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The Indian Independence Movement

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1 The Indian Independence Movement
Kevin Garcia Mr. Marshall Period 3 AP World History The Indian Independence Movement Chapter 30 Section 2

2 The Beginning Of The Indian Independence Movement
India was a colony of Great Britain from the late eighteenth century to the mid-twentieth centuries. (Bulliet Pg.800) Under British rule the subcontinent acquired many Western-Style economic developing, such as railroads. (Bulliet Pg.800) The economic transformation caused by the British resulted in the demands for political fulfillment and the awakening of that region. (Bulliet Pg.800) In response, the British gradually granted India a limited amount of political autonomy while maintaining overall control. (Bulliet Pg.800) Violent conflicts tore India apart after the withdrawal of the British in (ArmstrongPg.172) As Great Britain took control of India during the nineteenth century, British administrators, policymakers, and the general public all agreed that this new colony should serve the economic interest of the mother country. (Andrea Pg.330) Most of the British assumed that at some point they would leave India, and their colony would become a self-governing, independent state. They had no timetable for leaving, however, and they disagreed about how to prepare their subjects for that day of independence. (Andrea Pg.331)

3 The Middle Of The Indian Independence Movement
As Europeans, Britain admired modern technology but tried to control its introduction into India so as to maximize the benefits to Britain and to themselves. (Bulliet Pg.802) At the turn of the century the majority of Indians-especially the peasants, landowners, and princes-accepted British rule. (Bulliet Pg.802) But the Europeans’ racist attitude toward dark-skinned people increasingly offended Indians who had learned English and absorbed English ideas of freedom and representative government, only to discover thinly disguised racial quotas excluded them from the Indian Civil Service, the officer corps, and prestigious country clubs. (Andrea Pg.331) In 1885 a small group of English-speaking Hindu professionals founded a political organization called the Indian National Congress. (Bulliet Pg.802) In 1905 Viceroy Lord Curzon divided the province of Bengal in two to improve the efficiency of its administration. (Bulliet Pg.802) In 1906, while the Hindus of Bengal were protesting the partition of their province, Muslims, fearful of Hindu dominance elsewhere in India, founded the All Indian-Muslim League. (ArmstrongPg.173) In late 1918 and early 1919 a violent influenza epidemic broke out among soldiers in the war zone of Northern France. Within months it hit every continent on earth and killed 20 million people, India getting hit hardest. This dreadful toll increased mounting political tensions. (Bulliet Pg.803)

4 The End Of The Indian Independence Movement
India teetered on the edge of violent uprisings and harsh repression, possibly even war. That it did not succumb was due to Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, a man known to his followers as “Mahatma,” the “great soul.” (Bulliet Pg.803) Gandhi attracted ever-larger numbers of followers among the poor and the illiterate, who he called harijan (children of God), started to revere him; and he transformed the cause of Indian independence from an elite movement of the educated into a mass movement with a quasi-religious aura. (Bulliet Pg.804) Gandhi was a brilliant political tactician and a master of public relations gestures. (Bulliet Pg.804) Many times during the 1930s Gandhi threatened to fast “unto death,” and several times he did come close to death, to protest the violence of both the police and his followers and to demand independence. He was repeatedly arrested and spent a total of six years in jail. But every arrest made him more popular. (Andrea pg. 331) In the 1920s the British began to give in to The Indian National Congress and the Muslim League. They handed over control of “national “ areas such as education, the economy, and public works. They also gradually admitted more Indians into the Civil Service and officer corps. (Bulliet Pg.804) Jawaharlal Nehru, a highly educated nationalist and subtle thinker, unlike Gandhi , looked forward to creating a modern industrial India. (Bulliet Pg.804) By early 1947 the Indian National Congress had accepted the idea of a partition of India into two states, one secular but dominated by Hindus, the other Muslim. In June Lord Mountbatten, the last viceroy, decided that independence must come immediately. On August 15 British India gave way to a new India and Pakistan. (ArmstrongPg.173)

5 Bibliography Andrea, Alfred J., and James H. Overfield. Human Record. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2004. Armstrong, Monty, and David Daniel. The Princeton Review. 2009th ed. Vol. AP World History. New York: Random House, 2008. Bulliet, Richard W. The Earth And Its Peoples A Global History. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2004.


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