The Great Trial
The Great Trial
The Great Trial
(1919-1922)
T h e First World War was over. But in March 1919, the British
government introduced a law in India which allowed them
to imprison people without trial. Gandhi was extremely
angry about these laws. He travelled to Delhi and then to
Madras to talk to other leaders about fighting against them.
In Madras he stayed with Chakravati Rajagopalachari, a
lawyer who had sent money to Gandhi in South Africa and
who wanted to work with him.
Gandhi's idea was that the whole of India should stop
working for one day. During that day, everyone would fast
and pray. Some Indian leaders were already in prison, but
others joined Gandhi. T h e writer and Congress leader
Sarojini Naidu, who had met Gandhi in London in 1914,
joined the fight against the laws. She had described Gandhi
in 1917 as a 'dreamer of impossible dreams . . . a strange
man with . . . a calm, gentle smile'.
Across the whole of India, rich and poor, Hindus and
Muslims listened to Gandhi. On 6 April, everyone stopped
working. In Bombay, Gandhi spoke to a crowd of 5,000
Muslims before they went to pray. Vallabhbhai Patel helped,
and Jawaharlal Nehru joined the strike in Allahabad.
There was some violence in Delhi and in Ahmedabad. In
Amritsar, in the Punjab province in the far north of India,
three British bankers were killed by an angry crowd after the
government had arrested two leaders. Then, on 13 April 1919,
a crowd of 20,000 people went to
a meeting in Jallianwala Bagh, a -
garden with tall buildings on HHM^^^L
every side. A new British officer, *JJ
General Dyer, was commanding
the soldiers in Amritsar. He JL *
had said that no meetings were ' 1
allowed, but many people in the ^ £
order.
General Dyer took soldiers to Jallianwala Bagh and,
without warning, he ordered them to shoot. There was no
escape for the crowd because the soldiers stood at the only
exit. Probably more than 1,000 people were killed and more
than 1,000 were injured.
People all over the world heard
about this terrible crime. M a n y
British people were ashamed
of the Amritsar murders, but
others collected money for
General Dyer, who became ill
a n d left I n d i a . j h e memorial at Jallianwala Bagh
After this, Gandhi wanted the
end of British government in India, but he was ashamed
of the violence of the crowds too. He believed that the
strike had been a mistake because people were not ready
for satyagraha. He needed more people who were trained
to control the crowds. He began to teach people about
satyagraha by writing for two newspapers, Young India (in
English) and Navajivan (in Gujarati).
In October 1919, the government allowed Gandhi to visit
the Punjab for the first time. Many leaders were in prison,
but Motilal Nehru and Charles Andrews came to meet him
in Lahore. A great crowd met him at the railway station,
and for three months he travelled through the province,
talking to people about the political situation, and about
the spinning wheel and the material called khadi.
Gandhi wanted poor villagers to be able to make their
own clothes cheaply. He learnt to spin in 1917 and began to
make cotton material for his own clothes. Gandhi loved his
spinning wheel and used it every day for the rest of his life.
T h e cotton from the spinning wheel was called khadi and
it was thicker and rougher than factory cotton. M o r e and
more people began wearing clothes made of khadi.
Gandhi did not like the way that factories and machines
had changed the lives of villagers and taken away their
jobs. He wanted rich and poor people to become closer. He
believed that rich people should work like everyone else and
use their money, land, and factories to help other people.
Gandhi continued to travel to many cities and villages,
speaking to great crowds about Muslims and Hindus
working together, about changing Indian life, about spinning,
and about Untouchables. When Gandhi's train was going
through a town, crowds came from the towns and villages
to see him. Gandhi was patient with the crowds, but at times
they made it difficult for him to sleep or rest.
In 1920, Gandhi and other leaders told the Indian people
that they should stop working with the British. It was time for
India to have its own government. Lawyers stopped working
in the courts, bankers left their jobs, and people stopped
paying taxes. Nehru, Mahadev Desai, and Rajagopalachari
were all sent to prison. T h e brothers M u h a m m a d and
Shaukat Ali, who had first met Gandhi in 1915, and Abdul
Kalam Azad, a Muslim writer and Congress leader from
Calcutta, were all sent to prison. By January 1922 there
were about 30,000 Indians in prison.
