Nationalism in India [All in One] [ANSWERS]
Nationalism in India
ANSWERS
Check Point 01
Q. 1. Which act gave the government power to suppress
political activity and detain political prisoners without trial?
Answer: Rowlatt
Act gave the government power to suppress political activity and detain
political prisoners without trial.
a. The Rowlatt Act was passed in the year 1919.
b. This Act gave enormous powers to the British
Government.
c. The provisions of the Act empowered British Government
to suppress any sort of political activities thereby enabling the detention of
Indian nationalists and prisoners without any trial for two years.
d. The Act was passed without considering the opposition
of the Indian members.
e. There was a nationwide agitation against this Act.
f. Mahatma Gandhi organised nationwide Satyagraha.
g. Rallies were organised, and shops were closed.
h. Workers went on strike in railway workshops.
Thus, the Rowlatt Act, in a way, paved the root for
united opposition against the British. Q.
2. Besides Gandhiji who were the main leaders of Khilafat Movement?
Answer: The
First World War had ended with the defeat of Ottoman Turkey, and there were
rumours that a harsh peace treaty was going to be imposed on the Ottoman
Emperor.
1.
In order to
defend the Khalifa’s temporal powers, a Khilafat Committee was formed in Bombay
in March 1919.
2.
A young generation
of Muslim leaders like the brothers Muhammad Ali and Shaukat Ali began
discussing with Mahatma Gandhi about the possibility of united mass action.
This took the form of the
Khilafat movement.
Q. 3. Name the Sabha headed by Jawahar Lal Nehru and
Baba Ramchandra.
Answer: Oudh
Kisan Sabha was set up headed by Jawaharlal Nehru, Baba Ramchandra and a few
others.
1. In Awadh, a movement was led by Baba Ramchandra
against the talukdars and landlords.
2. The peasants were asked to pay high rents and cesses.
3. Peasants had to do begar, a form of labour that
villagers had to contribute without any wages.
4. The movement demanded the abolition of begar,
reduction of revenue and social boycott of oppressive landlords.
5. Jawaharlal Nehru went around the villages to
understand the grievances of the villagers.
Thus, in June 1920, Oudh Kisan Sabha was started.
Q. 4. Who
was Alluri Sitaram Raju?
Answer: Alluri
Sitaram Raju was an independence nationalist from Andhra Pradesh.
1. He was an ardent follower of Mahatma Gandhi.
2. When the hill people were forced to contribute begar,
Sitaram Raju led them against the British.
3. He was considered as an incarnation of God.
4. His astrological predictions were correct, and he
could heal many people.
5. He was capable of surviving even bullet shots.
6. He insisted people wear Khadi clothes and stop taking
liquor.
7. Even though he was attached to Gandhian principles, he
believed in the use of force to achieve independence.
8. He, with his followers, tried to kill British officers
and attacked police stations.
Alluri Sitaram Raju was
trapped by the British and was executed in the year 1924.
Q. 5. Why did the Non-Cooperation Movement gradually
slowdown in the cities?
Answer: The
Non-Cooperation Movement started with middle-class participation in the cities.
Government schools and colleges and foreign clothes were boycotted, and liquor
shops were picketed.
1. The movement in the cities gradually slowed down for a
variety of reasons.
2. The boycott of British institutions posed a problem,
Indian institutions were slow to come up.
3. The mass-produced mill cloth was cheap when compared
to the expensive khadi cloth. People started buying foreign clothes as they
could not afford higher prices.
Hence, the Non-Cooperation
movement was gradually withdrawn in cities.
Check Point 02
Q. 1. When and where the demand of ‘Purna Swaraj’ was
accepted by the Congress?
Answer: The
demand of Purna Swaraj was accepted by the Congress at the Lahore session of
Congress in the year 1929.
a.
In this session,
the declaration of ‘Purna Swaraj’ or complete independence was passed.
b.
The Congress
requested the Indians to celebrate 26th January 1930 as the Independence Day.
c.
This resolution
of Purna Swaraj was the beginning of the political movement against the
colonial rule.
d.
The political,
economic and cultural injustice towards the Indians was mentioned in the
resolution.
e.
The launching of
the Civil Disobedience movement was mentioned very clearly in the resolution.
The
resolution of Purna Swaraj was a symbolic event in the history of India.
