Sant
Jarnail Singh
Bhindranwale
Sant Jarnail Singh Khalsa Bhindranwale was born in village Rode located in Fiaridkot District of Punjab, in 1947. From his childhood, he had a religious bent of mind. Sant Gurbachan Singh Khalsa, head of Damdami Taksaal, the premier Sikh faith school, visited the child's village and suggested to Joginder Singh, Jarnail Singh's father, that his son join the Taksaal as a student. Coming to the Taksaal in 196, Jarnail Singh received instruction in Sikh theology and history under Sant Gurbachan Singh's tutelage and later under that of Sant Kartar Singh Bhinranwale. He was a brilliant student gifted with unusual memory and grew up to be an effective preacher of the Faith. At only thirty years of age, on August 25, 1977, he succeeded Sant Kartae Singh as head of the Taksaal.
From July 1977 to July 1982, the Sant extensively toured cities and villages of Punjab to preach the Sikh faith. He also visited other states and cities in India . Wherever he went, he carried Sri Guru Gobind Singh Sahib's message to every home exhorting Sikhs to receive amrit, observe the Sikh appearance given by the Guru, and live according to the teaches of Sri Guru Granth Sahib Jee. Tavleen Singh tells us: “His Philosophy in six words was nashey chaddo, amrit chhako, Gursikh bano.” (give up addictions, receive amrit, become good Sikhs). He defined his own mission as follows:
“My mission is to administer Amrit; to explain the meanings of Gurbani and to teach Gurbani to those around me; …. [to tell people] that a Hindu should be a true Hindi, a Muslim should be a true Muslim and a Sikh should be a true Sikh.”
His preaching was based on love. He said:
“If we speak to someone with hatred and try to assert our superiority, it will create hatred in the minds of everyone. So long as we have the spirit of love, so long as we have the support of Satguru Hargobind Singh, the master of Miri and Piri, is there any power on Earth that can subdue us?”
He wanted the Sikhs to “come back to Anandpur, their home” by receiving Amrit and become his brothers and sons of Sri Guru Gobind Singh Sahib.
Sant Jarnail Singh Khalsa Bhindranwale had a compelling personality and spoke in village idiom. Those who listened to him were impressed by his simple living, personal charm, and clear thinking. Joyce Pettigrew, who met in him in 1980, writes: “There was a very close association between the sant and the people, as I myself witnessed on a visit to meet Sant Bhindranwale in Guru Nanak Niwas.” According to Vandana Shive, Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale
“gained his popularity with the Punjab peasantry by launching an ideological crusade against the cultural corruption of Punjab . The most ardent followers of Bhindranwale in his first phase of rising popularity were children and women, both because they were relatively free of the new culture of degenerative consumption, and they were worst hit by the violence in generated. In the second phase of Bhindranwale's popularity, men also joined his following, replacing vulgar movies with visits to Gurdwaras and reading Gurbani in place of pornographic literature. The Sant's following grew as he successfully regenerated the ‘good' life of purity, dedication and hard work by reviving these fundamental values of the Sikh way of life. The popularity of Bhindranwale in the countryside was based on this positive sense of fundamentalism as revitalizing the basic moral values of life that had been the casualty of commercial capitalism. During the entire early phase on Bhindranwales preaching, he made no anti-Government or anti-Hindu statement, but focused on the positive values of the Sikh faith. His role was largely that of a social and religious reformer.”
According to Khushwant Singh;
“Within a short period of becoming head of the Taksaal, Jarnail Singh came to be recognised as the most effective instrument of renaissance of Sikh fundamentalism. He toured villages exhorting Sikh youth to return to the Spartan ways of the Khalsa started by Guru Gobind Singh: not to clip their beards, to abstain from smoking; drinking and taking drugs. Wherever he went, he baptized young men and women by the hundreds. An integral part of his preaching was that all Sikhs should, as has been required by their warrior Guru Gobind Singh, be shastradharis – weapon-bearers.”
Mark Tully and Satish Jacob state that “In spite of the Government's propaganda, to many people Bhindranwale remained a sant, or holy man, not a terrorist.”
The religious revival lead by Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale resulted in a large number of Sikhs, especially the youth, receiving initiation into the Sikh faith. According to Khushwant Singh:
“Bhindranwale's amrit parchaar was a resounding success. Adults in their thousands took oaths in public to abjure liquor, tobacco and drugs and were baptized. Videocassettes showing blue films and cinema houses lost out to the village Gurdwara. Men not only saved money they had earlier squandered in self-indulgence, but now worked longer hours on their lands and raised better crops. They had much to be grateful for to Jarnail Singh who came to be revered by them as Baba Sant Jarnail Singh Ji Khalsa Bhindranwale.”
