Quit India Movement facts for kids
The Quit India Movement was a movement started by Mahatma Gandhi on 8 August 1942 during the World War II asking for an end to British rule in India. The movement was started in a speech in Bombay where Mahatma Gandhi asked Indians to Do or Die. The Congress launched a protest asking the British to withdraw from India, however the British imprisoned most of the Congress leadership within a day of the speech in a effort to suppress the movement. All The British refused to grant independence until the war ended. We have relives to be confident and versions for the quit Indian movement. People destroyed symbols of British authority such as rail tracks,post office and police station.Leaders of Quit India movement are Sucheta Kriplani,Ram Manohar Lohia,Aruna Asaf Ali and jaipraksh narayan .
Quit India Movement The failure of the crips mission & effects of World War II created widespread discontentment in India.
This led Gandhiji to launch a movement calling for complete withdrawal of the British from India.
The Congress Working Committee, in its meeting in Wardha on 14 July 1942, passed the historic Quit India resolution demanding the immediate transfer of power to indians & quit India. On 8 August 1942 in Bombay, the All India Congress Committee
called for a non-violent mass struggle on the widest possible scale throughout the
mat Gandh delivered the famous Do or Die' speech: The call for Quit India a most
to a standstill in large parts of the country as people voluntarily threw themselves into People observed hearts and demonstrations and processions were accompanied by The movement was truly a mass movement which brought into its ambit thousands of udents, workers and peasants. It also saw the active participation of leaders, namely onps Aruna Asal Al and Ram Manohar Lohia and many women such as Matangini Hazra in Bengal Kanta Berry in Assam and Rama Devi in Odisha. The British responded with much force, yet it took more than a ps the movement
Images for kids
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A 2017 stamp sheet dedicated to the 75th anniversary of the Quit India Movement. It features the Martyr's Memorial Patna (bottom-left), Gandhi delivering his "Do or Die" speech on 8 August 1942 (3rd stamp), and a part of it: "The mantra is 'Do or Die'. We shall either free India or die in the attempt; we shall not live to see the perpetuation of our slavery." (1st stamp).