Q. 2. What is Hindu Mahasabha?
Answer: Hindu
Mahasabha was a Hindu nationalist organisation. It is said that this Sabha was
formed to protect the rights of Hindus when India was under British dominance.
Q. 3. During which movement was the Indian tricolour
flag designed?
The
Indian tricolour flag was designed during the Swadeshi movement in Bengal in 1921.
1. The flag which was first designed had three colours
Red, Green and Yellow.
2. It had eight lotuses. These eight lotuses represented
the eight provinces of British India.
3. The flag had a crescent moon which represented Hindus
and Muslims.
4. By 1921, the flag was again designed with Red, Green
and White.
5. This flag had a shining wheel at the centre.
6. This wheel represented the Gandhian ideal of
self-help.
This
tricolour flag was called the ‘Swaraj Flag’ during the independence movement.
Q. 4. Who has first created the image of Bharat Mata?
Answer: The
image of Bharat Mata was created by Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay.
1. The image created was painted by the famous
Rabindranath Tagore.
2. Bharat Mata was picturised as a form of Hindu Goddess.
3. She was calm, composed and divine.
4. The image was shown as dispensing learning, food and
clothing.
5. Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay wrote ‘Vande Mataram’ as
a hymn to the nation.
The image of Bharat Mata
symbolised India and developed a feeling of nationalism among the Indians.
Q. 5. Name the person who worked for the revival of
folk culture in Madras.
Answer: In
Madras, Natesa Sastri worked for the revival of folk culture.
1. He published a four-volume collection of Tamil fold
tales.
2. The collection was titled The Folklore of Southern
India.
3. According to him, “the folklore was the most
trustworthy manifestation of people’s real thoughts and characteristics”.
Natesa Sastri also stated
that the folklore was national literature.
Self Assessment
Q. 1. Why was the Kheda Satyagraha launched by Gandhiji?
Answer: Kheda
Satyagraha was launched by Gandhiji in the year 1917. The Kheda Satyagraha was
in support of the peasants who were unable to pay revenue due to crop failure
and a plague epidemic. The satyagraha demanded relaxation in revenue collection.
Q. 2. Why was the Simon Commission boycotted?
Answer: The
Simon Commission was appointed in the year 1929. The Simon Commission was
constituted under Sir John Simon.
1. The commission was set up to look after the
functioning of the constitutional system in India and suggest changes.
2. However, they did not have a single Indian member,
which was a huge problem.
3. When the Simon Commission arrived in India in 1928, it
was greeted with the slogan,
‘Simon, Go Back’.
Hence, the Simon Commission
was boycotted as it did not have any Indian representation.
Q. 3. When was Non-Cooperation boycotted?
Answer: The
Non-Cooperation movement was called off in 1922 by Mahatma Gandhiji. This was
because of the Chauri Chaura incident. A peaceful demonstration in a bazaar
turned into a violent clash with the police killing many British police
officers. Gandhiji felt that people should be properly trained to follow the
three principles of Satyagraha-Truth, Ahimsa and Non-violence before any mass
struggles.
Q. 4. Name the personality who organised the Dalits
into the Depressed Classes Association.
Answer: Dr
B.R. Ambedkar organised the Dalits into the Depressed Classes Association in
1930. But he clashed with Mahatma Gandhi at the Second Round Table conference.
He demanded separate electorate for Dalits. Gandhiji felt that granting of the
separate electorate may harm the unity of our country and weaken the freedom
struggle. Hence, they both signed the Poona Pact in 1932.
Q. 5. Who created the first image of Bharat Mata?
Answer: The
first image of Bharat Mata was created by Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay.
1. The image created was painted by the famous Rabindranath
Tagore.
2. Bharat Mata was picturised as a form of Hindu Goddess.
3. She was calm, composed and divine.
4. The image was shown as dispensing learning, food and
clothing.
5. Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay wrote ‘Vande Mataram’ as
a hymn to the nation.
The image of Bharat Mata
symbolised India and developed a feeling of nationalism among the Indians
Q. 6. What did the idea of Satyagraha emphasise?
Answer: The
idea of Satyagraha emphasized the power of truth and the need to search for
truth.
It suggested that if the
cause was true, if the struggle was against injustice, then physical force was
not necessary to fight the oppressor.
