Tebhaga
Peasant Movement
The Tebhaga movement
was a militant campaign initiated in Bengal by the Kisan Sabha (peasants
front of Communist Party of India) in 1946. At that time share-cropping
peasants (essentially, tenants) had to give half of their harvest to the owners
of the land. The demand
of the Tebhaga (sharing by thirds) movement was to reduce the share given to
landlords to one third. In many areas the agitations turned
violent, and landlords fled villages leaving parts of the countryside in the
hands of Kisan Sabha. As a response to the agitations, the then Muslim
League ministry in the province launched the Bargadari Act, which
provided that the share of the harvest given to the landlords would be limited
to one third of the total. But the law was not fully implemented.
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