#JallianwalaBaghMassacre100 जालियनवाला बाग हत्याकांड एप्रिल १३ १९१९ ला झाले.
The Duke of Connaught:
“The shadow of Amritsar has lengthened over the fair face of
India.”
Joseph Lelyveld, ‘Great Soul: Mahatma Gandhi and His
Struggle With India’, 2011:
“...The day of prayer and fasting was offered in April 1919
as a protest mainly against new legislation giving the colonial regime—in
another haunting analogy to our own times—a slew of arbitrary powers it said it
needed to combat terrorism. That supposedly nonviolent campaign quickly flared
into riots in Bombay and Ahmedabad and “firings,” confrontations in which the
constabulary or military trained their weapons on surging unarmed crowds in the
name of order. The first firing was in Delhi, where five were killed; another
came two weeks later in the Sikh stronghold of Amritsar. There, on April 13,
1919, in the most notorious massacre of the Indian national struggle, 379
Indians taking part in an unauthorized but peaceful gathering were gunned down
by Gurkha and Baluchi troops under British command in an enclosed square called
Jallianwala Bagh for defying a ban on protests. By then, Gandhi was on the
verge of calling off the national strike; he’d made a “Himalayan
miscalculation,” he said, in allowing himself to believe the masses were ready
for satyagraha. To Swami Shraddhanand, an important Hindu spiritual leader in
Delhi who questioned his bumpy, seemingly impulsive start-and-stop tactics, the
Mahatma dismissively replied: “Bhai sahib! You will acknowledge that I’m an
expert in the satyagraha business. I know what I’m about.”...”
Nick Lloyd, ‘Amritsar Massacre : The Untold Story of One
Fateful Day’, 2011:
“Amritsar’s unfortunate association with violence did not
end in 1919, or indeed with the savage communal slaughter of 1947. During the 1980s
the eastern half of the partitioned Punjab, now in India, was the scene of
growing unrest between groups of extremist Sikhs and the Government of India....”
भारतावरील ब्रिटिश हुकुमतीवरील सर्वात चांगले एकखंडी (one volume) पुस्तक बहुतेक प्रा.
जॉन विल्सन यांचे असावे... त्यांच्या पुस्तकातील जालियनवाला बागेच्या हत्याकांडाबद्दलचा (एप्रिल १३ १९१९) काही भाग त्या घटनेच्या शताब्दी वर्षाच्या प्रारंभाच्या निमित्ताने कृतज्ञतापूर्वक खाली उद्धृत केला आहे.
कितीतरी गोष्टी नोंद करण्यासारख्या आहेत - पहिल्या महायुद्धातील भारताच्या मोठ्या योगदानामुळे हत्याकांडाला दिल गेलेल ब्रिटन मधल महत्व,
Edwin Samuel Montagu ह्या ज्यू सेक्रेटरी ऑफ स्टेट यांच्यावर झालेले आरोप ('some of Dyer's defenders accused the Jewish Secretary of State of being part of a
global conspiracy of Jews against British power'), भारतीय राजकारणातील 'गर्दी'चे पदार्पण आणि महत्व (The Hunter inquiry marked the arrival of a new force in
Indian politics: the crowd)- जे २१व्या शतकात दिवसेंदिवस वाढत चालले आहे....
Jon Wilson:
“...Reginald Dyer was born near his father’s brewery in
Punjab. Dyer spent the first eleven years of his life in India, but was sent to
school in Ireland to preserve a sense of his separateness from Indian society.
From there, he joined the army, helped suppress riots in Belfast and ended up
back in India in 1887. By 1919 he had risen to become a temporary brigadier
general, and had charge of the Jalandhar division of the imperial army. On 11
April the city’s civilian Deputy Commissioner authorized General Dyer to use
whatever force was needed to impose British order on a city which had been
taken over by crowds. Two days later, just before noon, Dyer’s troops marched
around the city announcing by drumbeat that all public meetings were banned.
Early the same afternoon, Dyer learnt that a crowd had
gathered at the public waste ground where many of the ‘seditious’ public
meetings of the past few months had been held, the Jallianwala Bagh. It was a
mixed crowd of between 10,000 and 20,000. Some were there for a protest
meeting, others for the Sikh festival of Baisakhi. General Dyer entered the
ground with fifty Indian soldiers carrying .303 rifles, forty Gurkhas armed
only with swords, and the European chief of police. With no warning, his troops
started shooting, firing 1,650 rounds into the crowd. Official figures said 379
people died. The Congress inquiry into the shootings counted more than 1,000.
By a long way, this was the worst use of military force against a civilian
crowd in British history.
Dyer was briefly lauded by his superiors in Punjab for
quickly stopping the collapse of imperial power, and was sent to command troops
in Afghanistan. ‘Your action correct and Lieutenant-Governor approves,’ Dyer
was told when he first reported his action to the head of Punjab’s government.
But as news of the Amritsar killings spread to London his conduct began to be
criticized by his compatriots. The British government’s liberal Secretary of
State for India, Edwin Montagu, insisted on a public investigation into the
Punjab violence. Within months, Dyer was summoned to appear before a Disorders
Inquiry Committee in the Punjab capital of Lahore.
The committee consisted of a mild-mannered Scottish judge,
Lord William Hunter, four other Britons and three Indian lawyers. The
commission’s proceedings were irritable and anxious. Dyer and its British
members agreed that coercion was needed in Punjab. The arrest of 3,200
‘rebels’, the shooting of massed gatherings and bombing from the air were seen
as ‘difficult’ but necessary nonetheless to ‘hold on’ to British imperial power
if done in the right way. The committee approved of thirty-seven cases of
firing and censured only one. Their belief in the use of violence to preserve
British power placed the Britons at odds with their Indian colleagues,
eventually leading to a total breakdown between the two sides. ‘You people want
to drive the British out of the country,’ Hunter shouted at C. H. Setalvad, a
moderate lawyer on the inquiry committee, in one particularly tense exchange.
