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Indigo – Part 1

🎓 Class 12 English CBSE Theory Ch 5 — Indigo ⏱ ~35 min
🌐 Language: [gtranslate]

This CBSE English Passage Assessment will be based on: Indigo – Part 1

Assessment Format:
• 2 Short Answer Questions (2 marks each) = 4 marks
• 2 Fill in the Blanks Questions (1 mark each) = 2 marks
• 2 Short Answer Questions (1 mark each) = 2 marks
• 2 Multiple Choice Questions (1 mark each) = 2 marks
Total: 8 Questions, 10 Marks

This CBSE English Grammar Assessment will be based on: Indigo – Part 1

Assessment Format:
• 10 Randomized Grammar Questions (1 mark each)
• Question Types: Fill in the Blanks, MCQs, Error Identification, Reported Speech, Sentence Completion
Total: 10 Questions, 10 Marks

This English Vocabulary assessment will be based on: Indigo – Part 1
Targeting Vocabulary & Usage with Intermediate difficulty.

Before You Begin — Activate Prior Knowledge

The year is 1917. A determined young lawyer from South Africa arrives in a remote Bihar district at the request of an illiterate farmer. What unfolds changes the history of civil disobedience in India. Explore these questions before reading.

1
Notice these expressions — infer their meaning from context:
urge the departureTo strongly persuade or press someone to leave a place.
harbour a man like meTo give shelter or support to someone considered politically dangerous.
conflict of dutiesA situation where two moral obligations contradict each other.
seek a propTo look for external support or a crutch rather than relying on oneself.
2
Anticipation Guide: Imagine an ordinary farmer — poor, illiterate, with no political connections — approaches one of the most respected leaders of a national movement and insists, week after week, that the leader visit his district. What qualities must that farmer possess? What kind of leader would actually agree?
The farmer needs extraordinary tenacity — the belief that his cause matters enough to override social hierarchies and personal inconvenience. The leader needs genuine empathy: an ability to see greatness and moral urgency in the unlettered. Fischer's account shows both — Shukla's dogged persistence and Gandhi's willingness to be moved by a simple peasant's conviction rather than a politician's formal petition.
3
Historical Context — Indigo and Colonialism: Under the tinkathia system in Champaran, Bihar, tenant farmers were compelled to plant 15% of their land with indigo and hand over the entire crop as rent — a deeply exploitative arrangement that had persisted for generations. What economic and psychological effects might such a system have on a farming community over decades?
Economically, forced cultivation prevents farmers from growing food crops, creating both debt and food insecurity. Psychologically, compelled surrender generates fear, helplessness, and learned dependency. Fischer's narrative shows that Gandhi's goal was not merely legal redress but the restoration of self-respect — "the real relief for them is to be free from fear."
4
Critical Thinking — What is Civil Disobedience? Gandhi accepted a court summons and publicly declared he would disobey the order to leave Champaran. He then asked for the penalty. How does this differ from simply breaking the law, and why might it be more powerful?
Civil disobedience is the deliberate, open, non-violent violation of an unjust law combined with willing acceptance of the legal consequence. It differs from lawlessness because it operates within the framework of conscience and invites public scrutiny. Gandhi's willingness to be imprisoned demonstrated moral superiority — he was obeying a higher law — and embarrassed the colonial authorities, who could not punish him without looking oppressive to the watching world.

About the Author

LF

Louis Fischer (1896–1970)

American Journalist Princeton Faculty Political Biographer

Louis Fischer was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and served as a volunteer in the British Army between 1918 and 1920 before launching a distinguished career in journalism. He wrote for The New York Times, The Saturday Review, and a range of European and Asian publications, becoming one of America's most astute observers of international politics. Fischer met Gandhi personally in 1942 at the Sevagram ashram, an encounter that deepened into deep admiration and extensive research. His magnum opus, The Life of Mahatma Gandhi (1950), was hailed by the Times Educational Supplement as one of the finest biographies of Gandhi ever written — and the Oscar-winning 1982 film Gandhi, directed by Richard Attenborough, drew heavily on this biographical account. Fischer's writing style blends journalistic precision with vivid scene-setting, making the political events of the freedom movement feel immediate and personally consequential. The chapter 'Indigo' is excerpted from this biography and captures the Champaran episode of 1917 — the first successful exercise of civil disobedience in modern India.

