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Jallianwala Bagh massacre

The Jallianwala Bagh massacre, also known as the Amritsar massacre, took place on 13 April 1919. A large peaceful crowd had gathered at the Jallianwala Bagh in Amritsar, Punjab, to protest against the Rowlatt Act and arrest of pro-independence activists Saifuddin Kitchlew and Satyapal. In response to the public gathering, the temporary Brigadier general, R. E. H. Dyer, surrounded the protesters with his Gurkha, Baloch, Rajput and Sikh from 2-9th Gurkhas, the 54th Sikhs and the 59th Scinde Rifles of British Indian Army.[4] The Jallianwala Bagh could only be exited on one side, as its other three sides were enclosed by buildings. After blocking the exit with his troops, he ordered them to shoot at the crowd, continuing to fire even as the protestors tried to flee. The troops kept on firing until their ammunition was exhausted.[5] Estimates of those killed vary between 379 and 1500+ people[1] and over 1,200 other people were injured of whom 192 were seriously injured.[6][7] Responses polarised both the British and Indian peoples. This incident shocked Rabindranath Tagore, an Indian polymath and the first Asian Nobel laureate, to such an extent that he renounced his knighthood.

Narrow passage to the entrance of Jallianwala Bagh Garden where the massacre occurred
Location of Amritsar in India
LocationAmritsar, Punjab, British India (present-day Amritsar, Punjab, India)
Coordinates31°37′14″N 74°52′50″E / 31.62056°N 74.88056°E / 31.62056; 74.88056Coordinates: 31°37′14″N 74°52′50″E / 31.62056°N 74.88056°E / 31.62056; 74.88056
Date13 April 1919; 103 years ago (1919-04-13)
05:30 p.m (IST)
TargetCrowd of nonviolent protesters, along with Baisakhi pilgrims, who had gathered in Jallianwala Bagh, Amritsar
Attack type
Massacre
WeaponsLee-Enfield rifles
Deaths379[1] – 1000+[2]
Injured~ 1,500[2]
PerpetratorsBrig.-Gen.[3] R. E. H. Dyer, in charge of 50 soldiers of the 9th Gurkha Rifles, 54th Sikh regiment (Frontier Force) and 59th Scinde Rifles
Mural depicting 1919 Amritsar massacre

The massacre caused a re-evaluation by the British Army of its military role against civilians to "minimal force whenever possible", although later British actions during the Mau Mau rebellion in the Kenya Colony have led historian Huw Bennett to comment that the new policy could be put aside.[8] The army was retrained and developed less violent tactics for crowd control.[9] The level of casual brutality, and lack of any accountability, stunned the entire nation,[10] resulting in a wrenching loss of faith of the general Indian public in the intentions of the United Kingdom.[11] The attack was condemned by the Secretary of State for War, Winston Churchill, as "unutterably monstrous", and in the UK House of Commons debate on 8 July 1920 Members of Parliament voted 247 to 37 against Dyer. The ineffective inquiry, together with the initial accolades for Dyer, fuelled great widespread anger against the British among the Indian populace, leading to the non-cooperation movement of 1920–22.[12] Some historians consider the episode a decisive step towards the end of British rule in India.[13] Britain has never formally apologised for the massacre but expressed "deep regret" in 2019.[14]

Background

Defence of India Act

During World War I, British India contributed to the British war effort by providing men and resources. Millions of Indian soldiers and labourers served in Europe, Africa, and the Middle East, while both the Indian administration and the princes sent large supplies of food, money, and ammunition. Bengal and Punjab remained sources of anti-colonial activities. Revolutionary attacks in Bengal, associated increasingly with disturbances in Punjab, were enough to nearly paralyse the regional administration.[15][16] Of these, a pan-Indian mutiny in the British Indian Army planned for February 1915 was the most prominent amongst a number of plots formulated between 1914 and 1917 by Indian nationalists in India, the United States and Germany.

The planned February mutiny was ultimately thwarted when British intelligence infiltrated the Ghadarite movement, arresting key figures. Mutinies in smaller units and garrisons within India were also crushed. In the scenario of the British war effort and the threat from the militant movement in India, the Defence of India Act 1915 was passed limiting civil and political liberties. Michael O'Dwyer, then the Lieutenant Governor of Punjab, was one of the strongest proponents of the act, in no small part due to the Ghadarite threat in the province.[17]

The Rowlatt Act

The costs of the protracted war in money and manpower were great. High casualty rates in the war, increasing inflation after the end, compounded by heavy taxation, the deadly 1918 flu pandemic, and the disruption of trade during the war escalated human suffering in India. The pre-war Indian nationalist sentiment was revived as moderate and extremist groups of the Indian National Congress ended their differences to unify. In 1916, the Congress was successful in establishing the Lucknow Pact, a temporary alliance with the All-India Muslim League. British political concessions and Whitehall's India Policy after World War I began to change, with the passage of Montagu–Chelmsford Reforms, which initiated the first round of political reform in the Indian subcontinent in 1917.[18][19][20] However, this was deemed insufficient in reforms by the Indian political movement. Mahatma Gandhi, recently returned to India, began emerging as an increasingly charismatic leader under whose leadership civil disobedience movements grew rapidly as an expression of political unrest.[21]

The recently crushed Ghadar conspiracy, the presence of Raja Mahendra Pratap's Kabul mission in Afghanistan (with possible links to then nascent Bolshevik Russia), and a still-active revolutionary movement especially in Punjab and Bengal (as well as worsening civil unrest throughout India) led to the appointment of a sedition committee in 1918 chaired by Sidney Rowlatt, an Anglo-Egyptian judge. It was tasked to evaluate German and Bolshevik links to the militant movement in India, especially in Punjab and Bengal. On the recommendations of the committee, the Rowlatt Act, an extension of the Defence of India Act 1915, was enforced in India to limit civil liberties.[17][22][23][24][25]

The passage of the Rowlatt Act in 1919 precipitated large scale political unrest throughout India. Ominously, in 1919, the Third Anglo-Afghan War began in the wake of Amir Habibullah's assassination and institution of Amanullah in a system strongly influenced by the political figures courted by the Kabul mission during the world war. As a reaction to the Rowlatt act, Muhammad Ali Jinnah resigned from his Bombay seat, writing in a letter to the Viceroy, "I, therefore, as a protest against the passing of the Bill and the manner in which it was passed tender my resignation.... ... a Government that passes or sanctions such a law in times of peace forfeits its claim to be called a civilised government".[26] In India, Gandhi's call for protest against the Rowlatt Act achieved an unprecedented response of furious unrest and protests.


Before the massacre

 
The Jallianwalla Bagh in 1919, months after the massacre

Especially in Punjab, the situation was deteriorating rapidly, with disruptions of rail, telegraph, and communication systems. The movement was at its peak before the end of the first week of April, with some recording that "practically the whole of Lahore was on the streets, the immense crowd that passed through Anarkali Bazaar was estimated to be around 20,000".[27] Many officers in the Indian army believed revolt was possible, and they prepared for the worst. The British Lieutenant-Governor of Punjab, Michael O'Dwyer, is said to have believed that these were the early and ill-concealed signs of a conspiracy for a coordinated revolt planned around May, on the lines of the 1857 revolt, at a time when British troops would have withdrawn to the hills for the summer.[28]

The Amritsar massacre and other events at about the same time, have been described by some historians as the result of a concerted plan by the Punjab administration to suppress such a conspiracy.[29] James Houssemayne Du Boulay is said to have ascribed a direct relationship between the fear of a Ghadarite uprising in the midst of an increasingly tense situation in Punjab, and the British response that ended in the massacre.[30]

On 10 April 1919, there was a protest at the residence of Miles Irving, the Deputy Commissioner of Amritsar. The demonstration was to demand the release of two popular leaders of the Indian Independence Movement, Satya Pal and Saifuddin Kitchlew, who had been earlier arrested by the government and moved to a secret location. Both were proponents of the Satyagraha movement led by Gandhi. A military picket shot at the crowd, killing several protesters and setting off a series of violent events. Riotous crowds carried out arson attacks on British banks, killed several British people and assaulted two British women.[31]

 
All native men were forced to crawl the Kucha Kurrichhan on their hands and knees as punishment, 1919

On 11 April, Marcella Sherwood, an elderly English missionary, fearing for the safety of the approximately 600 Indian children under her care, was on her way to shut the schools and send the children home.[32][33] While travelling through a narrow street called the Kucha Kurrichhan, she was caught by a mob who violently attacked her. She was rescued by some local Indians, including the father of one of her pupils, who hid her from the mob and then smuggled her to the safety of Gobindgarh Fort.[33][34] After visiting Sherwood on 19 April, the Raj's local commander, General Dyer, enraged at the assault, issued an order requiring every Indian man using that street to crawl its length on his hands and knees as a punishment.[32][35] Colonel Dyer later explained to a British inspector: "Some Indians crawl face downwards in front of their gods. I wanted them to know that a British woman is as sacred as a Hindu god and therefore they have to crawl in front of her, too."[36] He also authorised the indiscriminate, public whipping of locals who came within lathi length of a police officer. Marcella Sherwood later defended Colonel Dyer, describing him "as the saviour of the Punjab".[35]

For the next two days, the city of Amritsar was quiet, but violence continued in other parts of Punjab. Railway lines were cut, telegraph posts destroyed, government buildings burnt, and three Europeans murdered. By 13 April, the British government had decided to put most of Punjab under martial law. The legislation restricted a number of civil liberties, including freedom of assembly; gatherings of more than four people were banned.[37]

On the evening of 12 April, the leaders of the hartal in Amritsar held a meeting at the Hindu College – Dhab Khatikan. At the meeting, Hans Raj, an aide to Kitchlew, announced a public protest meeting would be held at 16:30 the following day in the Jallianwala Bagh, to be organised by Muhammad Bashir and chaired by a senior and respected Congress Party leader, Lal Kanhyalal Bhatia. A series of resolutions protesting against the Rowlatt Act, the recent actions of the British authorities and the detention of Satyapal and Kitchlew was drawn up and approved, after which the meeting adjourned.[38]

The massacre

 
The Martyrs' Well, at Jallianwala Bagh. 120 bodies were recovered from this well as per inscription on it.[39]

On Sunday, 13 April 1919, Dyer, convinced a major insurrection could take place, banned all meetings. This notice was not widely disseminated, and many villagers gathered in the Bagh to celebrate the important Sikh and Hindu festival of Baisakhi, and peacefully protest the arrest and deportation of two national leaders, Satyapal and Saifuddin Kitchlew.[40]

At 9:00 on the morning of 13 April 1919, the traditional festival of Baisakhi, Reginald Dyer, the acting military commander for Amritsar and its environs, proceeded through the city with several city officials, announcing the implementation of a pass system to enter or leave Amritsar, a curfew beginning at 20:00 that night and a ban on all processions and public meetings of four or more persons. The proclamation was read and explained in English, Urdu, Hindi, and Punjabi, but few paid it any heed or appear to have learned of it later.[41] Meanwhile, local police had received intelligence of the planned meeting in the Jallianwala Bagh through word of mouth and plainclothes detectives in the crowds. At 12:40, Dyer was informed of the meeting and returned to his base at around 13:30 to decide how to handle it.[42]

By mid-afternoon, thousands of Indians had gathered in the Jallianwala Bagh (garden) near the Harmandir Sahib in Amritsar. Many who were present had earlier worshipped at the Golden Temple, and were passing through the Bagh on their way home. The Bagh was (and remains today) an open area of six to seven acres, roughly 200 yards by 200 yards in size, and surrounded on all sides by walls roughly 10 feet in height. Balconies of houses three to four stories tall overlooked the Bagh, and five narrow entrances opened onto it, several with lockable gates. During the rainy season, it was planted with crops, but served as a local meeting and recreation area for much of the year.[43] In the centre of the Bagh was a samadhi (cremation site) and a large well partly filled with water which measured about 20 feet in diameter.[43]

Apart from pilgrims, Amritsar had filled up over the preceding days with farmers, traders, and merchants attending the annual Baisakhi horse and cattle fair. The city police closed the fair at 14:00 that afternoon, resulting in an even larger number of people drifting into the Jallianwala Bagh.

