What Swaraj meant to different social groups who joined the Civil Disobedience Movement:
- To the countryside: Rich peasant communities expected the revenue tax to be reduced when the British refused to do so, they did not rejoin the movement in 1932.
- The Poor were the peasants who rented the land from landlords. Depression made them unable to pay rent and wanted it to be reduced. Their relationship with the Congress became uncertain.
- The Business Classes. After the war, their huge profits were reduced, wanted protection against the import of foreign goods. The failure of the Round Table Conference curbed their enthusiasm for the Civil Disobedience Movement.
- The industrial working class did not participate in a large number. They joined because of low wages and poor working conditions. Congress was reluctant to include workers’ demands as it would alienate the industrialists.
- Women and the Civil Disobedience Movement. 1930 was the year when women entered the struggle for Independence on a massive scale. During Gandhiji’s Dandi March, they joined protest marches, picketed foreign clothes and shops. But Congress did not encourage them or gave them important posts in the organization.