Key Figures — Champaran Movement

Character Map

Gandhi Leader / Satyagrahi Rajkumar Shukla Sharecropper / Catalyst Rajendra Prasad Lawyer / Future President British Landlords Antagonists / Planters C. F. Andrews English Pacifist Lt. Governor Gait Colonial Authority mobilised inspired challenged

Click any node to learn about that figure's role in the Champaran movement.

Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi — Drawn to Champaran in 1917 by Rajkumar Shukla's persistence, Gandhi arrived as a stranger but quickly became the moral centre of the movement. He combined rigorous fact-finding with courageous civil disobedience, refusing to leave when ordered by British officials, and turning a personal legal crisis into a public demonstration that colonial authority could be challenged. His Champaran campaign is historically significant as the first successful application of satyagraha on Indian soil.
Rajkumar Shukla — An illiterate but profoundly resolute indigo sharecropper. Shukla attended the 1916 INC session in Lucknow, identified Gandhi as the leader who could help, and then followed him relentlessly across India — to Cawnpore, to Ahmedabad, to Calcutta — for months, until Gandhi relented. Fischer notes he was "illiterate but resolute," encapsulating how ordinary conviction can set extraordinary history in motion.
Rajendra Prasad — A prominent Bihar lawyer who later became the first President of India. Initially he and his colleagues hesitated to commit fully to Gandhi's cause, but after Gandhi's example shamed them into solidarity, they declared their readiness to go to prison. Prasad documented the Champaran inquiry extensively and became one of Gandhi's most dedicated associates.
British Planters / Landlords — Owners of vast indigo estates who had exploited the tinkathia system for generations. When synthetic indigo arrived from Germany and their product lost value, they sought money from the sharecroppers. Faced with Gandhi's organised resistance and an official inquiry, they were compelled to refund a portion of their illegally extracted money — a historic humiliation that signalled the end of their dominance.
C. F. Andrews — An English pacifist and devoted follower of Gandhi who offered to stay in Champaran to assist. Gandhi firmly refused, arguing that leaning on an Englishman would betray weakness. This incident became a lesson in self-reliance — the conviction that Indians must win their own battles without seeking external props.
Lieutenant-Governor Sir Edward Gait — The provincial colonial authority who initially had Gandhi summoned to court but ultimately appointed an official commission of inquiry. Gandhi's four long interviews with Gait convinced the Lieutenant-Governor that the peasants' grievances were genuine, resulting in the landmark commission that dismantled the sharecropping system.