Dyer arranged for an aeroplane to overfly the Bagh and estimate the size of the crowd, that he reported was about 6,000, while the Hunter Commission estimates a crowd of 10,000 to 20,000 had assembled by the time of Dyer's arrival.[43][6] Colonel Dyer and Deputy Commissioner Irving, the senior civil authority for Amritsar, took no actions to prevent the crowd assembling, or to peacefully disperse the crowds. This would later be a serious criticism levelled at both Dyer and Irving.

An hour after the meeting began as scheduled at 17:30, Colonel Dyer arrived at the Bagh with a group of 50 troops, including 25 Gurkhas of 1/9 Gurkha Rifles (1st battalion, 9th Gurkha Rifles), Pathans and Baluch and 59th Sindh Rifles.[44] Fifty of them were armed with .303 Lee–Enfield bolt-action rifles. Dyer may have specifically chosen troops from those ethnic groups due to their proven loyalty to the British. He had also brought two armoured cars armed with machine guns; however, the vehicles could not enter the compound through the narrow entrances. The Jallianwala Bagh was surrounded on all sides by houses and buildings and had only five narrow entrances, most kept permanently locked. The main entrance was relatively wide, but was guarded heavily by the troops backed by the armoured vehicles so as to prevent anyone from getting out.

Dyer, without warning the crowd to disperse, blocked the main exits. Dyer ordered his troops to begin shooting toward the densest sections of the crowd in front of the available narrow exits, where panicked crowds were trying to leave the Bagh. Firing continued for approximately ten minutes. Unarmed civilians including men, women, elderly people and children were killed. This incident came to be known as the Amritsar massacre. Cease-fire was ordered only when ammunition supplies were almost exhausted.[45] He stated later that this act "was not to disperse the meeting but to punish the Indians for disobedience."[46]

The following day Dyer stated in a report that "I have heard that between 200 and 300 of the crowd were killed. My party fired 1,650 rounds".[47][45] Apart from the many deaths directly from the shooting, a number of people died of crushing in the stampedes at the narrow gates or by jumping into the solitary well on the compound to escape the shooting. A plaque, placed at the site after independence, states that 120 bodies were removed from the well. Dyer pushed the curfew time earlier than the usual time; therefore, the wounded could not be moved from where they had fallen and more who had been injured then died during the night.[48]

Casualties

The number of total casualties is disputed. The following morning's newspapers quoted an erroneous initial figure of 200 casualties, offered by the Associated Press, e.g.

"News has been received from the Punjab that the Amritsar mob has again broken out in a violent attack against the authorities. The rebels were repulsed by the military and they suffered 200 casualties (sic)."

— The Times of India, 14 April 1919[49]

The Government of Punjab, criticised by the Hunter Commission for not gathering accurate figures, only offered the same approximate figure of 200. When interviewed by the members of the committee a senior civil servant in Punjab admitted that the actual figure could be higher.[6] The Sewa Samiti society independently carried out an investigation and reported 379 deaths, and 192 seriously wounded. The Hunter Commission based their figures of 379 deaths, and approximately 3 times that number injured, suggesting 1500 casualties.[6] At the meeting of the Imperial Legislative Council held on 12 September 1919, the investigation led by Pandit Madan Mohan Malviya concluded that there were 42 boys among the dead, the youngest of them only 7 months old.[50] The Hunter commission confirmed the deaths of 337 men, 41 boys and a six-week-old baby.[6]

In July 1919, three months after the massacre, officials were tasked with finding who had been killed by inviting inhabitants of the city to volunteer information about those who had died.[6] This information was incomplete due to fear that those who participated would be identified as having been present at the meeting, and some of the dead may not have had close relations in the area.[51]

Winston Churchill reported nearly 400 slaughtered, and 3 or 4 times the number wounded to the Westminster Parliament, on 8 July 1920.[52]

Since the official figures were obviously flawed regarding the size of the crowd (6,000–20,000[6]), the number of rounds fired and the period of shooting, the Indian National Congress instituted a separate inquiry of its own, with conclusions that differed considerably from the British Government's inquiry. The casualty number quoted by the Congress was more than 1,500, with approximately 1,000 being killed.[2]

Indian nationalist Swami Shraddhanand wrote to Gandhi of 1500 deaths in the incident.[53]

The British Government tried to suppress information of the massacre,[54] but news spread in India and widespread outrage ensued; details of the massacre did not become known in Britain until December 1919.[55][56][57]

Aftermath

This event caused many moderate Indians to abandon their previous loyalty to the British and become nationalists distrustful of British rule.[58]

Colonel Dyer reported to his superiors that he had been "confronted by a revolutionary army", to which Major General William Beynon replied: "Your action was correct and Lieutenant Governor approves."[59] O'Dwyer requested that martial law should be imposed upon Amritsar and other areas, and this was granted by Viceroy Lord Chelmsford.[60][61]

Both Secretary of State for War Winston Churchill and former Prime Minister H. H. Asquith, however, openly condemned the attack, Churchill referring to it as "unutterably monstrous", while Asquith called it "one of the worst, most dreadful, outrages in the whole of our history".[62] Churchill, in the House of Commons debate of 8 July 1920, said, "The crowd was unarmed, except with bludgeons. It was not attacking anybody or anything ... When fire had been opened upon it to disperse it, it tried to run away. Pinned up in a narrow place considerably smaller than Trafalgar Square, with hardly any exits, and packed together so that one bullet would drive through three or four bodies, the people ran madly this way and the other. When the fire was directed upon the centre, they ran to the sides. The fire was then directed to the sides. Many threw themselves down on the ground, the fire was then directed down on the ground. This was continued to 8 to 10 minutes, and it stopped only when the ammunition had reached the point of exhaustion."[63]

After Churchill's speech in the House of Commons debate, MPs voted 247 to 37 against Dyer and in support of the Government.[64] Cloake reports that despite the official rebuke, many Britons still "thought him a hero for saving the rule of British law in India."[65]

Rabindranath Tagore received the news of the massacre by 22 May 1919. He tried to arrange a protest meeting in Calcutta and finally decided to renounce his British knighthood as "a symbolic act of protest".[66] In the repudiation letter, dated 31 May 1919 and addressed to the Viceroy of India, Lord Chelmsford, he wrote "I ... wish to stand, shorn, of all special distinctions, by the side of those of my countrymen who, for their so called insignificance, are liable to suffer degradation not fit for human beings."[67]

Gupta describes the letter written by Tagore as "historic". He writes that Tagore "renounced his knighthood in protest against the inhuman cruelty of the British Army to the people of Punjab", and he quotes Tagore's letter to the Viceroy "The enormity of the measures taken by the Government in Punjab for quelling some local disturbances has, with a rude shock, revealed to our minds the helplessness of our position as British subjects in India ... [T]he very least that I can do for my country is to take all consequences upon myself in giving voice to the protest of the millions of my countrymen, surprised into dumb anguish of terror. The time has come when badges of honour make our shame glaring in the incongruous context of humiliation ..."[68] English Writings of Rabindranath Tagore Miscellaneous Writings Vol# 8 carries a facsimile of this hand written letter.[69]

 
Disorders Inquiry Committee 1919–1920 (report) Calcutta- Superintendent Government Printing, India 1920

Hunter Commission

On 14 October 1919, after orders issued by the Secretary of State for India, Edwin Montagu, the Government of India announced the formation of a committee of inquiry into the events in Punjab. Referred to as the Disorders Inquiry Committee, it was later more widely known as the Hunter Commission. It was named after the chairman, William, Lord Hunter, former Solicitor-General for Scotland and Senator of the College of Justice in Scotland. The stated purpose of the commission was to "investigate the recent disturbances in Bombay, Delhi and Punjab, about their causes, and the measures taken to cope with them".[70][71] The members of the commission were:

  • Lord Hunter, Chairman of the Commission
  • Mr Justice George C. Rankin of Calcutta
  • Sir Chimanlal Harilal Setalvad, Vice-Chancellor of Bombay University and advocate of the Bombay High Court
  • W.F. Rice, member of the Home Department
  • Major-General Sir George Barrow, KCB, KCMG, GOC Peshawar Division
  • Pandit Jagat Narayan, lawyer and Member of the Legislative Council of the United Provinces
  • Thomas Smith, Member of the Legislative Council of the United Provinces
  • Sardar Sahibzada Sultan Ahmad Khan, lawyer from Gwalior State
  • H.C. Stokes, Secretary of the Commission and member of the Home Department[71]

After meeting in New Delhi on 29 October, the commission took statements from witnesses over the following weeks.[72] Witnesses were called in Delhi, Ahmedabad, Bombay, and Lahore. Although the commission as such was not a formally constituted court of law, meaning witnesses were not subject to questioning under oath, its members managed to elicit detailed accounts and statements from witnesses by rigorous cross-questioning. In general, it was felt the commission had been very thorough in its enquiries.[71] After reaching Lahore in November, the commission wound up its initial inquiries by examining the principal witnesses to the events in Amritsar. The commission held its official sittings in the Lahore Town Hall building near Anarkali Bazaar.

On 19 November, Dyer was ordered to appear before the commission. Although his military superiors had suggested he be represented by legal counsel at the inquiry, Dyer refused this suggestion and appeared alone.[71] Initially questioned by Lord Hunter, Dyer stated he had come to know about the meeting at the Jallianwala Bagh at 12:40 hours that day but did not attempt to prevent it. He stated that he had gone to the Bagh with the deliberate intention of opening fire if he found a crowd assembled there. Patterson says Dyer explained his sense of honour to the Hunter Commission by saying, "I think it quite possible that I could have dispersed the crowd without firing, but they would have come back again and laughed, and I would have made, what I consider, a fool of myself."[73] Dyer further reiterated his belief that the crowd in the Bagh was one of "rebels who were trying to isolate my forces and cut me off from other supplies. Therefore, I considered it my duty to fire on them and to fire well".[71]

After Mr. Justice Rankin had questioned Dyer, Sir Chimanlal Setalvad enquired:

Sir Chimanlal: Supposing the passage was sufficient to allow the armoured cars to go in, would you have opened fire with the machine guns?

Dyer: I think probably, yes.

Sir Chimanlal: In that case, the casualties would have been much higher?

Dyer: Yes.[71]

Dyer further stated that his intentions had been to strike terror throughout Punjab and in doing so, reduce the moral stature of the "rebels". He said he did not stop the shooting when the crowd began to disperse because he thought it was his duty to keep shooting until the crowd dispersed, and that minimal shooting would not prove effective. In fact, he continued the shooting until the ammunition was almost exhausted.[74] He stated that he did not make any effort to tend to the wounded after the shooting: "Certainly not. It was not my job. Hospitals were open and they could have gone there."[75]

Exhausted from the rigorous cross-examination questioning and unwell, Dyer was then released. Over the next several months, while the commission wrote its final report, the British press, as well as many MPs, turned increasingly hostile towards Dyer as the full extent of the massacre and his statements at the inquiry became widely known.[71] Lord Chelmsford refused to comment until the Commission had been wound up. In the meanwhile, Dyer became seriously ill with jaundice and arteriosclerosis, and was hospitalised.[71]

Although the members of the commission had been divided by racial tensions following Dyer's statement, and though the Indian members had written a separate, minority report, the final report, comprising six volumes of evidence and released on 8 March 1920, unanimously condemned Dyer's actions.[71] In "continuing firing as long as he did, it appears to us that General Dyer committed a grave error."[76] Dissenting members argued that the martial law regime's use of force was wholly unjustified. "General Dyer thought he had crushed the rebellion and Sir Michael O'Dwyer was of the same view", they wrote, "(but) there was no rebellion which required to be crushed." The report concluded that:

  • Lack of notice to disperse from the Bagh, in the beginning, was an error.
  • The length of firing showed a grave error.
  • Dyer's motive of producing a sufficient moral effect was to be condemned.
  • Dyer had overstepped the bounds of his authority.
  • There had been no conspiracy to overthrow British rule in the Punjab.