Q. 7. Under whose leadership was the Non-Cooperation
Movement started in the Gudem Hills of Andhra Pradesh?
Answer: The
Non-Cooperation movement in the Gudem Hills of Andhra Pradesh was led by Alluri
Sitaram Raju.
1.
Alluri Sitaram
Raju led the militant guerrilla movement in the early 1920s in the Gudem Hills.
2.
This was a
protest against the British Government which prevented the hill people from entering
the forests, collecting fuelwood and grazing the cattle.
3.
Sitaram Raju, who
was considered as an incarnation of God, persuaded the rebels to wear Khadi
clothes and stop taking liquor.
4.
Under his
leadership, Gudem rebels attempted to kill the British officials, raided on
Police stations. Guerilla warfare was carried on to achieve independence.
Thus, the rebellion at Gudem
Hills was in response to Gandhi’s Non-Cooperation movement.
Q. 8. Who led the Peasant Movement in Awadh during the
Non-Cooperation Movement?
Answer: Baba
Ramchandra led the peasant movement in Awadh during the NonCooperation
movement. Baba Ramchandra was a sanyasi. He launched this movement against the
talukdars and landlords. The peasants of Awadh had to do a begar. This movement
was started demanding reduction in revenue, the abolition of begar and social
boycott of the oppressive landlords.
Q. 9. What was the reaction of the people to the
Rowlatt Act?
Answer: The
Rowlatt Act was passed in the year 1919 much against the opposition of the
Indian members. The Act empowered the British Government to suppress the
political activities and detain the political prisoners for two years without
any trial.
There was a stout reaction
from the Indians.
1. Mahatma Gandhi launched the nationwide satyagraha.
2. Shops were closed.
3. Rallies were organised in many parts of the country.
4. Workers went on strike in railway workshops.
Thus, the Rowlatt Act called
for a nationwide protest against the British Government.
Q. 10. During the period of Non-Cooperation Movements,
who claimed to have a special power, could heal people and survive bullet
shots?
Answer: Alluri
Sitaram Raju was claimed to have a special power that could heal people and
survive bullet shots. Alluri Sitaram Raju was believed to be the incarnation of
God. He was very accurate in his astrological predictions and could heal
people.
Q. 11. Why did General Dyer open fire on the peaceful
gathering at Jallianwala Bagh on 13th April 1919?
Answer: Jallianwala
Bagh massacre was an important incident in the history of India.
Many people had gathered at
Jallianwalla Bagh at Amritsar in Punjab on the 13th of April 1919. Many men,
women and children were present to attend the meeting against the Rowlatt Act.
General Dyer ordered the British Army to block the entrance. He suddenly
ordered his men to start firing on the crowd without any warning. Many Indians
were brutally murdered, and many others were killed and injured.
Q. 12. What was the result of the Poona Pact of
September 1932?
Answer: Poona
Pact was signed between Dr B.R. Ambedkar and Mahatma Gandhi.
1.
The Pact gave
depressed classes reserved seats in the provincial and central legislative
councils but to be voted in by the general electorate.
2.
Earlier, Ambedkar
and Gandhiji clashed at the Second Round Table Conference as Ambedkar demanded
separate electorate for the Dalits.
3.
Mahatma Gandhi
was against this as he felt that granting a separate electorate would weaken
the independence movement affecting the unity among Indians.
Hence, this Pact was signed
to resolve the demand.
Q. 13. What is the meaning of the term ‘boycott’ in
respect of national movement?
Answer: The
term ‘boycott’ meant the refusal to participate in activities, or buy and use
things that belonged to the British Government. It was one of the ways used by
the people during the Non-Cooperation movement.
Q. 14. When and where did Mahatma Gandhi successfully
organise Satyagraha Movements just after arriving in India?
Answer: Several
Satyagraha movements were launched by Mahatma Gandhi after his return from
South Africa. Champaran, Kheda, Ahmedabad etc., were some of those places.
Champaran:
Mahatma Gandhi went to
Champaran in the state of Bihar in the year 1916 and started Satyagraha along
with the peasants as a struggle against the exploitative plantation system.
Ahmedabad:
Another Satyagraha movement
was launched in the year 1918. This movement was organised among the workers of
cotton mills.
