Quit India: The Final Push
The 1942 Quit India Movement — Gandhi's most radical demand — and how World War II transformed the independence struggle.
'Do or Die'
By 1942, World War II had changed the calculus of Indian independence. Japan had swept through Southeast Asia and was threatening India's borders. Britain desperately needed Indian cooperation for the war effort, but refused to promise independence in return. The Cripps Mission of March 1942 — offering dominion status after the war — was rejected by both the Congress and the Muslim League.
On August 8, 1942, Gandhi launched the Quit India Movement with the call 'Do or Die.' It was his most radical demand: the British must leave India immediately. The British responded with the largest mass arrest in Indian history, imprisoning Gandhi and virtually the entire Congress leadership. Leaderless, the movement turned violent in many areas — factories were sabotaged, railways disrupted, and telegraph lines cut. The British suppressed it with force, killing an estimated 2,500 people.