Gandhi decided that he would not speak on Mondays. He
was working very hard to change India, but he needed some
private time. He kept this habit of silent Mondays until the
end of his life. 'Perfect truth is in silence alone,' he wrote.
He also decided to shorten his dhoti. Because khadi was
more expensive than factory cloth, a shorter dhoti would be
cheaper for poor people to wear.
Gandhi wanted all Indians to stop wearing clothes that
were not made in India. In August 1921, Gandhi began to
ask people to burn foreign material and clothes. Tagore
(and Andrews) disagreed with Gandhi about this. Gandhi
told Tagore that the poor needed work, and he continued
his campaign.
In February 1922, there was violence in several cities and
in Chauri Chaura, in Uttar Pradesh, an angry crowd killed
a group of police. Gandhi felt responsible. He collected
a team to work on a new teaching programme, called the
Constructive Programme. Workers were sent to schools, to
ask them to accept Untouchable children. They took spinning
Yeravda Prison
Talking to Untouchables
land and cows from the villagers instead of the tax. Many
villagers were arrested, but there was 110 violence.
Gandhi called another one-day strike, and all over India
people stopped working. A few days later, the government
stopped the new tax. Prisoners were sent home, and land
and animals were returned to the villagers.
T h e news that non-violence had beaten the government
was reported all over India. But there were many who still
used violence to fight the British government. For example,
Bhagat Singh killed a police officer in Lahore in 1928 and in
April 1929 he threw a b o m b at a meeting in Delhi.
Gandhi and his sons sometimes disagreed. For many
years he had refused to allow his sons to marry. Harilal
had married without his father's agreement, but the other
three sons had obeyed Gandhi. Finally, in 1927, Manilal
was allowed to marry at the age of thirty-four, and Ramdas
married a few months later. Devadas, who was twenty-seven,
wanted to marry Rajagopalachari's daughter Lakshmi. T h e
parents told Devadas to wait for five years, because Lakshmi
was very young.
In 1928, Maganlal Gandhi died suddenly, at the age of
forty-six. Maganlal had been with Gandhi in South Africa
and had worked closely with Gandhi in the ashram. Gandhi
was filled with sadness. 'He was my hands, my feet and my
eyes . . . one who was dearer to me than my own sons, who
never once . . . failed me,' he wrote. M a n y people called
Gandhi Bapu (which means father) and Gandhi's sons
knew that their father loved many people outside the family.
But it must have been difficult to know that Gandhi loved
Maganlal, his cousin's son, more than his own sons.
In 1930 Gandhi wrote to the Viceroy, the chief of
the British government in India, explaining that he was
planning another satyagraha. He aimed to change the ideas
of the British people through non-violence: 'I do not want
to hurt your people,' he wrote. He described the problems
of the poor villagers, and mentioned the salt tax. No one
could make or sell salt without paying a tax to the British
government, and because salt was used to keep food fresh, as
well as for cooking, the tax was especially difficult for poor
villagers. Gandhi wanted to meet the Viceroy to discuss his
letter, but the Viceroy did not reply.
On 5 M a r c h , from the ashram, Gandhi said that he was
going to fight the salt tax. Vallabhbhai Patel, Jawaharlal
Nehru, and his other friends were surprised, and at first
disagreed with his plan, because the tax did not seem a
serious matter. A British newspaper wrote that it was
difficult not to laugh at Gandhi.
On 12 March 1930, at 6.30 a.m., Gandhi led seventy-eight
people from the ashram and began to march south. T h e
march had been kept secret. It was well organized and the
route had been carefully planned: just over 380 kilometres,
south through villages to the sea at Dandi, which had been
chosen because the sea always left salt on the beach there.
Some students went ahead to organize food and sleeping
places. All the marchers wore khadi. At sixty-one years old,
Gandhi was the oldest marcher.
They marched about 20 kilometres each day, and stopped
at villages where Gandhi spoke to the villagers about khadi,
and the need for Hindus to work with the Untouchables and
with Muslims. Crowds came to see Gandhi and more and
more people joined the march. Manilal, who was visiting
from South Africa, joined the march, with Ramdas and
Devadas. Every day, Gandhi wrote for the newspapers, and
spent some time spinning.