Mohandas Gandhi's 24-day March to the Sea, from March 12 to April 5,
1930, was a pivotal moment in India's quest to become an independent
country no longer ruled by Great Britain. With over 70 marchers, Gandhi
walked from his hometown near Ahmedabad to the seacoast near Dandi. The
march was a non-violent means to protest the taxes that Great Britain
had imposed on salt-not the salt that the Indians could get from the
sea, but the salt that Great Britain forced them to buy. Gandhi believed
that peaceful protests were an effective way to challenge British law,
and his peaceful but ultimately successful movement became known as
Satyagraha.