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Since the decade of the 1920s, the national movement acquired various ideological strands and thereby expanded its social base. Discuss. (1920 के दशक से राष्ट्रीय आंदोलन ने कई वैचारिक धाराओं को ग्रहण किया और अपना सामाजिक आधार बढ़ाया l विवेचना कीजिए l)

The decade of the 1920s marked a watershed moment in the Indian national movement, shifting it from an elitist, constitutional struggle into a mass-based political phenomenon.

Various Ideological Strands in the National Movement Since the 1920s

Gandhian Ideology (Satyagraha and Non-Violence)

Integrated truth, non-violence (Ahimsa), and civil disobedience to convert a middle-class movement into a mass struggle.

Brought rural masses, artisans, and the illiterate population into active political agitation.

Constructive Programme Focus: Emphasized Khadi, village industries, and the eradication of untouchability to build social self-reliance.

Eg: Non-Cooperation Movement (1920-22) and Civil Disobedience Movement (1930).

Revolutionary Nationalism

Advocated for the violent overthrow of British imperialism, capturing the imagination of radicalized urban youth.

Secular and Socialist Evolution: Transitioned from religious-patriotic undertones to explicit anti-imperialist, socialist-republican goals.

Dramatized Protests: Created powerful symbolic actions that inspired nationwide defiance against British authorities. Eg- Kakori Train attack

Eg: Bhagat Singh, Chandrashekhar Azad, and the Hindustan Socialist Republican Association (HSRA).

Peasant and Agrarian Ideology

Linked the national anti-British struggle with immediate agrarian grievances like high rents and forced evictions.

Organized localized peasant unions (Kisan Sabha) to demand structural land reforms.

Eg: Swami Sahajanand Saraswati founded the All India Kisan Sabha (1936) and the Bardoli Satyagraha (1928) led by Patel.

Communist Ideology

Working-Class Radicalization through trade unionism and collective strikes.

Anti-Imperialist-Anti-Capitalist Nexus

Eg: M.N. Roy founded the Communist Party of India (1920) and the growth of the Girni Kamgar Union.

Socialist Ideology (Within the Congress)

Radical Internal Reform: Worked within mainstream political platforms to tilt economic policies toward state-led industrial planning and social equality.

Attracted the younger generation of educated leaders who were dissatisfied with conservative compromise politics.

Eg: Jawaharlal Nehru and Subhas Chandra Bose leading the Congress Socialist Party (CSP) formed in 1934.

Feminist and Women’s Ideology

Transitioned women from traditional domestic roles into active political agitators and picketers on city streets.

Demanding Equal Legal Rights: Linked the fight against foreign colonial rule with domestic struggles for female suffrage, labor laws, and education.

Armed and Subversive Participation: Participated actively in underground revolutionary missions, breaking the stereotype of passive resistance.

Eg: Sarojini Naidu leading the Salt Satyagraha at Dharsana, and Pritilata Wadedar participating in the Chittagong Armoury Raid.

Dalit and Depressed Classes Ideology

Substantive Social Democracy: Argued that political freedom from the British was meaningless without social freedom from the oppressive caste hierarchy.

Institutional Legal Guarantees: Fought for separate electorates, reservation of seats, and constitutional safeguards for marginalized communities.

Assertion of Basic Human Dignity: Organized mass civil rights movements to secure access to public water bodies and temples.

Eg: Dr. B.R. Ambedkar established the Depressed Classes Institute (1924) and led the Mahad Satyagraha (1927).

Tribal and Indigenous Ideology

Defending Forest Sovereignty: Fought passionately against British colonial forest laws that disrupted traditional tribal community economies.

Guerrilla Warfare Tactics: Used traditional archery and terrain knowledge to stage highly effective ambush operations against British police forces.

Eg: Alluri Sitarama Raju leading the Rampa Rebellion (1922-24) in the Andhra hills.

Ideological Strands Weakening the National Movement

Rise of Communal Ideology: The institutionalization of the Muslim League’s two-nation theory severely fractured national unity, culminating in the tragedy of Partition.

The Capitalist-Landlord Conservative Pull: Wealthy business magnates and feudal princely states frequently funded moderate political factions to slow down radical land and labor reforms.

Fragmented Caste Intersections: The deep polarization between upper-caste mainstream nationalists and Dalit leaders over separate electorates.

Severe ideological rifts between right-wing conservatives and left-wing socialists within the Congress led to institutional deadlocks. Eg: The ideological fallout leading to Subhas Chandra Bose’s exit at the Tripuri Crisis (1939).

The influx of diverse ideological streams after the 1920s successfully transformed the Indian national movement into a vibrant, multi-layered struggle.