Kheda:
Gandhiji started another
Satyagraha movement in Kheda in the year 1918, demanding relaxation in revenue
collection. The peasants of Kheda were unable to pay the revenue due to crop
failure and a plague epidemic.
After these movements,
Gandhiji decided to launch another Satyagraha movement against the Rowlatt Act
in the year 1919.
Q. 15. Why was Non-Cooperation a Powerful method of
resistance?
Answer: Non-Cooperation
was a powerful method of resistance following the principles of non-violence
and ahimsa.
1. It was a passive resistance led by Gandhiji in the
year 1920.
2. It involved the boycott of British goods and clothes.
3. Even the titles conferred by the British Government
were surrendered.
4. Council elections were boycotted.
5. Indians were requested to boycott government
controlled schools and colleges.
Thus, the powerful
resistance was the first ever nationalist movement in India in the struggle of
independence against British which united all the sections of Indians.
Q. 16. ‘’The plantation workers in Assam had their own
understanding of
Mahatma Gandhi and nation of Swaraj.’’ Support the
statements with arguments.
Answer: 1.
The workers were not permitted to leave the tea gardens without permission as
per the provisions of the Inland Emigration Act, 1859.
2. Thousands of workers left the plantations and went
home.
3. They believed that they all would be given land in
their own village when Gandhi was coming.
4. However, they were all caught by the Police and beaten
up.
5. According to the workers, Swaraj meant the right to
move freely in and out of the restricted space which will enable them to stay
in link with their village.
The workers believed that
Gandhiji was the true identity of Swaraj, even to relieve them from all sort of
troubles.
Q. 17. Suggest at least three difference between the
Civil Disobedience and the Non-Cooperation Movement.
Answer: The
following are the differences between the Civil Disobedience Movement and the
Non-Cooperation movement.
Even though both these
movements were nationalist movements started by Gandhiji, the Civil
Disobedience Movement was more successful.
Q. 18. Describe the various problem in unifying people
in India by the end of the 19th century.
Answer: The
nationalists made sincere efforts to unify people against the British
Government. It was not an easy task to unify them. The following were some of
the problems involved in the process:
1. The past history of India was based on facts about
Hinduism and Hindu mythologies.
2. The images that were celebrated were drawn from Hindu
iconography.
3. This made the people of other communities feel
isolated.
4. Moreover, Mahatma Gandhiji’s leadership tried to
channel people’s grievances into an organised movement.
5. However, there was participation from people belonging
to different groups and classes each having their own aspirations and expectations.
6. Hence, the meaning of freedom from the British rule
was interpreted in different ways by different societies of people.
7. The demands of one group did not alienate each other.
8. It was the leaders who constantly worked to unite all
classes of people and tried to resolve their grievances.
9. There were episodes of frequent disunity and conflicts
between the different groups of people.
Thus, unifying people with
different views of freedom was difficult, but our leaders strived hard to free
our country from the British clutches.
Q. 19. ‘A Satyagraha wins the battle through
non-violence’. Explain with examples.
Answer: Satyagraha
is always a powerful weapon following the path of ahimsa and non-violence.
1. Satyagraha followed the idea that if the cause was
true and if the struggle was against injustice, then there is no need for
physical force to fight against the oppressor.
2. Gandhiji followed Satyagraha during his stay in South
Africa to fight the injustice.
3. He decided to take the path of Satyagraha after
arriving in India.
4. He fought for the welfare of peasants in Kheda
district of Gujarat demanding the relaxation in revenue collection. The
peasants could not pay high revenue due to crop failure and a plague epidemic.
The British Government agreed and deferred the payment of revenue to next year.
5. He also travelled to Champaran to inspire peasants. He
launched satyagraha to struggle against the exploitative plantation system. The
British Government passed an Act to ensure the welfare of the peasants.
6. He launched another Satyagraha in 1918 among the mill
workers of Ahmedabad. The workers got a hike in their pay after Gandhiji’s
intervention.
These are fine examples to
show that Satyagraha always wins battles through nonviolence.
Q. 20. Why did the Muslim community not join the
struggle during the Civil Disobedience Movements? Give reasons.
Answer: Some
of the Muslim organisations showed less interest in their response to Civil
Disobedience Movements.
1. A large part of the Muslim population in the country
was separated from the Congress after the failure of the Non-cooperation and
Khilafat movement.