The minority report of the Indian members further added that:

  • Proclamations banning public meetings were insufficiently distributed.
  • Innocent people were in the crowd, and there had been no violence in the Bagh beforehand.
  • Dyer should have either ordered his troops to help the wounded or instructed the civil authorities to do so.
  • Dyer's actions had been "inhuman and un-British" and had greatly injured the image of British rule in India.

The Hunter Commission did not impose any penal or disciplinary action because Dyer's actions were condoned by various superiors (later upheld by the Army Council).[77] The Legal and Home Members on the Viceroy's Executive Council ultimately decided that, though Dyer had acted in a callous and brutal way, military or legal prosecution would not be possible due to political reasons. However, he was finally found guilty of a mistaken notion of duty and relieved of his command on 23 March. He had been recommended for a CBE as a result of his service in the Third Afghan War; this recommendation was cancelled on 29 March 1920.

Reginald Dyer was disciplined by removal from his appointment, was passed over for promotion and was prohibited from further employment in India. He died in 1927.[78]

Demonstration at Gujranwala

Two days later, on 15 April, demonstrations occurred in Gujranwala protesting against the killings at Amritsar. Police and aircraft were used against the demonstrators, resulting in 12 deaths and 27 injuries. The Officer Commanding the Royal Air Force in India, Brigadier General N D K MacEwen stated later that:

I think we can fairly claim to have been of great use in the late riots, particularly at Gujranwala, where the crowd when looking at its nastiest was absolutely dispersed by a machine using bombs and Lewis guns.[79]

Assassination of Michael O'Dwyer

 

On 13 March 1940, at Caxton Hall in London, Udham Singh, an Indian independence activist from Sunam who had witnessed the events in Amritsar and had himself been wounded, shot and killed Michael O'Dwyer, the Lieutenant-Governor of Punjab at the time of the massacre, who had approved Dyer's action and was believed to have been the main planner.

Some, such as the nationalist newspaper Amrita Bazar Patrika, made statements supporting the killing. The common people and revolutionaries glorified the action of Udham Singh. Much of the press worldwide recalled the story of Jallianwala Bagh, and alleged O'Dwyer to have been responsible for the massacre. Singh was termed a "fighter for freedom" and his action was referred to in The Times newspaper as "an expression of the pent-up fury of the down-trodden Indian People".[80] Reporter and historian William L. Shirer wrote the next day, "Most of the other Indians I know [other than Gandhi] will feel this is divine retribution. O'Dwyer bore a share of responsibility in the 1919 Amritsar massacre, in which Gen. Dyer shot 1,500 Indians in cold blood. When I was at Amritsar eleven years after [the massacre] in 1930, the bitterness still stuck in the people there."[81]

In fascist countries, the incident was used for anti-British propaganda: Bergeret, published in large scale from Rome at that time, while commenting upon the Caxton Hall assassination, ascribed the greatest significance to the circumstance and praised the action of Udham Singh as courageous.[82] The Berliner Börsen Zeitung termed the event "The torch of Indian freedom". German radio reportedly broadcast: "The cry of tormented people spoke with shots."

At a public meeting in Kanpur, a spokesman had stated that "at last an insult and humiliation of the nation had been avenged". Similar sentiments were expressed in numerous other places across the country.[83] Fortnightly reports of the political situation in Bihar mentioned: "It is true that we had no love lost for Sir Michael. The indignities he heaped upon our countrymen in Punjab have not been forgotten." In its 18 March 1940 issue Amrita Bazar Patrika wrote: "O'Dwyer's name is connected with Punjab incidents which India will never forget." The New Statesman observed: "British conservatism has not discovered how to deal with Ireland after two centuries of rule. Similar comment may be made on British rule in India. Will the historians of the future have to record that it was not the Nazis but the British ruling class which destroyed the British Empire?" Singh had told the court at his trial:

 
Wide view of Jallianwala Bagh memorial

I did it because I had a grudge against him. He deserved it. He was the real culprit. He wanted to crush the spirit of my people, so I have crushed him. For full 21 years, I have been trying to wreak vengeance. I am happy that I have done the job. I am not scared of death. I am dying for my country. I have seen my people starving in India under the British rule. I have protested against this, it was my duty. What greater honour could be bestowed on me than death for the sake of my motherland?[84]

Singh was hanged for the murder on 31 July 1940. At that time, many, including Jawaharlal Nehru and Mahatma Gandhi, condemned the murder as senseless even if it was courageous. In 1952, Nehru (by then Prime Minister) honoured Udham Singh with the following statement, which appeared in the daily Partap:

I salute Shaheed-i-Azam Udham Singh with reverence who had kissed the noose so that we may be free.

Soon after this recognition by the Prime Minister, Udham Singh received the title of Shaheed, a name given to someone who has attained martyrdom or done something heroic on behalf of their country or religion.

Monument and legacy

 
Entrance to the present-day Jallianwala Bagh.
 
Memorial plaque at Jallianwala Bagh.
 
Memorial plaque in passageway of Jallianwala Bagh site.
 
Bullet holes in wall at Jallianwala Bagh memorial.
 
Martyrs Well at the Jallianwala Bagh memorial.
 
Bullet marks, visible on preserved walls, at present-day Jallianwala Bagh
 

A trust was founded in 1920 to build a memorial at the site after a resolution was passed by the Indian National Congress. In 1923, the trust purchased land for the project. A memorial, designed by American architect Benjamin Polk, was built on the site and inaugurated by President of India Rajendra Prasad on 13 April 1961, in the presence of Jawaharlal Nehru and other leaders. A flame was later added to the site.

The bullet marks remain on the walls and adjoining buildings to this day. The well into which many people jumped and drowned attempting to save themselves from the bullets is also a protected monument inside the park.

Formation of the Shiromani Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee

Shortly after the massacre, the official Sikh clergy of the Harmandir Sahib (Golden Temple) in Amritsar conferred upon Colonel Dyer the Saropa (the mark of distinguished service to the Sikh faith or, in general, humanity), sending shock waves among the Sikh community.[85] On 12 October 1920, students and faculty of the Amritsar Khalsa College called a meeting to strengthen the Nationalistic Movement.[85] The students pushed for an anti-British movement and the result was the formation of the Shiromani Gurudwara Prabhandak Committee on 15 November 1920 to manage and to implement reforms in Sikh shrines.[86]

Visit by Queen Elizabeth II

Although Queen Elizabeth II had not made any comments on the incident during her state visits in 1961 and 1983, she spoke about the events at a state banquet in India on 13 October 1997:[87]

It is no secret that there have been some difficult episodes in our past – Jallianwala Bagh, which I shall visit tomorrow, is a distressing example. But history cannot be rewritten, however much we might sometimes wish otherwise. It has its moments of sadness, as well as gladness. We must learn from the sadness and build on the gladness.[87]

On 14 October 1997, Queen Elizabeth II visited Jallianwala Bagh and paid her respects with a 30‑second moment of silence. During the visit, she wore a dress of a colour described as pink apricot or saffron, which was of religious significance to the Sikhs.[87] She removed her shoes while visiting the monument and laid a wreath at the monument.[87]

While some Indians welcomed the expression of regret and sadness in the Queen's statement, others criticised it for being less than an apology.[87] The then Prime Minister of India Inder Kumar Gujral defended the Queen, saying that the Queen herself had not even been born at the time of the events and should not be required to apologise.[87]

The Queen's 1997 statement was not without controversies. During her visit there were protests in the city of Amritsar, with people waving black flags and chanting the insult "Queen, go back."[88] Queen Elizabeth and the Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh merely signed the visitor's book. The fact that they did not leave any comment, regretting the incident was criticised.[89][90]

During the same visit, minutes after Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip stood in silence at the Flame of Liberty, the Prince and his guide, Partha Sarathi Mukherjee, reached[91] a plaque recording the events of the 1919 massacre. Among the many things found on the plaque was the assertion that 2,000 people were killed in the massacre. (The precise text is: "This place is saturated with the blood of about two thousand Hindus, Sikhs and Muslims who were martyred in a non-violent struggle." It goes on to describe the events of that day.)[92] "That's a bit exaggerated," Philip told Mukherjee, "it must include the wounded." Mukherjee asked Philip how he had come to this conclusion. "I was told about the killings by General Dyer's son," Mukherjee recalls the Duke as saying, "I'd met him while I was in the Navy." These statements by Philip drew widespread condemnation in India.[92][90][93][94]

Indian journalist Praveen Swami wrote in the Frontline magazine: "(The fact that) ... this was the solitary comment Prince Philip had to offer after his visit to Jallianwala Bagh ... (and that) it was the only aspect of the massacre that exercised his imagination, caused offence. It suggested that the death of 379 people was in some way inadequate to appal the royal conscience, in the way the death of 2,000 people would have. Perhaps more important of all, the staggering arrogance that Prince Philip displayed in citing his source of information on the tragedy made clear the lack of integrity in the wreath-laying."[92]

Demands for apology

There are long-standing demands in India that Britain should apologise for the massacre.[92][90][95][89] Winston Churchill, on 8 July 1920, urged the House of Commons to punish Colonel Dyer.[63] Churchill, who described the massacre as "monstrous",[96] succeeded in persuading the House to forcibly retire Colonel Dyer, but would have preferred to have seen the colonel disciplined.[64]

An apology was made at the time in a statement made by Sir William Vincent, the home member of the Viceroy's Council in a debate on the Punjab disturbances. This made clear the deep regret of the Government of India. It made clear that the actions taken were wrong and repudiated by the Government. It was called a noteworthy case of improper action; "overdrastic and severe action, excessive use of force and acts ... reasonably interpreted as designed to humiliate Indian people ... cannot but be regarded as unpardonable (and) morally indefensible." In addition, the Indian Government reported in despatches to the UK government that the actions of General Dyer were far beyond what was necessary. Also, General Dyer acted far beyond the principle of using reasonable and minimum force. Sir William Vincent stated that the actions of Dyer were of deep regret. A manual of instructions was created after the massacre to instruct officers in their use of force and this was to be avoided unless absolutely necessary.[97]

In February 2013 David Cameron became the first serving British Prime Minister to visit the site, laid a wreath at the memorial, and described the Amritsar massacre as "a deeply shameful event in British history, one that Winston Churchill rightly described at that time as monstrous. We must never forget what happened here and we must ensure that the UK stands up for the right of peaceful protests". Cameron did not deliver an official apology.[98] This was criticised by some commentators. Writing in The Telegraph, Sankarshan Thakur wrote, "Over nearly a century now British protagonists have approached the 1919 massacre ground of Jallianwala Bagh thumbing the thesaurus for an appropriate word to pick. 'Sorry' has not been among them."

