cooperation campaign?

A
  • Some campaigns would encourage action. (e.g. refusal to pay taxes)
  • Gandhi focused on areas where he knew the campaigns would not fall to mobs.
  • Initial successes: students boycotted their exams, taxes were not paid, people stayed away from 1920 elections, around 200 lawyers stopped work.)
  • few Indians attended the official ceremonies when a duke visited Calcutta in 1921.
  • Gandhi created a sense of excitement that change was imminent.
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5
Q

What were the limitations to Gandhi’s non-cooperation campaign?

A
  • Some campaigns were unrealistic (e.g. Lawyers new unlikely to leave the law courts nor would parents want to remove their children from education.)
  • Millions of Indians unable to understand the concept of Satyagraha.
  • Violence broke out (e.g. Bombay)
  • Muslims declared a jihad, killing British people. Forced conversion to Islam.
  • In the Punjab, Hindus forced Muslims to ‘purify’ themselves.
  • February 1922, a mob of Congress supporters torched a police station, killing 22. Gandhi forced to withdraw campaign.
  • Gandhi was arrested and charged with promoting disaffection. He was sentenced to 6 years imprisonment.
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6
Q

What was the significance of Gandhi’s imprisonment?

A
  • Gandhi became more involved in peasant communities & gained greater understanding of peasants’ needs & aspirations.
  • Congress became more ready to understand & exploit local grievances and explore how these could be linked to the broader campaign for swaraj.
  • Leadership of Congress passed to C.R. Das & Motilal Nehru, both favoured taking advantage of the Government of India Act 1919 & 1923.
  • The Raj returned to its traditional policy of attempting to balance the need to keep control, while also making concessions to India (considerable support was given to local assemblies where a cholera and smallpox inoculation programme was started.)
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7
Q

How much did Congress membership grow by in 1921?

A
  • From a base of 100,000 membership rose to around 2 million by the end of 1921.
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8
Q

Why were there membership withdrawals within Congress?

A
  • The more conservative elements of Congress had objected to seeing Congress’ transformation from a pressure group to one of open defiance to the Raj.
  • A large number of Muslims left after what they saw Gandhi’s failure to support them over their concerns about the break-up of the Ottoman empire after WW1.
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9
Q

How did Congress extend their appeal?

Recruiting Members & Geographically

A
  • It extended its appeal into a wider spread of geographical areas throughout the subcontinent.
  • began wooing interest groups that had hitherto been neglected.
  • Many new supporters came from the richer peasantry and the commercial castes.
  • Congress was beginning to recruit support from railway workers, millhands and poor peasants.
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10
Q

How was Congress organised in 1920?

Organisation

A
  • When Gandhi first emerged as a leader in 1920 there were 3 administrative levels: local branches, provincial committees and an All-Indian Congress Committee.
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11
Q

Why was the Structure of Congress revised under Gandhi?

A
  • The structure was revised in 1920 because of Gandhi’s perception that a new sense of direction and purpose was needed.
  • Cooperation with the Raj was to end and be replaced by non-violent non-cooperation.
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12
Q

How did Congress extend their appeal?

Organisation

A
  • Membership of The All-Indian Congress Committee increased from 161 seats to 350 and seats were re-allocated on a regional population basis.
  • Great emphasis was placed on recruiting women and untapped groups such as trade unions.
  • Around 100 additional provincial committees and several hundred more local branches were set up.
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13
Q

What did Gandhi set up upon his release from prison in 1920?

A
  • December 1920.

- Set up a new unit of the All-Indian Congress Committee (Congress Working Committee)

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14
Q

What did the Congress Working Committee do?

A
  • Its job was to formulate policy.
  • Mirrored what a cabinet was to government.
  • Clearly, Gandhi intended to develop an alternative administrative structure that could take over when the Raj withered away.
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15
Q

What did Gandhi do upon his release from prison in 1924?

A
  • Went ‘back to basics’
  • This was entirely congruent with what seemed to be his basic belief that the way forward for India was to dismantle the structure and organisation of Congress.
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16
Q

What was the intention behind the All-Indian Spinners’ Association?

A
  • Had the intention of spreading the words about hand spinning and weaving.
  • Also promoted the general cause of self-sufficiency.
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17
Q

What Campaigns did Gandhi and the All-India Spinners’ Association persuade Congress to embark on?

A
  • Mass literacy.
  • The improvement of village sanitation.
  • Gandhi also began to campaign vigorously on behalf of the ‘untouchables’ to enable them to fully integrate into Indian Society.
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18
Q

What two events changed the constructive development of Congress?

A
  • The ‘Young Hooligans’ bursting into the political scene.

