Banda Singh Shaheed
Banda Singh Shaheed
Banda Singh Shaheed
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Sohan Singh
Banda the Brave
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All rights reserved.
Published by
1915.
BANDA BAHADUB
Bliai SoJiaii Siiigli Shei-i-Babar
of Ciiijrainvala,
Secretarv, Office of the Siiperiiitendeiit,
FARIDKOT STATE.
Fofiuerly Editor, the Sikhs and Sikhism, and
the Khalsa Advocate Author of A Tale
;
'
V y U L
— :o:
Panth.
SOHAN SINGH.
FREFAOE.
In my case, it is ray own family traditions that
ERRATA.
It is regretted that owing to a hurry the
Sprinter's detit has ehided our vigilance. How-
-ever, the misprints are corrected below;
'Page Line For Read.
3 1 weal race.
3 3 nietamorphic metamorphostical
6 4 abided abode
96 last l:»ut lent
128 8 boary hoary.
Table of Contents.
Page.
1. Introduction ... ... 1
2. Chapter I. Birth, Parentage and
Early Life ... ... 7
o. Chapter II. Visited by Sri Guru
Gobind Singh ... ... 12
4. Chapter III. Advent in the
Panjab ... ... 30
5. Chapter IV. A brief outline of
the Situation ... ... 3i>
6. Chapter V. Preliminary Operations 39
7. Chapter VI. Pillage of Samana. 42
8. Chapter Vll. The Difficulties of
the Majhel Sikhs ... ... 49
9. Chapter VIll. Conquest of Sadhora 54
10. Chapter IX. Battle of Ropar ... 70
11. Cliapter X. Sirhind ... 74
12. Chapter XI. l*unishing the
Masands and Further Progress... 90
13. Chapter XII. Conquest of Saha-
I'anpiir and the surrounding tract 94
14. Chapter XII I. Reversion ... 90
15. Chapter XIV. Regaining the last
|>osition ... ... IJI
SoHAN Singh.
'
I praise my own Guru and praise him a hundred times^
who converted the human beings into gods, and it did net
take him long to do so,' a perfect Guru can effect an un-
imaginable change in the character of his followers; and
the chp.nge which the tenth Guru wrought in a twinkling in^
CHAPTER II.
Visited by CkUI'ii Gobind Singh.
The Sikh Gurus' struggle with the tyrant
Moghuls did not resemble a struggle and strife be-
tween two earthly powers, which must end sooner
or later in the victory of one and the defeat of the
other. Xor was it like the rising of an ambitious
individual resulting either in the final fulfilment
of his object or in his ultimate end and ruin. It
was a movement, which neither the murders of
the Gurus and their so many descendants and Sikhs
could suppress, nor any other means on earth could
put an end to. These persecutions and murders
rather fanned the fire of opposition into higher
flames. Thus the martyrdoms of Ajit Singh and
Jojhar Singh*^fl murders of Jorawar Singh and
Fateh Singh+ simply added to the courage of the
II
15
conversion of a Bairag I
, s'ahseqn'3ntly known in historif
rthread of history.
16
•tfli, -nTgaTii;'?? —
vBiHM^i' others may live or die,
but we will enjoy. Nero fiddled on while Rome
was burning I
and see how far he was right in his guess about the
playful Baivayi. He went to his hut, accompani-
II
17
who was neither his relative nor friend before, without any
them : —
1. Not to take rest until the Moslem anarchy
bad entirely stopped.
I 2. To do every thing in consultation with
five Sikhs t, and to begin every action with an
Ardas or prayer to God.
3. Never to disregard the position of the
community, and never to style himself a Guru.
4. Never to start a se^mrate sect.
5. Never to sow wild oats, or spoil his cele-
l>acy, by wooing a female. So on and so forth.
* It is said that tliR (r n'l fir-;t ga,»e his sword to Banda;
but the Sikhs sn itched it otf ivom him *iying that it was
meant for the use of none elso but the Khalsa Patitb.
t A Sikh quorum consists of five men, and anj-thing
which is approved by five men is accepted by the whole
nation. First of all, the tenth Gum initiated hi-; beloved
five —the well-known five Piaras of blessed memory
into the Khalsa Panth, and invested them with the powers
of an advisory committee. Ever since that day, a Sikh re-
solution has always required the imanimity of at lea^t five
lueu, Lu bo pcvssed.
24
25
himself.'
28
tlf 5f \h VH^ -ai ^T§ I fpff -qfa 3Z5^ cTHt Heft TMlf II
—
I
CHAPTER III.
Advent in the Punjab.
from Nanded
It has already been stated that
Banda had started with only twenty five Sikhs ;
CIIAPTEK IV.
A Biiei* cjtJhie of the Situation.