 

The issue of apology resurfaced during the 2016 India visit of Prince William and Kate Middleton when both decided to skip the memorial site from their itinerary.[99] In 2017, Indian author and politician Shashi Tharoor suggested that the Jalianwala Bagh centenary in 2019 could be a "good time" for the British to apologise to the Indians for wrongs committed during the colonial rule.[100][95] Visiting the memorial on 6 December 2017, London's mayor Sadiq Khan called on the British government to apologise for the massacre.[101]

In February 2019 the British House of Lords began discussing and debating the massacre.[102]

On 12 April 2019, a ceremony was held in Amritsar just before the centenary anniversary of the massacre. Although she did not issue an apology, British Prime Minister Theresa May called the 1919 shooting of unarmed civilians a "shameful scar", echoing the 2013 statement made by David Cameron.[103]

National Memorial Event in the UK

On 15 April 2019, a national memorial event was held in the British Parliament hosted by Jasvir Singh and organised by City Sikhs and the Faiths Forum for London entitled 'Jallianwala Bagh 100 Years On', where testimonies of survivors were read out from the book 'Eyewitness at Amritsar',[104] there were traditional musical performances, and a minute's silence was held to remember those who had been killed a century earlier.[105]

The Asian Awards

In April 2019 The Asian Awards honoured the Martyrs of Jallianwala Bagh with the prestigious Founders Award. It was accepted by the nephew of Bhagat Singh, Dr Jagmohan Singh.[106]

In popular culture

  • 1932: Noted Hindi poet Subhadra Kumari Chauhan wrote a poem, "Jallianwalla Bagh Mein Basant",[107] (Spring in the Jallianwalla Bagh) in memory of the slain in her anthology Bikhre Moti (Scattered Pearls).
  • 1977: The massacre is portrayed in the Hindi movie Jallian Wala Bagh starring Vinod Khanna, Parikshat Sahni, Shabana Azmi, Sampooran Singh Gulzar, and Deepti Naval. The film was written, produced and directed by Balraj Tah with the screenplay by Gulzar. The film is a part-biopic of Udham Singh (played by Parikshit Sahni) who assassinated Michael O'Dwyer in 1940. Portions of the film were shot in the UK notably in Coventry and surrounding areas.[108]
  • 1981: Salman Rushdie's novel Midnight's Children portrays the massacre from the perspective of a doctor in the crowd, saved from the gunfire by a well-timed sneeze.
  • 1982: The massacre is depicted in Richard Attenborough's film Gandhi with the role of General Dyer played by Edward Fox. The film depicts most of the details of the massacre as well as the subsequent inquiry by the Hunter commission.
  • 1984: The story of the massacre also occurs in the seventh episode of Granada TV's 1984 series The Jewel in the Crown, recounted by the fictional widow of a British officer who is haunted by the inhumanity of it and who tells how she came to be reviled because she ignored the honours to Dyer and instead donated money to the Indian victims.
  • 2000: Shaheed Udham Singh, a Hindi language film is based on the JallianWala Bagh Massacre and the assassination of Michael O'Dwyer by Udham Singh.
  • 2002: In the Hindi film The Legend of Bhagat Singh directed by Rajkumar Santoshi, the massacre is reconstructed with the child Bhagat Singh as a witness, eventually inspiring him to become a revolutionary in the Indian independence movement.
  • 2006: Portions of the Hindi film Rang De Basanti nonlinearly depict the massacre and the influence it had on the freedom fighters.
  • 2009: Bali Rai's novel, City of Ghosts, is partly set around the massacre, blending fact with fiction and magical realism. Dyer, Udham Singh and other real historical figures feature in the story.
  • 2012: A few shots of the massacre are captured in the movie Midnight's Children, a Canadian-British film adaptation of Salman Rushdie's 1981 novel of the same name directed by Deepa Mehta.
  • 2014: The British period drama Downton Abbey makes a reference to the massacre in the eighth episode of season 5 as "that terrible Amritsar business". The characters of Lord Grantham, Isobel Crawley and Shrimpy express their disapproval of the massacre when Lord Sinderby supports it.
  • 2017: The Hindi language film Phillauri references the massacre as the reason the spirit of the primary character portrayed by Anushka Sharma cannot find peace as her lover lost his life in Amritsar and was unable to return to their village for their wedding. The movie depicts the massacre and the following stampede, with the climax shot on-location at the modern-day Jallianwallah Bagh memorial.
  • 2019: The UK's BBC broadcast historian Dr. Zareer Masani's Amritsar 1919: Remembering a British Massacre[109] was broadcast.
  • 2019: the UK's Channel 4 broadcast "The Massacre That Shook the Empire" on Saturday 13 April at 9 p.m. in which writer Sathnam Sanghera examined the 1919 massacre and its legacy.
  • 2019: The UK's BBC broadcast a special Thought for the Day on Friday 12 April presented by Jasvir Singh to mark the anniversary.[110]
  • 2021: Sardar Udham, a Hindi language film is based on the JallianWala Bagh Massacre and the assassination of Michael O'Dwyer by Udham Singh.

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Collett, Nigel (2006). The Butcher of Amritsar: General Reginald Dyer.
  • Draper, Alfred (1985). The Amritsar Massacre: Twilight of the Raj.
  • Hopkirk, Peter (1997). Like Hidden Fire: The Plot to Bring Down the British Empire. Kodansha Globe. ISBN 1-56836-127-0.
  • Judd, Dennis (1996). "The Amritsar Massacre of 1919: Gandhi, the Raj and the Growth of Indian Nationalism, 1915–39", in Judd, Empire: The British Imperial Experience from 1765 to the Present. Basic Books. pp 258–72.
  • Lloyd, Nick (2011). The Amritsar Massacre: The Untold Story of One Fateful Day.
  • Narain, Savita (1998). The historiography of the Jallianwala Bagh massacre, 1919. New Delhi: Spantech and Lancer. 76pp. ISBN 1-897829-36-1
  • Swinson, Arthur (1964). Six Minutes to Sunset: The Story of General Dyer and the Amritsar Affair. London: Peter Davies.
  • Wagner, Kim A. "Calculated to Strike Terror': The Amritsar Massacre and the Spectacle of Colonial Violence." Past Present (2016) 233#1: 185–225. doi:10.1093/pastj/gtw037
  • Jalil, Rakhshanda "Jallianwala Bagh: Literary Responses in Prose & Poetry, 2019". Niyogi Books. ISBN 978-9386906922

External links

  • Amritsar: 1920 – Minutes of Evidence taken before the Hunter Committee – UK Parliament Living Heritage
  • Debate on this incident in the British Parliament
  • Black Chapter of Indian History – Jallianwala Bagh Massacre
  • An NPR interview with Bapu Shingara Singh – the last known surviving witness.
  • Churchill's speech after the incident.
  • Amritsar Massacre at Jallianwala Bagh Listen to the Shaheed song of the Amritsar Massacre at Jallianwala Bagh.
  • Singh, Gajendra: Amritsar, Massacre of, in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.

