Madan Mohan Malaviya,
Mazarul Haque and
Muhammad Ali Jinnah, a member of the
All-India Muslim League resigned from the Imperial legislative council in protest against the act.
Muhammad Ali Jinnah called it a "Black Act" in his resignation letter from
Imperial Legislative Council to the
Frederic Thesiger, then-
Viceroy of India.
Mahatma Gandhi, among other Indian leaders, was extremely critical of the Act and argued that not everyone should be punished in response to isolated political crimes. The act also infuriated many other Indian leaders and the public, which caused the government to implement repressive measures. Gandhi and others thought that constitutional opposition to the measure was fruitless, so on 6 April, a
hartal took place. This was an event in which Indians suspended businesses and went on strikes and would fast, pray and hold public meetings against the 'Black Act' as a sign of their opposition and civil disobedience would be offered against the law. Mahatma Gandhi bathed in the sea at Mumbai and made a speech before a procession to Madhav Baug temple took place. This event was part of the
Non-cooperation movement. One of the largest protests occurred in Ambala, Punjab Province in early 1919 under the chairmanship of the lawyer Jhanda Singh Giani. It was the Rowlatt Act which brought Gandhi to the mainstream of the Indian struggle for independence and ushered in the
Gandhian Era of Indian politics.
Jawaharlal Nehru described Gandhi's entry into the protests in his
Glimpses of World History: Early in 1919 he was very ill. He had barely recovered from it when the Rowlatt Bill agitation filled the country. He also joined his voice to the universal outcry. But this voice was somehow different from others. It was quiet and low, and yet it could be heard above the shouting of the multitude; it was soft and gentle, and yet there seemed to be steel hidden away somewhere in it; it was courteous and full of appeal, and yet there was something grim and frightening in it; every word used was full of meaning and seemed to carry a deadly earnestness. Behind the language of peace and friendship there was power and quivering shadow of action and a determination not to submit to a wrong...This was something very different from our daily politics of condemnation and nothing else, long speeches always ending in the same futile and ineffective resolutions of protest which nobody took very seriously. This was the politics of action, not of talk. However, the success of the hartal in
Delhi, on 30 March, was overshadowed by tensions running high, which resulted in
rioting in the
Punjab, Delhi and Gujarat. Deciding that Indians were not ready to make a stand consistent with the principle of
nonviolence, an integral part of
satyagraha (disobeying the British colonial government's laws without using violence), Gandhi suspended the resistance. The Rowlatt Act came into effect on 21 March 1919. In Punjab the protest movement was very strong, and on 10 April, two leaders of the congress, Dr.
Satyapal and
Saifuddin Kitchlew, were arrested and taken secretly to
Dharamsala. On 13 April people from neighbouring villages gathered for
Baisakhi Day celebrations and to protest against their deportation in
Amritsar. Subsequently, the army was called into Punjab, which resulted in the
Jallianwala Bagh massacre of 1919. ==Revocation==