The Story — Part I: From Lucknow to Champaran

Indigo

1
When Louis Fischer first visited Gandhi at his Sevagram ashram in 1942, the Mahatma spoke with quiet reflection about a moment that had changed everything: "I will tell you how it happened that I decided to urge the British to leave India — it began in 1917." The account Gandhi offered was not of grand political design but of a chance encounter with a determined peasant.
2
In December 1916, Gandhi attended the annual session of the Indian National Congress in Lucknow — a vast gathering of over two thousand delegates and many more visitors. Amidst the political discussions, a emaciated peasant made his way to Gandhi. He introduced himself as Rajkumar Shukla, a sharecropper from a district called Champaran, located in the foothills of the Himalayas near the Nepal border. Gandhi had never heard of the place.
3
Shukla, though illiterate, was resolute beyond measure. He had come to the Congress session to voice the suffering of his people under the oppressive landlord system in Bihar, and someone had probably pointed him towards Gandhi. Gandhi explained that he had prior commitments — an appointment in Cawnpore, visits to other parts of India — but Shukla was undeterred. Personification He accompanied Gandhi everywhere, shadowing him like a loyal conscience, following him even to his ashram near Ahmedabad.
4
For weeks, Shukla never left Gandhi's side. Each day he asked the same thing: "Fix a date." Gandhi, moved both by the sharecropper's story and his extraordinary tenacity, finally relented. He told Shukla to meet him in Calcutta on a specified date and from there they would travel together. When Gandhi arrived months later in Calcutta, Shukla was waiting exactly where he had been told — squatting patiently at the appointed spot.
5
The two boarded a train to Patna, where Shukla led Gandhi to the home of Rajendra Prasad — a respected Bihar lawyer who would later serve as India's first President. Prasad was absent, but his servants recognised Shukla as a poor man who often came to pester their master about the indigo sharecroppers. They allowed the two to stay on the grounds, assuming Gandhi himself was another poor yeoman. In a small but telling detail, Gandhi was not permitted to draw water from the well, for fear that drops from his bucket might pollute it — the servants could not know he was not an untouchable. Irony

Read and Find Out — Section 1

Q1. Strike out what is not true: Rajkumar Shukla was — (i) a sharecropper, (ii) a politician, (iii) a delegate, (iv) a landlord.
Strike out (ii) a politician, (iii) a delegate, and (iv) a landlord. Rajkumar Shukla was a sharecropper (i). He was also poor and illiterate, but he was physically determined though not physically strong in the conventional sense — strike out "physically strong" as well.
Q2. Why is Rajkumar Shukla described as 'resolute'?
Shukla was resolute because he refused to accept refusal. Despite being illiterate and poor, he followed Gandhi from Lucknow to Cawnpore, then to Ahmedabad, camped at his ashram for weeks, waited for months in Calcutta at the appointed spot, and finally succeeded in taking Gandhi to Champaran. His determination to secure justice for his fellow sharecroppers overrode every obstacle, making him a symbol of the power of individual conviction.
Q3. Why did the servants think Gandhi was another peasant?
Because he arrived with Shukla — a known poor yeoman who frequently troubled their master — and had no visible markers of status or distinction. Gandhi's simple appearance and the company he kept led the servants to assume he too was a common man, just another supplicant accompanying Shukla. This irony underscores Gandhi's deliberate identification with the poorest of Indians.
6
Gandhi first made his way to Muzaffarpur, which lay on the route to Champaran, to gather more thorough information about the conditions there than Shukla alone could provide. He telegraphed Professor J. B. Kripalani of the local Arts College — a man he had met at Tagore's Shantiniketan — and arrived by train at midnight on 15 April 1917. Kripalani waited at the station with a large group of students. For two days Gandhi stayed at the home of Professor Malkani, a government school teacher. Gandhi himself noted with poignancy that it was "an extraordinary thing in those days for a government professor to harbour a man like me." In smaller towns, Indians had been conditioned to fear any association with advocates of home rule.
7
News of Gandhi's presence and purpose spread quickly. Sharecroppers from across Champaran began arriving on foot and by every available conveyance, drawn to see the man who they heard might champion their cause. Muzaffarpur lawyers visited Gandhi to brief him; they told him about the cases they regularly fought on behalf of peasant groups and mentioned the substantial fees they collected. Gandhi rebuked them. He had reached a firm conclusion: "We should stop going to law courts. Where the peasants are so crushed and fear-stricken, law courts are useless. The real relief for them is to be free from fear." Irony
8
The economic structure of Champaran was one of profound colonial exploitation. Most of the cultivable land was owned by English landlords, worked by Indian tenants who had little say in what they grew. The principal commercial crop was indigo, and under the tinkathia arrangement, landlords compelled all tenants to plant 15 per cent of their holdings with indigo and surrender the entire harvest as rent — a system entrenched by long-term contracts that bound the peasants in an endless cycle of debt and dispossession.
9
Then Germany developed synthetic indigo. The moment natural indigo lost its market value, the landlords moved swiftly: they persuaded the sharecroppers to sign agreements paying compensation in exchange for being released from the 15 per cent obligation. The peasants who could afford it signed willingly, wanting to be rid of the irksome arrangement. Those who resisted hired lawyers; the landlords hired thugs. But when news of the synthetic alternative finally reached the peasants who had already signed and paid, they realised they had been cheated — they had paid to escape something the landlords were already planning to abandon — and they wanted their money back.

