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Gandhi had only been
in South Africa for about a week when he was asked to take the long trip from
Natal to the capital of the Dutch-governed Transvaal province of South Africa
for his case. It was to be a several day trip, including transportation by
train and by stagecoach. When Gandhi boarded the first train of his journey at
the Pietermartizburg station, railroad officials told Gandhi that he needed to
transfer to the third-class passenger car. When Gandhi, who was holding
first-class passenger tickets, refused to move, a policeman came and threw him
off the train.
That was not the last
of the injustices Gandhi suffered on this trip. As Gandhi talked to other
Indians in South Africa (derogatorily called "coolies"), he found
that his experiences were most definitely not isolated incidents but rather,
these types of situations were common. During that first night of his trip,
sitting in the cold of the railroad station after being thrown off the train,
Gandhi contemplated whether he should go back home to India or to fight the
discrimination. After much thought, Gandhi decided that he could not let these
injustices continue and that he was going to fight to change these
discriminatory practices.
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