When Sant Bhindranwale was staying in the Darbar Sahib complex during 1982 and 1983, four to five hundred persons were administered amrit each Wednesday and Sunday. On April 13, 1983 over ten thousand were initiated and during the month ending on April 12, 1984, forty-five thousand Sikhs received amrit. This revival was extremely significant and Sant Bhindranwale was emerging as the lead figure in the Sikh faith and a role model for the youth. A relative once told me that his two sons had stopped taking tea. I asked him why, and if they had been to see Sant Bhindranwale. The reply was : “No, it is just the way things are in Punjab . The young people love and admire him so much that if they come to know what the Sant does or doesn't do, they like to follow his example.” People sought his advice and intercession for personal problems and conflict resolution. Khushwant Singh reports:
“On a later visit to Amritsar I got an inkling into the reasons of Bhindranwale's popularity. I will narrate two incidents to illustrate this. One day a young girl came to see Bhindranwale. She clutched his feet and sobbed out her story of how she was maltreated by her husband's family for failing to extract more money from her parents and of her husband's unwillingness to take her side. Bhindranwale asked hename and where she lived. “So you are a daughter of the Hindus,” he said. “Are you willing to become the daughter of a Sikh?” She nodded. Bhindranwale sent a couple of his armed guards to fetch the girl's family. An hour later a very frightened trio consisting of the girl's husband and his parents were brought to his presence. “Is this girl a daughter of your household?” he demanded. They admitted she was. “She tells me that you want money from her father. I am her father.” He placed a tray full of currency notes before them and told them: “Take whatever you want”. The three fell at his feet and craved forgiveness.
Khushwant Singh tells us that he was so respected that, after his election to be head of the Damdami Taksaal in preference to Amrit Singh, son of Kartar Singh, “instead of resenting the choice, Amrik Singh became a confidante and collaborator of Jarnail Singh.”
In the six years which led up to the invasion of Sri
Harmander Sahib (the Golden Temple) Indira Gandhi and her government
machinery ruthlessly made Sant Jarnail Singh Khalsa Bhindranwale the
target of false propaganda in an attempt to assassinate his
character.
The Indian government used it's controlled radio and television to
vehemently denounce him; it paid large sums of money to renowned writers
to write against him in order to tarnish his figure, sent letters and
messages to politicians, opposition members and Chief Ministers requesting
them to denounce Sant Jarnail Singh as an evil man, and hired people to
deliver speeches and write articles in newspapers and news magazines
mischievously maligning Sant Bhindranwale as a terrorist and anti Hindu
communalist. His speeches were branded as anti national,
seccessionist and inflammatory and he was given the title of India's
Khomeimi.
Yet if facts, and facts alone are considered a very different picture
emerges of this influential Sikh figure.Sant Jarnail Singh was born in
1947 at village Rode in district FaridKot in Punjab and was the youngest
of seven brothers . From his childhood he showed profound spiritual
inclinations and was baptised at the young age of five by Sant
Gurbachan Singh Khalsa the 12th head of the highly respected missionary
college Damdami Taksal (the Taksal was set up by Guru Gobind Singh
Ji who appointed Baba Deep Singh Ji and Bhai Mani Singh Ji in 1709 to lead
this Sikh institute of religious learning). He spent his
childhood and adolescense in deep meditation devoting himself towards a
spiritual life. Sant Gurbachan Singh seeing this asked his
father in order to admit him into the Taksal. When Sant Kartar Singh
the 13th Jathedar of Damdami Taksal expired in 1977 Sant Jarnail Singh was
chosen as the 14th Jathedar of this institution due to his meditative
nature and knowledge of Gurbani. He immediately set about keeping
the traditions of Damdami Taksal by imparting training to students in
reciting and understanding of the Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji and the
propagating of Sikh traditional values. He went from village to
village and town to town preaching Sikh values, baptising the Sikhs and
exhorting them not to consume intoxicants of any kind as well as to
refrain from eating meat. He preached the true spirit of Sikhi. But
what circumstances forced him to make a stand against the Hindu rulers
of Delhi ?
