On 13 April 1919, in Amritsar in the Punjab, British soldiers under the personal command of Brigadier General Reginald (Rex) Dyer, entered the Jallianwala Bagh, a seven-acre former walled garden that had become a dusty recreation ground and public meeting space. It was crowded that day. The usual gatherings to socialise and partake of the street vendor food were swollen due to a festival at the nearby Golden Temple, and by those come to hear an address promoting peaceful protest against British rule.
Political tension was high. The First World War was in the balance, and Indian troops were fighting on the front. Political gatherings had been forbidden, though the prohibition had been sparsely proclaimed. The soldiers did not order the crowd to disperse. They simply opened fire on Dyer’s orders, discharging 1,650 rounds of rifle ammunition in ten minutes of carnage before withdrawing, leaving five to six hundred dead and maybe three times as many wounded.
Eighteen-year-old Udham Singh was in Amritsar that day to do some business for a relative. He had been in the Bagh that morning but had slipped away to do the deal. When he heard the shots ring out, he returned to find his friends dead or dying. He swore revenge on the British Raj, as personified by Rex Dyer and his civilian chief, Lieutenant Governor Sir Michael O’Dwyer.
Udham Singh was a low caste orphan with no education or resources, and it took him twenty years, and many false starts, to get himself into a position to carry out his vengeance (though by then one of his targets had already died). He got the other one and willingly paid the price. This is no-spoiler, it is history and is revealed in chapter one - though personally being ignorant of the full story, I would have preferred that reveal to have been held back to the end.
Anita Anand, whose grandfather in similar fashion narrowly escaped the massacre, guides the reader through the history of Indian resistance and suppressed rebellion interweaving the personal stories of Udham Singh, Rex Dyer, and Sir Michael O’Dwyer with the geopolitics spanning the two world wars.
It is a
well-written, interesting, disturbing, and fascinating account of a shameful
colonial episode, not wide enough known. I recommend you read it.