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:: History
of Amritsar |
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The history of the
city of Amritsar is intricately intertwined with
the birth of the Sikh religion. It is believed
that the formal birth of the city occurred in the
year 1577. The Sikh Guru Ram Das with his son Guru
Arjan Dev constructed a temple around a miracle
pool with healing powers. Guru Arjan Dev
encouraged traders and craftsmen to settle around
the fledgling temple complex. The city then
started on the path of religion and wealth. |
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The plundering
adventurers targeting the North India for its
riches almost destroyed this city in the 18th
century. The Punjab province, then under Maharaja
Ranjit Singh, was a rich and almost independent
state. Ranjit Singh rebuilt the city, established
the lost businesses of the traders and donated one
hundred kilos of pure Gold for the temple. The
city has a character of inviting trouble, from
wandering plunderers and even ruling Mughals. The
tenth Sikh Guru, Guru Govind Singh, founded the
martial or the warrior class of Sikhs for
defending the city and the Sikh religion. |
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The city maintained
its reputation of being fiercely independent
during India’s freedom struggle against the
British. The people of Amritsar were outraged at
the Rowlatt Act, which was somewhat extreme form
of the US Patriot’s Act. The Act granted
overwhelming powers to the rulers to detain any
one without any proof and deny him the right to
appeal. The demonstrations against the act
continued and the British Government arrested and
deported key leaders of Punjab to unknown
locations. |
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The city of Amritsar
was a big scene of protest on 10th April 1919 with
more than 15000 people shouting slogans against
the draconian Act. The British officers ordered
firing on the crowd and felled about 20 of them.
But the strong crowd defied the firing and killed
four British officers and a Christian missionary,
Marcella Sherwood. The city of Amritsar was being
viewed as another Meerut of 1857 and fears were
ripe of another uprising. |
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General Reginald
Dyer imposed a ban on public assemblies but the
people of Amritsar who had defied the British
again assembled in large numbers in the
Jalianwalla Bagh on the 13th of April. It was a
peaceful gathering where men, women and children
listened to the speeches against the Act. General
Dyer and his troops blocked the only gate to the
park and started firing on the peaceful crowd. The
terrified women and children started jumping in a
well near the boundary wall of the park to avoid
the bullets. Soon the well was full with human
bodies. The park was littered with bullet ridden
innocent public. Thousands must have been dead
that day, though the official toll was 379. |
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The massacre at
Amritsar started a wave of unrest all over North
India. Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs joined hands
against the colonial oppressor. The British in
their bid to break the resolve of the people of
Amritsar enforced stricter orders. The infamous
‘crawling order’, where everyone was made to crawl
on the streets of Amritsar, was imposed a few days
after the Jalianwalla massacre by General Dyer.
The atrocities committed by one man on the city of
Amritsar earned him the famous sobriquet, Butcher
of Amritsar and also hundreds of thousands of
British Pounds for his biography by Nigel Collett.
The bullets did make numerous dents in the walls
of the Bagh but not the fiercely independent
spirit of the people of Amritsar. |