Rivers That Created Empires: Nile, Ganges, Tigris, and More — Fexingo History
In 1930, Mahatma Gandhi led a 240-mile march to the Arabian Sea to defy the British salt monopoly. But the route he chose followed the ancient Sabarmati River, a tributary of the Ganges, and the protest drew on deep cultural currents of purification and pilgrimage. This episode traces Gandhi's march from his ashram on the Sabarmati to the coastal village of Dandi, examining how river symbolism, Hindu ritual, and colonial law collided. We explore the geopolitics of salt taxation, the role of the monsoon in shaping British policy, and how the march's riverine path turned a legal infraction into a national epic. Along the way, we meet figures like Sarojini Naidu, Abbas Tyabji, and the British collector who watched helplessly as thousands followed Gandhi to the sea. This is not just a story of independence — it's a story of how a river became a road to freedom. #Ganges #SaltMarch #DandiMarch #MahatmaGandhi #SabarmatiRiver #IndianIndependence #BritishRaj #SaltTax #CivilDisobedience #Ahmedabad #SarojiniNaidu #AbbasTyabji #1930 #ColonialLaw #Nonviolence #Monsoon #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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