It was on April 13th 1978, on the day of Vaisakhi when Sant Bhindranwale’s
Jatha and members of the Akhand Kirtani Jatha lead by Bhai Fauja
Singh on hearing that a heretical sect (called Nirankaries) were mocking
their faith and insulting the Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji decided to hold a
peaceful protest march to the place where the so called Nirankaries were
gathering. These 'Nakli Nirankaries' were receiving help and financial
support from the Congress government with the intention of dividing and
disrupting the Sikhs. On reaching the gathering the Sikhs were fired upon
by the Nirankaries resulting in the deaths of 13 Sikhs including Bhai
Fauja Singh and injury to a further 80. The police either looked on
or took part in the massacre and later the government prevented the case
from being heard in the High Court.
It was after this tragic and deplorable incident that Sant
Bhindranwale came to the forefront of events in Punjab and led the
Sikhs in airing their grievances against the Central Government. In
Brahmin India hundreds of people belonging to minorities were being
killed, intimidated, discriminated against, exploited and eliminated
systematically by the regime of New Delhi. Sant Bhindranwale invited
the Sikhs to rise and raise their voices against the tyrant rulers as the
law of the land had failed to give justice to them: His message was
plain "follow the Satguru". However because people had
strayed so far from the true path of Sikhi any attempt to
bring people back to that path
was considered
extreme. He was labelled a religious fanatic to which he replied in his
speeches:
"I am accused of extremism because I propagate
against social evils and persuade the people to get themselves baptised by
observing the ceremony of taking Amrit, the sacred necter used for
baptism."
"We wish every religion to grow and
flourish but we will not tolerate attacks on Sikhi designed to terminate
it."
"We have no enmity with Hindus or with a person of
any other faith"
"My mission is to ensure that everyone
Hindu, Sikh, Muslim remains true to ones religion, that there is unity
among all sections of people, that the modesty of women is not violated
that all people are weaned away from the use of narcotics, that all social
evils are cured and to see that the Sikhs mobilise themselves under one
banner by strengthening their faith in the Guru Granth Sahib Ji. If
all this, which is the mission of my life is termed as 'extremism' then I
don't mind being known as an extremist"
"We are in favour of unity if it does not result
in Sikhs being treated as second class citizens."
" We are Sikhs and Sikhs do not believe in
killing. "
" Even if it results in my body being cut to small
pieces I shall still fight against injustice. "
It is left to the reader to decide whether or not
these are the words of a fanatic.
To understand Sant Bhindranwale one needs to go to the very roots of Sikhi
itself. The sixth Guru, Sri Guru Hargobind Sahib Ji, had the Sri Akal
Takhat Sahib built directly in front of Sri Harmandir Sahib. For the
Sikhs, the Akal Takhat is the centre for their political (worldly)
decisions and Sri Harmandir Sahib is the centre for their religious
(spiritual) inspiration. Setting both these along-side each other
was a gesture that the religion and political thought must go together -
political decisions must be made with the enlightenment gained from
religion and religion can only flourish with freedom. Guru Gobind Singh Ji
put this idea in the following gesture:
Dharma
(righteousness) cannot flourish without Raj (sovereignty) Without
Dharma nothing is of any value.
For Sikhs there is
only one sovereign to whom they bow and that is Sri Guru Granth
Sahib Ji. Our religious teachings say we cannot have a sovereign amongst
equals, as all humans are equal. Thus a Sikh owes greater allegiance
to Guru Ji than to any government. Hence the need arose for Sant
Bhindranwale to say :
We are not the
followers of Indria or her father. We are the Sikhs of Sri Guru
Hargobind Sahib Ji and Sri Guru Gobind Singh Ji The Lords of both
Spiritual and Temporal Power.
Here the need also rose for him to come to the forefront in the
recent struggle. He was not a politician. He was a religious preacher,
first and foremost, but because Sikhi was under attack from also from
‘Sikh’politicians he had to enter the political fray.
Even now, to back up its claim that Sant Bhindranwale was a terrorist the
government propaganda machine arises absurd questions concerning
him. One of these is that if Sant Bhindranwale was not a terrorist
then why did he appeal to the Sikhs to arm themselves ? Arms are an
inseparable part of the Sikh religion and culture. The Khalsa was
created out of the double
edged sword, he
trained himself in arms and he died fighting against the tyrant with arms.
