Monday, February 9, 2026
ADVT 
India

Timely Compendium Of How Jallianwala Bagh Moved Indian Writers, Poets

Darpan News Desk IANS, 22 Mar, 2019 08:56 PM

    It's been described as "an episode without precedent or parallel in the modern history of the British empire. Not surprisingly, the Jallianwala Bagh massacre of April 13, 1919, spawned a wealth of outporuing from Indian writers and poets that author-critic-literary historian Rakshanda Jalil has painstakingly brought together in a seminal volume that will be an eye-opener for the present generation for the lows to which a ruler can stoop.


    "While a grat deal of scholarly work has been done on Jalianwala Bagh, it's reflection in Indian literature in the different bhashas and also in English has been overlooked.


    "I was curious to see how an incident that stirred the conscience of millions, one that had far-reaching implications for the national freedom struggle, that made British colonial interests in India morally untenable, found its way through pen and paper to reach the nooks and cranies of popular imagination filtered through the mind of the creative writer," Jalil writes in the extensive introduction to "Jallainwala Bagh - Literary Responses in Prose and Poetry" (Niyogi Books/pp 227).


    The book, she says, subjective as all such collections are by their very nature, "makes no pretence at being either exhaustive ot definite; it's only claim is to open a window into the world of possibilities that literature offers to reflect, interpret and occasionally analyse events of momentous historical import. At best, the prose and poetry included in this selection offers ways of 'seeing' history," Jalil says.


    As is Jalil's wont, she is being much too modest. Where else, in one volume, will you come across the works of Saadat Hasan Manto, Khwaja Ahmad Abbas, Mulk Raj Anand, Bhisham Sahani, Stanley Wolpert, Saojini Naidu, Muhammad Iqbal and Josh Mahilabadi, to name just a few of those featured.


    What clearly comes out is the pain and anguish the Jallianwala Bagh massacre caused them and the burden of living under a brutal colonial ruler for whom justice and mercy didn't exist. And yet, the fire of freedom didn't die - indeed it was only reinforced.

    Sample this from "Inquilab" by Abbas, about two friends, Anwar and Ratan, caught in the malestorm of the massacre: "A child was trying to wake up his mother who would be asleep forever; a boy of Anwar's own age lay flat and lifeless. Everywhere there was blood.


    Anwar's head reeled, his bowels contracted within him, he wanted to vomit but could not. He laid his head on the ground and saw the sky revolving and the stars dancing, a dance of death, and the crooked palm tree was dancing too. But before he yielded to unconsciousness, Anwar saw a glimpse of Ratan's face. It bore nor trace of sorrow or grief but a far-way look, he was biting his lip to choke his sobs, and his eyes were ablaze with the cold fury of revenge."


    Then, there's "Panjab 1919" by Sarojini Naidu: "How shall our love console thee, or assuage/Thy helpless woe; how shall our grief requite/The hearts that scourge thee and the hands that smite/Thy beauty with their rods of bitter rage?


    Lo! Let our sorrows be they battle-gage/To wreck the terror of the tyrant's might/Who mocks with ribald wrath they tragic plight/And stains with shame they radiant heritage!


    O beautiful! O broken and betrayed!/O mournful queen!/O martyred Draupadi!/Endure thou still, unconquered, undismayed!/The sacred rivers of thy stricken blood/Shall prove the five-fold stream of Freedom's flood/To guard the watch-towers of our Liberty."


    Jalil's work will ensure that the flame that Jallianwalla Bagh lit will never be ensured.

     

    MORE India ARTICLES

    92-Year-Old Bengal Priest Father Franois Laborde Gets France's Highest Civilian Honour

    French Ambassador to India, Alexandre Ziegler, said the country was happy to confer the award on Father Laborde who had set up Howrah South Point, an organisation working for the development of specially-abled children, the destitute and the most deprived sections of the society.

    92-Year-Old Bengal Priest Father Franois Laborde Gets France's Highest Civilian Honour

    Golfer Jyoti Randhawa Moves High Court For Bail In Poaching Case

    The Lucknow bench of the court granted the Uttar Pradesh government three days time to file its counter-affidavit on Jyoti Randhawa's plea and fixed the next date of hearing on February 15.  

    Golfer Jyoti Randhawa Moves High Court For Bail In Poaching Case

    Gabbar And Sambha To Spread Awareness On Traffic Rules In Gurgaon

    "They will use typical dialogues from Sholay to encourage motorists to obey traffic rules, disciplines and respect other travellers," Gurgaon Police PRO Subhash Bokan said.

    Gabbar And Sambha To Spread Awareness On Traffic Rules In Gurgaon

    India Among Countries To Benefit From US-China Trade War, Says UN

    India Among Countries To Benefit From US-China Trade War, Says UN
    UNCTAD's Pamela Coke-Hamilton repeated his description of protective tariffs as "a gun that recoils on ourselves"  

    India Among Countries To Benefit From US-China Trade War, Says UN

    Virginity Test Of Brides Form Of 'Sexual Assault': Maharashtra Government

    Virginity Test Of Brides Form Of 'Sexual Assault': Maharashtra Government
    Certain communities in the state follow a custom whereby a newly-wed woman has to prove that she was virgin before the marriage.  

    Virginity Test Of Brides Form Of 'Sexual Assault': Maharashtra Government

    Altruistic Spirit: Shashi Tharoor Nominates Kerala Fishermen For Nobel Peace Prize 2019 For Their ‘Selfless Service’

    Congress leader Shashi Tharoor has recommended Kerala fishermen, whose deeds of courage were the main highlight of the rescue operations during the 2018 Kerala floods, for the Nobel Peace Prize.

    Altruistic Spirit: Shashi Tharoor Nominates Kerala Fishermen For Nobel Peace Prize 2019 For Their ‘Selfless Service’