Q."Non-Cooperation Movement gave new direction and energy to the National Movement".Explain. (IAS-Mains 2008, 150
words)
Ans. Non-Cooperation
Movement
prevailed
in many parts of India.
The Bijolia movement
in Mewar, Rajasthan, won a partial victory in 1922, 'while agitation
against
cesses and begar on the Khalisa
lands of
the Udaipur Maharana took place. In Bengal, peasants under
the student
leader Someshwar Prasad protested against indigo cultivation.
No tax campaign was
organised
in Midnapore
in Bengal. In the United Provinces, the peasants upsurge in South and South-east Avadh associated with Baba Ram Chandra culminated in widespread
agrarian riots
in Rae Bareilly,
Prarapgarh, Faizabad and Sultanpur in 1921. Eka Movement was also started in North-west Avadh by some local Congressmen. In Andhra, a powerful
agitation led by Duggirala Gopala Krishnayya developed in Guntur district,
where
people' refused to
pay municipal taxes. In Malabar, (northern Kerala) the Muslim peasants, Moplahas created
a powerful anti-zamindar
movement, under the inspiration
of Khilafat leaders like Ali Musaliar, against the Hindu landlords.
So the
movement
gave a
new boost to nationalism in India. It hastened
the advent of Swaraj. Henceforth
the Congress accepted the policy
of direct and self-reliant acts. The
movement made the masses in general and the workers in particular
fearless in crossing
swords with the Government. The
prisons began to be regarded as places of pilgrimage by the patriots.
Prohibition got encouragement. The
Congress realised the nature and
value of real sanction, 'i.e., popular support. Though
the movement failed to attain Swaraj, il definitely came
nearer to it.
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