The correct answer is Champaran, Ahmedabad, Kheda, Non-cooperation.
Key Points
- The tale of Champaran (Bihar) starts in the early nineteenth century when European planters forced cultivators to cultivate indigo in 3/20th of their land holdings (Tin-Kathia).
- However, when indigo became unprofitable, European planters levied higher taxes to compensate for their losses in the foreign trade.
- Gandhi succeeded in abolishing the Tin-Kathia scheme in July 1917, and the cultivators received a salary refund.
- The mill owners and employees in Ahmedabad (March 1918) were fighting over the so-called "plague bonus," which the former decided to keep after the epidemic was over.
- Due to crop failure, the peasants of Kheda district (1917-1918) were in dire straits, and the government ignored their pleas for land revenue remission.
- Kheda's peasants were already struggling due to disease, high prices, and drought.
- Gandhi went on his first hunger strike in Ahmedabad in 1918 to protest a pay increase for mill employees.
Additional Information
- The Champaran Satyagraha(19 April 1917- 13 May 1917)
- This was his first act of civil disobedience.
- The Rowlatt Satyagraha(6 April 1919 - March 1922)
- This was his first all-India Satyagraha.
- The Kheda Satyagraha(22 March - 5 June 1918)
- This was his first non-cooperation movement.
- The first Non-Cooperation Movement
- It was founded on 1 August 1920.