On the morning of March 12, 1930 C.E., a 60-year-old man in a simple white dhoti walked out of Sabarmati Ashram with 78 volunteers and began a 387-kilometer journey to the sea. What looked, to some observers, almost comically modest — a protest about salt — would shake the foundations of the British Empire and help write the modern playbook for nonviolent resistance.
What the evidence shows
- Salt March: Gandhi and his volunteers walked from Sabarmati Ashram to the coastal village of Dandi over 24 days, arriving on April 5, 1930 C.E., and breaking the British salt law the following morning.
- Salt Satyagraha: The campaign of civil disobedience that followed the march lasted nearly a year, drew worldwide press coverage, and resulted in more than 60,000 arrests across India — including Gandhi’s own on May 4–5, 1930 C.E.
- British salt monopoly: The 1882 Salt Act made it a criminal offense for Indians to collect or sell salt independently, even on coastlines where sea salt was freely available — a law that disproportionately burdened the poorest citizens.
Why salt, of all things
When Gandhi announced that his first act of civil disobedience against British rule would target the salt tax, the reaction was almost universally skeptical. The prominent newspaper The Statesman wrote that it was “difficult not to laugh.” Viceroy Lord Irwin dismissed the plan entirely, writing to London that “the prospect of a salt campaign does not keep me awake at night.”
Gandhi understood something his critics did not.
Salt was not an abstraction. It was something every Indian — Hindu or Muslim, farmer or city dweller, rich or poor — used every single day. The salt tax represented 8.2% of British Raj tax revenue and hit the poorest households hardest. As Gandhi put it: “Next to air and water, salt is perhaps the greatest necessity of life.” By choosing a grievance that was simultaneously universal and concrete, he created a protest that almost anyone could join, understand, and feel personally.
The statesman C. Rajagopalachari grasped this immediately. Speaking in Tuticorin, he explained that civil disobedience must be aimed at something specific and tangible — “not that that is our final end, but for the time being it is our aim, and we must shoot straight.”
The march itself
What began as 79 people grew with every village they passed through. Crowds lined the roads. Local leaders joined. Journalists from around the world filed dispatches. By the time Gandhi reached Dandi on April 5, 1930 C.E., the march had become a spectacle that the British colonial administration could no longer ignore or dismiss.
At 8:30 in the morning on April 6, Gandhi stooped to pick up a small lump of natural salt from the mud — a direct and deliberate violation of the Salt Act. That single gesture triggered one of the largest acts of coordinated civil disobedience in history. Millions of Indians across the country began making, buying, and selling salt outside colonial law.
The Congress Party planned to continue the campaign at the Dharasana Salt Works, 40 kilometers south of Dandi. Gandhi was arrested before he could lead that action. What followed — colonial police beating hundreds of nonviolent protesters who refused to fight back or retreat — was witnessed and reported by journalists worldwide. The images and accounts reached living rooms in Britain, the United States, and beyond, fundamentally shifting international opinion about British rule in India.
Satyagraha as method
The word satyagraha comes from the Sanskrit satya (truth) and agraha (insistence). Gandhi translated it loosely as “truth-force.” It was not passive resistance in the sense of doing nothing — it was active, disciplined, principled refusal to cooperate with injustice, without resorting to violence.
The Indian National Congress had formally adopted satyagraha as its core strategy in 1920 C.E. But the Salt March was its most visible, most globally legible demonstration. The march came just weeks after the INC’s Purna Swaraj declaration on January 26, 1930 C.E. — a proclamation of India’s right to complete self-rule. Gandhi saw an “inviolable connection between the means and the end,” arguing that only nonviolent, truthful means could lead to genuine progress. The march was designed to embody that principle in every step.
Lasting impact
The Salt March did not immediately win independence. The British did not make major concessions following the Satyagraha. Gandhi negotiated with Viceroy Lord Irwin after his release, and the campaign formally ended without the dramatic policy reversal many had hoped for. Over 60,000 people had been jailed. That is not a footnote — it is part of the full picture.
What the march did accomplish was larger in a different sense. It demonstrated, at scale and in full international view, that an unarmed civilian population could challenge an empire through coordinated nonviolent action — and command global moral authority in doing so. It proved that the British Raj was not simply governing India; it was holding it by force against the will of its people.
The influence of Gandhi’s methods spread far beyond India. Martin Luther King Jr. studied Gandhi’s satyagraha teachings directly and cited the Dandi March as a model for the American civil rights movement. James Bevel, a key strategist in the movement’s most pivotal campaigns, drew explicitly on Gandhian nonviolent discipline. The framework Gandhi tested in the salt flats of Gujarat helped shape the tactics used in Birmingham, Selma, and Montgomery decades later.
India achieved independence on August 15, 1947 C.E. — 17 years after Gandhi bent down on a beach and picked up a pinch of salt.
Blindspots and limits
The Salt March is one of history’s most documented acts of civil disobedience, but the documentary record concentrates heavily on Gandhi and the Congress leadership. The tens of thousands of ordinary Indians — women, farmers, coastal workers, village organizers — who sustained the movement, made salt in their own communities, and absorbed arrests far from any camera are less visible in the historical narrative. It is also worth noting that Gandhi’s strategic choices, including his handling of caste and his complex views on the role of women in public life, were contested within the independence movement itself, and that legacy remains a live subject of debate among Indian historians.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Salt March
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous communities secure rights over 160 million hectares at COP30
- Ghana establishes major marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- The Good News for Humankind archive on India
About this article
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