Today, India has become a grazing field for all kinds of religious bigots, led by the Hindutva brigade. Even the Prime MinisterтАФwho took an oath to uphold a democratic and secular polityтАФopenly identifies as a Hindu nationalist, as if his office exists to serve the cause of Hindutva. The RSS/BJP rulers openly declare their intention to turn India into a Hindu Rashtra, where the Brahmanical Codes of ManuтАФwhich reduce women and Dalits to sub-human statusтАФwould become the law of the land. For them, India is the Fatherland and Holyland only for Hindus.
It must be noted that, according to the Hindutva definition, only those who have Aryan blood, believe in caste hierarchy, possess fair skin, and regard Sanskrit as a holy language can be considered true Hindus. This not only excludes Muslims and Christians but also marginalizes faiths like Sikhism, Buddhism, and Jainism, which are merely tolerated as sects of Hinduism.
However, this was not the scenario 105 years ago, when British rulers committed one of the worst massacres in modern history. Despite being shackled by one of the most powerful imperialist powers in the world, the people of India offered a heroic and united resistance. This is not hearsayтАФit is substantiated by contemporary British official documents. These invaluable records, part of the British archives that became the National Archives of India post-independence, were briefly made public during the 75th commemoration of the Jallianwala Bagh Massacre in an exhibition titled "Archives and Jallianwala Bagh: A Saga of Independence."
The documents on display, from one of the most volatile periods of the Indian freedom struggle, not only exposed British barbarism and disregard for democratic norms but also revealed previously hidden aspects of IndiaтАЩs united resistance. They were both heart-wrenching and awe-inspiring. It was painful to witness the so-called тАЬcivilizedтАЭ British committing brutalities against Indians, yet inspiring to see people from all religions and castes rising collectively in revolt.
Tragically, this rich trove of visual and textual narratives was locked away again, never to be displayedтАФeven during the massacreтАЩs centenary. It seems that neither the rulers nor the archivists want future generations to know about the colonial atrocitiesтАФor the remarkable resistance they triggered.
British Barbarism
Photographs in the exhibition revealed the horrifying repression in Punjab from 1914тАУ1919. Sikhs, in particular, were tied to metal or wooden frames and flogged, or forced to crawl on their bellies across roadsтАФnaked and humiliated in full public view. Punjab was turned into a military camp. Indians were forced to salute every Englishman/woman, barred from riding bicycles, and often had their moustaches or beards forcibly pulled. This reign of terror birthed revolutionaries like Bhagat Singh.
One chilling testimony came from Rattan Devi, who spent the night of April 13тАУ14, 1919 beside her husbandтАЩs dead body at Jallianwala Bagh:
тАЬI sat by his sideтАж I found a bamboo stick which I kept in my hand to keep off dogs. I saw three men writhing in great pain and an injured boy, about 12 years old, entreat me not to leave. I told him I would not leave my husbandтАЩs body. He asked for water, but it was impossible to get any thereтАжтАЭ
Another remarkable story was published in the Hindi daily Abhyuday (October 4, 1919). It recounted the martyrdom of two teenage friendsтАФ18-year-old Abdul Karim and 17-year-old RamchanderтАФwho had come from Lahore to attend the protest meeting. Abdul Karim had passed the Punjab matriculation exam with first-class marks, posthumously.
Air Bombardments
Perhaps the most shocking revelation was that the British used Royal Air Force planes to bomb villages in Punjab. A top-secret document dated April 14, 1919 (Task 14.4.1919), described how bombs and machine-gun fire were used against gatherings of unarmed civilians near GujranwalaтАФnow in Pakistan.
Protests by Tagore and Jinnah
The exhibition also showcased Rabindranath TagoreтАЩs original handwritten letter renouncing his knighthood in protest. He wrote:
тАЬThe time has come when badges of honour make our shame glaringтАж and I wish to stand, shorn of all special distinctions, by the side of those of my countrymen whoтАж suffer degradation not fit for human beings.тАЭ
Equally moving was M.A. JinnahтАЩs resignation letter from the Imperial Legislative Assembly, dated March 28, 1919:
тАЬA government that passes or sanctions such a law [Rowlatt Act] in times of peace forfeits its claim to be called a civilized government.тАЭ
Resistance in Gujarat
Contrary to its stereotyped image of compliance, Gujarat too witnessed violent resistance. Official records show that on April 11тАУ12, 1919, protesters burned down government offices in Ahmedabad, including the CollectorтАЩs office, city court, jail, telegraph centre, and 26 police stations.
