Many people consider Mohandas Gandhi the
greatest figure of the 20th century. Gandhi freed India from rule by the
British Empire. But it was how Gandhi did it that won the world’s respect. Most
new nations are born through war. Gandhi found a different way. He was against
violence.
Biography of the man who freed India from rule by the British Empire
GANDHI’S EARLY LIFE
Mohandas K. Gandhi was born in India in
1869. India had then been ruled by Britain for a century. At his mother’s
urging, Mohandas went to college in England and studied law.
In 1893, Gandhi went to South Africa to
practice law. South Africa, too, was then part of the British Empire. It had a
large Indian community. Gandhi was angry to find that Indians were denied basic
freedoms. In 1896, he began to lead Indians in South Africa in a struggle for
equal rights.
It was not an armed struggle. Gandhi
preached nonviolence. He organized marches to call attention to his cause. His
followers refused to obey unfair laws. When attacked by police, they did not
fight back.
Gandhi described his policy by an Indian
word that meant “truth and firmness.” He was jailed many times. But his courage
won people to his cause. In 1914, the South African government granted Indians
their rights.
GANDHI IN INDIA
Gandhi returned to India in 1915. His
goal was to win for his country the right to rule itself. His methods of strong
but peaceful resistance spread across India.
In 1920, British soldiers killed
hundreds of peaceful protesters in the city of Amritsar. Gandhi then called on
Indians to refuse to cooperate with Britain. People stopped buying British
goods. Instead, they made things at home in traditional ways. They took their
children out of British schools. Those in government jobs quit.
During the years of resistance, Gandhi
lived the simple life of the poorest Indians. He gave away his possessions.
People called him Mahatma, meaning “great soul.” It was a title given to wise
religious leaders.
BRINGING CHANGE
Not all Indians followed Gandhi.
Sometimes violence erupted against the British. This troubled Gandhi so much
that he quit politics several times. But his people’s struggle kept drawing him
back in.
In 1930, Gandhi called on Indians to
refuse to pay taxes to Britain. The most hated tax was on salt. Gandhi led
thousands of followers on a march to the sea to make salt from seawater. He was
arrested again. But a year later, the British removed the salt tax and freed
him. Without Gandhi, the British government realized, India would break out in
violent revolution.
Gandhi also tried to break India’s
traditional caste (social class) system. He supported the rights of people in
the lowest caste, called untouchables. They were the poorest, most oppressed
Indians.
Religion also divided India’s people.
Violence sometimes broke out between Hindus and Muslims. Gandhi tried to bring
them together.
“YOU MUST BE THE CHANGE”
In 1939, World War II began. Gandhi
refused to support Britain in the war unless India was granted complete
independence after it was over. Five years later, the British agreed.
India became a free country in 1947.
Gandhi’s dream of a united India was not realized, however. India’s people were
mostly Hindus. The country’s Muslims demanded their own state, which became
Pakistan. Religious violence broke out between India and Pakistan.
Gandhi himself became a victim of the
violence. On January 30, 1948, he was shot and killed by an Indian who hated
his efforts to achieve peace.
“You must be the change you wish to see
in the world,” Mahatma Gandhi said. His death was considered a world tragedy.
But his life inspired other people. One person who followed Gandhi’s way was
American civil-rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr.
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