MUMBAI, Oct. 12 -- A woman in a sari worn in the style of the Kolis, a central, dhoti-like swathe of cloth transforming the wrapped fabric into no-nonsense workwear, stands on the footrest of a police van. Inside, silhouettes of women with their heads covered by their saris are visible. A policeman with a baton stands outside the van. More men in uniform are milling in the background. This photograph shows the aftermath of a protest organised by women in Bandra in July 1930. The protest was aimed at the auction of toddy shop licences, and the women sitting in the van were eventually dropped off at Ghatkopar, about 25 km away, in the Bombay Suburban District. This is one of the 115 photographs that will be on display for six months at the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya (CSMVS Museum) starting October 11, and which depict the protests of common men and women of Mumbai (then Bombay) during the Civil Disobedience movement. The photographs were first found in a vintage album titled the Collections of Photographs of Old Congress Party (1930-31), which is informally called the "Nursey" album, from the name "KL Nursey" stamped on the spine. They now form part of the Alkazi Collection of Photography (ACP) maintained by the Alkazi Foundation for the Arts founded by the late theatre director, Ebrahim Alkazi. A book, titled, Photographing Civil Disobedience: Bombay (1930-1931), published by Mapin, bearing most of these photographs will also be released on Saturday. Co-edited by Avrati Bhatnagar and Sumathi Ramaswamy, US-based historians of colonial and modern South Asia, the book comprises essays on various aspects of what the editors call "the disobedient streets of Bombay" in those crucial years of the Indian national movement. The Civil Disobedience movement is understood to have commenced on March 12, 1930, when Mahatma Gandhi led a host of non-violent protestors on foot from the Sabarmati Ashram to Dandi, located on the coastline of Gujarat, to revolt against the salt laws imposed by the British. The 24-day march served as a lightning rod for ordinary men and women to claim their right to protest as citizens of a state under colonial rule, making it one of the most successful mass movements of the 20th century. The movement was suspended for a duration in 1931, and eventually called off in 1934. Though history books highlight the role played by Gandhi and other Congress leaders in shaping the movement, it is the role played by masses that this exhibition draws our attention to. "This album makes such a strong visual case for taking stock of the power of ordinary people, especially the people of Bombay, to bring about change and speak up to perceived injustices," Bhatnagar said....