The Salt March was a way for the protesting Indians to peacefully protest against the British government instead of fighting them. They wanted to try and be the better people by not fighting.
Using passive resistance
he used passive resistance
He told the Indians not to fight back if they were being attacked.
Satyagraha, or passive resistance, was developed and expanded on by Gandhi as an alternative to the type of passive resistance discussed by Thoreau in â??On Civil Disobedienceâ??. He believed his version stressed love and a lifestyle that incorporated mind, body and spirit.
The Salt March was a way for the protesting Indians to peacefully protest against the British government instead of fighting them. They wanted to try and be the better people by not fighting.
Civil disobedience
Thoreau's views in "Walden" and "Civil Disobedience" both emphasize simplicity, self-reliance, and non-conformity to unjust laws. Gandhi drew inspiration from Thoreau's ideas on civil disobedience and applied them in his nonviolent resistance against British colonial rule in India. Gandhi, like Thoreau, believed in passive resistance and the power of individual conscience to stand against injustice.
Civil disobedience and passive resistance are much the same. They are two ways of standing up for what you believe without involving weaponry or violence. Civil disobedience is something like Rosa Parks on the bus. She knew the rules, but refused to listen to them because they went against what she believed. Passive resistance is something like a sit in where people know the rules but go against them without being violent.
Passive resistance is a nonviolent method of protest or resistance, often used to oppose oppression or injustice. It involves actions such as boycotts, strikes, civil disobedience, and noncooperation with authorities. Passive resistance aims to create change through peaceful means and can be a powerful tool in challenging unjust systems.
Using passive resistance
he used passive resistance
he used passive resistance
The noncooperation movement aimed to boycott British goods and institutions, while the civil disobedience movement involved breaking specific laws as a form of protest, both were led by Mahatma Gandhi in India's struggle for independence. Noncooperation was more about passive resistance and noncompliance, whereas civil disobedience was more active and involved breaking unjust laws.
The ending of British rule in India by Ghandi's passive resistance. It would not have worked against people who are less friendly than the British, for example the Nazis or the Japanese fascists (who would have just killed the pacifists).
He told the Indians not to fight back if they were being attacked.
His idea was to use passive resistance to British rule. And by means of non-violence - "Satyagraha".