It was after a thorough survey of the then
situation that Banda con&idered it worth his
—
36
J
the foundation, ready to tumble down at a single-
shock, the subjects were exceedingly sick of it,,
praying in their heart of hearts that they might soon
be rid of it. Therefore, in his opposition of the
former, Banda was quite confident of the support
of the latter, and when he began to meddle with
the law, not only the professed followers of the
Onrus, the actual Sikhs, joined him, but also the
leading Hindus of the villages surrounding his-
CHAPTER V.
Preliminary operations.
you be threatened by thieves, dacojts
*ShoTild
or way-farcrs, or troubled by a Moliamniadau
bigot, be he an official of the Empire or a private
man should your o wn lives or that of your dear
;
CHAPTER VI.
Pillage of Saiiiana.
j
Samana*" was the first important town, which
fell a prey to Banda's exctirsion. Being a sub-/
division, or so to sav a district of the sub province/
of Sirhind, with 9 important Parganas^ under
* The native village of Jalal-ud-din, the executioner,
by whom Teg Bahadur had been put to death. Transfor-
mation of Sikhism, by G. C. Narang.
t Corresponding to the modern tehsil.
43
45
48
CHAPTER VII.
The difficulties of the Majliel Sikhs.
So far it was the Malva Sikhs, who had join-
ed Banda. in his preliminary expeditions, as there
was no serious difficulty in their way to come
over to him. Thus, those of them that feared
none else but God, and always longed to be able to
serve their Guru, spared no moment to meet his
Messenger, Banda, as soon as they heard of his
approach. For instance, the brave Sikhs of the
type of Ali Singh and Mah Singh ofSalaud,
whose account we have given in chapter IV, got
at him even at the risk of their own lives as well
50
I
53
CHAPTER VIII.
Conquest of Sadhora.
Meanwhile, Wazid Khan was, day and night„
busy doing all that he could, to set Banda's
eflforts at nought. But as his end had drawn
nigh, all his attempts proved futile. For in-
stance, when the Sikh army was besieging^
Samana, his spies, not more than four or five in
number, so that they might not be easily known,.
55
58
60
63
*
Ratal GarM or 'Slaughter house.' It exists dowu
to this day.
74
CHAPTER X
Sirliind.
The mention of this very name brings before I
Thus ,
just as frightened people do under such
circumstances, many left their houses unshut and
unlocked, and ran away to what direction they
found safe, while others, who were
pessimig.less
and they fled. And they had not to wait long now.
The ubiqutous referee of the field, the Sun,
became tired of his day long presence, and was
anxious to declare one party or the other defeated
or the battledrawn that an arrow struck Wazid
Khan, felling him down from his horse.* Jm-
mediately after his fall, his army turned their
backs, leaving: the field in favor of the victorious
Khalsa. Bat thsy were hotly pursued, and a
space of five or six miles was covered with corpses.
The wretched Wazid Khan reaped what he
had sown. He was lingering between life and death
that his legs having been tied with a rope, he
was dragged througli the bazars of the town. And
when this had been done, he was fastened to a
tree, where his corpse furnished a feast to kites
third brother Sham Singh, while his 4th brother was ii»
CHAPTER XI.
Punishing the Masands
AND
Further Progress.
As Banda's mission consisted in vindicating
the Sikhism and the Sikhs, and defending the
oppressed against the oppressor, he always atten-
tively listened to the statements of the afflicted
people and spared no pains to redress their wrongs.
This was why he won a universal sympathy, and
with all his habit of enforcing discipline with a
palm of flint and a finger of iron, the people liked
and loved him as their veritable champion and
liberator. For instance, a Sikh musician, Bulaki
Singh, reported that the Masandis of the village
Ghuram^ interrupted him in his prayer ; and, to
add injury to insult, broke his guitar and beat him
black and blue without any rhyme or reason.
order to appease the king, said that the real word w^as Be
92
93
CHAPTER XII.
Conquest of Saharaiipur and the
surrounding tract.
Now the progress of the miglit}^ l^auda
was absolutely unchecked, as who would have
liked to invite Death by encountering such an
invincible force which had destroyed the pcnver-
ful Nawab of Sirhind, the strongest of all the
. Faujdars? And those that still came in his way,
soon scattered away as straws Ijefore a storm, or
97
"
t The Shamsber Khalsa sa^'s ; In those days Stifi/uf/ir
CHAPTER XIII.
Reversion.
Oa their way back, the Khalsa took KarDal.
But history regrets that he should have
refrained froiu faUmg upon Delhi, which lay
quite near by, unguarded and unprotected during
the absence of the Emperor, who was away to
the Deccan. But for this sad ommission, tho
Khalsa would quite practically have become the
rulers of the whole of India without much ado.
