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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Young India

The conclusion of the First World War and the introduction of the Rowlatt Act of 1919 marked a major shift in the Indian national movement, transitioning it from elite constitutional representations to mass passive resistance. Following his successful experiments with Satyagraha in Champaran, Kheda, and Ahmedabad, Mahatma Gandhi recognized the absolute necessity for an independent, wide-reaching English media platform. He needed a journal to politically educate the masses, disseminate the structural principles of non-violence (Ahimsa) and truth (Satyagraha), and counter the pro-colonial narratives maintained by the Anglo-Indian press.

Founding, Ownership, and Publication Profile

Young India was an English-language weekly journal published from 1919 to 1931. The journal was originally started in Bombay (now Mumbai) by a group of early nationalists associated with the Home Rule League, including Jamnadas Dwarkadas, Shankarlal Banker, and Indulal Yagnik. Recognizing Mahatma Gandhi’s growing national influence, they handed over the management and editorial control of the journal to him in 1919. Gandhi subsequently shifted the base of operations from Bombay to Ahmedabad, printing it at his Navajivan Press.

Key Publication Profiles
AttributeDetails
Founder / Original PromotersJamnadas Dwarkadas, Shankarlal Banker, and Indulal Yagnik
Chief Editor and ProprietorMahatma Gandhi (took editorial control in October 1919)
Date of Inception1919 (Ceased publication in 1931)
Frequency of PublicationWeekly
LanguageEnglish
Place of PublicationBombay (initially), Ahmedabad (from November 1919 onward)
Sister PublicationNavajivan (Weekly journal published in Gujarati and Hindi)
Core PhilosophySatyagraha, Ahimsa, Swadeshi, Sarvodaya, and Hindu-Muslim unity

Editorial Character and Core Ideological Columns

Unlike contemporary commercial newspapers, Young India carried no commercial advertisements. It was financed entirely through subscriber fees and functioned as a pure ideological tract. Mahatma Gandhi used a highly transparent, simple, and logically precise style of English prose to explain complex philosophical concepts to the general public.

Primary Editorial Pillars
  • The Blueprint of Non-Cooperation: Young India served as the official media vehicle for the Non-Cooperation Movement (1920–1922). Gandhi utilized its columns to issue operational instructions, define the parameters of peaceful boycott, and explain the strategic significance of spinning Khadi.
  • The Doctrine of Satyagraha: The weekly published series of essays explaining the structural dynamics of passive resistance, emphasizing that a Satyagrahi must harbor no ill-will toward the oppressor but must completely refuse to obey unjust laws.
  • Economic Self-Reliance and Swadeshi: Gandhi wrote extensively on the economic drain of Indian wealth caused by the import of foreign Manchester cloth. He popularized the Charkha (spinning wheel) not just as a tool of cottage industry, but as a symbol of national defiance and economic liberation.
  • Socio-Religious Eradication Campaigns: The journal was an assertive platform for social reform. It carried powerful essays condemning the practice of untouchability—redefining the marginalized communities as Harijans (Children of God)—and actively advocated for women’s education, total prohibition of alcohol, and rural sanitation.

Historical Significance for UPSC Prelims

The Historic Great Trial of 1922

The radical writing published in Young India directly led to one of the most high-profile sedition trials in British Indian history, mirroring the earlier legal battles faced by Bal Gangadhar Tilak.

The Sedition Charges

In March 1922, following the sudden suspension of the Non-Cooperation Movement due to the Chauri Chaura incident, Mahatma Gandhi was arrested under Section 124A of the Indian Penal Code. The prosecution cited three specific articles written by Gandhi in Young India as highly seditious and inciting disaffection against the Crown.

The Three Indicted Articles
  • “Disaffection a Virtue”
  • “Tampering with Loyalty”
  • “A Puzzle and its Solution”
The Judgment

During the trial before Judge C.N. Broomfield at the Ahmedabad Circuit House, Gandhi pleaded guilty to the charges, stating that sedition against an unconstitutional government was a moral duty. He was sentenced to six years of rigorous imprisonment, which led to a temporary pause in the journal’s regular editorial oversight.

Structural Transformation into Harijan (1933)

In 1931, matching the political transitions of the Salt Satyagraha and the Round Table Conferences, Young India ceased publication. To give absolute organizational focus to his campaign against untouchability following the Poona Pact, Gandhi replaced it by launching a new weekly journal named Harijan in February 1933, which was published in English, Hindi (Harijan Sevak), and Gujarati (Harijan Bandu).

Legacy and Historical Trivia

Ideological Bridge to Western Thinkers

Young India was widely read by international intellectuals and pacifists. It acted as an intellectual bridge, introducing Gandhi’s unique philosophy of non-violent political resistance to global thinkers, directly influencing civil rights movements outside India.

Historical Trivia for Prelims
  • No Advertisement Policy: Gandhi maintained a strict rule that Young India would never accept commercial advertisements. He believed that financial dependence on corporate advertisers would compromise the editorial integrity and absolute independence of the journal.
  • The Jail Editorship: During Gandhi’s various imprisonments, the editorial responsibilities of Young India were capably handled by his close associates, including C. Rajagopalachari, Jairamdas Daulatram, and Mahadev Desai, ensuring the weekly reached subscribers without interruption.
  • The Declaration of Independence: The historic “Pledge of Independence” or the Declaration of Purna Swaraj, which was read across India on January 26, 1930, was drafted and widely circulated through the columns of Young India to ensure uniform nationwide implementation.

Contemporary Gandhian and Allied Nationalist Journals

The media ecosystem managed by Mahatma Gandhi and his contemporaries during the mass mobilization phase featured multiple targeted publications designed to reach different linguistic and social strata across India.

Core Journals of the Gandhian Era
Publication NameLaunch YearLanguageKey Editors / FoundersPrimary Political / Social Focus
Young India1919EnglishMahatma GandhiPolitical education, Non-Cooperation instructions, Satyagraha theory.
Navajivan1919Gujarati / HindiMahatma GandhiSister concern of Young India; targeted rural masses of Western India with reformist ideas.
Harijan1933EnglishMahatma GandhiExclusively focused on anti-untouchability, rural economy, and temple entry campaigns.
Harijan Sevak1933HindiMahatma GandhiHindi version of Harijan; widely circulated across North India for social integration.
Independent1919EnglishMotilal NehruLaunched from Allahabad to counter the moderate views of The Pioneer; strongly pro-Congress.
Kudi Arasu1925TamilE.V. Ramasamy (Periyar)
Last Modified: June 15, 2026

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