Since 1948, every year, July 13, was observed as the state holiday in Jammu and Kashmir and the Chief Minister and other Cabinet Ministers, opposition leaders, would pay tributes to the martyrs in Srinagar. On this day, in 1931, 21 Kashmiris were killed by Maharaja Hari Singh’s forces when Kashmiris were agitating against Maharaja for arresting a fiery orator, Abdul Qadir, outside Srinagar’s central jail. Qadir was arrested for insisting that the only course for Muslims was to fight “Maharaja’s oppression” with sticks and stones if guns were not available. The Maharaja’s forces opened fire at the protesters, who were pelting stones. Twenty-one Kashmiris were killed and several wounded. Thus, the first street agitation against Maharaja began in Kashmir. Later, Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah described the day as having the same impact on “our movement as the massacre Jallianwala Bagh had on India’s independence movement.”