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24.1 The Indian Subcontinent Achieves Freedom - Coggle Diagram
24.1 The Indian Subcontinent Achieves Freedom
Nationalism Surfaces in India
WWI Increases Nationalist Activities in India
Britain promised India for a reform on self-government
Passed Rowlatt Acts to stop protestors and throw them in jail for 2 years
Amristar Massacre
Killed thousands of Indians that protested Rowlatt Acts
Ghandi's Tactics of Nonviolence
Ghandi emerges as the leader of the independence movement
Noncooporation
The Congress Party passed Civil Disobedience, the right to not follow an unjust law
Boycotts
Refusal of buying British goods
Strikes and Demonstration
British struggled to keep factories and trains running, jails overcrowd
The protests have become riots
The Salt March
Hate of Salt Act where they can only buy salt from British government
Demonstrators including Ghandi is arrested
Britain Grants Limited Self-Rule
A Movement Towards Independence
Congress Party v. s. Muslim League
Ghandi v.s. Jinnah
Freedom Brings Turmoil
Partition and Blood Shed
British think that Partition is the safe way to separate Muslim and Hindus
Partition is the way to separate Hindus and Muslims
The Battle for Kashmir
Hindus v.s. Muslim on Kashmir
Modern India
Nehru Leads India
Enhanced India's heavy manufacturing industries
Form an alliance that are neutral in the Cold War
Reorganized land by language
Sponsor social reforms and industrialization
Help gain woman rights and rise the low castes' social status
Troubled Times
Indria Ghandi took over when Nehru died
Sikh wanted independent land and threatens to attack Indian symbol of authority. Sikh guards of Indria Ghandi killed her, her son became Prime Minister
Ghandi's son is bombed to death
21st Century Challenges
Some religion is still banned
Faced population growth
Nuclear Weapons race-off with Pakistan
Pakistan Copes With Freedom