cover image: Modern Review  December  1939

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20.500.12592/5v4pph

Modern Review December 1939

1939

From the sentences in the article which follow one can gather that in Gandbiji's opinion it is not the numerically superior majority"612 THE MODERN REVIEW FOR DECEMBER 1939 which is stronger but it is the minority supplmg soldiers to the army including in great part the Muslims which is the stronger elment The Communal Decision of the British Government has made this stronger element sti [...] The course of the war and the policy pursued by the British and French Governments in particular the declarations made on behalf of the British Government regarding India seem to demonstrate that the present war like the World War of 191448 is being carried on for imperialist endt and British Imperialism is to remain entrenched in Indic With such a war and with this policy the Congress cannot [...] It is firm to the extent (Vitt the 'Congress leaders are conscious of their stoiin the opinion of Mahatma Gandhi Indians are not sufficiently democratic diciplined and non-violent perhaps there is an apprehenaion in the subconscious regions of the Minds of Mahatma Gandhi and the leaders who follow 'him that if the English were to witdraw all of a sudden " and there was no foreign Waiv [...] By way of preparation for future action the Committee have enunciated the programme indicate) in the following sentence: The Working Committee desire to make it char that the true test of preparedness for Civil Disobedience lies in Congressmen themselves spinning and promoting the cause of khadi to the exclusion of mill cloth and deeming it their duty to establish harmony between the communities [...] In reconstructing the provinces of the future—a task which the young men and women of today will soon be called upon to take up—we have to ensure the organic unity of India without in any way endangering the autonomy of the provinces the fullest self-expression for all the communities or the integrity of other fundamental rights.
government politics public policy
Pages
129
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120016
Segment Pages Author Actions
Notes
609-632 unknown view
Poland and the War
633-637 C.F Andrews view
Emerson and James Freeman Clarke
637-638 J.T. Sunderland view
The Newspaper in America and Abroad
639-643 Sudhindra Bose view
The Singing People of Simla Hills
643-651 Devendra satyarthi view
Inside the U.S.S.R.
652-657 Shyama Charan view
Europe At War
658-662 D.Graham Pole view
Dominion Status For India—When?
662-ii D.Graham Pole view
The Nepal Museum
665-673 Siva Sen view
The Crisis
674-676 Rabindranath Tagore view
Study of History
677-679 Gope Gur-Bax view
New Light on an Old Problem
679-680 Sunity Chatterji view
Has There Been Exaggeration in the Number of Mohammedan Infants at the Bengal Census of 1931 ?
681-682 Amal Ghatak view
The Enigma of The Soviet-German Pact
683-684 A.M. Bose view
India And Rural Reconstruction
684-685 R.H. Gracefield view
Tourist Trade
686-688 J.N. Sinha view
Book Reviews
689-695 unknown view
A Visit To Batas’
696-696 Amiya Chakravarty view
Thakkar Bapa-The Father of The Harijans
697-700 Rangildas Kapadia view
H. M. Percival
701-702 S.N Dutt view
Comment and Criticism
703-704 unknown view
Burma Government’s Land Purchase Scheme
705-707 P.M Isaac view
Millions From Waste
707-708 Chaman Lal view
College Education
708-709 G.S Krishnayya view
The Course of Flogging in English Law
710-712 Anil Sarkar view
Indian Periodicals
713-717 unknown view
Foreign Periodicals
718-721 unknown view
A Strange War
722-728 Gopal Haldar view