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Amritsar Massacre
tragedy in which several hundred Indians gathered at Jallianwala Bagh
were injured or killed after British Brigadier General Reginald Dyer ordered troops to open fire
on the unarmed peasants
ashram
self-sufficient communities; examples include Phoenix Settlement and Tolstoy Farm in
South Africa and Sabarmati Ashram and Sevagram Ashram in India
Asiatic Registration Bill
proposed law that would require all Indians and Chinese in the
Transvaal to be fingerprinted and carry identification papers; failure to do so could result in
fines, imprisonment, and deportation
charkha
spinning wheel used by Indians to make their own cloth so as not to have to buy from
the British
Civil Disobedience
concept of Gandhi’s revolution in which laws viewed as unfair would not
be followed; essay by Henry David Thoreau
Franchise Amendment Bill
proposed law that would deprive South African Indians of the
opportunity to vote
Indian National Congress
Indian political party that played a major role in the Indian
independence movement
Indian Opinion
paper founded by Gandhi used to communicate with South African Indians
Mahatma
Great Soul
Muslim League
an organization formed in 1906 and led by Mohamed Ali Jinnah created to
protect the interests of India's Muslims, in particular to prevent Muslims from being dominated
by the Hindu majority upon independence from Britain, which later proposed that India be
divided into separate Muslim and Hindu nations
Partition Day
8/14/1947; creates Pakistan as a Muslim country and brings to a close British
colonial rule
Rowlatt Act
law that imposed severe punishments upon those involved in political activity that
opposed the government
Salt March
24-day, 240-mile walk from the Sabarmati Ashram to Dandi, a coastal city on the
Arabian Sea, to protest the British tax on salt
satyagraha
word meaning truth, love, and firmness; used by Gandhi to describe his nonviolent
revolution
swaraj
self-rule