The Hunter inquiry marked the arrival of a new force in
Indian politics: the crowd. Up until 1919, British officers thought about
Indian politics in terms of potentially seditious political leaders. The mass
of India’s population existed off-stage. As passive subjects, they were the
occasional target of government action. In government reports, the ‘mob’ was
sometimes described as being brought into play by scheming political leaders,
sporadically excited by religious passion, but the masses had no political life
of their own. From the events in Punjab in 1919 onwards, ‘the crowd’ began to
be seen as a political actor in its own right. The Indian government’s report
on the disturbances used the word ‘crowd’ 150 times in seventy pages; the
Hunter report 280 times in 175 pages, and the text’s narrative began with a
mass ‘outbreak’. The fear, throughout, was that the escalation of crowd
violence might cause the collapse of the Raj’s power. Hunter was not sure
middle-class revolutionaries were a great threat, but the report’s authors
feared that ‘a movement which had started in rioting and become a rebellion
might have rapidly become a revolution’.
Dyer and his British critics disagreed about the best
response to this new politics of spontaneous crowd violence. The government in
London and the Viceroy believed the quick and firm use of force against rioting
needed to be accompanied by concessions to India’s political elites. They
wanted Indian nationalists to help them control the crowd. They had started to
believe that British sovereignty in India relied on conceding pockets of power
to Indians in an otherwise despotic regime. By 1919, the British government had
started to frame reforms to include a liberal element in India’s autocratic
constitution.
Dyer, by contrast, thought any act of retreat would quickly
cause the Raj to unravel. For him, British power in India was based on
conquest, and conquest could only be maintained if violence was continually
asserted against a population which could quickly turn into a mob. Any kind of
equality entailed a dangerous lack of respect for India’s conquerors. After a
crisis, such as those of 1857 or 1919, authority could only be restored if
Indians were forced to submit themselves, sometimes humiliatingly, before their
masters. So, after the initial disorders in Punjab, barristers in Amritsar were
forced to do menial work. Every resident of Gujranwala was ordered to salute
and salaam when they passed a British officer. Any Indian passing along the
street where the missionary Miss Sherwood had been attacked was commanded by
Dyer to crawl on their bellies.
Given in a packed Lahore assembly hall in November 1919,
Dyer’s testimony before the Hunter Commission used the language of personal
triumph and humiliation. Dyer treated his cross-examination as a series of
insults and slights. He often lost his temper. The ‘rebel’ meeting at the
Jallianwala Bagh was, he argued, an act of ‘defiance’ against his authority
that needed to be ‘punished’. ‘It was’, Dyer famously argued, ‘no longer a
question of merely dispersing the crowd.’ The shooting was calculated to
produce ‘a moral effect’, to reduce ‘the morale of the rebels’, and in the
process, force Indian subjects to submit.
Dyer’s response to riots in Amritsar was a retaliation to an
existential challenge. The way of life he had been brought up in was wrapped up
with the idea of Indian obedience to British commands. If those commands were
not obeyed, Dyer would not be able to consider himself a dignified human being.
When asked why he did not just shoot to disperse the crowd, Dyer said the
people who gathered ‘would all come back and laugh at me’. Without the killing,
he said, ‘I considered I would be making myself a fool’.
Dismissed quickly by his Commander-in-Chief, in poor physical
and mental health, Dyer travelled to Bombay without a hotel reservation and was
forced to stay in a dirty dormitory before taking a troopship back to England.
The Army Council banned him from any further employment in the armed forces.
Back in Britain support for him grew in some quarters, and his actions at
Amritsar were debated in Parliament. There Dyer became a political cause
célèbre for die-hard Tory and Unionist politicians who believed Britain’s
global power was acquired and retained by conquest not partnership; they saw
every act of concession as a humiliating desertion of the embattled bastions of
imperial power before the insurgent crowd. The Irish Unionist, one-time First
Lord of the Admiralty and staunch opponent of Irish nationalism, Sir Edward
Carson, was Dyer’s most fervent advocate. In his speech before the House of
Commons, Carson portrayed Dyer as the defender of English values and imperial
power against the international revolutionaries manipulating crowd violence in
Egypt, Ireland, Russia and India. ‘It is all one conspiracy, it is all
engineered in the same way, it all has the same object – to destroy our sea
power and drive us out of Asia.’
Dyer’s British defenders and critics were united in their
desire to sustain British sovereignty in India against new forces of resistance
and rebellion. Theirs was a passionate, sometimes vicious debate: some of
Dyer’s critics accused him of being ‘unBritish’ and on the verge of insanity;
some of his defenders accused the Jewish Secretary of State of being part of a
global conspiracy of Jews against British power.
The intensity of these arguments was partially caused by the
deep-rooted commitment which the everyday operators of imperial power had long
felt towards empire. But it was partly caused, too, by the fact that empire in
India had recently become important to Britain in a new way. In 1919, India was
no longer merely a self-sustaining, self-justifying outpost of British power
that mattered only to families like the Dyers who ruled it. The First World War
briefly turned British India into a vital source of British geopolitical power,
a recruiting ground for soldiers and a base for materials and cash. World war
forced Britain’s political leaders to adopt a more liberal attitude towards the
Government of India. But it also created forces that ensured liberal
imperialism could not last....”
(‘India Conquered: Britain's Raj and the Chaos of Empire’,
2016)
"A picket of British soldiers in Amritsar, 1919, defending
imperial institutions in the wake of the Jallianwalagh Bagh massacre"
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