Gandhiji’s constructive program encompassed much more than only the fight against imperialism and nationalism.
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In the 1920s, a significant space in the nationalist spectrum was occupied by Gandhiji’s constructive programme. With the withdrawal of the non-cooperation after mob violence at Chauri-Chaura in 1922, the national movement got diverted into multiple channels. At one end was the politics of ‘constitutional opposition’ practiced by the Swarajists and at the other end, violent revolutionary activities in Punjab, UP and Bengal emerged. Gandhiji’s constructive programme, however, remained the major pillar of nationalist movement in this period. The constructive programme was a multi-faceted phenomenon. It had social, economic and moral dimensions providing it a strategic character,as discussed below: Facets of the Constructive Program of Gandhi:
As Discussed Below:
The multifaceted constructive programme thus formed an important component of Gandhiji’s antiimperialist struggle in which phases of agitation alternated with phases of constructive programme and thus kept the movement going without any break. In this sense the significance went well beyond the anti-imperialist nationalist struggle.