INDIGO WORKSHEET
INDIGO WORKSHEET
INDIGO WORKSHEET
Theme
The issue of Indigo harvesting and high handed attitude of the Britishers becomes a road to freedom for the
sharecroppers
The only way out to win it is to develop qualities like self – reliance, strong –will, courage
Persistence and patience of Gandhiji helps him in procuring justice for the peasants
It is very important to be first free of any kind of fear.
The account is also reflection of the efforts made by Gandhiji to improve the health conditions as well as
social and cultural life of the peasants
Main Points
Raj Kumar Shukla- an illiterate but resolute peasant followed Gandhiji at Lucknow, Kanpur, Ahemdabad,
Calcutta, Patna, Muzzafarpur & then Champaran.
Gandhi ji goes to Muzzafarpur first to get detailed information about Champaran sharecropper.
Sent telegram to J B Kriplani and stayed in Prof. Malkani’s home - a government servant.
.
On Gandhi’s arrival sharecroppers gathered in large number to meet their champion.
Gandhiji chided the Muzzafarpur lawyers for taking high fee.
Champaran district was divided into estate owned by English people, Indians only tenant farmers.
Landlords compelled tenants to plant 15% of their land with indigo and surrender their entire harvest as
rent.
In the meantime Germany had developed synthetic indigo –British landlords freed the Indian farmers from
the 15% arrangement but asked them to pay compensation.
Many signed, some resisted, engaged lawyers, landlords hired thugs.
Gandhiji visited the secretary of the British landlord association to get the facts but considered an outsider.
Gandhiji went to the British Official Commissioner who asked him to leave Trihut, Gandhiji disobeyed,
went to Motihari the capital of Champaran where a vast multitude greeted him, continued his
investigations.
Visited maltreated villagers, stopped by the police superintendent but disobeyed the order,summoned to
court.
Gandhi released without bail. Civil Disobedience triumphed.
Gandhiji agreed to 25% refund by the landowners, it symbolized the surrender of the prestige.
Gandhiji worked for social economic reforms, elevated their distress aided by his wife, Mahadev Desai,
Narhari Parikh.
Gandhiji taught a lesson of self-reliance by not seeking help of an English man Mr. Andrews.
Q1. “….. Rajendra Prasad was out of town, but the servants knew Shukla as a poor yeoman who pestered
their master to help the indigo sharecroppers. So they let him stay on the grounds with his companion,
Gandhi, whom they took to be another peasant……”
Gandhi looked like one of the peasants in his simple dress and emaciated appearance. Alsosince he was
accompanying Shukla they presumed he was one of them
Q2. ‘….. He said, “ I have come to the conclusion that we should stop going to law courts. Taking such
cases to the courts does little good. Where the peasants are so crushed and fear-stricken, law courts are
useless. The real relief for them is to be free from fear”…….
The peasants were afraid of the British officers and how they would take action against them.
Q.3 . Why was Gandhiji impressed with Rajkumar Shukla’s tenacity and determination?
Ans. Rajkumar Shukla the Champaran-Sharecropper requested Gandhiji in
Congress Session in Lucknow to fix a date to visit Champaran where the sharecroppers
were subjected to injustice. Till Gandhiji fixed a date he did not leave him rather
he accompanied him wherever he went. Gandhiji was impressed by his tenacity
and determination and finally agreed to go there from Calcutta.
did Gandhiji make the peasants fearless and self-reliant?
Ans. Gandhiji made the peasants fearless by letting them know about their rights, fighting their
case and by obtaining the refund of compensation made to the British landlords who were
behaving as lords above the law.
Q2. ‘….. But Champaran did not begin as an act of defiance. It grew out of attempt to alleviate the distress
of large number of poor peasants. This was typical Gandhi pattern – his politics were intertwined with the
practical, day-to-day problems of the millions. His was not a loyalty to abstractions; it was a loyalty to living,
human beings…’
SAQ
1. Why did Gandhi chide the lawyers who represented the interests of Indigo planters?
2. What amount of repayment did the big planters think Gandhi would demand? What did Gandhi ask?
What amount was finally settled?
3. Why did Gandhi ji settle for 25 % settlement?
4. How did Gandhiji begin his mission in Champaran? (Foreign 2014)
5. What does Gandhi mean by, ‘conflict of duties’?
LAQ
1. What do you think led Gandhi to exclaim ‘The battle of Champaran is won.’?
2. Self-reliance, Indian independence and help to sharecroppers were all bound together. Elucidate.with
reference to the lesson ‘Indigo.’