English, asked by shivani1410, 1 year ago

How did Gandhiji use Satyagraha and non - violence of champaran to achieve his goal?

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Answered by lolsomedudeinsta
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Secondary SchoolEnglish8+4 pts

How did Gandhi use satyagraha and non-violence at Champaran to achieve his goal ?

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Sam215 Helping Hand

At Champaran , Gandhi took up the cause of peasants against the landlords. In this case , the strategy was satyagraha and the principles were truth and non violence . The force working under Gandhi was mass participation .

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Rahulragini ★ Brainly Teacher ★

Mahatma Gandhi, who was an apostle of peace and non-violence, agitated in Champaran district of Bihar in 1917 and then in Kheda district of Gujarat in 1918. Although the term Satyagraha was coined in 1919, when the Anti - Rowlatt Act protests took place, Champaran witnessed this kind of non-violent protests for the first time.
The protests in Champaran took place as the British introduced farming of cash crops like indigo, which they bought at a low price for export. Opium was also extracted from the seeds of poppy,which was grown for export to China to fill the coffers of the imperialist rulers. The protests were against two decisions of the British, viz. forcing farmers to cultivate cash crops in place of food crops, which they earlier cultivated for sustenance, and payment of abysmally low wages to the growers. Rajendra Prasad, Anugrah Narayan Sinha, Brajkishore Prasad, Acharya Kripalani and many others took part in the agitation with Gandhi.
Satyagraha was actually a mass civil disobedience movement. Gandhiji set up an ashram there and volunteers in scores joined his agitation. He then began cleaning up the villages, built hospitals and schools, induced villagers to remove untouchability and do away with the purdah system. After all this was done, people became conscious of their rights and non-violent protests were the order of the day. This culminated in the arrest of Gandhi. He was later released by an order of the court, after the agitators agitated en masse in front of the police station and the court. Thereafter, Gandhi was called Bapu across the country. The Champaran movement brought to heel the British rulers and their cohorts, the wealthy landlords; the poor farmers were subsequently paid remunerative wages and their farming right of the desired crops was restored.

Answered by nafibarli789
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Answer:

In April 1917, Gandhiji reached Champaran and started asking about the exploitative indigo sharecropping system. When Gandhiji failed to obtain any information about the position of peasants in the sharecropping agreement from British officials, he determined to take up residence in Motihari to inquire further

Explanation:

Gandhi was asked to vacate Champaran by official order. He respected the lawful administration. He didn't desire to be a lawbreaker. But the voice of conscience caused him to break the order. Thousands of people, particularly the peasants, held a massive demonstration. The government was confused. The officials felt powerless. Gandhi was released without bail. So civil disobedience had triumphed for the first time in modern India. But in the full episode of Champaran Gandhi was pleasant and polite. He supported the government to control the crowd in Motihari. Champaran's episode existed not as an act of defiance but an effort to clear the distress of people. The success of Champaran was the victory of peaceful civil disobedience.

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