enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Mahatma Gandhi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahatma_Gandhi

    Gandhi in 1942, the year he launched the Quit India Movement. Gandhi's arrest lasted two years, as he was held in the Aga Khan Palace in Pune. During this period, Gandhi's longtime secretary Mahadev Desai died of a heart attack, his wife Kasturba died after 18 months' imprisonment on 22 February 1944, and Gandhi suffered a severe malaria attack ...

  3. List of fasts undertaken by Mahatma Gandhi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fasts_undertaken...

    Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, popularly known as Mahatma Gandhi, informally The Father of the Nation in India, undertook 18 fasts during India's freedom movement. His longest fasts lasted 21 days. Fasting was a weapon used by Gandhi as part of his philosophy of Ahimsa (non-violence) as well as satyagraha. [1]

  4. Salt March - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_March

    When they reached the railhead at Dandi, more than 50,000 were gathered. Gandhi gave interviews and wrote articles along the way. Foreign journalists and three Bombay cinema companies shooting newsreel footage turned Gandhi into a household name in Europe and America (at the end of 1930, Time magazine made him "Man of the Year"). [48]

  5. Quit India Movement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quit_India_Movement

    The movement ended in 1945 with the release of jailed freedom fighters. Martyrs of this freedom movement include Mukunda Kakati, Matangini Hazra, Kanaklata Barua, Kushal Konwar, Bhogeswari Phukanani and others. [10] In 1992, the Reserve Bank of India issued a 1 rupee commemorative coin to mark the Golden Jubilee of the Quit India Movement. [11]

  6. Champaran Satyagraha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Champaran_Satyagraha

    The Champaran Satyagraha of 1917 was the first satyagraha movement led by Mahatma Gandhi in British India and is considered a historically important rebellion in the Indian independence movement. It was a farmer's uprising that took place in Champaran district of Bihar in the Indian subcontinent, during the British colonial period.

  7. Satyagraha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satyagraha

    Satyagraha theory also influenced many other movements of nonviolence and civil resistance. For example, Martin Luther King Jr. wrote about Gandhi's influence on his developing ideas regarding the Civil Rights Movement in the United States: Like most people, I had heard of Gandhi, but I had never studied him seriously.

  8. Non-cooperation movement (1919–1922) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-cooperation_movement...

    The movement was one of Gandhi's first organized acts of large-scale satyagraha. [2] Gandhi's planning of the non-cooperation movement included persuading all Indians to withdraw their labour from any activity that "sustained the British government and also economy in India," [7] including British industries and educational institutions. [7]

  9. Swadeshi movement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swadeshi_movement

    The Swadeshi movement was a self-sufficiency movement that was part of the Indian independence movement and contributed to the development of Indian nationalism. [1] Before the BML Government's decision for the partition of Bengal was made public in December 1903, there was a lot of growing discontentment among the Indians.