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3 - Nepal’s Gandhians Take Arms

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 September 2021

Ches Thurber
Affiliation:
Northern Illinois University
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Summary

This chapter traces the strategic evolution of the Nepali Congress from its deliberation and rejection of nonviolence through a vote of party leaders in Calcutta in 1950 to its gradual return to an exclusively nonviolent platform by 1990. It illustrates that the movement's lack of social ties with other groups within Nepal limited its ability to generate mass mobilization, causing leaders to sour on the prospects of being able to achieve victory through civil resistance. But over the course of the following four decades, the Nepali Congress party was able to substantially enlarge its social base in ways that made it far better positioned for civil resistance. Interestingly, a challenger with a very different ideology, the Marxist-Leninists, underwent a very similar transition. After a failed effort at inciting revolution through the beheading of “class enemies” in the early 1970s, the Marxist-Leninists, like the Nepali Congress, engaged in a program of organization- and coalition-building that paved the way for the adoption of civil resistance.

Type
Chapter
Information
Between Mao and Gandhi
The Social Roots of Civil Resistance
, pp. 54 - 80
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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