The period 1939-1944 covering the outbreak of World War II and India's involuntary involvement in the conflict, the Indian National Congress's principled opposition to India's participation without the consent of Indian people, the Congress Working Committee's statement of 15 September 1939 insisting that Indians alone must decide on matters of war and peace, Viceroy Linlithgow's 17 October 1939 announcement offering dominion status and a post-war constitutional review, the resignation of Congress ministers from eight provinces in October-November 1939, Jinnah and the Muslim League celebrating the resignations as a Day of Deliverance; the August Offer of 1940 with its promises of dominion status, expansion of the Viceroy's Executive Council, an Advisory War Council, and a post-war Constituent Assembly, the rejection of the offer by both Congress and Muslim League, Gandhi's launch of Individual Satyagraha in 1940 with Vinoba Bhave as the first satyagrahi followed by Nehru, and the dual purpose of Individual Satyagraha in expressing protest while preparing people for a larger movement; the Cripps Mission of March 1942 sent under pressure from Allied powers and the Japanese threat, its proposals of dominion status after the war, a Constituent Assembly, and the option for provinces to stay outside the Indian union, Gandhi's dismissal of the proposals as a post-dated cheque, the key departures from previous offers including constitution-making solely in Indian hands and the blueprint for partition; the Quit India Movement launched on 8 August 1942 at Gowalia Tank Maidan in Bombay with Gandhi's Do or Die call, the arrest of all major leaders on 9 August, the three phases of the movement from urban protests to rural peasant rebellion to revolutionary youth activity, the shooting of school students at Patna Secretariat on 11 August, Jai Prakash Narayan's Azad Dasta guerrilla force, the establishment of parallel governments at Satara, Ballia, Champaran, and Midnapore, Usha Mehta's secret radio broadcasts, Aruna Asaf Ali's role in Delhi, and Ram Manohar Lohia's mobilisation in northern India; the salient features including its character as an all-India mass movement, the non-participation of the Communist Party, Hindu Mahasabha, and Muslim League central leadership while the Muslim League student wing joined, and the comparison of its intensity with the Revolt of 1857; and the lasting significance of the movement in convincing the British that their departure from India was inevitable, the merger of violence and non-violence, the emergence of parallel governments, and the movement's role in placing independence as the immediate agenda of national negotiations