totalitarianism. nationalism in india and southwest asia 30.4 revolutions both peaceful and violent

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Totalitarianism

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Page 1: Totalitarianism. Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4 Revolutions both peaceful and violent

Totalitarianism

Page 2: Totalitarianism. Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4 Revolutions both peaceful and violent

Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4

Revolutions both peaceful and violent

Page 3: Totalitarianism. Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4 Revolutions both peaceful and violent

USSR under Stalin

• Wanted to create a police state• The Great Purge- 1937 Stalin tried to eliminate

anyone who threatened his power. Responsible for 8-13 million deaths during the Great Purge.

• The Government controlled all media, education, and religion. Tried to replace religion with Communist teachings.

Page 4: Totalitarianism. Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4 Revolutions both peaceful and violent

Stalin controls the economy

• Command Economy- The government makes all the decisions.

• The Five Year Plan- In five years Stalin wanted Russia to catch up with the rest of the world in production of goods….at the expense of the people (food, clothing, housing, ect)

Page 5: Totalitarianism. Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4 Revolutions both peaceful and violent

Agricultural Revolution

• Collective Farms- Hundreds of families worked on large farms to make food for the country.

• 5-10 million die under protest and starvation.

Page 6: Totalitarianism. Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4 Revolutions both peaceful and violent

Daily Life under Stalin

• Citizens were better educated and more skilled

• Citizens also lost personal freedoms and severe shortages of everyday goods such as food.

• Women had greater rights (became doctors, factory workers, ect..) However, they were also expected to do all of the household chores as well.

Page 7: Totalitarianism. Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4 Revolutions both peaceful and violent

Imperial China Collapses

• Qing Dynasty falls in 1911 (had ruled since 1644).

• Sun Yixian- becomes the first president of the Republic of China.

• Things did not go well and then WWI broke out. China joined the allies, hoping to get lands back from Germany……However, the Versailles Treaty gave the land to Japan and demonstrations broke out in China.

Page 8: Totalitarianism. Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4 Revolutions both peaceful and violent

China’s Greatest Revolutionary Leader Emerges

• Mao Zedong- he was an assistant librarian at Beijing University.

• Wanted communism for China.• Chinese Civil War breaks out- The communists

under Zedong were outnumbered 700,000 to 100,000. They were forced into The Long March- a six thousand mile march; many died along the way.

Page 9: Totalitarianism. Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4 Revolutions both peaceful and violent

Jiang Jieshi and the Nationalists

• Greatly outnumbered the Communists• Promised democracy and civil rights• Had many Communists killed• First President of the Nationalist Party in China• Forced Mao and the Communists to abandon

their capital and flee to the mountains.

Page 10: Totalitarianism. Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4 Revolutions both peaceful and violent

The Long March

Page 11: Totalitarianism. Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4 Revolutions both peaceful and violent

Civil War SuspendedIn 1931 Japan watched as China fought each other in civil war.Japan invades Manchuria China and takes over the industry there.By 1938 Japan controlled most of China.Truce between the Communists and the Nationalists….however, they still battled until 1949.

Page 12: Totalitarianism. Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4 Revolutions both peaceful and violent

Indian Nationalism Grows

Page 13: Totalitarianism. Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4 Revolutions both peaceful and violent

India under British Rule

• Two groups wanted to gain control from the British: The Hindu Indian National Congress (Congress Party) and the Muslim League.

• During WWI over 1 million Indians enlisted to fight for the British. They were promised reforms which would lead to self government….they did not get those promises.

Page 14: Totalitarianism. Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4 Revolutions both peaceful and violent

Violence

• The Indians became violent and wanted the promised reforms.

• In response the British passed the Rowlatt Acts- laws allowed the government to jail protesters without trial for as long as two years.

• Amristar Massacre- to protest the acts 10,000 Indians held festivals in Punjab in an enclosed area behind the walls of the city. British soldiers fired on the crowd killing over 400 and wounding over 1200!

Page 15: Totalitarianism. Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4 Revolutions both peaceful and violent

Gandhi preachers non-violence

• After the massacre, millions of Indians were now in favor of self-rule

• Mohandas Gandhi- emerges as the leader of the independence movement. The “Great Soul” endorsed non-violent protest.

• Civil Disobedience- deliberate refusal to obey an unjust law

• Boycotts used to put a strain on the British economy….Gandhi even spent two hours/day weaving his own clothes!

• Strikes and Demonstrations- closed factories, ect.

Page 16: Totalitarianism. Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4 Revolutions both peaceful and violent

The Great Salt March

• The British passed laws that Indians could only buy salt from them at a high tax.

• Gandhi and his followers walked 240 miles to the coast where they began to get salt from evaporated sea water; in protest of the British.

• *Read page 889• 60,000 people including Gandhi were

arrested.

Page 17: Totalitarianism. Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4 Revolutions both peaceful and violent

Limited Self-Rule. Who will rule India?

Muslim• Outnumbered by the

Hindus• Muslim League• 100 million strong after

WWII

Hindu• Over 350 million after WWII• Battles are still raging.• Indian independence (full)

in 1947.• Chapter 34

Page 18: Totalitarianism. Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4 Revolutions both peaceful and violent

Nationalism in Southwest Asia

Ottoman Empire 1914 After WWI

Page 19: Totalitarianism. Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4 Revolutions both peaceful and violent

Turkey, Iran, Saudi Arabia

Turkey, Iran• Republic of Turkey; first

republic in Southwest Asia• Laws that separated the

laws of Islam from the laws of the country

• Persia becomes Iran• Built roads, schools, gave

women more rights

Saudi Arabia• Held strictly to Islamic Law.• Brought in some modern

technology, but, resisted modernization because of religion.

• Oil drove industry in the region.

• Geologists later discovered that 2/3 of the worlds oil reserves were located around the Persian Gulf.

Page 20: Totalitarianism. Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia 30.4 Revolutions both peaceful and violent

Oil and PetroleumBecause of oil and petroleum products many nations still wanted to control Southwest Asia.