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The Jallianwala Bagh massacre also known as the Amritsar massacre took place on 13 April 1919 A large peaceful crowd had gathered at the Jallianwala Bagh in Amritsar Punjab to protest against the Rowlatt Act and arrest of pro independence activists Saifuddin Kitchlew and Satyapal In response to the public gathering the temporary Brigadier general R E H Dyer surrounded the protesters with his Gurkha Baloch Rajput and Sikh from 2 9th Gurkhas the 54th Sikhs and the 59th Scinde Rifles of British Indian Army 4 The Jallianwala Bagh could only be exited on one side as its other three sides were enclosed by buildings After blocking the exit with his troops he ordered them to shoot at the crowd continuing to fire even as the protestors tried to flee The troops kept on firing until their ammunition was exhausted 5 Estimates of those killed vary between 379 and 1500 people 1 and over 1 200 other people were injured of whom 192 were seriously injured 6 7 Responses polarised both the British and Indian peoples This incident shocked Rabindranath Tagore an Indian polymath and the first Asian Nobel laureate to such an extent that he renounced his knighthood Narrow passage to the entrance of Jallianwala Bagh Garden where the massacre occurredLocation of Amritsar in IndiaLocationAmritsar Punjab British India present day Amritsar Punjab India Coordinates31 37 14 N 74 52 50 E 31 62056 N 74 88056 E 31 62056 74 88056 Coordinates 31 37 14 N 74 52 50 E 31 62056 N 74 88056 E 31 62056 74 88056Date13 April 1919 103 years ago 1919 04 13 05 30 p m IST TargetCrowd of nonviolent protesters along with Baisakhi pilgrims who had gathered in Jallianwala Bagh AmritsarAttack typeMassacreWeaponsLee Enfield riflesDeaths379 1 1000 2 Injured 1 500 2 PerpetratorsBrig Gen 3 R E H Dyer in charge of 50 soldiers of the 9th Gurkha Rifles 54th Sikh regiment Frontier Force and 59th Scinde RiflesMural depicting 1919 Amritsar massacre The massacre caused a re evaluation by the British Army of its military role against civilians to minimal force whenever possible although later British actions during the Mau Mau rebellion in the Kenya Colony have led historian Huw Bennett to comment that the new policy could be put aside 8 The army was retrained and developed less violent tactics for crowd control 9 The level of casual brutality and lack of any accountability stunned the entire nation 10 resulting in a wrenching loss of faith of the general Indian public in the intentions of the United Kingdom 11 The attack was condemned by the Secretary of State for War Winston Churchill as unutterably monstrous and in the UK House of Commons debate on 8 July 1920 Members of Parliament voted 247 to 37 against Dyer The ineffective inquiry together with the initial accolades for Dyer fuelled great widespread anger against the British among the Indian populace leading to the non cooperation movement of 1920 22 12 Some historians consider the episode a decisive step towards the end of British rule in India 13 Britain has never formally apologised for the massacre but expressed deep regret in 2019 14 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Defence of India Act 1 2 The Rowlatt Act 2 Before the massacre 3 The massacre 4 Casualties 5 Aftermath 5 1 Hunter Commission 5 2 Demonstration at Gujranwala 5 3 Assassination of Michael O Dwyer 6 Monument and legacy 6 1 Formation of the Shiromani Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee 6 2 Visit by Queen Elizabeth II 6 3 Demands for apology 6 4 National Memorial Event in the UK 6 5 The Asian Awards 7 In popular culture 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksBackground EditDefence of India Act Edit Main article Defence of India Act 1915 See also Ghadar Mutiny During World War I British India contributed to the British war effort by providing men and resources Millions of Indian soldiers and labourers served in Europe Africa and the Middle East while both the Indian administration and the princes sent large supplies of food money and ammunition Bengal and Punjab remained sources of anti colonial activities Revolutionary attacks in Bengal associated increasingly with disturbances in Punjab were enough to nearly paralyse the regional administration 15 16 Of these a pan Indian mutiny in the British Indian Army planned for February 1915 was the most prominent amongst a number of plots formulated between 1914 and 1917 by Indian nationalists in India the United States and Germany The planned February mutiny was ultimately thwarted when British intelligence infiltrated the Ghadarite movement arresting key figures Mutinies in smaller units and garrisons within India were also crushed In the scenario of the British war effort and the threat from the militant movement in India the Defence of India Act 1915 was passed limiting civil and political liberties Michael O Dwyer then the Lieutenant Governor of Punjab was one of the strongest proponents of the act in no small part due to the Ghadarite threat in the province 17 The Rowlatt Act Edit See also Rowlatt Committee and Rowlatt Act The costs of the protracted war in money and manpower were great High casualty rates in the war increasing inflation after the end compounded by heavy taxation the deadly 1918 flu pandemic and the disruption of trade during the war escalated human suffering in India The pre war Indian nationalist sentiment was revived as moderate and extremist groups of the Indian National Congress ended their differences to unify In 1916 the Congress was successful in establishing the Lucknow Pact a temporary alliance with the All India Muslim League British political concessions and Whitehall s India Policy after World War I began to change with the passage of Montagu Chelmsford Reforms which initiated the first round of political reform in the Indian subcontinent in 1917 18 19 20 However this was deemed insufficient in reforms by the Indian political movement Mahatma Gandhi recently returned to India began emerging as an increasingly charismatic leader under whose leadership civil disobedience movements grew rapidly as an expression of political unrest 21 The recently crushed Ghadar conspiracy the presence of Raja Mahendra Pratap s Kabul mission in Afghanistan with possible links to then nascent Bolshevik Russia and a still active revolutionary movement especially in Punjab and Bengal as well as worsening civil unrest throughout India led to the appointment of a sedition committee in 1918 chaired by Sidney Rowlatt an Anglo Egyptian judge It was tasked to evaluate German and Bolshevik links to the militant movement in India especially in Punjab and Bengal On the recommendations of the committee the Rowlatt Act an extension of the Defence of India Act 1915 was enforced in India to limit civil liberties 17 22 23 24 25 The passage of the Rowlatt Act in 1919 precipitated large scale political unrest throughout India Ominously in 1919 the Third Anglo Afghan War began in the wake of Amir Habibullah s assassination and institution of Amanullah in a system strongly influenced by the political figures courted by the Kabul mission during the world war As a reaction to the Rowlatt act Muhammad Ali Jinnah resigned from his Bombay seat writing in a letter to the Viceroy I therefore as a protest against the passing of the Bill and the manner in which it was passed tender my resignation a Government that passes or sanctions such a law in times of peace forfeits its claim to be called a civilised government 26 In India Gandhi s call for protest against the Rowlatt Act achieved an unprecedented response of furious unrest and protests Before the massacre Edit The Jallianwalla Bagh in 1919 months after the massacre Especially in Punjab the situation was deteriorating rapidly with disruptions of rail telegraph and communication systems The movement was at its peak before the end of the first week of April with some recording that practically the whole of Lahore was on the streets the immense crowd that passed through Anarkali Bazaar was estimated to be around 20 000 27 Many officers in the Indian army believed revolt was possible and they prepared for the worst The British Lieutenant Governor of Punjab Michael O Dwyer is said to have believed that these were the early and ill concealed signs of a conspiracy for a coordinated revolt planned around May on the lines of the 1857 revolt at a time when British troops would have withdrawn to the hills for the summer 28 The Amritsar massacre and other events at about the same time have been described by some historians as the result of a concerted plan by the Punjab administration to suppress such a conspiracy 29 James Houssemayne Du Boulay is said to have ascribed a direct relationship between the fear of a Ghadarite uprising in the midst of an increasingly tense situation in Punjab and the British response that ended in the massacre 30 On 10 April 1919 there was a protest at the residence of Miles Irving the Deputy Commissioner of Amritsar The demonstration was to demand the release of two popular leaders of the Indian Independence Movement Satya Pal and Saifuddin Kitchlew who had been earlier arrested by the government and moved to a secret location Both were proponents of the Satyagraha movement led by Gandhi A military picket shot at the crowd killing several protesters and setting off a series of violent events Riotous crowds carried out arson attacks on British banks killed several British people and assaulted two British women 31 All native men were forced to crawl the Kucha Kurrichhan on their hands and knees as punishment 1919 On 11 April Marcella Sherwood an elderly English missionary fearing for the safety of the approximately 600 Indian children under her care was on her way to shut the schools and send the children home 32 33 While travelling through a narrow street called the Kucha Kurrichhan she was caught by a mob who violently attacked her She was rescued by some local Indians including the father of one of her pupils who hid her from the mob and then smuggled her to the safety of Gobindgarh Fort 33 34 After visiting Sherwood on 19 April the Raj s local commander General Dyer enraged at the assault issued an order requiring every Indian man using that street to crawl its length on his hands and knees as a punishment 32 35 Colonel Dyer later explained to a British inspector Some Indians crawl face downwards in front of their gods I wanted them to know that a British woman is as sacred as a Hindu god and therefore they have to crawl in front of her too 36 He also authorised the indiscriminate public whipping of locals who came within lathi length of a police officer Marcella Sherwood later defended Colonel Dyer describing him as the saviour of the Punjab 35 For the next two days the city of Amritsar was quiet but violence continued in other parts of Punjab Railway lines were cut telegraph posts destroyed government buildings burnt and three Europeans murdered By 13 April the British government had decided to put most of Punjab under martial law The legislation restricted a number of civil liberties including freedom of assembly gatherings of more than four people were banned 37 On the evening of 12 April the leaders of the hartal in Amritsar held a meeting at the Hindu College Dhab Khatikan At the meeting Hans Raj an aide to Kitchlew announced a public protest meeting would be held at 16 30 the following day in the Jallianwala Bagh to be organised by Muhammad Bashir and chaired by a senior and respected Congress Party leader Lal Kanhyalal Bhatia A series of resolutions protesting against the Rowlatt Act the recent actions of the British authorities and the detention of Satyapal and Kitchlew was drawn up and approved after which the meeting adjourned 38 The massacre Edit The Martyrs Well at Jallianwala Bagh 120 bodies were recovered from this well as per inscription on it 39 On Sunday 13 April 1919 Dyer convinced a major insurrection could take place banned all meetings This notice was not widely disseminated and many villagers gathered in the Bagh to celebrate the important Sikh and Hindu festival of Baisakhi and peacefully protest the arrest and deportation of two national leaders Satyapal and Saifuddin Kitchlew 40 At 9 00 on the morning of 13 April 1919 the traditional festival of Baisakhi Reginald Dyer the acting military commander for Amritsar and its environs proceeded through the city with several city officials announcing the implementation of a pass system to enter or leave Amritsar a curfew beginning at 20 00 that night and a ban on all processions and public meetings of four or more persons The proclamation was read and explained in English Urdu Hindi and Punjabi but few paid it any heed or appear to have learned of it later 41 Meanwhile local police had received intelligence of the planned meeting in the Jallianwala Bagh through word of mouth and plainclothes detectives in the crowds At 12 40 Dyer was informed of the meeting and returned to his base at around 13 30 to decide how to handle it 42 By mid afternoon thousands of Indians had gathered in the Jallianwala Bagh garden near the Harmandir Sahib in Amritsar Many who were present had earlier worshipped at the Golden Temple and were passing through the Bagh on their way home The Bagh was and remains today an open area of six to seven acres roughly 200 yards by 200 yards in size and surrounded on all sides by walls roughly 10 feet in height Balconies of houses three to four stories tall overlooked the Bagh and five narrow entrances opened onto it several with lockable gates During the rainy season it was planted with crops but served as a local meeting and recreation area for much of the year 43 In the centre of the Bagh was a samadhi cremation site and a large well partly filled with water which measured about 20 feet in diameter 43 Apart from pilgrims Amritsar had filled up over the preceding days with farmers traders and merchants attending the annual Baisakhi horse and cattle fair The city police closed the fair at 14 00 that afternoon resulting in an even larger number of people drifting into the Jallianwala Bagh Dyer arranged for an aeroplane to overfly the Bagh and estimate the size of the crowd that he reported was about 6 000 while the Hunter Commission estimates a crowd of 10 000 to 20 000 had assembled by the time of Dyer s arrival 43 6 Colonel Dyer and Deputy Commissioner Irving the senior civil authority for Amritsar took no actions to prevent the crowd assembling or to peacefully disperse the crowds This would later be a serious criticism levelled at both Dyer and Irving An hour after the meeting began as scheduled at 17 30 Colonel Dyer arrived at the Bagh with a group of 50 troops including 25 Gurkhas of 1 9 Gurkha Rifles 1st battalion 9th Gurkha Rifles Pathans and Baluch and 59th Sindh Rifles 44 Fifty of them were armed with 303 Lee Enfield bolt action rifles Dyer may have specifically chosen troops from those ethnic groups due to their proven loyalty to the British He had also brought two armoured cars armed with machine guns however the vehicles could not enter the compound through the