- The British Government setting up the Simon Commission.

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19
Q

Who were the ‘Young Hooligans’?

A
  • Subhas Chandra Bose, Jayprakash Narayan and Jawaharlal Nehru.
  • Lobbied the All-Indian Congress Committee and the Congress Working Committee.
  • They wanted renewed action and wanted it now.
  • Independence and the freedom it would grant all Indian people was their ultimate objective and they were impatient with what they perceived as Congress’ reluctance to confront the Raj.
  • They fiercely opposed Dominion Status wanting only complete independence.
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20
Q

What was the 1928 Nehru Report?

A
  • At an All-Parties Congress, a sub-committee produced a report that was really the first draft of a written constitution for India.
  • It was the work of two lawyers; Tej Bahadur Sapru (leader of liberal party) and Motilal Nehru (member of Congress).
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21
Q

What did the 1928 Nehru Report recommend?

A
  • Recommended dominion status for India on the same terms as those laid down for White self-governing countries within the British Empire such as Canada and Australia.
  • Suggested that the princely states and British India were to be joined in a federation.
  • There would be no further devolution of power to the provinces (However, this meant that Hindus would form a permanent majority within central government.)
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22
Q

Why were the Muslims unhappy with the Recommendations laid out within the 1928 Nehru Report?

A
  • Despite vague promises that religious freedoms would be safeguarded and new Muslim states created, most Muslims were deeply unhappy.
  • Under the Nehru Report they would lose the protection of their separate electorate status.
  • Although it was only a Report, the fragile Hindu-Muslim alliance hung in the balance.
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23
Q

In December 1928, Congress met under Motilal Nehru demanding dominion status. What was the demand made by both Bose and Nehru?

A
  • Britain was to withdraw from India by 31 December 1929.
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24
Q

Why was Bose and Nehru’s unrealistic demand for the British to withdraw from India by the 31st of December 1929 clever?

A
  • Due to the unrealistic nature of the demand when withdrawal didn’t occur Congress would have the excuse to embark on a course of further non-cooperation if they wished.
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25
Q

What was Gandhi’s dilemma regarding Congress meeting in Lahore in December 1929?

A
  • Gandhi was aware that he had the voice that all delegates would listen to.
  • Gandhi also knew that Congress was deeply divided over what to do about the future of the Raj.
  • Was Gandhi to back the young militants against moderate conservatives and risk potential bloodshed?
  • Or was Gandhi to back the moderates and push for Dominion Status at the risk of dividing Congress potentially forever?
  • Congress also needed to reassert its authority to be the voice of all India as not doing so would run the risk of allowing the British to settle with individual factions and in doing so play them off against each other.
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26
Q

Who had the Young Hooligans gained the support of?

A
  • Had considerable support in the districts.
  • Support from the young.
  • Support from trade unionists.
  • They were also building up a steady following amongst the younger members of Congress.
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27
Q

What did Gandhi decide at the Lahore Congress in 1929?

A
  • Gandhi decided that he would support the Young Hooligans.
  • He steered his policy through the various Congress committees and a militant open session, and ended up with a Working Committee of his own choosing to direct Congress’s actions in the months ahead.
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28
Q

What became India’s new political demand after the 1929 Lahore Congress?

A
  • Purna Swaraj (total independence)
  • Congress left it to their Working Committee to decide how and when the non-violent confrontation would begin and the Working Committee left this decision to Gandhi.
29
Q

Why did Gandhi choose to oppose the Salt Tax?

A
  • The tax brought in little revenue.
  • Cost the average Indian about 3 annas a year.
  • It was an emotive issue as salt was the one commodity everyone needed.
30
Q

What happened on the 12th of March 1930?

A
  • The Salt March.
  • Gandhi intended to walk 240 miles from his house to Dandi accompanied by 78 supporters including untouchables.
  • The March took on the character of a pilgrimage.
  • Gandhi reached into the sea and picked up a piece of salt (tax free) and urged Indians to do the same.
31
Q

What happened the day before the 1930 Salt March?

A
  • A prayer meeting.

- Attracted 10,000 people.

32
Q

How many people did Gandhi’s 1930 Salt March attract on the day?

A
  • 75,000 people.
33
Q

What did the Raj do in response to Gandhi’s 1930 Salt March?

A
  • 100s of peasants were arrested and imprisoned.
  • There were mass arrests of local and national Congress leaders.
  • They arrested Gandhi which triggered a wave of strikes and protests.
  • In June the entire Congress Working Committee was arrested.
34
Q

What did the second phase of Satyagraha (Civil Disobedience) entail?