2. Hindu nationalist groups like the Hindu Mahasabha was
closely associated with the Congress.
3. This led to the straining of ties between the Hindus
and Muslims.
4. Communal clashes and riots spread across the country
as each community was involved in organising their own religious processions
and campaigns.
5. M.R. Jayakar who belonged to the Hindu Mahasabha was
not ready to compromise with the demand of Muhammad Ali Jinnah, leader of the
Muslim League. Jinnah demanded reserved seats for Muslims in the Central
Assembly, and he wanted separate representation for the Muslims in Bengal and
Punjab.
6. This widened the gap between the two communities.
7. Hence, the majority of the Muslims did not respond to
the call for Civil Disobedience Movement.
Thus, alienation from the
Congress and distrust among the Hindus and Muslims were the main reasons for
the poor response to the call for united struggle.
Q. 21. Examine any four cultural processes through
which Indian nationalism captured people’s imagination.
Answer: People
should believe that they all belong to the same country. This sense was
developed by the united struggles against the British to some extent. The
following are some of the cultural processes through which Indian nationalism
captured people’s minds.
1. History and Fiction:
a.
Reinterpretation
of history served as an important tool in creating a feeling of nationalism
among Indians.
b.
As the Britishers
felt that Indians were primitive, Indians started to reinterpret history to
know about their achievements.
c.
During ancient
times, religion and culture, art and architecture, science and mathematics,
trade etc., flourished. Articles on these were written to inspire people.
d.
It was also
mentioned that there was a huge decline in these areas when Britishers started
colonising India.
e.
The history of
glorious India made the readers to inculcate the urge for freedom from the
British clutch.
2. Popular prints and Symbols:
a. A nation is always identified with a figure or an
image.
b. The image of Bharat Mata, portrayed by Abanindranath
Tagore came to be the symbol of identity of India.
c. Tricolour flag, which was called as Swaraj flag,
designed by Gandhiji also instilled nationalism among Indians.
3. Folklore and Songs:
a. Indian nationalists went around many villages to
gather their traditional folk tales.
b. Movements were launched to revive the traditional
Indian folklore.
c. These folktales played a major role in restoring one’s
national identity and developing a sense of pride.
4. Hymns:
Hymns like Vande Mataram and
‘Swaraj is my birthright’ were widely sung to capture nationalism.
Nationalism, thus, spreads
only if there is a feeling of oneness among all the people of a country.
Q. 22. Explain the reaction of the business class
towards the Civil Disobedience Movements.
Answer: Civil
Disobedience Movement was accepted in different forms by different classes of
society. The support given by the business class was a big boost to the
movement.
1. The Civil Disobedience Movement was welcomed by the
business class during the early phase of the movement.
2. Monetary support was extended, and the business class
refused to buy or sell the Manchester goods.
3. The businessmen expected to have independent business
units without any colonial restrictions being imposed.
4. They wanted the smooth functioning of trade and other
industries without any constraints.
5. But the support given by the business class was
withdrawn when Gandhiji relaunched the movement after the failure of the Round
Table Conference.
6. They did not want their business to be disrupted.
Thus, the business class
extended warm support when the Civil Disobedience Movement was launched.
Q. 23. How did salt march become an effective tool of
resistance against British colonial power?
Answer: The
Salt March was an effective tool of resistance against British colonial power.
1. Mahatma Gandhi was very much against the levy of tax
on salt and monopoly of the Government over its production.
2. He felt that salt was the essential food item having
no disparity between the rich and the poor.
3. Hence, he stated that it was an atrocity of British
power.
4. He decided to launch a movement to exempt salt from
tax.
5. Lord Irwin, the then Viceroy was sent a letter from
Gandhiji stating eleven demands.
6. The Primary demand was to withdraw the tax on salt and
make it tax-free.
7. Since the British side showed reluctance, Gandhi
started the salt march.
8. It was called as Dandi March, where he walked 240
miles from his Sabarmati Ashram to Dandi.
9. He was accompanied by about seventy-eight followers.
10.
After reaching
Dandi, the coastal town, he boiled sea water and manufactured salt, thus
violating the salt law.
11.
By this, he
persuaded people to break colonial laws and started Non-cooperation movement
against the British power.
This Dandi March or the Salt
March, thus, can be rightly said as the first powerful protest against the
British.
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