History, asked by 123456789020, 1 year ago

how did the salt march become a effective tool of resistance towards colonalism

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1
Salt Satyagraha produced scant progress toward dominion status or self-rule for India, and did not win any major concessions from the British. It also failed to attract Muslim support. Congress leaders decided to end satyagraha as official policy in 1934. Nehru and other Congress members drifted further apart from Gandhi, who withdrew from Congress to concentrate on his Constructive Programme, which included his efforts to end untouchability in the Harijan movement.Even though British authorities were again in control by the mid-1930s, Indian, British, and world opinion increasingly began to recognise the legitimacy of claims by Gandhi and the Congress Party for sovereignty and self-rule .[78] The Satyagraha campaign of the 1930s also forced the British to recognise that their control of India depended entirely on the consent of the Indians – Salt Satyagraha was a significant step in the British losing that consent
Answered by DhruvAwasthi
0

Answer:

The salt march become a effective tool of resistance towards colonalism as after this revolt, the Indians realised that they could be independently relied on themselves and that they do not need any more upper controllers now. After this, the boycott movement{massive burning of foreign goods by Indians} also started giving Britishers a permanent wound.

Explanation:

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