Social Sciences, asked by harshif, 1 year ago

what was the purpose of civil disobedience movement?

Answers

Answered by Rohitupadhyay1
3
To give the message to the Britishers to break the taxes
Answered by Karthik1632002
7
Civil disobedience is the active, professed refusal to obey  certain laws, demands, and commands of a government, or of an occupying  international power. Civil disobedience is a symbolic or ritualistic  violation of the law, rather than a rejection of the system as a whole.  Civil disobedience is sometimes, though not always, defined as being nonviolent resistance. 
Under the leadership of Gandhiji, the Civil  Disobedience  Movement was launched in AD 1930. It began with the Dandi  March. On 12 March 1930, Gandiji with some of his followers left the   Sabarmati Ashram at Ahmedabad and made their way towards Dandi, a  village on the  west coast of India. After travelling for twenty-five  days and covering a  distance of three hundred and eighty-five kms, the  group reached Dandi on 6  April 1930. Here, Gandhiji protested against  the Salt Law (salt was a monopoly  of the government and no one was  allowed to make salt) by making slat himself  and throwing up a  challenge to the British government. The Dandi March signified  the  start of the Civil Disobedience Movement.
The movement spread and salt laws were challenged in  other  parts of the country. Salt became the symbol of people’s defiance  of the  government. In Tamil Nadu, C Rajagopalchari led a similar march  from  Trichinopoly to Vedaranyam. In Gujarat, Sarojini Naidu pretested  in front of the  slat depots. Lakhs of people including a large number  of women participated  actively in these protests.
The Civil Disobedience Movement carried forward the  unfinished  work of the Non-Cooperation Movement. Practically the whole  country became  involved in it. Hartals put life at a standstill. There  were large-scale  boycotts of schools, colleges and offices. Foreign  goods were burnt in bonfires.  People stopped paying taxes. In the  North-West Frontier Province, the movement  was led by Khan Abdul  Ghaffar Khan, popularly known as ‘Frontier Gandhi’. For a  few days,  British control over Peshawar and Sholapur ended. People faced the   batons and bullets of the police with supreme courage. No one retaliated  or said  anything to the police. As reports and photographs of this  extraordinary protest  began to appear in newspapers across the world,  there was a growing tide of  support for India’s freedom struggle.
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