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During military attack on the Golden Temple Complex, code named,
"Operation Blue Star" at least five thousand innocent Sikhs who had
gathered there for observation of the martyrdom day of Guru Arjun, were
massacred by the Indian Army. Feeling not content with this ghastly
bloodshed the Indian government, side by side with Operation Blue Star,
launched on the Sikhs another attack known as Operation Woodrose. The
main purpose of this Operation was to mop up all Amritdhari Sikhs,
especially the young boys, from all villages of Punjab. During this
mopping up operation the Army indiscriminately picked up all Sikh boys
and other Sikhs who had supported flowing beards and adorned Gatra, a
small dagger, one of the five symbols prescribed by Guru Gobind Singh.
It is preposterous that the Army branded in their official publication
"Bat Cheet" all Amritdhari Sikhs as extremists and the Indian government
led by Indira Gandhi had endorsed this grave disinformation spread by
the blinded Army. Instead of asking the Army to keep their hands off the
innocent Amritdhari Sikhs, the Indian government framed draconian laws
to facilitate the Army to carry out indiscriminate arrests of the Sikhs,
young and old, alike. The state of Punjab and Chandigarh were declared
as disturbed areas and to accord it legal sanctity the Punjab Chandigarh
Disturbed Areas Act was passed by the government. Not only that, to
enable the Army to round up any Sikh they wished to without impunity the
government passed another Act called the Armed Forces (Punjab and
Chandigarh) Act. To provide sharp teeth to the courts, the Terrorists
Affected Areas (Special Courts) Act was also passed to deal sternly with
the arrested Sikhs. And to arm the police and the paramilitary forces
with unbridled powers the Criminal Procedure Code was amended. The civil
administration was virtually subordinated to the military authorities.
Thus Punjab was virtually converted into a Military Occupied Area as is
done in the case of captured area of an enemy country.
The Army revengefully let loose a rein of terror in
every nook and comer of all villages of Punjab. Like hunting hounds they
rounded up thousands of Sikhs especially the youths, detained them in
military camps, tortured them brutally, and in many cases shot them
dead. Many were crippled and maimed permanently. The reckless oppression
forced hundreds of those Sikh youths, at whom the Army could not lay
hands, to flee their villages. Many of them went under ground and many
escaped to Pakistan and other countries to escape ruthless oppression
let loose by the Army. The mothers, sisters and wives of those Sikhs,
who went under ground for fear of arbitrary arrests, were arrested,
detained in the military camps, tortured and in many cases molested in
order to force their fleeing relatives to surrender. There was none to
hear their wails and woes; their was none to give them healing touch.
Only wild wolves were let loose to howl and growl at them. The fanatic
Hindus slyly smiled and gleefully rejoiced at the pitiable plight of the
Sikhs in Punjab.
This monstrous military action against the Sikhs was
mischievously code-named as Operation Woodrose because in the blind eyes
of the Indian government the young Sikhs were of course roses but
"wildly" grown in the woods. With this malice and contempt in their
minds the Indian Army weeded out the "roses" from the "Woods". In this
way the land of the roses, the state of Punjab, was ruined beyond
repairs.
The ruthless repression of the Sikhs in Punjab
surpassed the atrocities committed by Zakarya Khan and Mir Mannu, in the
eighteenth century A.D. under the Mughal rule as well as of Ahmed Shah
Abdali.
Thus "Operation Blue Star" and "Operation Wood Rose"
left a deep and indelible scar in the fare face of the land of he roses,
the land of Punjab. Who will heal these wounds; who will remove this
scar? None else, One day the Sikhs alone would heal their wounds. Or
some day some Messiah may born again to restore confidence in them and
elevate them.
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