- After being released in 1914, Tilak sought re-entry into Congress. Annie Besant and Gokhale supported. But finally Pherozshah Mehta won and Tilak was not admitted.
- Tilak and Besant decided to start the home rule movement on their own.
- In early 1915, Annie Besant (and S Subramaniya Iyer) launched a campaign through her two newspapers, New India and Commonweal, and organized public meetings and conferences to demand that India be granted self-government on the lines of the White colonies after the War. From April 1915, her tone became more peremptory and her stance more aggressive.
- At the annual session of the Congress in December 1915 it was decided that the extremists be allowed to rejoin the Congress. The opposition from the Bombay group has been greatly weakened by the death of Pherozshah Mehta.
- Tilak and Annie Besant set up two different home rule leagues.
- Tilak’s league was to work in Maharashtra (excluding Bombay city), Karnataka, the central 11.4-132.3 11.4-132.3s0-89.4-11.4-132.3zm-317.5 213.5V175.2l142.7 81.2-142.7 81.2z"/> Subscribe on YouTube
The Home Rule Movement
- “Home rule is my birthright, and I will have it”
- The moderates were pacified by the government’s assurance of reforms after Besant’s release.
- The publication of scheme of government reforms in July 1918 further created divisions. Many rejected it while others were for giving it a trial.
- Later, Tilak went to England to fight a case. With Besant unable to give a firm lead, and Tilak away in England, the movement was left leaderless.
- The achievement of the Home Rule movement was that it created a generation of ardent nationalists who formed the backbone of the national movement in the coming years.
- The Home rule leagues also created organizational links between town and country which were to prove invaluable in later years.
- By popularizing the idea of self-government, it generated a widespread pro-nationalist atmosphere in the country.
- The movement set the right mood for the entry of Mahatma Gandhi and take the leadership.