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Harbans Singh. Encyclopedia Of Sikhism, Punjabi University, Patiala
Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindrenwale was a (and to some extent
still is ) Sikh hero of modern times. He was born in the
family of Brar-Jatt Baba Joginder Singh and Mata Nihal Kaur of
the village Rode in Faridkot District. Baba Joginder Singh was
a farmer of moderate means. Bhindrenwale was youngest of the
seven brothers.
After primary education he took up farming in his village. He
engaged himself in farming until 1965 when he joined the
Damdami. Taksal of Bhinder Kalan village, about 15 km north of
Moga, then headed by Sant Gurbachan Singh Khalsa. Hence the
epithet Bhindrenwale. But his association with Bhinder village
was only notional because Sant Gurbachan Singh, though
associated with Gurdwara Akhand Prakash at Bhinder Kalan,
usually took out his group of pupils on prolonged tours.
Jarnail Singh underwent a one-year course in scriptural,
theological and historical studies, at the hands of Sant
Gurbachan Singh Khalsa partly during one of his tours but for
the most part during his stay at Gurdwara Sis Asthan Patshahi
IX, near Nabha Sahib village, 15 km south of Chandigarh along
the Chandigarh-Patiala road. In 1966, he rejoined his Family
and settled down to farming again. He was married in 1966 to
Bibi Pritam Kaur, daughter of Bhai Sucha Singh of Bilaspur,
and had two sons, Ishar Singh and Inderjit Singh, born in 1971
and 1975 respectively. He continued his religious studies and
also kept his close association with the Taksal, which after
the death of Sant Gurbachan Singh Khalsa, in June 1969, was
headed by Sant Kartar Singh Khalsa, who established his
headquarters at Gurdwara Gurdarshan Prakash at Mehta Chowk, 25
km northeast of Amritsar along the road to Sri Hargobindpur.
Sant Kartar Singh khalsa was killed in a road accident. Before
his deadh on 16 August 1977, he had mentioned the name of Sant
Jarnail Singh as his successor as the new head of Damdami
Taksal. Sant Jarnail Singh was formally, elected at the bhog
ceremony in honour of Sant Kartar Singh Khalsa at Mehta Chowk
on 25 August 1977.
He had a meteoric rise to fame and his photographs began to be
avidly displayed on the front pages of newspapers and journals
across the continents. Trained in a Sikh seminary to preach
the holy word of the Gurus, he stood face to face with history
at several critical moments. Bhindrenwale within his seven
brief years of a total of 37, marked by a precipitous course,
emerged as a man of extraordinary grit and charisma. Soon he
came to be talked about in the far-flung academe as well as in
political forums.
Sant Jarnail Singh exhibited remarkable enthusiasm in carrying
out his missionary responsibilities. The primary task he
addressed was the administrating of amrit (Khanda Baate da
Pahul) . He vehemintly denounced drugs, alcoholic drinks and
trimming of hair. He took special notice of the Nirankari
heresy which was undermining the Sikh Structure. Opposition to
the Nirankaris had started during the time of his predecessor,
Sant Kartar Singh Khalsa. Matters camee to a head on the
Baisdkhi day of 1978 when Nirankaris held a convention at
Amritsar. The Damdami Taksal under Sant Jarnal Singh
Bhindrenwale and the Akhand Kirtani Jatha, another purely
religious organization, protested against government allowing
the Nirankaris to hold their convention at a time the Sikhs
were celebrating the birth anniverssary of the Khalsa. Some of
them who marched to the site of the convention were fired upon
by Nirankari guardsmen killing 13 of them on the spot and
wounding 78 others. The episode brought Sant Bhindrenwale into
the political arena. He was more against the Akali Dal which
was then leading the government in the Punjab and was partner
in the central authority in Delhi. On 4 january 1980, two days
before the Lok Sabha poll, all the 64 Nirankari accused,
including their chief Gurbachan Singh, being tried for the
killing of Sikhs, were set at liberty, by the sessions judge
of Karnal in Haryana. This bittered Sant Bhindranwale. The
media in the Punjab took the part of the Nirankaris on the
pica of' secularism. So did the Congress party which, on
returning to power at the Centre, dismissed the Akali
government in the Punjab, where too fresh elections were held
and Congress government installed. On 9 September 1981, Lala
Jagat Narain, a press baron of jalandhar, highly critical of
Sant Bhindrenwale, was assassinated. The Sant too had been a
strong critic of Jagat Narain. The government suspected the
Sant's hand in the murder and issued warrants for his arrest.
