Was Gandhi enough? The radical alternatives in India’s anti colonial struggle: MN Roy’s internationalism to Bhagat Singh’s socialism
2025-08-23 , Anti-imperialist Tent 2

The anticolonial struggle in South Asia has often been narrowly portrayed as a nonviolent, Gandhian-led movement centered on civil disobedience. However, the fight against British colonialism in India was far more complex and revolutionary—a multilayered resistance that encompassed diverse ideologies, tactics, and visions for liberation. This session shifts the focus to the socialist currents within India’s freedom struggle, highlighting the radicals who envisioned not just political independence but a complete revolutionary transformation of society.
While the bourgeois nationalist leadership sought to establish a liberal postcolonial state, socialist revolutionaries—organized in parties, trade unions, and peasant movements—fought for an egalitarian, classless India, firmly aligned with global anticolonial and proletarian struggles. The Russian Revolution of 1917 electrified South Asia’s revolutionaries, inspiring an internationalist perspective that linked India’s emancipation with worldwide socialist liberation. Moreover, this internationalism provided a crucial ideological weapon against the rise of fascism, positioning India’s revolutionaries within a broader global front of anti-imperialist and anti-fascist resistance. This session critically examines these revolutionary movements and moments in late colonial South Asia, reclaiming the legacy of socialist anticolonialism beyond the dominant narrative of Gandhi. By doing so, we explore how these struggles continue to inform visions of international solidarity and revolutionary futures today.


Please describe your contribution shortly (1-2 sentences):

Indian decolonisation was far more complex and revolutionary than the dominant Gandhian narrative suggests, with socialists resisting British colonialism and envisioning a revolutionary transformation of society. Inspired by the Russian Revolution and global anti-imperialist movements, these activists linked India’s liberation to worldwide socialist struggles. This session critically examines these revolutionary movements and moments in late colonial South Asia, reclaiming the legacy of socialist anticolonialism, and explores how they continue to shape visions of international solidarity and revolutionary futures today.

How many people can take part in your contribution?:

As many as space allows

Will your contribution deal with movement history?:

Bewegungsgeschichte ist der Hauptfokus im Beitrag.

What is your preferred language to hold the contribution in?:

English

What is the linguistical level of your contribution? Is it in easy read/plain English?:

B2: Selbstständige Sprachverwendung, C1: Fachkundige Sprachkenntnisse

Is prior knowledge required for the content?:

No, but some basic idea about South Asia would be helpful (caste, religion, language diversity, post colonial formations, etc.)

Who is your contribution (especially) aimed at?:

Keine spezifische Ausrichtung

If you are an individual at the camp: do you belong to an organization? (optional):

No

As Palestine Solidarity group we see ourselves as comrades in the fight for Palestinian liberation and solidarity as being embedded in a wider anti-imperial and anti-colonial understanding of the world. Acknowledging that people within the German climate justice movement have been socialized in a country where zionist perspective dominate, we aim to critically engage with the speechlessness of many in the German left concerning this topic and invited external groups to share their knowledge about the Palestinian struggle and beyond.

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