A
  • Entered its second after Gandhi’s arrest in 1930.
  • Congress authorised provincial committees to organise their own satyagrahas, including their nature and timing.
  • Congress did however recommend an order of priority for the focus of their satyagrahas.
35
Q

What was Congress’s order of priority for provincial committees satyagrahas during the second phase of Civil Disobedience?

A
  • Salt.
  • The boycott of foreign cloth.
  • The non-payment of taxes.
  • The refusal to cooperate with authorities when they tried to prevent the satyagraha.
36
Q

Why was the second phase of Satyagraha (Civil Disobedience) different to the first wave and why was this difficult for the Raj?

A
  • The second phase of Satyagraha was not master-minded and directed centrally.
  • This made it much more difficult for the Raj to stop as there was no central organisation to take out.
37
Q

What were the strengths to Congress’s new way of enacting Satyagraha during the second phase of Civil Disobedience?

A
  • Congress cleverly papered over the cracks of potential divisions among its members as to how disobedient civil disobedience should be.
  • By allowing provincial committees such a large degree of autonomy, Congress hoped to demonstrate that it was a universal umbrella organisation, sensitive to local needs.
38
Q

Was the second phase of Satyagraha a success?

A
  • In 1930, Civil Disobedience became a formidable psychological weapon used by Indians against the Raj.
  • By the middle of the year all provinces in India had been affected, with Bombay and Gujarat being the most turbulent.
  • In the majority of areas, civil disobedience was frequently used by people as a vehicle for expressing local grievances.
  • Civil disobedience became the vehicle whereby a whole range of people became politically aware and articulate.
  • Women, in particular, became actively involved because the men in their families had been imprisoned.
39
Q

How many women were in jail by November 1930 and why?

A
  • Nearly 360 women were in jail for participation in different satyagrahas.
40
Q

Why was the second phase of Satyagraha limited?

A
  • By early 1931, the Raj had more or less restored law and order.
  • Around 60,000 people passed through India’s jails in 1930, put a strain on the civil service and overcrowding in jails.
  • By the end of 1930 there were still 29,000 people in jails including women and youths under 17.
  • Local satyagrahas could not be sustained once local grievances were settled.
  • By the end of 1930 the Raj and Congress had reached a stalemate.
41
Q

What was the Khilafat movement?

A
  • Indian Muslims regarded the Turkish Caliph as their spiritual leader.
  • Turkey supported Germany in WW1, therefore Muslims wanted to go against the British Empire.
  • The Khilafat Movement legitimised Muslim participation in any nationalist movement.
  • The Movement was supported by Gandhi but Jinnah was suspicious.
  • In 1923 the Khilafat Movement had collapsed (was seen as a terroist group that was anti-British)
42
Q

Why did Gandhi and the Muslim leaders join together in 1920 and 1921?

A
  • To mobilise the masses for the civil disobedience and non-cooperation campaigns in response to the Amritsar Massacre and the Rowlatt Acts.
  • Gandhi also endorsed the Khilafat Movement bringing the weight of Hindu opinion behind what had originally been a solely Muslim movement.
43
Q

What was Jinnah’s attitude towards Gandhi and the Khilafat Movement?

A
  • Opposed Gandhi’s support for the movement as it was not only opportunistic on Gandhi’s behalf but also caused schism amongst Muslims.
  • In December 1920 Jinnah spoke openly against non-cooperation.
  • The extent of violence displayed in civil disobedience, some involving Hindus and Muslims settling old scores, gave credence to Jinnah’s desire for an alternative approach.
44
Q

Why did the Khilafat Movement collapse in 1923?

A
  • Turkey rejected the caliphate and became a secular state. (Main reason for Khilafats movements existence was gone)
  • The religious mass-appeal aspects of the movement alienated Western-Oriented politicians like Jinnah, who resigned from Congress.
  • Many Muslims became uncomfortable with Gandhi’s leadership.
45
Q

What was the reemergence of Muslim Values?

A
  • 1920s: The Tandem and the Tabligh movements came to the fore.
  • Each town was to have their own association (Anjuman).
  • Anti-Hindu sentiment grew rapidly.
  • Congress was no longer seen by Muslims as the body that would push for independence.
46
Q

What was the Tandem movement focussed on?

A
  • Organisation.
47
Q

What was the Tabligh movement focussed on?

A
  • Religion.
48
Q

What the Anjuman responsible for?

A
  • Preaching.
  • Islamic Education.
  • Regular observance of religious duties.
  • Construction of Mosques.
49
Q

In 1927, what was the Muslim League’s offer to Congress?

A
  • Jinnah offered to end the League’s support for separate electorates in exchange for 1/3 of the seats of the Assembly.
  • Congress rejected the offer.
50
Q

What did Jinnah propose to Congress in 1929?

