how did the rich peasants and women take part in civil disobedience movement?
Answers
Answered by
68
Answer:
Participation of women in the Civil Disobedience Movement :
(i) Women in large number participated in the Civil Disobedience Movement.
(ii) During Salt March thousands of women came out of their homes to listen to Gandhiji.
(iii) They participated in protest marches, manufactured salt.
(iv) They picketed foreign cloth and liquor shops.
(v) Many went to jail.
(vi) They began to see service to the nation as a sacred duty of women.
Hope it helps you dear.....xd
Answered by
3
Women and rich peasants actively participated in CDM on a huge scale.
- They produced salt, took part in protest marches, and protested foreign clothing and alcohol stores.
- Many were locked up. These women came from high caste households and lived in urban areas.
- Women in rural areas came from wealthy peasant families.
- Women took part out of a sense of civic duty and service to the country.
- The Patidars of Gujarat and the Jats of Uttar Pradesh, two wealthy peasant communities, enthusiastically participated in the Civil Disobedience Movement.
- Their idea of Swaraj involved fighting against high incomes.
- These wealthy peasants fervently embraced the Civil Disobedience Movement.
- They organised their neighbourhoods and occasionally coerced people to take part in boycott campaigns.
- But when the initiative was abandoned in 1931 without the revenue rates being altered, they were extremely upset.
- Consequently, many of them declined to take part when the movement was revived in 1932.
#spj2
Similar questions