Gandhi’s Experiments of Satyagraha
The first
attempt at mobilizing the Indian masses was made by Gandhi on an invitation by
peasants of Champaran. Before launching the struggle he made a detailed study
of the situation. Indigo cultivators of the district Champaran in Bihar were
severely exploited by the European planters who had bound the peasants to
compulsorily grow indigo on lease on 3/20th of their fields and sell it at the
rates fixed by the planters. This system squeezed the peasants and eventually
reduced them to penury. Accompanied by local leaders such as Rajendra Prasad,
Mazharul Huq, Acharya Kripalani and Mahadeva Desai, Gandhi conducted a detailed
enquiry. The British officials ordered Gandhi to leave the district. But he
refused and told the administration that he would defy the order because it was
unjust and face the consequences.
Subsequently an enquiry committee with Gandhi also as a member was formed. It was not difficult for Gandhi to convince the committee of the difficulties of the poor peasants. The report was accepted and implemented resulting in the release of the indigo cultivators of the bondage of European planters who gradually had to withdraw from Champaran itself.
Thus
Gandhi met with his first success in his homeland. The struggle also enabled
him to closely understand the condition of peasantry. The next step at
mobilizing the masses was the workers of the urban centre, Ahmedabad. There was
a dispute between the textile workers and the mill owners. He met both the
parties and when the owners refused to accept the demands of the low paid workers,
Gandhi advised them to go on strike demanding a 35 percent increase in their
wages. To bolster the morale of the workers he went on fast. The worker’s
strike and Gandhi’s fast ultimately forced the mill owners’ to concede the
demand.
The
peasants of Kheda district, due to the failure of monsoon, were in distress.
They had appealed to the colonial authorities for remission of land revenue
during 1918. As per government’s famine code, in the event of crop yield being
under 25 percent of the average the cultivators were entitled for total
remission. But the authorities refused and harassed them demanding full
payment. The Kheda peasants who were also battling the plague epidemic, high
prices and famine approached the Servants of India Society, of which Gandhi was
a member, for help. Gandhi, along with Vithalbhai Patel, intervened on behalf
of the poor peasants and advised them to withhold payment and ‘fight unto death
against such a spirit of vindictiveness and tyranny.’ Vallabhbhai Patel, a
young lawyer and Indulal Yagnik joined Gandhi in the movement and urged the
ryots to be firm. The government repression included attachment of crops,
taking possession of the belongings of the ryots and their cattle and in some
cases auctioning them.
The government authorities issued instructions that revenues shall be collected only from those ryots who could afford to pay. On learning about the same, Gandhi decided to withdraw the struggle.
The three
struggles led by Gandhi, demonstrated that he had understood where the Indian
nation lay. It was the poor peasants and workers of all classes and castes, who
constituted the pith and marrow of India, whose interests Gandhi espoused in
these struggles. He had confronted both the colonialist and Indian exploiters
and by entering into dialogue with them, he had demonstrated that he was a
leader who could mobilize the oppressed and at the same time negotiate with the
oppressors. These virtues made him the man of the masses and soon he was hailed
as the Mahatma.
Servants of India Society was founded by Gopal Krishna Gokhale
in 1905 to unite and train Indians of different castes, regions and religions
in welfare work. It was the first secular organization in the country to devote
itself to the betterment of underprivileged, rural and tribal people. The
members involved themselves in relief work, the promotion of literacy, and
other social causes. Members would have to go through a five-year training
period and agree to serve on modest salaries. The organization has its
headquarters in Pune (Maharashtra) and notable branches in Chennai (Madras),
Mumbai (Bombay), Allahabad and Nagpur.
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