Sanskrit for of one's own country, it turned a cloth boycott into a freedom movement.
The Sanskrit roots are sva (self, one's own) and deśa (country).1 Combined, svadeśī means of one's own country. The word entered English around 1900, initially through Bengali and Hindi.
The Swadeshi Movement was formally proclaimed on August 7, 1905, in response to Lord Curzon's decision to partition Bengal. Indian leaders organized a boycott of British-made goods and promoted domestic production.2 Mahatma Gandhi later described Swadeshi as the soul of swaraj (self-rule).
Gandhi transformed Swadeshi from a political boycott into a moral discipline. Writing in 1916, he described it as the spirit that restricts us to the use and service of our immediate surroundings.3 The charkha (spinning wheel) became its most powerful symbol: a tool of economic self-sufficiency and, simultaneously, a rejection of industrial dependence on British textile mills.
On July 31, 1921, Gandhi led a public burning of 150,000 English cloths in Mumbai, a gesture that fused economics with resistance.4 The spinning wheel was elevated to the Indian national flag. On August 15, 1947, a hand-spun khadi tricolor was raised as British rule ended.
E.F. Schumacher, author of Small Is Beautiful (1973), credited Gandhi's concept of Swadeshi as an influence on his own economic philosophy of local self-reliance.5