A nine-member team of the Desh Bhagat Yadgaar Committee, Jalandhar, set up to preserve the legacy of the Ghadar movement, visited the newly renovated Jallianwala Bagh to see the changes for themselves. The members registered their indignation and resentment over the work done at Jallianwala Bagh and demanded its restoration to its original form. They demanded that in the light of the havoc played with the spirit and history of Jallianwala Bagh, a committee of prominent historians should be constituted to set right the wrongs committed. Public bodies like the Desh Bhagat Yadgaar Committee should be involved in the deliberations, they added.
They lamented that the beautification of Jallianwala Bagh undertaken by the government has divested it of its historical heritage and reduced the memorial to a place of recreation. Talking about the changes done at Jallianwala Bagh, the members said that murals displayed on the walls of its entrance reminds one of a festival and not of a place where more than 1,000 Indians were massacred by the British Army, when they were raising their voice against the Rowlatt Act.
Similarly, the well in which 200 persons lost their lives does not now evoke a sense of anger against the Raj, as it has been concealed behind a glass wall through which almost nothing is visible in daylight. Even the place from where the Army fired upon people has been wiped out and only a nondescript floor tile has been laid there. Earlier, this place
— source thewire.in | 10/Sep/2021
[this clearly shows the commitment of sangh towards british, even after 100 years]