1810 House Tax HartalThe House Tax Hartal of 1810–11 was an occasion of nonviolent resistance to protest a tax in parts of British India, with a particularly noteworthy example of hartal (a form of general strike) in the vicinity of Varanasi. BackgroundIn 1810 the government attempted to extend a house tax that was in effect in Calcutta to other areas in Eastern India: Varinasi, Bengal, Bihar, and Odisha. Inflation, crop failures, and widespread poverty made the tax especially difficult to bear.[1]: 424–427 Various non-governmental civil society groups in Varanasi met to decide on a course of opposition to the tax, and eventually decided on a hartal which included a general strike. HartalThe strike was extraordinarily comprehensive. According to one commentator:[1]: 334
The protesters gathered in a mass protest near the European occupation government authority buildings outside of town, and were joined by people from neighboring towns, in numbers variously estimated at more than two hundred thousand[1]: 334 or between twenty and thirty thousand[2] people. They presented a petition to the magistrate asking for the repeal of the tax. Meanwhile, they remained peaceably assembled throughout the days, returning to their homes at night, from December 26, 1810 to January 8, 1811.[1]: 334 They explained this tactic in their petition thusly:[1]: 428–429
The tax collector commented on the nonviolent resistance strategy in this way:[3]
The protest began to flag, but was revitalized by government intransigence (it declared the protest assembly illegal on January 13, 1811). The protesters organized a march to Calcutta to present the Governor-General with their demands, but this petered out and they instead presented their petition through more ordinary bureaucratic channels.[1]: 335 ResultThe protest was successful in convincing the government to repeal the house tax. The following year, a more limited version of the tax was instituted in three cities, but the assessment and spending of the tax was placed in the hands of Indian representatives. That reformed tax did not provoke vigorous protests.[1]: 335 References
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