Read and Find Out — Section 2

Q1. List the places Gandhi visited between his first meeting with Shukla and his arrival at Champaran.
Gandhi visited the following places in sequence: Cawnpore (prior commitment) → various parts of India → Ahmedabad (his ashram, where Shukla followed him) → Calcutta (where Shukla waited) → Patna (Rajendra Prasad's home) → Muzaffarpur (to gather information, stayed 2 days) → then finally Motihari, the capital of Champaran district.
Q2. What did the peasants pay the British landlords as rent? What did the British now want instead, and why? What would be the impact of synthetic indigo on the price of natural indigo?
The peasants paid their entire indigo harvest as rent under the tinkathia system, cultivating 15% of their land with indigo. When Germany developed synthetic indigo, the British landlords foresaw the collapse of natural indigo prices, so they demanded monetary compensation from peasants in exchange for releasing them from the cultivation contract. Synthetic indigo would flood the market at far lower cost, making natural indigo commercially worthless — so the landlords extracted money from the peasants for a contract they themselves were ready to abandon.
10
It was precisely at this moment of simmering grievance and deception that Gandhi arrived in Champaran. His first step was to seek facts — not assumptions, not rhetoric. He called on the secretary of the British Landlords' Association, who curtly told him that no information would be given to an outsider. Gandhi replied, with quiet firmness, that he was no outsider. Irony He was as much a part of this country as the landlords who had settled here from England.
11
Gandhi then visited the British Commissioner of the Tirhut division, which encompassed Champaran. The Commissioner, according to Gandhi's own account, resorted to bullying and ordered him to leave Tirhut forthwith. Gandhi did not leave. Instead he proceeded to Motihari, the district capital, accompanied by several lawyers. At the station, a vast crowd had gathered. He established a headquarters and continued his investigations. A report reached him of a peasant who had been maltreated in a nearby village. Gandhi set out the next morning on the back of an elephant — only to be intercepted by a police superintendent's messenger, who ordered him to return to town.
12
Gandhi complied with the summons but did not comply with the underlying demand. When he was served an official notice to quit Champaran immediately, he signed the receipt — and then wrote on it that he would disobey the order. He was subsequently summoned to court the next morning. That night, he did not sleep: he telegraphed Rajendra Prasad to come from Bihar with influential friends, sent instructions to his ashram, and wired a full report to the Viceroy. He was preparing not for escape, but for maximum moral visibility. Symbolism

Vocabulary — Key Words from the Text

Word Power — Indigo (Part 1)

emaciated
adjective
Abnormally thin and weak due to illness, hunger, or poverty.
"A peasant came up to me looking like any other peasant in India, poor and emaciated."
resolute
adjective
Admirably determined; unwilling to give up despite obstacles.
Shukla was illiterate but resolute — he followed Gandhi for months until his mission was secured.
tenacity
noun
The quality of being persistent and determined; refusing to give up.
Gandhi was impressed by the sharecropper's tenacity and agreed to visit Champaran.
yeoman
noun
A person who works a small farm; used loosely to mean a common, hard-working person.
The servants knew Shukla as a poor yeoman who pestered their master.
irksome
adjective
Causing irritation or annoyance; tedious and burdensome.
The sharecropping arrangement was irksome to the peasants, and many signed the compensation agreement willingly.
maltreated
verb (past tense)
Treated cruelly or unjustly; subjected to abuse or harm.
A report reached Gandhi that a peasant had been maltreated in a nearby village, which prompted him to investigate.
vehemently
adverb
In a forceful, passionate, and intensely earnest manner.
Gandhi was vehemently opposed to Andrews staying in Champaran, arguing it would show weakness.
spontaneous
adjective
Occurring naturally and without prior planning or external prompting.
The spontaneous demonstration of thousands of peasants around the courthouse marked the beginning of their liberation from fear.

