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 tool used by Gandhi as part of his philosophy of Ahimsa (non-violence) as well as satyagraha. [1]
Number | Date | Duration | Place | Reason and demands | Reaction to fast | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1913 (13–20 July) [2] | 7 days | Phoenix, South Africa | First penitential fast [3] | ||
2 | 1914 (February) | 1 day [4] | Phoenix, South Africa | A Phoenix teacher had violated Ashram rules by eating pakodas with some students but denied it. Gandhi began an indefinite fast of atonement. [5] | She confessed a day later. | Gandhi ended the fast. |
3 | 1914 (2 May – 16 May) [6] | 14 days | Phoenix, South Africa | Second penitential fast [3] | ||
4 | 1918 (15–18 March) | 3 days | Ahmedabad | Striking mill workers in Ahmedabad were dejected and losing hope of getting their needed raise. Gandhi announced an indefinite fast until it was resolved. | Mill workers agreed to stay on strike. | Mill workers and owners agreed to arbitration; the workers got their raise. [7] |
5 | 1919 (14-17 Apr) | 72 hours | Ahmedabad | First anti-violence fast: against the attempted derail of a train at Nadiad. [3] | ||
6 | 1921 (19-22 Nov) | 3 days | Bombay | Second anti-violence fast: indefinite fast until peace was made in Bombay, after violence broke out on the occasion of the Prince of Wales' arrival [3] | Community leaders went around the city to "restore and preserve peace." [8] | After a peaceful night, broke his fast with "a frugal fruit repast." [9] |
7 | 1922 (12-17 Feb) | 5 days | Bardoli | Third anti-violence fast: for atonement for violence done in Chauri Chaura incident.[ citation needed ] | ||
8 | 1924 (18 Sep – 8 Oct) | 21 days | Delhi | First Hindu-Muslim unity fast | Interest of Hindu-Muslim unity after the first non-cooperation movement | Ended fast while listening to the Quran and Gita being read. [10] |
9 | 1925 (24 Nov – 1 Dec) | 7 days | Third penitential fast. [3] | |||
10 | 1932 (20-26 Sep) | 149 hours [11] | Poona | First anti-untouchability fast: Communal Award of separate electorates and separate reservation of seats for depressed classes | Fast undertaken at Yerwada Central Jail. National leaders assembled in Pune. | British Government withdrew the clauses in the Communal Award against which Gandhi was protesting [10] |
11 | 1932 (3-4 Dec) | 1 day | Second anti-untouchability fast: sympathetic to Appasaheb Patwardhan [3] | |||
12 | 1933 (8 May – 29 May) | 21 days | Third anti-untouchability fast: for the improvement of Harijans' condition [12] | Released unconditionally from prison on 8 May 1933, and observed the fast at Lady Thackersey's home in Poona. | ||
13 | 1933 (16-23 Aug) | 7 days | Fourth anti-untouchability fast: to obtain privileges (while in prison) that would enable him to carry on his fight in behalf of the Harijans [12] | Released unconditionally from prison on 23 August 1933, for health reasons [13] | ||
14 | 1934 (7-14 Aug) | 7 days | Fourth anti-violence fast: against a violent young Congressman [3] | |||
15 | 1939 (3-7 March) | 99 hours [14] | Rajkot | Establishment of a political reform committee and release of satyagraha prisoners. [15] | The British Viceroy brokered a deal to end the fast. | Gandhi's wife was freed, but the committee was never formed. |
16 | 1943 (10 Feb – 3 Mar) | 21 days | Delhi | Objecting to six months of detention without charges by the British. [16] [17] | The British ignored him; nothing changed. | |
17 | 1947 (1-4 Sep) | 73 hours | Second Hindu-Muslim unity fast [3] | |||
18 | 1948 (13-18 Jan) | 123 hours | Third Hindu-Muslim unity fast for restoration of communal peace. Gandhi was reading the dreadful news of the Kashmir war, while at the same time fasting to death because Muslims could not live safely in Delhi. Meeting Maulana Azad, Gandhi laid down seven conditions for breaking his fast. These were:
| Politicians and leaders of communal bodies had to agree for a joint plan for restoration of normal life. Nathuram Godse assassinated Gandhi. | A large number of important politicians and leaders of communal bodies agreed to a joint plan for restoration of normal life in the city |
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was an Indian lawyer, anti-colonial nationalist, and political ethicist who employed nonviolent resistance to lead the successful campaign for India's independence from British rule. He inspired movements for civil rights and freedom across the world. The honorific Mahātmā, first applied to him in South Africa in 1914, is now used throughout the world.
Satyāgraha, or "holding firmly to truth", or "truth force", is a particular form of nonviolent resistance or civil resistance. Someone who practises satyagraha is a satyagrahi.
Mahadev Haribhai Desai was an Indian independence activist, scholar and writer best remembered as Mahatma Gandhi's personal secretary. He has variously been described as "Gandhi's Boswell, a Plato to Gandhi's Socrates, as well as an Ānanda to Gandhi's Buddha".
