1893 |
Departure of Gandhi to South Africa. |
1894 |
Foundation of Natal Indian Congress. |
1899 |
Foundation of Indian Ambulance Core during Boer Wars. |
1904 |
Foundation of Indian Opinion (magazine) and Phoenix Farm, at Phoenix,
near Durban. |
1906 |
First
Civil Disobedience Movement (Satyagaraha) against Asiatic Ordiannce in
Transvaal. |
1907 |
Satyagraha against Compulsory Registration and Passes for Asians (The
Black Act) in Transvaal. |
1908 |
Trial
and imprisonment-Johanesburg Jail (First Jail Term). |
1910 |
Foundation of Tolstoy Farm (Later-Gandhi Ashrama), near Johannesburg. |
1913 |
Satyagraha against derecognition of non-Christian marraiges in Cape
Town. |
1914 |
Awarded
Kaisar-i-Hind for raising an Indian Ambulance Core during Boer wars |
1915 |
Arrived
in Bombay (India) on 9 January 1915; Foundation of Satyagraha Ashrama at
Kocharab near Ahmedabad (20 May). In 1917, Ashrama shifted at the banks
of Sabarmati; |
1916 |
Abstain
from active politics (though he attended Lucknow session of INC held in
26–30 December, 1916, where Raj Kumar Shukla, a cultivator from Bihar,
requested him to come to Champaran.) |
1917 |
Gandhi
entered active politics with Champaran campaign to redress grievances of
the cultivators oppressed by Indigo planter of Bihar (April 1917).
Champaran Satyagraha was his first Civil Disobedience Movement in India. |
1918
|
cooperation Movement. In Febuary 1918, Gandhi launched the struggle in
Ahmedabad which involved industrial workers. Hunger strike as a weapon
was used for the first time by Gandhi during Ahmedabad struggle. In
March 1918, Gandhi worked for peasants of Kheda in Gujarat who were
facing difficulties in paying the rent owing to failure of crops. Kheda
Satyagraha was his first Non |
1919 |
Gandhi gave a call for Satyagraha against the Rowlatt Act on April 6,
1919 and took the command of the nationalist movement for the first time
(First all-India Political Movement), Gandhi returns Kaisar-i-Hind gold
medal as a protest against Jallianwala Bagh massacre-April 13, 1919; The
All India Khilafat Conference elected Gandhi as its president (November
1919, Delhi). |
1920-22 |
Gandhi leads the Non-Cooperation and Khilafat Movement (August 1,
1920–Febuary 1922), Gandhi calls off Movement (Feb. 12, 1922), after the
violent incident at Chauri-Chaura on Febuary 5, 1922. Non-Co-operation
Movement was the First mass based politics under Gandhi. |
1924
|
Belgaum (Karnataka) session of INC–for the first and the last time
Gandhi was elected the president of the Congress. |
1925–27
|
Gandhi retires from active politics for the first time and devotes
himself to ‘constructive programme’ of the Congress; Gandhi resumes
active politics in 1927. |
1930–34
|
Gandhi launches the Civil Disobedience Movement with his Dandhi
march/Salt Satyagraha (First Phase: March 12, 1930–March 5, 1931;
Gandhi-Irwin Pact: March 5, 1931; Gandhi attends the Second Round Table
Conference in London as sole representative of the Congress: September
7-December. 1, 1931; Second Phase: January 3, 1932-April 17, 1934). |
1934–39
|
Sets up Sevagram (Vardha Ashram). |
1940–41
|
Gandhi launches Individual Satyagraha Movement. |
1942 |
Call to Quit India Movement for which Gandhi raised the slogan,
‘Do or Die’ (Either free India or die in the attempt), Gandhi and all
Congress leaders arrested (August 9, 1942). |
1942–44 |
Gandhi kept in detention at the Aga Khan Palace, near Pune (August
9, 1942-May, 1944). Gandhi lost his wife Kasturba (Febuary 22, 1944) and
private secretary Mahadev Desai; this was Gandhi’s last prison term. |
1946
|
Deeply distressed by theory of communal violence, as a result Muslim
League’s Direct Action call, Gandhi travelled to Noakhali (East
Bengal-now Bangladesh) and later on to Calcutta to restore communal
peace. |
1947
|
Gandhi, deeply distressed by the Mountbatten Plan/Partition Plan (June
3, 1947), while staying in Calcutta to restore communal violence,
observes complete silence on the dawn of India’s Independence (August,
15, 1947). Gandhi returns to Delhi (September 1947).
|
1948 |
Gandhi was shot dead by Nathu Ram Godse, a member of RSS, while on his
way to the evening prayer meeting at Birla House, New Delhi (January 30,
1948). |