Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
India

'Jallianwala Bagh Massacre Was Preceded By Reign Of Terror By The British'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 12 Dec, 2018 03:40 AM
  • 'Jallianwala Bagh Massacre Was Preceded By Reign Of Terror By The British'

As the country gears up to observe the 100th anniversary of the Jallianwala Bagh massacre of innocent, unarmed Indians by ruthless British forces, the events before and after the April 13, 1919, killing of hundreds clearly indicate that the British rulers of that time were unnerved by the unrest in Punjab in general and Amritsar in particular, which led them to do something which could "teach a lesson" to the Indians.


"Though Brigadier General Reginald Dyer (who ordered his troops to fire on people who had gathered at the Jallianwala Bagh on the fateful day and killed hundreds) was blamed for the action, there is hardly any documented evidence to show how he landed in Amritsar on that day as he was posted in Jalandhar (earlier Jullundur)," author and columnist Kishwar Desai told IANS in an interview here.


Desai, who has penned a book "Jallianwala Bagh, 1919: The Real Story" recently, said that her extensive research on the happenings around the massacre revealed that the British rulers were quite unnerved by the unrest in Punjab and Amritsar.


"Prior to the killings at Jallianwala Bagh, there had been signs of increasing unrest in Punjab. These signs were being interpreted as sedition, even though causes of the unrest were varied.


Indeed, it is impossible to understand what happened on 13 April 1919, without an examination of the barbarism unleashed in Punjab under the regime of the then Lieutenant Governor Sir Michael O'Dwyer to suppress the so-called rebellion," Desai, who is the chair of The Arts and Cultural Heritage Trust that set up the world's first Partition Museum at Amritsar's Town Hall, points out in her book.


The author said that the idea to write this book and to bring out "some facets which had not been researched in detail so far" came after she chanced upon a photograph of the burnt-down Town Hall building of Amritsar. This happened in April 1919.


Further investigation and research, according to Desai, led to more evidence of the British atrocities on Indian subjects just before the Jallianwala Bagh incident and the violence that erupted in Amritsar on April 10 in which many people, including five Europeans, were killed. Properties, including the Town Hall, were targeted to protest against the British atrocities.


Disputing the commonly held narrative that the people who had gathered at the Bagh on the fateful day for an anti-Rowlatt Act meeting were outsiders who had come to Amritsar for the Baisakhi festival, Desai points out that the meeting was attended mostly by local residents of Amritsar and no more than 25 per cent of them were from outside.


"And it is very likely that the massacre was a carefully planned one, not spontaneous one as has been often made out. In all likelihood, no women were present," Desai states in the book, adding that O'Dwyer, who was nearing retirement at that time, and others in power, were upset over the emerging importance of Punjab in the freedom struggle and retaliated with a reign of terror where people were whipped in public, bombed, incarcerated, forced to crawl, starved, beaten, caged and even executed.


"The massacre on 13 April was part of a policy of oppression unleashed by O'Dwyer against the frequent 'hartals' (strikes) or the 'Satyagraha Movement' (launched by Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi)... in fact, the civil administration of Punjab had already declared Amritsar a war zone (around April 11) and regarded the residents as their enemies," Desai points out in the book.


Dyer, who had arrived in Amritsar from Jullundur on the evening of April 11, had ordered his troops to fire on the gathering inside Jallianwala Bagh on the evening of April 13, 1919. The official death figure was put at 379 while nearly 1,200 were injured. The death toll is often disputed, with claims (Indian National Congress Report) that over 1,000 innocent people were killed.


"Not a very well-known entity" when he arrived in Amritsar, Dyer had a "fairly humdrum career" till he "hit immortality as a mass murderer", the new book says.

MORE India ARTICLES

Woman Denies Marriage, Stabbed To Death By Spurned Lover In Rajasthan

Woman Denies Marriage, Stabbed To Death By Spurned Lover In Rajasthan
The woman who was stabbed succumbed to her injuries at the hospital, while her mother is undergoing treatment and is out of danger.

Woman Denies Marriage, Stabbed To Death By Spurned Lover In Rajasthan

'We Keep Waiting': Cop's Wife's Moving Post On Jammu and Kashmir

'We Keep Waiting': Cop's Wife's Moving Post On Jammu and Kashmir
Arifa Tausif has written how most wives of policemen raise their children on their own like a single parent and have no one to support them with their husbands being away on duty.

'We Keep Waiting': Cop's Wife's Moving Post On Jammu and Kashmir

'Use Cannabis, Arrest Her: Video Shows New Low In Trinamool-BJP Battle'

'Use Cannabis, Arrest Her: Video Shows New Low In Trinamool-BJP Battle'
Senior Trinamool Congress leader Anubrata Mandal courted controversy yet again as he was caught on camera purportedly instructing his party workers to get a party rebel and a woman BJP leader arrested on a false case of possessing cannabis.

'Use Cannabis, Arrest Her: Video Shows New Low In Trinamool-BJP Battle'

Teacher From Mewat With ‘Magic Wand’ Picked For National Award

Teacher From Mewat With ‘Magic Wand’ Picked For National Award
When he arrived at Tappan village, the school strength was a mere 78. It now stands at 600. Basruddin Khan managed to persuade an NGO and an agency to invest Rs 1.7 crore for upliftment. 

Teacher From Mewat With ‘Magic Wand’ Picked For National Award

Former Congress Councillor Booked For Killing Sad Supporter, Wife

Former Congress Councillor Booked For Killing Sad Supporter, Wife
Garg had close ties with senior Akali leader and Rajya Sabha member SS Dhindsa and his son PS Dhindsa, who was Finance Minister in the Badal government. “Congress leaders have no fear of the law. All accused must be arrested immediately,” the latter demanded.

Former Congress Councillor Booked For Killing Sad Supporter, Wife

Akali Leaders Question Party's Stand On Sacrilege Debate

Akali Leaders Question Party's Stand On Sacrilege Debate
The senior leaders, those who participated in the taksali movement and organised morchas, are learnt to have told Sukhbir Singh Badal that the Party seems to be losing the perception battle and that the Party was not even on course correction. 

Akali Leaders Question Party's Stand On Sacrilege Debate