As a young lawyer, Mohandas Gandhi wasn’t especially interested in politics—until 1894, when a law set out to disenfranchise ...
Today marks the 96th anniversary of the historic Dandi March. What happened during the march? Why did Gandhi choose ‘salt’?
Ninety-six years after Mahatma Gandhi’s Salt March that began on March 12, 1930, the shrinking space for dissent in India ...
The march that began on March 12, 1930 culminated at Gujarat’s coastal village Dandi. It inspired thousands across India to protest the colonial salt tax and became a defining moment in the freedom ...
Initiated by Mahatma Gandhi in 1930, the Dandi March disrupted British colonial authority through peaceful defiance, mobilizing widespread participation and serving as a catalyst for justice-driven ...
ROME – When Mahatma Ghandi launched his famous “Salt March” in March 1930, protesting British policies banning Indians from producing their own salt, thereby compelling them to buy heavily taxed ...
Relive the 24-day journey that shook the British Empire. Explore the Dandi March's impact, key participants, and the power of ...
In the early morning of 6 April 1930, on the quiet shores of the Arabian Sea at Dandi in Gujarat, Mahatma Gandhi bent down, ...
On March 12, 1930, Mahatma Gandhi stepped out of Sabarmati Ashram with a small group of followers and a simple but radical ...
The Dandi March or Salt Satyagraha is regarded as the second major mass movement led by Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi which started on March 12, 1930 which ended on April 6, 1930. The March covered a ...
Introduction / Joseph Helfenstein -- Gandhi: Salt and the march to freedom / Vinay Lal -- Four alternatives to Civilization: Gandhi's ashrams, their principles and sources / Eric M. Wolf -- Henri ...