narrow entrances The Jallianwala Bagh was surrounded on all sides by houses and buildings and had only five narrow entrances most kept permanently locked The main entrance was relatively wide but was guarded heavily by the troops backed by the armoured vehicles so as to prevent anyone from getting out Dyer without warning the crowd to disperse blocked the main exits Dyer ordered his troops to begin shooting toward the densest sections of the crowd in front of the available narrow exits where panicked crowds were trying to leave the Bagh Firing continued for approximately ten minutes Unarmed civilians including men women elderly people and children were killed This incident came to be known as the Amritsar massacre Cease fire was ordered only when ammunition supplies were almost exhausted 45 He stated later that this act was not to disperse the meeting but to punish the Indians for disobedience 46 The following day Dyer stated in a report that I have heard that between 200 and 300 of the crowd were killed My party fired 1 650 rounds 47 45 Apart from the many deaths directly from the shooting a number of people died of crushing in the stampedes at the narrow gates or by jumping into the solitary well on the compound to escape the shooting A plaque placed at the site after independence states that 120 bodies were removed from the well Dyer pushed the curfew time earlier than the usual time therefore the wounded could not be moved from where they had fallen and more who had been injured then died during the night 48 Casualties EditThe number of total casualties is disputed The following morning s newspapers quoted an erroneous initial figure of 200 casualties offered by the Associated Press e g News has been received from the Punjab that the Amritsar mob has again broken out in a violent attack against the authorities The rebels were repulsed by the military and they suffered 200 casualties sic The Times of India 14 April 1919 49 The Government of Punjab criticised by the Hunter Commission for not gathering accurate figures only offered the same approximate figure of 200 When interviewed by the members of the committee a senior civil servant in Punjab admitted that the actual figure could be higher 6 The Sewa Samiti society independently carried out an investigation and reported 379 deaths and 192 seriously wounded The Hunter Commission based their figures of 379 deaths and approximately 3 times that number injured suggesting 1500 casualties 6 At the meeting of the Imperial Legislative Council held on 12 September 1919 the investigation led by Pandit Madan Mohan Malviya concluded that there were 42 boys among the dead the youngest of them only 7 months old 50 The Hunter commission confirmed the deaths of 337 men 41 boys and a six week old baby 6 In July 1919 three months after the massacre officials were tasked with finding who had been killed by inviting inhabitants of the city to volunteer information about those who had died 6 This information was incomplete due to fear that those who participated would be identified as having been present at the meeting and some of the dead may not have had close relations in the area 51 Winston Churchill reported nearly 400 slaughtered and 3 or 4 times the number wounded to the Westminster Parliament on 8 July 1920 52 Since the official figures were obviously flawed regarding the size of the crowd 6 000 20 000 6 the number of rounds fired and the period of shooting the Indian National Congress instituted a separate inquiry of its own with conclusions that differed considerably from the British Government s inquiry The casualty number quoted by the Congress was more than 1 500 with approximately 1 000 being killed 2 Indian nationalist Swami Shraddhanand wrote to Gandhi of 1500 deaths in the incident 53 The British Government tried to suppress information of the massacre 54 but news spread in India and widespread outrage ensued details of the massacre did not become known in Britain until December 1919 55 56 57 Aftermath EditThis event caused many moderate Indians to abandon their previous loyalty to the British and become nationalists distrustful of British rule 58 Colonel Dyer reported to his superiors that he had been confronted by a revolutionary army to which Major General William Beynon replied Your action was correct and Lieutenant Governor approves 59 O Dwyer requested that martial law should be imposed upon Amritsar and other areas and this was granted by Viceroy Lord Chelmsford 60 61 Both Secretary of State for War Winston Churchill and former Prime Minister H H Asquith however openly condemned the attack Churchill referring to it as unutterably monstrous while Asquith called it one of the worst most dreadful outrages in the whole of our history 62 Churchill in the House of Commons debate of 8 July 1920 said The crowd was unarmed except with bludgeons It was not attacking anybody or anything When fire had been opened upon it to disperse it it tried to run away Pinned up in a narrow place considerably smaller than Trafalgar Square with hardly any exits and packed together so that one bullet would drive through three or four bodies the people ran madly this way and the other When the fire was directed upon the centre they ran to the sides The fire was then directed to the sides Many threw themselves down on the ground the fire was then directed down on the ground This was continued to 8 to 10 minutes and it stopped only when the ammunition had reached the point of exhaustion 63 After Churchill s speech in the House of Commons debate MPs voted 247 to 37 against Dyer and in support of the Government 64 Cloake reports that despite the official rebuke many Britons still thought him a hero for saving the rule of British law in India 65 Rabindranath Tagore received the news of the massacre by 22 May 1919 He tried to arrange a protest meeting in Calcutta and finally decided to renounce his British knighthood as a symbolic act of protest 66 In the repudiation letter dated 31 May 1919 and addressed to the Viceroy of India Lord Chelmsford he wrote I wish to stand shorn of all special distinctions by the side of those of my countrymen who for their so called insignificance are liable to suffer degradation not fit for human beings 67 Gupta describes the letter written by Tagore as historic He writes that Tagore renounced his knighthood in protest against the inhuman cruelty of the British Army to the people of Punjab and he quotes Tagore s letter to the Viceroy The enormity of the measures taken by the Government in Punjab for quelling some local disturbances has with a rude shock revealed to our minds the helplessness of our position as British subjects in India T he very least that I can do for my country is to take all consequences upon myself in giving voice to the protest of the millions of my countrymen surprised into dumb anguish of terror The time has come when badges of honour make our shame glaring in the incongruous context of humiliation 68 English Writings of Rabindranath Tagore Miscellaneous Writings Vol 8 carries a facsimile of this hand written letter 69 Disorders Inquiry Committee 1919 1920 report Calcutta Superintendent Government Printing India 1920 Hunter Commission Edit On 14 October 1919 after orders issued by the Secretary of State for India Edwin Montagu the Government of India announced the formation of a committee of inquiry into the events in Punjab Referred to as the Disorders Inquiry Committee it was later more widely known as the Hunter Commission It was named after the chairman William Lord Hunter former Solicitor General for Scotland and Senator of the College of Justice in Scotland The stated purpose of the commission was to investigate the recent disturbances in Bombay Delhi and Punjab about their causes and the measures taken to cope with them 70 71 The members of the commission were Lord Hunter Chairman of the Commission Mr Justice George C Rankin of Calcutta Sir Chimanlal Harilal Setalvad Vice Chancellor of Bombay University and advocate of the Bombay High Court W F Rice member of the Home Department Major General Sir George Barrow KCB KCMG GOC Peshawar Division Pandit Jagat Narayan lawyer and Member of the Legislative Council of the United Provinces Thomas Smith Member of the Legislative Council of the United Provinces Sardar Sahibzada Sultan Ahmad Khan lawyer from Gwalior State H C Stokes Secretary of the Commission and member of the Home Department 71 After meeting in New Delhi on 29 October the commission took statements from witnesses over the following weeks 72 Witnesses were called in Delhi Ahmedabad Bombay and Lahore Although the commission as such was not a formally constituted court of law meaning witnesses were not subject to questioning under oath its members managed to elicit detailed accounts and statements from witnesses by rigorous cross questioning In general it was felt the commission had been very thorough in its enquiries 71 After reaching Lahore in November the commission wound up its initial inquiries by examining the principal witnesses to the events in Amritsar The commission held its official sittings in the Lahore Town Hall building near Anarkali Bazaar On 19 November Dyer was ordered to appear before the commission Although his military superiors had suggested he be represented by legal counsel at the inquiry Dyer refused this suggestion and appeared alone 71 Initially questioned by Lord Hunter Dyer stated he had come to know about the meeting at the Jallianwala Bagh at 12 40 hours that day but did not attempt to prevent it He stated that he had gone to the Bagh with the deliberate intention of opening fire if he found a crowd assembled there Patterson says Dyer explained his sense of honour to the Hunter Commission by saying I think it quite possible that I could have dispersed the crowd without firing but they would have come back again and laughed and I would have made what I consider a fool of myself 73 Dyer further reiterated his belief that the crowd in the Bagh was one of rebels who were trying to isolate my forces and cut me off from other supplies Therefore I considered it my duty to fire on them and to fire well 71 After Mr Justice Rankin had questioned Dyer Sir Chimanlal Setalvad enquired Sir Chimanlal Supposing the passage was sufficient to allow the armoured cars to go in would you have opened fire with the machine guns Dyer I think probably yes Sir Chimanlal In that case the casualties would have been much higher Dyer Yes 71 Dyer further stated that his intentions had been to strike terror throughout Punjab and in doing so reduce the moral stature of the rebels He said he did not stop the shooting when the crowd began to disperse because he thought it was his duty to keep shooting until the crowd dispersed and that minimal shooting would not prove effective In fact he continued the shooting until the ammunition was almost exhausted 74 He stated that he did not make any effort to tend to the wounded after the shooting Certainly not It was not my job Hospitals were open and they could have gone there 75 Exhausted from the rigorous cross examination questioning and unwell Dyer was then released Over the next several months while the commission wrote its final report the British press as well as many MPs turned increasingly hostile towards Dyer as the full extent of the massacre and his statements at the inquiry became widely known 71 Lord Chelmsford refused to comment until the Commission had been wound up In the meanwhile Dyer became seriously ill with jaundice and arteriosclerosis and was hospitalised 71 Although the members of the commission had been divided by racial tensions following Dyer s statement and though the Indian members had written a separate minority report the final report comprising six volumes of evidence and released on 8 March 1920 unanimously condemned Dyer s actions 71 In continuing firing as long as he did it appears to us that General Dyer committed a grave error 76 Dissenting members argued that the martial law regime s use of force was wholly unjustified General Dyer thought he had crushed the rebellion and Sir Michael O Dwyer was of the same view they wrote but there was no rebellion which required to be crushed The report concluded that Lack of notice to disperse from the Bagh in the beginning was an error The length of firing showed a grave error Dyer s motive of producing a sufficient moral effect was to be condemned Dyer had overstepped the bounds of his authority There had been no conspiracy to overthrow British rule in the Punjab The minority report of the Indian members further added that Proclamations banning public meetings were insufficiently distributed Innocent people were in the crowd and there had been no violence in the Bagh beforehand Dyer should have either ordered his troops to help the wounded or instructed the civil authorities to do so Dyer s actions had been inhuman and un British and had greatly injured the image of British rule in India The Hunter Commission did not impose any penal or disciplinary action because Dyer s actions were condoned by various superiors later upheld by the Army Council 77 The Legal and Home Members on the Viceroy s Executive Council ultimately decided that though Dyer had acted in a callous and brutal way military or legal prosecution would not be possible due to political reasons However he was finally found guilty of a mistaken notion of duty and relieved of his command on 23 March He had been recommended for a CBE as a result of his service in the Third Afghan War this recommendation was cancelled on 29 March 1920 Reginald Dyer was disciplined by removal from his appointment was passed over for promotion and was prohibited from further employment in India He died in 1927 78 Demonstration at Gujranwala Edit Two days later on 15 April demonstrations occurred in Gujranwala protesting against the killings at Amritsar Police and aircraft were used against the demonstrators resulting in 12 deaths and 27 injuries The Officer Commanding the Royal Air Force in India Brigadier General N D K MacEwen stated later that I think we can fairly claim to have been of great use in the late riots particularly at Gujranwala where the crowd when looking at its nastiest was absolutely dispersed by a machine using bombs and Lewis guns 79 Assassination of Michael O Dwyer Edit See also Udham Singh Michael O Dwyer c 1912 On 13 March 1940 at Caxton Hall in London Udham Singh an Indian independence activist from Sunam who had witnessed the events in Amritsar and had himself been wounded shot and killed Michael O Dwyer the Lieutenant Governor of Punjab at the time of the massacre who had approved Dyer s action and was believed to have been the main planner Some such as the nationalist newspaper Amrita Bazar Patrika made statements supporting the killing The common people and revolutionaries glorified the action of Udham Singh Much of the press worldwide recalled the story of Jallianwala Bagh and alleged O Dwyer to have been responsible for the massacre Singh was termed a fighter for freedom and his action was referred to in The Times newspaper as an expression