Mohandas Gandhi (1869-1948):
Major Events in the Life of a Revolutionary Leader
Items appearing in bold are included in the glossary.
1869
On October 2 in the small principality of Porbandar, Gujarat Province (Northwest
India), Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was born third son to a wealthy Hindu family.
His father, Karamchand Gandhi, was a high-ranking official of the regional
government.
India had been a British crown colony for over a decade when Gandhi was born. In
1857, following a series of well publicized and bloody rebellions by Indian troops
serving the British East India Company (“the Company”), the crown stepped in to
assume direct control of most of the subcontinent. The Company became
increasingly active in Indian internal trade and politics since its charter as a joint stock
trading company in 1600. By the nineteenth century, the Company had become
the de facto government of much of India, exercising direct or indirect control over
nearly all of the country. The rebellions of 1857 highlighted the more exploitative
aspects of Company rule, catalyzing a movement by British reformers to shift control
of India from private Company rule to direct rule by the British government.
1888
Against the wishes of his family, Gandhi sailed for England to study law. In London,
he was exposed to new ideas and many elements of British society and culture — he
took dancing and violin lessons, read new religious works, and participated in British
vegetarian groups.
1891
Gandhi became officially licensed to practice law in court. Weary of life in London
and having accomplished his goal of becoming a lawyer, he returned to India.
1893
Gandhi traveled to South Africa to take a position as a legal consultant for an Indian
trading and shipping company. Gandhi’s time in South Africa was crucial to his
political evolution. The inequality and discrimination of South Africa’s colonial
society were shocking to him, sharpening his political awareness and spurring his
commitment to anti-colonial politics.
When Gandhi arrived in 1893, South Africa consisted of two British colonies — Cape
and Natal — and two Dutch colonies — Transvaal and the Orange Free State. The
Indian population was small in South Africa (about three percent of the total
population of the country) and consisted of mostly indentured laborers and free
traders. Indians enjoyed few rights in South Africa and, although many of them were
British subjects with voting rights, Indians were still victim to prejudice and racism.
Discrimination was particularly harsh in the two Dutch colonies, where Indians were
prohibited from owning property in most areas, forbidden to vote in local elections,
and subject to a curfew that made it a crime to walk the streets at night.
1894
Gandhi worked with other Indian-rights activists in South Africa to create the Natal
Indian Congress, an organization committed to giving Indians a collective voice in
South African politics.
1899
Gandhi organized an Indian Ambulance Corps at the beginning of the Boer War
(1899-1902) to provide relief to injured British soldiers. Although Gandhi did not
support the war on principle, he created the Ambulance Corps to send a message to
the British that Indians were capable and responsible individuals who deserved the
same rights as other British subjects.
1904
Gandhi established the Phoenix Settlement, where his followers and friends (both
Indian and European) experimented with living in community. This included a life
devoted to vegetarianism, fasting, and alternative farming techniques. It was from
here that Gandhi founded, edited, and published the journal Indian Opinion that
served as a venue for Indians to express their ideas about the social and legal
inequities in South Africa.
1906
Gandhi organized his first satyagraha campaign of peaceful non-cooperation to
protest the Transvaal Asiatic Amendments Act — a law that required the registration
and fingerprinting of all Indians living in the Transvaal. Until 1911 when this act,
known as the “Black Act” was repealed, Gandhi continued to protest this legislation,
organizing resistance throughout the Transvaal.
1914
Gandhi decided to return to India. Once there he continued to hone and refine the
strategies of protest and resistance he had developed in South Africa.
1915
By the time Gandhi sailed into Bombay, news of his fight for Indian equality in South
Africa had spread throughout India, and he was welcomed home as a hero. Wanting
to familiarize himself with the problems in Indian society, Gandhi spent most of the
next year traveling throughout the country by train. The poverty, famine, and
government corruption that Gandhi saw on his travels convinced him of the need for
social and moral reform.