Extract-Based Questions (CBSE Board Format)

Literature CBQ — Section A

"Gandhi said, 'I have come to the conclusion that we should stop going to law courts. Taking such cases to the courts does little good. Where the peasants are so crushed and fear-stricken, law courts are useless. The real relief for them is to be free from fear.'"
— Louis Fischer, Indigo (Flamingo, Class 12, Ch. 5)
  • What was Gandhi's criticism of the lawyers at Muzaffarpur, and what does this reveal about his priorities? L2 Understand2 marks
    Gandhi criticised the lawyers for charging large fees from the already impoverished sharecroppers and for treating justice as a commercial transaction. His observation reveals that his primary concern was not legal victory but psychological liberation — the ability of the peasants to stand without fear. He believed that as long as they were terrorised, legal processes could not help them; their real need was the restoration of self-respect and courage.
  • What does the phrase "free from fear" signify in the context of the Champaran movement? L4 Analyse2 marks
    "Free from fear" represents the psychological emancipation Gandhi sought alongside legal redress. The Champaran peasants had been so thoroughly subjugated — economically dependent, legally powerless, and socially invisible — that their primary disability was not poverty but terror. The colonial system perpetuated itself partly through the peasants' internalised helplessness. Gandhi's method of civil disobedience, demonstrated publicly and without violence, showed the peasants that British authority could be challenged — a revelation that was, as Fischer notes, "the beginning of their liberation."
  • Identify the literary technique Fischer employs when Gandhi declares, "I am no outsider," and explain its significance. L4 Analyse3 marks
    Fischer employs dramatic irony combined with a powerful assertion of belonging. The British Secretary's label of "outsider" carries both literal and ideological weight — Gandhi was physically from outside the district and ideologically outside the colonial framework. Gandhi's counter-declaration dismantles both meanings: as an Indian, he is native to the land the British occupy, making the colonisers themselves the true outsiders. Fischer's use of direct speech here gives the moment an immediacy and force that pure narration could not achieve, turning a brief exchange into a statement of political philosophy.
  • Evaluate Gandhi's decision to send a full report to the Viceroy rather than attempting to escape or negotiate quietly. What does this choice reveal about his strategy? L5 Evaluate3 marks
    Gandhi's decision to wire the Viceroy was strategically brilliant. By creating a paper trail at the highest levels of colonial administration, he ensured transparency and moral accountability. It prevented local officials from suppressing the case quietly and brought the issue into the sphere of imperial policy-making. More importantly, it demonstrated that Gandhi was not hiding or defying blindly — he was openly challenging what he considered unjust while showing respect for lawful authority at its highest levels. This combination of defiance and transparency is the essence of satyagraha: forcing power to confront itself in the light of public scrutiny.

