Jalianwala Bagh Massacre
Massacre of Amritsar, also called Jallianwalla Bagh Massacre, Jallianwalla also spelled Jallianwala, incident on April 13, 1919, in which British troops fired on a large crowd of unarmed Indians in Amritsar in the Punjab region (now in Punjab state) of India,
killing several hundred people and wounding many hundreds more. It
marked a turning point in India’s modern history, in that it left a
permanent scar on Indo-British relations and was the prelude to Mohandas (Mahatma) Gandhi’s full commitment to the cause of Indian nationalism and independence from Britain.
During World War I
(1914–18) the British government of India enacted a series of
repressive emergency powers that were intended to combat subversive
activities. By the war’s end, expectations were high among the Indian
populace that those measures would be eased and that India would be
given more political autonomy. The Montagu-Chelmsford Report, presented to the British Parliament
in 1918, did in fact recommend limited local self-government. Instead,
however, the government of India passed what became known as the Rowlatt Acts in early 1919, which essentially extended the repressive wartime measures.
The acts were met by widespread anger and discontent among Indians,
notably in the Punjab region. Gandhi in early April called for a one-day
general strike throughout the country. In Amritsar
the news that prominent Indian leaders had been arrested and banished
from that city sparked violent protests on April 10, in which soldiers
fired upon civilians, buildings were looted and burned, and angry mobs
killed several foreign nationals and severely beat a Christian
missionary. A force of several dozen troops commanded by Brigadier
General Reginald Edward Harry Dyer was given the task of restoring order. Among the measures taken was a ban on public gatherings.
On the afternoon of April 13, a crowd of at least 10,000 men, women, and children gathered in an open space known as the Jallianwalla Bagh,
which was nearly completely enclosed by walls and had only one exit. It
is not clear how many people there were protesters who were defying the
ban on public meetings and how many had come to the city from the
surrounding region to celebrate Baisakhi, a Hindu and Sikh spring
festival. Dyer and his soldiers arrived and sealed off the exit. Without
warning, the troops opened fire on the crowd, reportedly shooting
hundreds of rounds until they ran out of ammunition. It is not certain
how many died in the bloodbath, but, according to one official report,
an estimated 379 people were killed, and about 1,200 more were wounded.
After they ceased firing, the troops immediately withdrew from the
place, leaving behind the dead and wounded.
The shooting was followed by the proclamation of martial law
in the Punjab that included public floggings and other humiliations.
Indian outrage grew as news of the shooting and subsequent British
actions spread throughout the subcontinent. The Bengali poet and Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore
renounced the knighthood that he had received in 1915. Gandhi was
initially hesitant to act, but he soon began organizing his first
large-scale and sustained nonviolent protest (satyagraha) campaign, the noncooperation movement (1920–22), which thrust him to prominence in the Indian nationalist struggle.
The government of India ordered an investigation of the incident
(the Hunter Commission), which in 1920 censured Dyer for his actions and
ordered him to resign from the military. Reaction in Britain to the
massacre was mixed, however. Many condemned Dyer’s actions—including Sir Winston Churchill, then secretary of war, in a speech to the House of Commons in 1920—but the House of Lords
praised Dyer and gave him a sword inscribed with the motto “Saviour of
the Punjab.” In addition, a large fund was raised by Dyer’s sympathizers
and presented to him. The Jallianwalla Bagh site in Amritsar is now a
national monument.