Kochhar’s involvement with the martyrs of Ajnala began when, while studying articles and books on India’s national movement, he stumbled upon a book in 2003 titled Crisis in Punjab, written by Frederick Henry Cooper, the deputy commissioner of Amritsar in 1857. Cooper, who had led the massacre, had written the book apparently to eulogise his barbaric act of torturing 282 soldiers to death and disposing of them, both dead and alive, in a well in Ajnala. While many took the book as a piece of fiction, Kochhar sensed that Cooper’s boastful description was an untold story of freedom fighters who had been killed brutally. Pieces of evidence started adding up. Soon, Kochhar was convinced that such a mass killing had indeed taken place and the graveyard—the well—did exist somewhere.