Banned Literature
The Archives hold a treasure trove of banned resistance literatureтАФpoetry, plays, and essays. Among them:
- Bagh-e-Jallian (Hindi play by Ram Saroop Gupta)
- Jallianwala Bagh (Gurmukhi poem by Firoziddin Sharf)
- Punjab Ka Hatyakand (Urdu play)
- Jallianwala Bagh (Gujarati play, anonymous)
Some powerful verses:
> рдЬреБрд▓реНрдо рдбрд╛рдпрд░ рдиреЗ рдХрд┐рдпрд╛ рдерд╛ рд░рдВрдЧ рдЬрдорд╛рдиреЗ рдХреЗ рд▓рд┐рдП
рд╣рд┐рдВрдж рд╡рд╛рд▓реЛрдВ рдХреЛ рдореБрд╕реАрдмрдд рдореЗрдВ рдлрдБрд╕рд╛рдиреЗ рдХреЗ рд▓рд┐рдПред
> рд╣рдо рдЙрдЬрдбрд╝рддреЗ рд╣реИрдВ рддреЛ рдЙрдЬрдбрд╝реЗрдВ, рд╡рддрди рдЖрдмрд╛рдж рд░рд╣реЗ,
рдорд░ рдорд┐рдЯреЗ рд╣реИрдВ рд╣рдо рдХреЗ рдЕрдм рд╡рддрди рдЖрдЬрд╝рд╛рдж рд░рд╣реЗред
Even after Independence, the families of martyrs and injured survivors remained neglected. Ironically, those jailed briefly during the 1975тАУ77 Emergency now receive monthly pensions, but the Jallianwala Bagh families were denied even railway concessions or pensions. In frustration, the Jallianwala Bagh Shaheed Parivar Samiti wrote to the British Prime Minister for compensationтАФa telling reflection of their helplessness, and of IndiaтАЩs spineless leadership.
Udham Singh тАУ The Avenger
A telegram from April 16, 1940тАФkept secret for 47 yearsтАФrevealed British fears of Udham SinghтАЩs trial turning into a spectacle. His words in court after assassinating Michael OтАЩDyer in London were electrifying:
тАЬI did it becauseтАж he deserved itтАж For 21 years IтАЩve tried to avenge my peopleтАж I am not scared of death. IтАЩm dying for my country.тАЭ
He signed himself Mohammad Singh Azad, underscoring the idea that IndiaтАЩs freedom would come only through unityтАФof Hindus, Muslims, Sikhs. His journey took him through Mesopotamia, Kenya, Uganda, USA, USSRтАФseeking revolutionaries and ammunitionтАФbefore he finally reached London.
Sadly, in todayтАЩs India, a name like Mohammad Singh Azad could get him lynched.
Unity in Martyrdom
The Hunter Commission listed 381 martyrs: 222 Hindus, 96 Sikhs, 63 MuslimsтАФreflecting the diverse and inclusive nature of the resistance. Among them were lawyers, journalists, cobblers, weavers, laborers, women, and even children. Udham Singh himself was present at Jallianwala Bagh during the massacre.
Before the advent of Hindu and Muslim separatism, IndiaтАЩs freedom struggle was a genuinely united, anti-colonial movement.
Hidden Histories
It is tragic that these narratives of shared struggle and martyrdom remain hidden in dusty archive rooms. If made accessible, they could counteract many of the communal, casteist, and sectarian agendas plaguing modern India.
Every year on April 13, the hypocrisy of IndiaтАЩs rulers is evident. While condemning colonial-era laws like the Rowlatt Act, they themselves enforce far worse: DIR, MISA, TADA, POTA, UAPA, AFSPA. India today lives under an iron heel that even the British did not dare to impose.
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Link for some of S. Islam's writings and video interviews/debates: http://du-in.academia.edu/ShamsulIslam. Facebook: https://facebook.com/shamsul.islam.332. Twitter: @shamsforjustice. http://shamsforpeace.blogspot.com/
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