Unit 38. Nationalist and Congress Leaders

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Unit 39. Revolutionary and Militant Leaders

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Unit 40. Women and Regional Activists

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Unit 41. British Officials and Missions

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Nagpur Congress 1920

The Nagpur Session of the Indian National Congress (INC), held in December 1920, stands as one of the most transformative junctures in modern Indian history. While the preceding Calcutta Special Session in September 1920 had provisionally accepted Mahatma Gandhi’s Non-Cooperation program, it was the regular session at Nagpur that ratified it with overwhelming consensus. This session effectively brought the “Moderate” era of elite constitutionalism to a formal close, structurally reorganizing the Congress into a mass-based, vanguard political machine geared for extra-constitutional direct action.

Core Organizational Framework and Logistics

Venue and Timeline

The 35th annual session of the Indian National Congress was convened at Nagpur, in the Central Provinces, from December 26 to December 31, 1920.

Presidential Chair

The session was presided over by C. Vijayaraghavachariar, a veteran nationalist leader from Salem, Madras Presidency. Known as the “Lion of South India,” his legal background and senior standing lent institutional weight to the sweeping constitutional shifts enacted during the proceedings.

Key Institutional Fact-Sheet
ParameterHistorical Detail
Session PresidentC. Vijayaraghavachariar
Viceroy of IndiaLord Chelmsford (Governed from 1916 to 1921)
Primary ResolutionRatification of the Non-Cooperation Movement
Mover of Primary ResolutionChittaranjan (C.R.) Das
Key Structural ArchitectMahatma Gandhi

The Great Reconciliation and Ratification

The political landscape at Nagpur shifted dramatically from the divided factions observed at the Calcutta Special Session.

C.R. Das and the Strategic Realignment

At Calcutta, Chittaranjan (C.R.) Das had led the opposition against the boycott of legislative councils. However, before the Nagpur session commenced, a compromise was reached between Gandhi and Das. C.R. Das reversed his stance and personally moved the main resolution on Non-Cooperation at Nagpur, bringing the powerful Bengal delegation completely into the Gandhian fold.

Broad-Based Endorsement

Other prominent leaders who had previously harbored reservations, such as Lala Lajpat Rai and Madan Mohan Malaviya, extended their support to the resolution. This created an unprecedented unified front within the nationalist leadership, solidifying Non-Cooperation as the official operational policy of the Indian national movement.

Structural and Constitutional Reorganization of the Congress

To transform the Congress from a yearly deliberative assembly into a permanent, highly functional political party capable of executing sustained mass agitations, Mahatma Gandhi drafted a completely new Congress Constitution.

Redefining the Ultimate Goal

The Congress altered its baseline creed. The earlier goal of achieving self-government within the British Empire through strictly constitutional means was replaced by the attainment of “Swaraj” (Self-Rule) within or outside the British Empire, through all peaceful and legitimate means. This change marked an explicit departure from purely constitutional limitations.

Institutional Tiering and Decentralization
  • Congress Working Committee (CWC): A 15-member executive body was established to handle day-to-day organizational decisions. This transformed the Congress into a continuous, year-round administrative entity.
  • Provincial Congress Committees (PCCs): The local committees were completely reorganized on a linguistic basis rather than following the arbitrary administrative boundaries drawn by the British colonial state. This drastically bridged the gap between the leadership and regional language speakers.
  • All-India Congress Committee (AICC): The overall membership base of the AICC was expanded to 350 representatives to ensure wider geographic and demographic inclusion.
  • Grassroots Committees: Institutional structures were extended downward to the village and ward levels through the formation of Taluka and Village Congress Committees (Gram Committees).
Democratic Inclusivity and Fee Reduction

To democratize participation and convert the Congress into a genuine mass movement, the annual membership fee was reduced to four annas (a quarter of a rupee). This enabled peasants, workers, and the lower-middle class to formally enroll as Congress members.

Inclusion of Socio-Economic and Welfare Directives

The Nagpur session widened the nationalist agenda by explicitly integrating constructive social reforms and labor welfare into its operational framework.

Surrender of Untouchability

The Congress passed a formal resolution calling for the complete eradication of untouchability from Hindu society, making social reform an intrinsic part of the freedom struggle.

Promotion of Hand-Spinning and Khadi

The session mandated the widespread popularization of the Charkha (spinning wheel) and the use of hand-woven Khadi cloth to systematically undermine British textile imports and promote rural self-reliance.

Labor Union Integration

Recognizing the growing consciousness of the working class, the Congress expressed its solidarity with the nascent trade union movement. It urged provincial committees to actively assist the newly formed All India Trade Union Congress (AITUC, established in October 1920) in organizing Indian labor.

Institutional Exits and the Fracture with Constitutional Purists

The radical change in the Congress creed from constitutional agitation to mass-based non-cooperation caused an institutional fracture, leading to the departure of several veteran leaders who refused to endorse extra-constitutional methods.

Resignation of Mohammad Ali Jinnah

Jinnah strongly opposed the inclusion of the Khilafat religious demand into the political framework of the Congress and warned against invoking mass emotionalism through street agitations. He formally resigned from the Indian National Congress at the Nagpur Session, severing his long-standing ties with the organization.

Departure of Other Moderate Stalwarts

Following the passage of the new constitution, Annie Besant, G.S. Khaparde, Bipin Chandra Pal, and Jamnadas Dwarkadas permanently left the Congress, marking the complete end of the old Moderate hegemony.

Crucial Trivia and Prelims-Oriented Facts

Record Delegate Attendance

The Nagpur session witnessed an unprecedented registration of 14,582 delegates, the largest political gathering in India up to that point, demonstrating the immediate impact of lowering the membership barriers.

The Linguistic Pivot

By restructuring the PCCs along linguistic lines, the Nagpur session laid the political foundation for the post-independence linguistic reorganization of Indian states executed via the State Reorganisation Act of 1956.

The Tilak Swaraj Fund Target

The session consolidated the target for the ‘Tilak Swaraj Fund’ (launched in memory of Bal Gangadhar Tilak), aiming to collect one crore rupees to finance the organizational machinery of the Non-Cooperation Movement, a target that was successfully achieved within months.

Hindu-Muslim Unity Symbols

Historical records highlight that Muslim Khilafat volunteers actively assisted the local managers in organizing the logistics and housing for Hindu delegates at Nagpur, serving as a practical demonstration of the Hindu-Muslim unity advocated by the Lucknow Pact and the Calcutta-Nagpur resolutions.

Last Modified: June 15, 2026

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