Eastern Eye (UK)

Mixed reaction to Jallianwal­a Bagh revamp

MODI SAYS RENOVATION WILL BE A REMINDER OF HISTORY AMID ANGER AT ‘INSULT TO MARTYRS’

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A BRITISH Sikh MP is among those who have criticised a revamp of the Jallianwal­a Bagh memorial in India.

The Jallianwal­a Bagh massacre, as it is known in India, saw British troops fire on thousands of unarmed men, women and children in the northern city of Amritsar on the afternoon of April 13, 1919.

The number of casualties from the event, which galvanised support for India’s independen­ce, is unclear. Colonial-era records put the death toll at 379, but Indian figures put the number closer to 1,000.

India’s prime minister Narendra Modi last Saturday (28) virtually inaugurate­d the renovated Jallianwal­a Bagh complex.

As part of the facelift, museum galleries have been opened, along with a daily sound and light show to display the events of April 13, 1919.

The walls of a narrow lane through which British soldiers were led by Brigadier General RH Dyer into the park have now been embellishe­d with murals and sculptures.

The martyrs’ well, in which it is believed people jumped to escape the bullets, has been covered with a transparen­t barrier.

Modi said the renovated memorial “will remind the new generation about the history of this holy place and will inspire to learn a lot about its past”.

However, historian Kim Wagner said on Twitter it was “part of the general Disneyfica­tion of the old city of Amritsar” and added that the revamped site “means that the last traces of the event have effectivel­y been erased”.

Reacting to Wagner’s tweet, British MP Preet Kaur Gill tweeted: “Our history being erased. Why?”

India’s main opposition party also criticised the move, with Congress leader Rahul Gandhi saying his party was against “this indecent cruelty”.

“Such an insult to the martyrs of Jallianwal­a Bagh can only be done by those who do not know the meaning of martyrdom,” Gandhi tweeted.

“I am the son of a martyr – I will not tolerate the insult of martyrs at any cost.”

However, Shwait Malik, an MP from the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and a member of the Jallianwal­a Bagh Trust, defended the renovation.

“These sculptures in the lane will make visitors conscious of those who walked in on that day… Earlier, people walked this narrow lane without knowing its history, now they will walk with history,” he said.

More than 100 years after the massacre, Britain has made no official apology for the incident.

During a visit in 2013, then British prime minister David Cameron described what happened as “deeply shameful” but stopped short of an apology. In 1997, the Queen laid a wreath at the site.

 ??  ?? LEARNING LESSONS: The renovated Jallianwal­a Bagh Martyrs’ Memorial was inaugurate­d via video conference by Narendra Modi last Saturday (28)
LEARNING LESSONS: The renovated Jallianwal­a Bagh Martyrs’ Memorial was inaugurate­d via video conference by Narendra Modi last Saturday (28)

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