Literature CBQ — Section B

"The news of Gandhi's advent and of the nature of his mission spread quickly through Muzzafarpur and to Champaran. Sharecroppers from Champaran began arriving on foot and by conveyance to see their champion."
— Louis Fischer, Indigo (Flamingo, Class 12, Ch. 5)
  • What does the word "advent" suggest about how the peasants perceived Gandhi's arrival? L2 Understand1 mark
    "Advent" carries a quasi-religious connotation — it refers to the arrival of something or someone greatly anticipated, often with a sense of deliverance. Fischer's choice of this word suggests the peasants viewed Gandhi not merely as a political activist but as a saviour-like figure, someone whose coming represented hope after generations of helplessness. It elevates the political event into a deeply human and almost spiritual moment.
  • What does the spontaneous gathering of thousands of peasants at the courthouse reveal about the nature of Gandhi's leadership? L4 Analyse2 marks
    The spontaneous gathering demonstrates that Gandhi's leadership operated through moral inspiration rather than organisation. The peasants did not know his South African record; they simply heard that a Mahatma was in trouble with the authorities for trying to help them. Their mass response was driven entirely by trust and need — not by political machinery. This is what Fischer calls "the beginning of their liberation from fear": the moment a subjugated people chose, without instruction, to stand beside someone who stood for them.
  • How does Louis Fischer's role as a biographer shape the narrative perspective of 'Indigo'? L5 Evaluate3 marks
    Fischer's biographical perspective gives 'Indigo' its distinctive blend of intimate detail and historical sweep. As someone who interviewed Gandhi personally and had access to primary accounts, Fischer can move fluidly between Gandhi's self-reflection (direct speech from the 1942 Sevagram meeting) and wider historical documentation. He does not merely admire Gandhi — he interrogates his decisions and explains their logic. This produces a narrative that is simultaneously hagiography and critical analysis: we see Gandhi's greatness, but also the calculated strategy behind each act of apparent spontaneity. The use of direct quotations, official records, and eyewitness accounts (like Reverend Hodge's testimony) gives the account documentary authority while maintaining narrative momentum.

Frequently Asked Questions — Indigo (Part 1)

What is the significance of the Champaran episode as a turning-point in Gandhi's life?
Gandhi himself called Champaran a turning-point because it was where he first declared — through action — that the British could not order him about in his own country. More importantly, it demonstrated that political goals and the practical, daily suffering of ordinary people could be addressed simultaneously. Fischer notes: "His was not a loyalty to abstractions; it was a loyalty to living, human beings." Champaran shaped Gandhi's method for all subsequent campaigns.
How did the Champaran movement contribute to the broader Indian freedom struggle?
It demonstrated three things that proved decisive for the freedom movement: (1) Civil disobedience could work — the case was dropped without Gandhi going to prison. (2) Anonymous Indians — a single illiterate peasant — could initiate history-changing events. (3) Combining political resistance with social upliftment (schools, health clinics, sanitation) was not only possible but necessary. Champaran became the template for the Gandhian method in India.
Why is Louis Fischer's account considered a reliable historical source?
Fischer met Gandhi in person, researched primary documents, interviewed associates like Rajendra Prasad, and drew on the accounts of witnesses including the British missionary Reverend J. Z. Hodge. His book was reviewed by the Times Educational Supplement as one of the finest biographies of Gandhi ever written, and served as the basis for the Oscar-winning 1982 film Gandhi.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Indigo – 1 about in NCERT English?

Indigo – 1 is a lesson from the NCERT English textbook that covers important literary and language concepts. The lesson includes vocabulary, literary devices, comprehension exercises, and writing tasks aligned to the CBSE curriculum.

What vocabulary is important in Indigo – 1?

Key vocabulary words from Indigo – 1 are highlighted throughout with contextual meanings, usage examples, and interesting facts. Click any highlighted word to see its full definition and example sentence.

What literary devices are used in Indigo – 1?

Indigo – 1 uses various literary devices including imagery, symbolism, and figurative language. These are identified with coloured tags throughout the text for easy recognition and understanding by students.

What exercises are included for Indigo – 1?

Exercises include extract-based comprehension questions in CBSE board exam format, grammar workshops connected to the passage, vocabulary activities, and creative writing tasks with model answers provided.

How does Indigo – 1 help in board exam preparation?

Indigo – 1 includes CBSE-format extract-based questions, long answer practice with model responses, and grammar exercises that mirror board exam patterns. All questions follow Bloom's Taxonomy levels L1-L6.

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