Gandhi established the Satyagraha Ashram at Kochrab, Ahmedabad, Gujarat
Province (Northwest India). The ashram was a spiritual retreat for his followers
similar to the Phoenix farm in South Africa. Shocking the Hindu community, Gandhi
invited a family of untouchables to live on his farm. Opposed to what he saw as
anachronistic Hindu practices, Gandhi campaigned for the rights of the untouchables
for the rest of his life. In 1917, Gandhi relocated the Ashram to a site near the
Sabarmati River in Ahmedabad and renamed it the Sabarmati Ashram.
1919
Gandhi helped to organize nationwide protests against the Rowlatt Acts, legislation
aimed at suppressing Indian nationalism and activism through the suspension of
Indian civil liberties, especially the right to public organization and protest. That
same year, in an attempt to maintain public order, heavily armed British troops killed
more than 350 unarmed Indians who had gathered for a Sikh religious celebration,
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many of them women and children. The event, which took place just outside the city
of Amritsar, Punjab (northern India), quickly came to be known as the “Jallianwala
Bagh Massacre” or the “Armritsar Massacre.” Gandhi responded to the killings with
a well publicized three-day fast and began to accelerate his program of resistance to
colonial rule.
1920
Gandhi organized a massive boycott of British goods and taxes to protest Western
materialism and the British economic exploitation of India. Gandhi promoted locally
produced goods over those imported from Britain.
1922
British authorities arrested and tried Gandhi for seditious acts. In this trial, known as
“The Great Trial,” Gandhi pleaded guilty to the charges, but argued that he had
broken the law only to protest the gross inequities in Indian society. He was
sentenced to six years in jail, but was released after two years when he had to undergo
an appendectomy. Fearing the public response should Gandhi be returned to jail after
his illness, British authorities released him from custody.
1928
Gandhi organized a tax strike in the city of Bardoli, Gujarat Province (Northwest
India) to protest the creation of a constitutional reform committee that did not include
a single Indian member. While he had originally argued for reform within the Brit
untouchables, women, and children, and campaigning for better and more pragmatic
education in rural areas.
1940
With the eruption of World War II in 1939, Gandhi soon returned to active politics.
Great Britain had involved India in the war without its consent and British authorities
began to strictly censor criticism of the war. In response to British censorship,
Gandhi launched another satyagraha campaign, resulting in the arrest of thousands of
protesters.
1942
Gandhi launched what became known as the “Quit India” movement. The Indian
National Congress passed the “Quit India” resolution demanding that the British
recognize Indian independence. In support of the resolution, Gandhi launched his last
nationwide satyagraha campaign. Along with other Indian leaders, Gandhi was
arrested and imprisoned.
1945
At the end of World War II, the Labor party came into power in Britain. Weary of
war and empire, Labor politicians worked with Indian leaders to establish India as an
independent state.
1946
With the uncertainty of an independent India on the horizon, tensions between Hindu
and Muslim leaders began to increase. Both Hindus and Muslims feared they would
not receive adequate representation in the new Indian government. Violent conflict
erupted across India between Muslims and Hindus. Both sides were unwilling to
compromise, and talks began about the division of India into two states — one
controlled by Muslims, the other controlled by Hindus. Gandhi, who had long urged
the Indian people to cast aside their religious and ethnic differences, faced the reality
of an India divided along religious lines.
1947
On August 14, India declared its independence. The country was partitioned into two
separate states: India, with a largely Hindu population, and Pakistan, with a largely
Muslim population. Jawaharlal Nehru became the first president of India.
Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the Muslim leader who had petitioned for the formation of
Pakistan, became governor-general of Pakistan. Partition launched one of the largest
human migrations in history, with over ten million people forced to relocate.
1948
On January 30, Gandhi was assassinated by a Hindu nationalist. Shot three times in
the chest, Gandhi died at the age of 78.
The Legacy of Gandhi
More than fifty years after his death, Gandhi is still remembered for his legendary
satragraha campaigns and his philosophy of nonviolent resistance. Gandhi’s
philosophy has inspired many of the most famous resistance movements of the
twentieth century — for example, the U.S. civil rights movement led by Dr. Martin
Luther King, Aung San Suu Kyi’s pro-democracy movement against the military
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junta of Myanmar, and the movement to end the apartheid in South Africa led by
Nelson Mandela.