Pochampally in Nalgonda district of Telengana became famous in April,

Pochampally in Nalgonda district of Telengana became famous in April, 1951 because

the Bhoodan movement was launched there by Vinoba Bhave
the landless peasants rose up in arms against the landlords
it witnessed violent anti-Hindi agitation
Silk weavers' cooperative was formed for the first time in India
This question was previously asked in
UPSC NDA-1 – 2015
Pochampally, a village now in Telangana (then part of Hyderabad State), gained prominence in April 1951 because it was the starting point of the Bhoodan Movement (Land Gift Movement) led by Acharya Vinoba Bhave. Vinoba Bhave was undertaking a walking tour in the region, which had recently experienced the Telengana peasant uprising. On April 18, 1951, while addressing a meeting in Pochampally, some landless villagers requested land. A local landlord, Vedire Ramachandra Reddy, spontaneously offered to donate 100 acres of his land. This act inspired Vinoba Bhave to launch the Bhoodan movement, appealing to landowners across India to donate land for redistribution to the landless poor as a voluntary, non-violent land reform initiative.
Pochampally is historically significant as the location where the Bhoodan movement, a key post-independence social movement focused on voluntary land reform, originated.
The Bhoodan movement aimed to bring about agrarian revolution through peaceful means, based on Gandhian principles. It later evolved into the Gramdan movement, where entire villages were donated for collective ownership. While Pochampally is also famous for its Ikat weaving, its fame in the context of April 1951 is directly linked to the launch of the Bhoodan movement.
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