He was then on a preaching tour in Haryana and was camping at
Chando Kalan village in Hissar district when a combined force
of Punjab and Haryana police raided the village to nab him. He
himself escaped t the security of his own headquarters at
Mehta Chowk, but the police fired upon his jathd or band of
disciples; their baggage was looted, and some of the sacred
texts burnt.
The Sant offered himself for arrest on 20 September 1981. This
was followed by, a spate of violence. The Sant was released
after the Central Home Minister, Giani Zail Singh, declared in
the Parliament on 14 October 1981 that there was no evidence
against him to show his hand in Jagat Narain's murder. The
Sant had seen through the Congress conspiracy loaded against
the Sikhs. His arrest and Subsequent release raised the Sant's
stature among the Sikh community who, especially the youth,
judging hitu against the moderate Akali leadership, flocked
under his banner in ever increasing numbers. The Sant became
increasingly outspoken. The governnient took notice of the
change in Bhindrenwale's stance and proceeded to take action
against him. An attempt Was made to arrest him while he was on
a visit to Bombay was staying in the Singh Sabha Gurdwara at
Dadar on 20 April 1982, but Sant Bhindrenwale was again able
to reach safely in the Gurdwara at Mehta Chowk. On 19 July
1982 the police arrested Bhai Amrik Singh son of the late Sant
Kartar Singh Khalsa and president of the All India Sikh
Students Federation. Another senior member of thc Damdami
Taksal, Bhai Thind Singh, was arrested on the following day.
Sant Bhindrenwale felt highly provoked. Feeling that sanctuary
at Mehta Chowk was not safe enough, he moved to the Guru Nanak
Nivas rest house in the Darbar Sahib complex in Amritsar on 20
july and called for a Panthic convention on 25 july at which
he announced the launching of a morcha (campaign) For thc
release of his men. Meanwhile., the Shiromai Akali Dal had
been conducting a morcha since April 1982 against the digging
of Satluj-Yamuna Link (S.Y.L.) canal which would divert part
of Punjab's river waters to Haryana. The agitation inspite of
immense support from the Sikh peasantry was not bearing any
tangible fruit because the site (Kapori village on the Haryana-Punjab
border where the Indian Prime minister had inaugurated the
digging of the canal on 6 April 1982 was in a remote corner
away from the Dal's headquarters. The Dal now decided to
transfer the agitation, now designated Dharam Yuddh or
religious war, to Amritsar from 4 August 1982. Sant jarnail
Singh merged his own morcha with it, and thus became in a way
the joint dictator of the entire Panth though he still swore
loyalty to the former dictator of the Akali morcha, Sant
Harchand Singh Longowal.
A further provocation to the Sikhs came from the behaviour of
the Haryana government and police during the Asian Games held
at Delhi in November 1982. Sikhs travelling from Punjab to
Delhi or back were indiscriminately stopped, searched and
humiliated. Violence in the Punjab was on the increase. It was
becoming more and more clear that the government would seek a
military Solution of the situation in Punjab rather than a
political one. Sant Bhindranwale exhorted the people to be
prepared for a showdown. On 15 December 1983, he with his men
entered the Akal Takht and With the help of a former major
general of the Indian Army, Shahbeg Singh, prepared a network
of defensive fortifications inside the complex collecting in
the meanwhile a large stock of arms, ammunition and rations
anticipating the possibility of a prolonged siege. The
government on its part made elaborate plans for all army
action while pretending all along its readiness for
negotiations and denying any intention of sending armed forces
inside the Darbar Sahib complex. The Punjab was placed under
the President's rule on 6 October 1983. A ordinance declaring
parts of the state a disturbed area was promulgated, and the
police was given power to search, arrest or even shoot whom
they will with immunity from legal action. Six additional
divisions of the army including especially trained para
commandos were inducted into Punjab by the end of May 1984. On
1 June, while the Sikhs had started preparations in the Golden
Temple for the observation of the martyrdom anniversary of
Guru Arjan, which fell on the 3rd of June, strict curfew was
clamped on Amritsar and surrounding districts. The actual
assault of the army's operation nicknamed Blue Star took place
on the night of 5-6 June 1984. A pitched battle ensued in
which the army also used tanks and artillery. On the 7 Of June
the dead body of Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale was located
in the basement of the Akal Takht. |