what was the result of champaran movement
Answers
Answered by
33
Summary of Champaran (Bihar) Movement (1917-18) !
The Champaran peasant movement was also a part of the wider struggle for independence. When Gandhiji returned from South Africa, he made the experiment of non-cooperation in a smaller way by giving leadership to the peasant struggles in Champaran (Bihar) and later on in Kheda (Gujarat). These struggles were taken up as a reformist movement but the idea was to mobilise the peasants for their demands.
The Champaran peasant movement was launched in 1917-18. Its objective was to create awakening among the peasants against the European planters. These planters resorted to illegal and inhuman methods of indigo cultivation at a cost which by no canons of justice could be called an adequate remuneration for the labour done by the peasants....
hope you are satisfied....
plz mark as brainiest....
thank you..
The Champaran peasant movement was also a part of the wider struggle for independence. When Gandhiji returned from South Africa, he made the experiment of non-cooperation in a smaller way by giving leadership to the peasant struggles in Champaran (Bihar) and later on in Kheda (Gujarat). These struggles were taken up as a reformist movement but the idea was to mobilise the peasants for their demands.
The Champaran peasant movement was launched in 1917-18. Its objective was to create awakening among the peasants against the European planters. These planters resorted to illegal and inhuman methods of indigo cultivation at a cost which by no canons of justice could be called an adequate remuneration for the labour done by the peasants....
hope you are satisfied....
plz mark as brainiest....
thank you..
Answered by
43
The Champaran Movement was India's first civil Disobedience Movement.The results of the Movement include :
1. Champaran Agrarian Bill was passed which gave great relief to the indigo cultivators and land tenants.
2. It provided Gandhi a platform to emerge a great national leader.
3. Satyagraha was first time adopted which later became the part of freedom struggle of India.
Similar questions