Je ne sais pas!!
Gandhi broke the unjust "salt laws".Gandhi believed in respect for all humans.the salt laws for one.
Gandhi threatened to carry out the Salt March, also known as the Salt Satyagraha, in protest of the British salt monopoly in India in 1930. This act of civil disobedience involved marching to the Arabian Sea to collect salt from the ocean, in defiance of British laws.
He was involved in many events such as the March to the sea to make salt and the salt production invasion 'attempt'
Saltsatyagraha is a movement done by Gandhi to break the salt laws Gandhi started march from ashramam to dandi with 78members and with 375km trek He started in March 12th 1930.
gandhi march
He wanted the right to harvest and sell salt in India. if he did not fight back and the British attacked them the world will frown upon Britain. ultimately get permission to harvest their own salt.
Coastal Villages started collecting salt, and it was sold on the streets. Tens of thousands of Indians were also imprisoned as Gandhi's campaign was gaining force.
Grandhi
Gandhi guided Indians to oppose unjust laws through his philosophy of nonviolent resistance, or Satyagraha, which emphasized civil disobedience and passive resistance. He encouraged mass mobilization, urging people to refuse compliance with oppressive British laws, such as the salt tax. By organizing campaigns like the Salt March in 1930, he demonstrated the power of collective action. Gandhi's approach fostered a sense of unity and empowerment among Indians, ultimately galvanizing the movement for independence.
Gandhi was born in 1869. Look up the date of the Salt March and DO SOME MATH!
Gandhi's followers, during the Salt March in 1930, aimed to produce their own salt as a form of civil disobedience against British salt laws, which imposed a tax on salt production. They gathered salt from the sea, which was a natural and unrefined form of salt. While the salt produced was not "pure" in the industrial sense, it served as a powerful symbol of resistance and self-sufficiency against colonial rule. Thus, it was more about the act of making salt than the purity of the salt itself.
The Great Salt March of 1930 was lead by Gandhi.