of the pent up fury of the down trodden Indian People 80 Reporter and historian William L Shirer wrote the next day Most of the other Indians I know other than Gandhi will feel this is divine retribution O Dwyer bore a share of responsibility in the 1919 Amritsar massacre in which Gen Dyer shot 1 500 Indians in cold blood When I was at Amritsar eleven years after the massacre in 1930 the bitterness still stuck in the people there 81 In fascist countries the incident was used for anti British propaganda Bergeret published in large scale from Rome at that time while commenting upon the Caxton Hall assassination ascribed the greatest significance to the circumstance and praised the action of Udham Singh as courageous 82 The Berliner Borsen Zeitung termed the event The torch of Indian freedom German radio reportedly broadcast The cry of tormented people spoke with shots At a public meeting in Kanpur a spokesman had stated that at last an insult and humiliation of the nation had been avenged Similar sentiments were expressed in numerous other places across the country 83 Fortnightly reports of the political situation in Bihar mentioned It is true that we had no love lost for Sir Michael The indignities he heaped upon our countrymen in Punjab have not been forgotten In its 18 March 1940 issue Amrita Bazar Patrika wrote O Dwyer s name is connected with Punjab incidents which India will never forget The New Statesman observed British conservatism has not discovered how to deal with Ireland after two centuries of rule Similar comment may be made on British rule in India Will the historians of the future have to record that it was not the Nazis but the British ruling class which destroyed the British Empire Singh had told the court at his trial Wide view of Jallianwala Bagh memorial I did it because I had a grudge against him He deserved it He was the real culprit He wanted to crush the spirit of my people so I have crushed him For full 21 years I have been trying to wreak vengeance I am happy that I have done the job I am not scared of death I am dying for my country I have seen my people starving in India under the British rule I have protested against this it was my duty What greater honour could be bestowed on me than death for the sake of my motherland 84 Singh was hanged for the murder on 31 July 1940 At that time many including Jawaharlal Nehru and Mahatma Gandhi condemned the murder as senseless even if it was courageous In 1952 Nehru by then Prime Minister honoured Udham Singh with the following statement which appeared in the daily Partap I salute Shaheed i Azam Udham Singh with reverence who had kissed the noose so that we may be free Soon after this recognition by the Prime Minister Udham Singh received the title of Shaheed a name given to someone who has attained martyrdom or done something heroic on behalf of their country or religion Monument and legacy Edit Entrance to the present day Jallianwala Bagh Memorial plaque at Jallianwala Bagh Memorial plaque in passageway of Jallianwala Bagh site Bullet holes in wall at Jallianwala Bagh memorial Martyrs Well at the Jallianwala Bagh memorial Bullet marks visible on preserved walls at present day Jallianwala Bagh A trust was founded in 1920 to build a memorial at the site after a resolution was passed by the Indian National Congress In 1923 the trust purchased land for the project A memorial designed by American architect Benjamin Polk was built on the site and inaugurated by President of India Rajendra Prasad on 13 April 1961 in the presence of Jawaharlal Nehru and other leaders A flame was later added to the site The bullet marks remain on the walls and adjoining buildings to this day The well into which many people jumped and drowned attempting to save themselves from the bullets is also a protected monument inside the park Formation of the Shiromani Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee Edit Shortly after the massacre the official Sikh clergy of the Harmandir Sahib Golden Temple in Amritsar conferred upon Colonel Dyer the Saropa the mark of distinguished service to the Sikh faith or in general humanity sending shock waves among the Sikh community 85 On 12 October 1920 students and faculty of the Amritsar Khalsa College called a meeting to strengthen the Nationalistic Movement 85 The students pushed for an anti British movement and the result was the formation of the Shiromani Gurudwara Prabhandak Committee on 15 November 1920 to manage and to implement reforms in Sikh shrines 86 Visit by Queen Elizabeth II Edit Although Queen Elizabeth II had not made any comments on the incident during her state visits in 1961 and 1983 she spoke about the events at a state banquet in India on 13 October 1997 87 It is no secret that there have been some difficult episodes in our past Jallianwala Bagh which I shall visit tomorrow is a distressing example But history cannot be rewritten however much we might sometimes wish otherwise It has its moments of sadness as well as gladness We must learn from the sadness and build on the gladness 87 On 14 October 1997 Queen Elizabeth II visited Jallianwala Bagh and paid her respects with a 30 second moment of silence During the visit she wore a dress of a colour described as pink apricot or saffron which was of religious significance to the Sikhs 87 She removed her shoes while visiting the monument and laid a wreath at the monument 87 While some Indians welcomed the expression of regret and sadness in the Queen s statement others criticised it for being less than an apology 87 The then Prime Minister of India Inder Kumar Gujral defended the Queen saying that the Queen herself had not even been born at the time of the events and should not be required to apologise 87 The Queen s 1997 statement was not without controversies During her visit there were protests in the city of Amritsar with people waving black flags and chanting the insult Queen go back 88 Queen Elizabeth and the Prince Philip Duke of Edinburgh merely signed the visitor s book The fact that they did not leave any comment regretting the incident was criticised 89 90 During the same visit minutes after Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip stood in silence at the Flame of Liberty the Prince and his guide Partha Sarathi Mukherjee reached 91 a plaque recording the events of the 1919 massacre Among the many things found on the plaque was the assertion that 2 000 people were killed in the massacre The precise text is This place is saturated with the blood of about two thousand Hindus Sikhs and Muslims who were martyred in a non violent struggle It goes on to describe the events of that day 92 That s a bit exaggerated Philip told Mukherjee it must include the wounded Mukherjee asked Philip how he had come to this conclusion I was told about the killings by General Dyer s son Mukherjee recalls the Duke as saying I d met him while I was in the Navy These statements by Philip drew widespread condemnation in India 92 90 93 94 Indian journalist Praveen Swami wrote in the Frontline magazine The fact that this was the solitary comment Prince Philip had to offer after his visit to Jallianwala Bagh and that it was the only aspect of the massacre that exercised his imagination caused offence It suggested that the death of 379 people was in some way inadequate to appal the royal conscience in the way the death of 2 000 people would have Perhaps more important of all the staggering arrogance that Prince Philip displayed in citing his source of information on the tragedy made clear the lack of integrity in the wreath laying 92 Demands for apology Edit There are long standing demands in India that Britain should apologise for the massacre 92 90 95 89 Winston Churchill on 8 July 1920 urged the House of Commons to punish Colonel Dyer 63 Churchill who described the massacre as monstrous 96 succeeded in persuading the House to forcibly retire Colonel Dyer but would have preferred to have seen the colonel disciplined 64 An apology was made at the time in a statement made by Sir William Vincent the home member of the Viceroy s Council in a debate on the Punjab disturbances This made clear the deep regret of the Government of India It made clear that the actions taken were wrong and repudiated by the Government It was called a noteworthy case of improper action overdrastic and severe action excessive use of force and acts reasonably interpreted as designed to humiliate Indian people cannot but be regarded as unpardonable and morally indefensible In addition the Indian Government reported in despatches to the UK government that the actions of General Dyer were far beyond what was necessary Also General Dyer acted far beyond the principle of using reasonable and minimum force Sir William Vincent stated that the actions of Dyer were of deep regret A manual of instructions was created after the massacre to instruct officers in their use of force and this was to be avoided unless absolutely necessary 97 In February 2013 David Cameron became the first serving British Prime Minister to visit the site laid a wreath at the memorial and described the Amritsar massacre as a deeply shameful event in British history one that Winston Churchill rightly described at that time as monstrous We must never forget what happened here and we must ensure that the UK stands up for the right of peaceful protests Cameron did not deliver an official apology 98 This was criticised by some commentators Writing in The Telegraph Sankarshan Thakur wrote Over nearly a century now British protagonists have approached the 1919 massacre ground of Jallianwala Bagh thumbing the thesaurus for an appropriate word to pick Sorry has not been among them Jallianwala Bagh memorial The issue of apology resurfaced during the 2016 India visit of Prince William and Kate Middleton when both decided to skip the memorial site from their itinerary 99 In 2017 Indian author and politician Shashi Tharoor suggested that the Jalianwala Bagh centenary in 2019 could be a good time for the British to apologise to the Indians for wrongs committed during the colonial rule 100 95 Visiting the memorial on 6 December 2017 London s mayor Sadiq Khan called on the British government to apologise for the massacre 101 In February 2019 the British House of Lords began discussing and debating the massacre 102 On 12 April 2019 a ceremony was held in Amritsar just before the centenary anniversary of the massacre Although she did not issue an apology British Prime Minister Theresa May called the 1919 shooting of unarmed civilians a shameful scar echoing the 2013 statement made by David Cameron 103 National Memorial Event in the UK Edit On 15 April 2019 a national memorial event was held in the British Parliament hosted by Jasvir Singh and organised by City Sikhs and the Faiths Forum for London entitled Jallianwala Bagh 100 Years On where testimonies of survivors were read out from the book Eyewitness at Amritsar 104 there were traditional musical performances and a minute s silence was held to remember those who had been killed a century earlier 105 The Asian Awards Edit In April 2019 The Asian Awards honoured the Martyrs of Jallianwala Bagh with the prestigious Founders Award It was accepted by the nephew of Bhagat Singh Dr Jagmohan Singh 106 In popular culture EditThis article appears to contain trivial minor or unrelated references to popular culture Please reorganize this content to explain the subject s impact on popular culture providing citations to reliable secondary sources rather than simply listing appearances Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2019 1932 Noted Hindi poet Subhadra Kumari Chauhan wrote a poem Jallianwalla Bagh Mein Basant 107 Spring in the Jallianwalla Bagh in memory of the slain in her anthology Bikhre Moti Scattered Pearls 1977 The massacre is portrayed in the Hindi movie Jallian Wala Bagh starring Vinod Khanna Parikshat Sahni Shabana Azmi Sampooran Singh Gulzar and Deepti Naval The film was written produced and directed by Balraj Tah with the screenplay by Gulzar The film is a part biopic of Udham Singh played by Parikshit Sahni who assassinated Michael O Dwyer in 1940 Portions of the film were shot in the UK notably in Coventry and surrounding areas 108 1981 Salman Rushdie s novel Midnight s Children portrays the massacre from the perspective of a doctor in the crowd saved from the gunfire by a well timed sneeze 1982 The massacre is depicted in Richard Attenborough s film Gandhi with the role of General Dyer played by Edward Fox The film depicts most of the details of the massacre as well as the subsequent inquiry by the Hunter commission 1984 The story of the massacre also occurs in the seventh episode of Granada TV s 1984 series The Jewel in the Crown recounted by the fictional widow of a British officer who is haunted by the inhumanity of it and who tells how she came to be reviled because she ignored the honours to Dyer and instead donated money to the Indian victims 2000 Shaheed Udham Singh a Hindi language film is based on the JallianWala Bagh Massacre and the assassination of Michael O Dwyer by Udham Singh 2002 In the Hindi film The Legend of Bhagat Singh directed by Rajkumar Santoshi the massacre is reconstructed with the child Bhagat Singh as a witness eventually inspiring him to become a revolutionary in the Indian independence movement 2006 Portions of the Hindi film Rang De Basanti nonlinearly depict the massacre and the influence it had on the freedom fighters 2009 Bali Rai s novel City of Ghosts is partly set around the massacre blending fact with fiction and magical realism Dyer Udham Singh and other real historical figures feature in the story 2012 A few shots of the massacre are captured in the movie Midnight s Children a Canadian British film adaptation of Salman Rushdie s 1981 novel of the same name directed by Deepa Mehta 2014 The British period drama Downton Abbey makes a reference to the massacre in the eighth episode of season 5 as that terrible Amritsar business The characters of Lord Grantham Isobel Crawley and Shrimpy express their disapproval of the massacre when Lord Sinderby supports it 2017 The Hindi language film Phillauri references the massacre as the reason the spirit of the primary character portrayed by Anushka Sharma cannot find peace as her lover lost his life in Amritsar and was unable to return to their village for their wedding The movie depicts the massacre and the following stampede with the climax shot on location at the modern day Jallianwallah Bagh memorial 2019 The UK s BBC broadcast historian Dr Zareer Masani s Amritsar 1919 Remembering a British Massacre 109 was broadcast 2019 the UK s Channel 4 broadcast The Massacre That Shook the Empire on Saturday 13 April at 9 p m in which writer Sathnam Sanghera examined the 1919 massacre and its legacy 2019 The UK s BBC broadcast a special Thought for the Day on Friday 12 April presented by Jasvir Singh to mark the anniversary 110 2021 Sardar Udham a Hindi language film is based on the JallianWala Bagh Massacre and the assassination of Michael O Dwyer by Udham Singh See also Edit India portal Punjab portal