Keeping arms for protection of justice and righteousness is not evil; on
the contrary, every Sikh is to bear arms. Sri Guru Gobind
Singh Ji's instructions to his Sikhs were :
O my beloved
(Khalsa) hear this request of mine, Without weapons and Kesh (Hair) do
not come before me.
Thus in effect Sant Bhindranwale was reiterating this order. By calling
him a terrorist for doing so, the government was explicitly casting a slur
on the Sikh religion. Sant Bhindranwale also pointed out that a Sikh
needs no licence for such arms, since Sri Guru Hargobind Sahib Ji did not
obtain a licence from Emperor Jehangir and nor did Sri Guru Gobind Singh
Ji from Aurengzeb, even though it was illegal for Sikhs to carry arms in
those days. As to the use of these weapons, Sant Bhindranwale time and
again stated the Sikh belief that there is no greater sin than to use such
weapons to murder people or to loot and plunder. But he also
pointed out that for a Sikh to posses arms and not to use them to fight
for his and others’ just rights and his survival is just as great a
sin.
He supported violence only against those who first
committed violence against innocent people, and the killings of those who
first killed innocents. To kill those who first kill others is not
terrorism but is in fact an act to stop terrorism and uphold the
principles of justice and righteousness: the responsibility of
a Saint-Soldier.
The Indian government also points an accusing finger at Sant Bhindranwale
saying that he was responsible for the murder of all Hindus in the months
leading up to the invasion of Sri Harmandir Sahib. The fact is that
there's not a scrap of evidence to back up this claim. Any evidence
that has been forwarded is purely circumstantial and would not stand
up in any court of law and did not when Sant Bhindranwale voluntary
courted arrest at Metha Chowk, but was released without charge.
Feudal killings in the Punjab, and indeed in the rest of India, are
unfortunately very common. Since Sant Bhindranwale came to the
forefront in the Punjab, all such killings were portrayed as being
political and blamed on Sant Ji. The justification given for the
attack on Sri Harmandir Sahib was that the government could not
tolerate the killing of Hindus in Punjab. What is conveniently
ignored is the fact that an equal, if not greater number of Sikhs were
also killed during the same period; whether it be whilst in police
custody, or during peaceful demonstrations, or by 'Hindu' mobs in
neighbouring states such as Haryana, or in personal feuds. No action has
been taken to bring those actually responsible to
justice.
Those people who have spent any time in the presence of the Sant, vouch
for his true character. For example, Joyce Pettigrew of South Asia
Research writes about the Sant :
" I met Jarnail
Singh Bhindranwale and Amrik Singh (president All India Sikh Students
Federation A.I.S.S.F. (now known as S.S.F.) in mid-December 1983.
They were not fanatical figures full of hatred that the press portrayed.
Bhindranwale was quiet, with a sense of humour. He listened intently
to the questions, answering directly if he could. On one occasion when he
could not he said openly that he studied only to the fifth grade. He was
unpretentious, apologising twice if anything he said offended
me.”
Professor Mehar-Chan Bharadwaj, an advisor to the agitation, persuaded an
M.P. to spend three days at Sri Harmandir sahib in April '84. On his
return he made a speech in parliament stating that " there were no
terrorists in the
Golden Temple
"
and further said that " to invade the
Golden Temple would be a grave
mistake ".
It is extremely
unfortunate that the Indian government and media chose to portray Sant
Bhindranwale in the way they did. By doing so they branded
every true follower of the Sikh faith a terrorist and succeeded in
alienating Sikhs from
India.
Sant Bhindranwale did just what is expected of a saint-soldier, and thus
he was not a terrorist but a protector of those who were being terrorised
by the tyrant rulers.
It is hoped that this article has gone some way to redressing the balance,
Sikhs of today must wash off their masochistic tendencies of
condemnation of their own community, which appears to have been imbibed in
them as a result of continued mischievous propaganda against the Sikhs by
the brahmin majority.
"Please come under
the fold of Satguru (the one and only True Satguru), take Amrit,
read the bani (Scriptures) and talk among yourselves of the Panth and the
Kesari Nishan Sahib (the Sikh flag) and of your true leader the Guru
Granth Sahib Ji...and when the time comes for confrontation don't kill the
poor, don't molest the women and don't trouble the old, but don't spare
anyone who insults Guru Ji!"
Let me die
unafraid beyond the reach of aid Let me lie proudly
dead. (Sant Jarnail
Singh Ji Khalsa Bhindranwale)
Information Courtesy of:
Shaheedi
Immortality
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