A
  • His ‘14 Points’.

- These were also rejected by Congress.

51
Q

What are 5 examples from Jinnah’s 14 points?

A
  • A uniform measure of autonomy in each province.
  • Muslim representation in the central legislature no less than 1/3.
  • Full religious liberty.
  • The future constitution should be federal, with the residuary powers in each province.
  • There should be safeguards for Muslim culture.
52
Q

When did Jinnah leave for England and what idea was beginning to develop?

A
  • In 1929.

- An idea of a separate Muslim State began to develop.

53
Q

What was significant about the rejection of Jinnah’s 14 points?

A
  • His 14 Point compromise drove him out of politics.

- Jinnah increasingly began to support the separatist movement.

54
Q

What was the 1927 Simon Commission?

A
  • Government sent out a parliamentary delegation to find out how the Government of India Act was working and to make any recommendations for any necessary review.
  • Significantly, there were no Indian members.
  • The message was loud and clear. It appeared the fate of India was to be decided by British politicians in Westminster and Indians were to have no part in deciding their own future.
55
Q

Who was apart of the 1927 Simon Commission?

A
  • Headed by Sir John Simon.

- Labour MP Clement Attlee was apart of the 7 member delegation.

56
Q

What happened to the 1927 Simon Commission Delegates upon arrival in Bombay?

A
  • Greeted by booing, jeering crowds carrying banners and waving black flags.
  • They shouted slogans like ‘Simon go home!’
  • They were met with the same response in Calcutta, Deli, Lahore, Lucknow, Madras and Patna.
  • Everywhere the Commission went they were met with mass demonstrations that the police could barely control.
57
Q

Which minorities aided the Simon Commission when asked and why?

A
  • Anglo-Indians.
  • Sikhs.
  • Untouchables.
  • Did so as they hoped for a better future than what they were anticipating under a Hindu-dominated Congress.
58
Q

Why was the Simon Report abandoned before publication?

A
  • Did little more than reassert the status quo.
59
Q

Why did the 1927 Simon Commission take place?

A
  • The 1919 Government of India Act was due for review in 1929 but that was the year of the general election.
  • The Conservative Government was worried that if the Labour Party won and the review was held after their election then policies on India would veer to the left.
  • Therefore the review was brought forwards so that it happened before the election under a conservative government.
60
Q

How did Ramsay McDonald (New PM) and William Wedgwood Benn (New SoS) feel towards India?

A
  • They were sympathetic towards the demands of Congress.
61
Q

What did Lord Irwin do during his mid-term leave?

A
  • Travelled back to England with two new suggestions:
    1) A conference to discuss future reforms.
    2) A declaration that the Raj’s goal for India was dominion status.
62
Q

Who supported Lord Irwin’s suggestions?

A
  • Ramsay McDonald.
  • William Wedgwood Benn.
  • Surprisingly, Stanley Baldwin (Leader of Conservative party).
63
Q

What was the 1929 Irwin Declaration?

A
  • Reasserted the Montagu declaration.
  • Said Dominion Status was a natural development of this.
  • Indian representatives were invited to London to a Round Table Conference where details of a new Indian constitution would be hammered out.
64
Q

What did the Congress Working Committee call for after the declaration (Irwin rejected the proposition)?

A
  • Release all Indian political prisoners.
  • This led to Indians retaliating against what they saw to be British ‘stubbornness’ leading to more terrorist attacks including the bombing of the Viceroy’s train.
65
Q

Why did Gandhi and Congress believe attending the London Conferences suggested by Irwin would be ‘political suicide’?

A
  • Not only were they on foreign soil but they would also be forced to follow a British agenda.
  • The British also weren’t just expecting members of Congress to attend but representatives of all Indian opinion.
  • This led Gandhi to believe that the chances of Congress getting what they really wanted would be compromised.
66
Q

What issues would arise if Gandhi and Congress decided against going to Irwin’s London Conferences?

A
  • Not attending could possibly result in a settlement being made that Congress and Gandhi couldn’t possibly agree to.
67
Q

What was the 1931 Gandhi-Irwin Pact?

A
  • Irwin met with Gandhi later in 1931 appealing to his spiritual & political nature.
  • The discussions were frank and open, both men genuinely wanted to find a way out of the impasses.
68
Q

What did the 1931 Gandhi-Irwin Pact consist of?

A
  • Congress’s Civil disobedience campaign was suspended.
  • Gandhi agreed to attend a second London conference.
  • 19,000 Congress supporters were released from jail.
  • Confiscated property was returned to its owners.
    The Gandhi-Irwin Pact brought everyone some breathing space.