United Kingdom portalVidurashwatha Babrra massacre Charan Paduka massacre on the Makar Sankranti festival 14 January 1930 in Chhatarpur called the Jallianwala Bagh of Madhya Pradesh General Fischer ordered the firing on non violent Indian freedom fighters resulting in 21 deaths and many injured 111 112 113 114 115 Anti British sentiment Massacre of Chumik Shenko Indian independence movement List of massacres in India Bloody Sunday a day of IRA assassinations in Ireland and revenge attacks by the Royal Irish Constabulary on a crowd at Croke Park and on prisoners at Dublin Castle in 1920References Edit a b Nigel Collett 15 October 2006 The Butcher of Amritsar General Reginald Dyer A amp C Black p 263 ISBN 978 1 85285 575 8 a b c Amritsar Massacre ninemsn Encarta Archived from the original on 1 November 2009 No 29509 The London Gazette Supplement 14 March 1916 p 2902 Punjab disturbances April 1919 compiled from the Civil and military gazette Lahore Civil and Military Gazette Press 1921 Retrieved 18 August 2022 Jallianwala Bagh Massacre Britannica a b c d e f g India Committee on Disturbances in Bombay Delhi and the Punjab 1920 Report disorders inquiry committee 1919 1920 pp XX XXI 44 45 116 7 Retrieved 8 September 2018 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Dolly Sequeria 2021 Total History amp Civics 10 ICSE New Delhi Morning Star p 71 Huw Bennett Fighting the Mau Mau The British Army 52nd Sikh regiment and Counter Insurgency in Kenya Srinath Raghaven Protecting the Raj The Army in India and Internal Security c 1919 39 Small Wars and Insurgencies Fall 2005 16 3 pp 253 279 online Bipan Chandra et al India s Struggle for Independence Viking 1988 p 166 Barbara D Metcalf and Thomas R Metcalf 2006 A concise history of modern India Cambridge University Press p 169 Collett Nigel 2006 The Butcher of Amritsar General Reginald Dyer pp 398 399 Bond Brian October 1963 Amritsar 1919 History Today Vol 13 no 10 pp 666 676 Amritsar Theresa May describes 1919 massacre as shameful scar BBC News BBC News 10 April 2019 Retrieved 6 November 2021 Gupta Amit Kumar September October 1997 Defying Death Nationalist Revolutionism in India 1897 1938 Social Scientist 25 9 10 3 27 doi 10 2307 3517678 JSTOR 3517678 Popplewell Richard J 1995 Intelligence and Imperial Defence British Intelligence and the Defence of the Indian Empire 1904 1924 Routledge p 201 ISBN 978 0 7146 4580 3 a b Popplewell Richard J 1995 Intelligence and Imperial Defence British Intelligence and the Defence of the Indian Empire 1904 1924 Routledge p 175 ISBN 978 0 7146 4580 3 Majumdar Ramesh C 1971 History of the Freedom Movement in India Vol II Firma K L Mukhopadhyay p xix ISBN 978 81 7102 099 7 Dignan Don February 1971 The Hindu Conspiracy in Anglo American Relations during World War I The Pacific Historical Review 40 1 57 76 doi 10 2307 3637829 JSTOR 3637829 Cole Howard et al 2001 Labour and Radical Politics 1762 1937 Routledge p 572 ISBN 978 0 415 26576 8 Dennis Dalton 2012 Mahatma Gandhi Nonviolent Power in Action Columbia University Press pp 8 14 20 23 30 35 ISBN 978 0 231 15959 3 Lovett Sir Verney 1920 A History of the Indian Nationalist Movement New York Frederick A Stokes Company pp 94 187 191 ISBN 978 81 7536 249 9 Sarkar B K 10 March 1921 The Hindu Theory of the State Political Science Quarterly 36 1 79 90 doi 10 2307 2142662 JSTOR 2142662 Tinker Hugh October 1968 India in the First World War and after Journal of Contemporary History 3 4 89 107 doi 10 1177 002200946800300407 JSTOR 259846 S2CID 150456443 Fisher Margaret W Spring 1972 Essays on Gandhian Politics the Rowlatt Satyagraha of 1919 in Book Reviews Pacific Affairs 45 1 128 129 doi 10 2307 2755297 JSTOR 2755297 Wolpert Stanley 2013 Jinnah of Pakistan Karachi Pakistan Oxford University Press p 62 ISBN 978 0 19 577389 7 Swami P 1 November 1997 Jallianwala Bagh revisited The Hindu Archived from the original on 28 November 2007 Retrieved 7 October 2007 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Jallianwala Bagh Massacre What Happened On The Dark Day 103 Years Ago NDTV com Retrieved 13 April 2022 Cell John W 2002 Hailey A Study in British Imperialism 1872 1969 Cambridge University Press p 67 ISBN 978 0 521 52117 8 Brown Emily May 1973 Book Reviews South Asia The Journal of Asian Studies 32 3 522 523 doi 10 2307 2052702 JSTOR 2052702 S2CID 153543772 Stanley Wolpert The postwar years India Encyclopedia Britannica a b Jaswant Singh 13 April 2002 Bloodbath on the Baisakhi The Tribune Retrieved 16 March 2013 a b Ferguson Niall 2003 Empire How Britain Made the Modern World London Penguin Books p 326 ISBN 978 0 7139 9615 9 Collett Nigel 2006 The Butcher of Amritsar General Reginald Dyer Hambledon Continuum New Edition p 234 a b Banerjee Sikata 2012 Muscular Nationalism Gender Violence and Empire p 24 ISBN 9780814789773 Talbott Strobe 2004 Engaging India Diplomacy Democracy and the Bomb Brookings Institution Press p 245 ISBN 9780815783008 Townshend Britain s Civil Wars p 137 Collett The Butcher of Amritsar p 246 Jallianwala Bagh Massacre was a horrifying bloodbath on the day of Baisakhi 99 years ago India Today 13 April 2018 Retrieved 16 October 2021 Jallianwala Bagh Massacre Causes History amp Significance Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 13 April 2022 Collett The Butcher of Amritsar p 252 253 Collett The Butcher of Amritsar p 253 a b c Collett The Butcher of Amritsar p 254 255 Colvin p 178 a b Nigel Collett 15 October 2006 The Butcher of Amritsar General Reginald Dyer A amp C Black p 262 ISBN 978 1 85285 575 8 Collett The Butcher of Amritsar General Reginald Dyer p 255 58 Punjab Disturbances The Case of General Dyer Parliamentary Debates Hansard House of Lords 19 July 1920 col 254 Retrieved 12 April 2019 Collett Nigel 2006 The Butcher of Amritsar General Reginald Dyer Hambledon Continuum New Edition p 254 255 KOTHAR URVISH 19 April 2019 British media woke up to Jallianwala Bagh massacre eight months after it happened The Print Retrieved 5 June 2020 Datta Vishwa Nath 1969 Jallianwala Bagh Kurukshetra University Books and Stationery Shop for Lyall Book Depot Nigel Collett 2007 The Butcher of Amritsar General Reginald Dyer Hambledon and London p 263 PUNJAB DISTURBANCES LORD HUNTER S COMMITTEE 1725 Parliament UK Hansard Retrieved 5 June 2020 Feigenbaum Anna 2018 Chapter 8 Tear Gas and Colonial Bodies in the British Interwar Period In Mankoo Alex Rappert Brian eds Chemical Bodies The Techno Politics of Control Book Publishers pp 151 164 ISBN 978 1 7866 0586 3 Meherally Yusuf 1948 Chapter VI The Massacre of Jallianwala Bagh The Price of Liberty National Information amp Publications p 66 Sharma Dipti 1993 Assamese Women in the Freedom Struggle Punthi Pustak p 42 ISBN 978 8 1850 9461 8 Subba Rao K Sreeranjani 1989 Struggle for Freedom Case Study of the East Godavari District 1905 1947 Mittal Publications p 97 ISBN 978 8 1709 9176 2 Dhabade Sneha Dhabade Rohan 2019 Something About Jallianwala Bagh And The Days of British Empire Evincepub Publishing p 169 ISBN 978 9 3888 5572 3 Stanley Wolpert Jallianwala Bagh massacre India Encyclopedia Britannica Nigel Collett The Butcher of Amritsar General Reginald Dyer 2006 p 267 Derek Sayer British Reaction to the Amritsar Massacre 1919 1920 Past amp Present May 1991 Issue 131 p 142 Nigel Collett The Butcher of Amritsar General Reginald Dyer 2006 p 372 Derek Sayer British Reaction to the Amritsar Massacre 1919 1920 Past amp Present May 1991 Issue 131 p 131 a b Hansard House of Commons Archives Hansard 1719 1733 8 July 1920 a b Manchester William 1988 The Last Lion Winston Spencer Churchill Visions of Glory 1874 1932 Little Brown p 694 J A Cloake 1994 Britain in the Modern World Oxford University Press p 36 ISBN 9780199133765 Rabindranath Tagore Sisir Kumar Das January 1996 A miscellany Sahitya Akademi p 982 ISBN 978 81 260 0094 4 Retrieved 17 February 2012 Tagore renounced his Knighthood in protest for Jalianwalla Bagh mass killing The Times of India Mumbai 13 April 2011 Archived from the original on 12 May 2013 Retrieved 17 February 2012 Kalyan Sen Gupta 2005 The philosophy of Rabindranath Tagore Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 3 ISBN 978 0 7546 3036 4 Rabindranath Tagore Introduction By Mohit K Ray 1 January 2007 English Writings of Rabindranath TagoreMiscellaneous Writings Vol 8 Atlantic Publishers amp Dist p 1021 ISBN 978 81 269 0761 8 Retrieved 17 February 2012 Dipankan Bandopadhyay 15 April 2020 Bloodbath on the Baishakhi Retrieved 3 May 2020 a b c d e f g h i Collett Nigel 2006 The Butcher of Amritsar General Reginald Dyer Amritsar India Continuum International Publishing Group pp 333 334 ISBN 9781852855758 Evidence Taken before the Disorders Inquiry Committee Volume III Amritsar UK Parliament Steven Patterson The cult of imperial honor in British India 2009 P 67 Nick Lloyd The Amritsar Massacre The Untold Story of One Fateful Day 2011 p 157 Collett The Butcher of Amritsar p 337 Cyril Henry Philips The evolution of India and Pakistan 1858 to 1947 select documents p 214 Oxford University Press 1962 Winston Churchill 8 July 1920 Winston Churchill s speech in the House of Commons Retrieved 14 September 2010 Army Council and General Dyer 1920 Parliamentary Debates Hansard House of Commons 8 July 1920 col 1722 Retrieved 29 April 2020 Royal Air Force Power Review PDF 1 Spring 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 6 June 2011 Retrieved 24 October 2010 The Times London 16 March 1940 Shirer William L 20 June 1941 Berlin Diary New York Alfred A Knopf p 299 Public and Judicial Department File No L P J 7 3822 Caxton Hall outrage India Office Library and Records London pp 13 14 Government of India Home Department Political File No 18 3 1940 National Archives of India New Delhi p40 CRIM 1 1177 Public Record Office London p 64 a b Ajit Singh Sarhadi Punjabi Suba The Story of the Struggle Kapur Printing Press Delhi 1970 p 19 Coward Harold 2003 Indian critiques of Gandhi Google Books ISBN 978 0 7914 5910 2 Retrieved 1 February 2011 a b c d e f Burns John F 15 October 1997 In India Queen Bows Her Head Over a Massacre in 1919 The New York Times Retrieved 12 February 2013 Rediff on the NeT Queen visits Jallianwalla Bagh www rediff com a b Jallianwala Bagh massacre anniversary Is it time for Britain to apologise for excesses committed on Indians India Today a b c Thakur Sankarshan 21 February 2013 History repeats itself in stopping short Wayback Machine Archived from the original on 26 August 2018 Retrieved 17 October 2021 Swami Praveen 1 November 1997 The Queen in Amritsar Frontline Retrieved 16 October 2021 a b c d Swami Praveen 14 November 1997 THE QUEEN S VISIT The Queen in Amritsar Wayback Machine Archived from the original on 6 March 2014 Retrieved 16 October 2021 Rediff on the NeT Prince Philip kicks up another storm m rediff com Burns John F 19 October 1997 India and England Beg to Differ Tiptoeing Through the Time of the Raj The New York Times a b Jallianwala Bagh centenary a good time for British to apologise Shashi Tharoor Hindustan Times 15 January 2017 Retrieved 16 October 2021 Amritsar Theresa May describes 1919 Massacre as shameful scar BBC Online 10 April 2019 Retrieved 10 April 2019 p 72 Legislative Assembly Debates Government Central Press Simla 15 February 1921 David Cameron marks British 1919 Amritsar massacre News BBC 20 February 2013 Retrieved 20 February 2013 Not our finest hour David Cameron to visit Amritsar massacre site but won t make official apology Daily Mirror 20 February 2013 Retrieved 20 February 2013 Jallianwala Bagh killings shameful says David Cameron News Daily News and Analysis 20 February 2013 Retrieved 20 February 2013 Jallianwala Bagh The shrine Kate and Will should not have given a miss CatchNews com 13 April 2016 Retrieved 16 October 2021 When will a British PM beg forgiveness for Jallianwala Bagh massacre www dailyo in Britain must apologise for Jallianwala Bagh massacre London Mayor Sadiq Khan 6 December 2017 via The Economic Times Viewpoint Should Britain apologise for Amritsar massacre BBC News 19 February 2019 Hundreds gather to commemorate Jallianwala Bagh massacre centenary CBC 13 April 2019 Retrieved 13 April 2019 but she did not issue a formal apology In 2013 then British Prime Minister David Cameron described the killings as a deeply shameful event in a visitor book at the site now marked by a 14 metre high flame shaped memorial Kashi House Publishing Kashi House Retrieved 30 January 2021 Jallianwala Bagh 100 Years On Faiths Forum 17 April 2019 Retrieved 16 October 2021 The Asian Awards Honouring Asian Excellence VIP Asian Awards Business Awards 8th Asian Awards theasianawards com Retrieved 30 January 2021 जल य व ल ब ग म बस त स भद र क म र च ह न कव त क श kavitakosh org Jallian Wala Bagh at IMDb Masani Dr Zareer Amritsar 1919 Remembering a British Massacre Radio 4 BBC Retrieved 13 April 2019 Thought for the Day Jasvir Singh 12 04 2019 BBC 12 April 2019 Retrieved 16 October 2021 A U Siddiqui Indian Freedom Movement in Princely States of Vindhya Pradesh Northern Book Centre New Delhi 2004 Bundelkhand s Jallianwala Bagh led to martyrdom of 21 freedom fighters Webinar in Bhopal ब द लख ड क चरणप द क म भ ह आ थ जल य व ल ब ग ज स हत य क ड व ब न र क जर ए शह द क क य य द 14 April 2021 ब न द लख ड क चरण प द क म ह ए थ भ रत म क 21 सप त शह द 14 August 2018 Charan Paduka Narsamhar Madhya Pradesh ka Jaliawala bagh YouTube Further reading EditCollett Nigel 2006 The Butcher of Amritsar General Reginald Dyer Draper Alfred 1985 The Amritsar Massacre Twilight of the Raj Hopkirk Peter 1997 Like Hidden Fire The Plot to Bring Down the British Empire Kodansha Globe ISBN 1 56836 127 0 Judd Dennis 1996 The Amritsar Massacre of 1919 Gandhi the Raj and the Growth of Indian Nationalism 1915 39 in Judd Empire The British Imperial Experience from 1765 to the Present Basic Books pp 258 72 Lloyd Nick 2011 The Amritsar Massacre The Untold Story of One Fateful Day Narain Savita 1998 The historiography of the Jallianwala Bagh massacre 1919 New Delhi Spantech and Lancer 76pp ISBN 1 897829 36 1 Swinson Arthur 1964 Six Minutes to Sunset The Story of General Dyer and the Amritsar Affair London Peter Davies Wagner Kim A Calculated to Strike Terror The Amritsar Massacre and the Spectacle of Colonial Violence Past Present 2016 233 1 185 225 doi 10 1093 pastj gtw037 Jalil Rakhshanda Jallianwala Bagh Literary Responses in Prose amp Poetry 2019 Niyogi Books ISBN 978 9386906922External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Jallianwala Bagh massacre Amritsar 1920 Minutes of Evidence taken before the Hunter Committee UK Parliament Living Heritage Debate on this incident in the British Parliament Black Chapter of Indian History Jallianwala Bagh Massacre An NPR interview with Bapu Shingara Singh the last known surviving witness Churchill s speech after the incident Amritsar Massacre at Jallianwala Bagh Listen to the Shaheed song of the Amritsar Massacre at Jallianwala Bagh Singh Gajendra Amritsar Massacre of in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jallianwala Bagh massacre amp oldid 1128705057, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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