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Ghandi Millers


Enviado por   •  28 de Abril de 2014  •  240 Palabras (1 Páginas)  •  143 Visitas

Gandhi’s tactics of non-violence

His strategy for battling injustice involved his religious approach to political activity.

His teachings blended ideas from all of the major world religions, Hinduism, Jainism, Buddhism, Islam and Christianity.

hinduism

jainism

buddhism

islam

chistianity

He got followers and they call him Mahatma “great soul”

Noncooperation

Where British didn’t punish the officers for the Amritsar massacre Gandhi said the Indian National Congress to say something to British government.

1920: the civil disobedience was his deliberate and public refusal to obey an unjust law, and nonviolence as the means to achieve independence.

The Gandhi launched campaign of civil disobedience to weak British over India.

Boycotts

Gandhi staged successful boycott to British, he said to all Indians to stop buying British things.

He said that they do their own cloth and they started doing it, so the sake of British cloth in India dropped sharply.

Strikes and demonstrations

Gandhi’s civil disobedience damage British economy.

British tried to keep the trains and the factories working but things were hard times for them.

1920 British arrested thousands of Indians who had participated in strikes and demonstrations but Gandhi’s please for nonviolence protest became in fights sometimes.

The salt march

In 1930 Gandhi organized a demonstration to defy the salt acts that said that they can only buy salt from other part but in the government and pay taxes for it.

They walked 240 miles to the seacoast and make they own salt, this peaceful protest was the Salt March.

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