The Salt march, also known as the Salt Satyagraha, Dandi March, and the Dandi Satyagraha, was an act of nonviolent civil disobedience in colonial India, led by Mahatma Gandhi. The 24-day march lasted from 12 March 1930 to 6 April 1930 as a direct action campaign of tax resistance and nonviolent protest against the British salt monopoly. Another reason for this march was that the Civil Disobedience Movement needed a strong inauguration that would inspire more people to follow Gandhi's example. Gandhi started this march with 78 of his trusted volunteers. The march spanned 387 kilometres (240 mi), from Sabarmati Ashram to Dandi, which was called Navsari at that time. Growing numbers of Indians joined them along the way. When Gandhi broke the British Raj salt laws at 8:30 am on 6 April 1930, it sparked large-scale acts of civil disobedience against the salt laws by millions of Indians.
Kasturba Mohandas Gandhi was an Indian political activist who was involved in the Indian independence movement during British India. She was married to Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, commonly known as Mahatma Gandhi. National Safe Motherhood Day is observed in India annually on April 11, coinciding with Kasturba's birthday.
The Anarchical and Revolutionary Crimes Act of 1919, popularly known as the Rowlatt Act, was a law, applied during the British India period. It was a legislative council act passed by the Imperial Legislative Council in Delhi on 18 March 1919, indefinitely extending the emergency measures of preventive indefinite detention, imprisonment without trial and judicial review enacted in the Defence of India Act 1915 during the First World War. It was enacted in the light of a perceived threat from revolutionary nationalists of re-engaging in similar conspiracies as had occurred during the war which the Government felt the lapse of the Defence of India Act would enable.
Manilal Mohandas Gandhi was the second son of Mahatma Gandhi and Kasturba Gandhi.
Potti Sreeramulu was an Indian freedom fighter known for his pivotal role in the creation of Andhra State. Revered as "Amarajeevi", he is remembered for his commitment to social justice and the upliftment of Dalits, organizing fasts to advocate for their rights and access to religious sites. Influenced by Mahatma Gandhi, Sreeramulu participated in major independence movements, including the Salt Satyagraha and Quit India movement, and was imprisoned multiple times.
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. The farmers were protesting against having to grow indigo with barely any payment for it.
Events in the year 1924 in India.
Mahatma Gandhi Museum was formerly Alfred High School in Rajkot was one of the oldest educational institutions in India which was active for 164 years where Mahatma Gandhi studied few years.
Hermann Kallenbach was a Lithuanian-born Jewish South African architect who was one of the foremost friends and associates of Mahatma Gandhi. Kallenbach was introduced to the young Mohandas Gandhi while they were both working in South Africa and, after a series of discussions, they developed a long-lasting association.
Dinanath Gopal Tendulkar (1909–1972) was an Indian writer and documentary film maker. He is most well known as the author of an eight-volume biography of Mahatma Gandhi, titled Mahatma: Life of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi. He was also a close associate of Vithalbhai Jhaveri and collaborated for the documentary film, Mahatma: Life of Gandhi, 1869–1948. He died on Monday, June 12, 1972.
Indulal Kanaiyalal Yagnik was an Indian independence activist and a Member of Parliament from 1957 to 1972. He was a leader of the All India Kisan Sabha and one who led the Mahagujarat Movement, which spearheaded the demand for the separate statehood of Gujarat on 8 August 1956. He is also known as Indu Chacha. He was also a writer and film maker.
Kushal Konwar was an Indian freedom fighter from Assam. He was hanged in 1942 during the Quit India Movement.
Maniben Patel was an Indian independence movement activist and a Member of the Indian parliament. She was the daughter of freedom fighter and post-Independence Indian leader Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel. Educated in Bombay, Patel adopted the teachings of Mahatma Gandhi in 1918, and started working regularly at his ashram in Ahmedabad.
Swami Anand was a monk, a Gandhian activist and a Gujarati writer from India. He was the manager of Gandhi's publications such as Navajivan and Young India and inspired Gandhi to write his autobiography, The Story of My Experiments with Truth. He wrote sketches, memoir, biographies, philosophy, travelogues and translated some works.
Kanu Gandhi was an Indian photographer. He was a grandnephew of Mahatma Gandhi who lived with him in several of his ashrams and was a member of his personal staff. He is best remembered as Gandhi's photographer, recording many moments of Gandhi's life on film from 1938 until his assassination in 1948. Following Gandhi's death, Kanu and his wife Abha moved to Rajkot where they ran a rural centre named after Kasturba Gandhi. Abha was one of the companions with Gandhi at Birla House Delhi, when Godse shot Gandhi.
The Gandhi family is the family of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, commonly known as Mahatma Gandhi; Mahatma meaning "high souled" or "venerable" in Sanskrit; the particular term 'Mahatma' was accorded Mohandas Gandhi for the first time while he was still in South Africa, and not commonly heard as titular for any other civil figure even of similarly rarefied stature or living or posthumous presence.
The Kheda Satyagraha of 1918 was a satyagraha movement in the Kheda district of Gujarat in India organised by Mahatma Gandhi during the period of the British Raj. It was a major revolt in the Indian independence movement. It was the second Satyagraha movement, which was launched 7 days after the Ahmedabad mill strike. After the successful Satyagraha conducted at Champaran in Bihar, Gandhi organised the movement to support peasants who were unable to pay the revenue because of famine and plague epidemic.
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