The question, why such a glaring ommission,
mind ])ut
natiu-ally arises in the careful reader's ;
^jime been plucked uji root and branch and awarded the fa.to
104
I
in the Sikhs which the mighty forces of the Em-
I
|)ire could not overcome. So he sent his choicest
I
men, Asad Khan the son of Khankhana and
I
laujdar Shahabuddin, and others, with his own
I
son, pi-inco Muazzam, with strict orders not to
come jjack unless the turbulaut Banda had been
^mptured alive. They went with forced marches
and were met by the Khalsa near Buria. But the
latter having sustained a <lefeat tied away partly
to the mountains and partly — Banda and others—
to the Fort of Lohgarh, which was besieged in no
time. The siege continued for many days amidst
a regular and unceasing rain of shots and shells
from both sides. But as the Sikhs were un-
supported and unprovisioned while the Imperial
force was constantly reinforced and richly provi-
sioned, the former were about to flee away that a
sym]):itliis3r —a true illustration of '^. friend in
ami U a frmni iMi/jJ^t/'— appeared from among
the enemy, and supT)orted the Khalsa secretly
with ])rovisious at such a critical juncture. It
was Diwan Hardyal, a prominent figure in the
expedition, who, though au employ of the Moghal,
was an admirer of the Sat Guiai. First his
support was secret; ))ut when
enemy came to
the
know of it, he openly went over to Banda with
as many men and as much material as he could
take.
history, the first being that of Bhai Sant Singh, who having'
in his appearance the likeness of the 10th Guru, professed:
108
CHAPTEK X
Regaining' the last position.
j
When Banda heard this, he again came out
^of his mountain recesses and took possession of
Sirhind. But the Emperor, who was soon in-
formed of this, again personally appeared on the
spot with a formidable force suiting his royal
position. Banda, finding himself unable to
encounter them, again disappeared in the moun-
tains, so that Sirhind was once more in the hands
-of the jSIoghul.
Meanwhile Banda went as far through the
112
coo
it
I
iSikhs. The occu'pation ofKahon was followed by
i the conquest of Jullundhar. Thus the progre^ss of
I
the Klialsa was now uncontested and uncurbed,
I
till it received a fatal blow in the time of Far-
rukh Sayyar.
CHAPTER XV.
Eiirthcr fights with tii« Kasiiri Patkans.
/
* According to Banda B ihadar this battle took place
in 17GS Bikrami. But my tinding is that these events
k followed the battle of Lohgarh. However, this difference
123
*
Almost all writers have considered such a clever
flight of the Sikhs to be nothing but a defeat.
But to be true, all have been mistaken, and it
was only one Qazi Nur Din who understood the
real object of it. He had personally witnessed
many a battle of the Sikhs in the Panjab in com-
pany with Ahmad Shah abdali . Says he in his
book styled 'Jang NamcC :
CHAPTER XYI.
Pluiuler of Kalaiiaur aiul Bahila.
*17 70Bikrami.
126
128
CHAPTER XTII.
Retrogression and disriiption. A
It is easy, say the boary sages, to encounter
1
131
as his guest, aud when the latter was fast asleep, he stola
dwindle.
136
/
137
'
138
CHAPTER XVIII.
Captivity and End.
The news of this fresh havoc exasperated the
Emperor most, so that he issued express orders
to Abdul Samad Khan, the Governor of Lahore,
to put an end to the trouble. The said Governor,
joined by the Hakims of Eminabad, Pasrur, Patti
-and Kalanaur, Eaja Bheem Singh of Kattoch and
Dhru Deva of Jasrota'*, each with a large army,
led this greatest and final expedition against
Banda, who being informed of all this, had
already commenced to throw up a fort at Kot
Mirza Jan near Kalanaur, as he knew that he
was then not strong enough to fight the innume-
rable oddsi of the enemy in an open field. But
Providence now would not allow him to fulfil his
object, as the fort was as yet only half built that
the Imperial army took him by surprise. And as
was expected of him, he fought most bravely, in-
flicting heavy loss on the imperialists. But he
was compelled to leave that unsafe fort and to
retreat from post to post till he took shelter in a
*lbrat Nama quoted by G. C. Narang.
fA large army of chosen warriors and a powerful
.artillery. — G. C. Narang.
—
141
^
would not cease, till it was decided that
Baba Binod Singh should leave the Haveli.
This the Baba accepted .nnd the brave old
Sikh fell upon the besiegers sword in hand,
and piercing the apparently impassable rows,
disappeared soon from the sight. Finding that
if further pressed, the hungry and thirsty Sikhs
144
ing that he was a Sikh of the Guru and that he was quite
willing to die in company with his brothers. Thus, it waS
amidst the continued remonstrance of his mother that he
gave his dear life at the alter of -piece. This version is
supported by Khafi Khan, and we hope to dwell upon it in
detail, in a separate pamphlet. /
145
BANDA.
..1
Ranjit Singh.
r.
Jujhar Singh. Zorawar Singh.
1 .
Arjan Singh.
1 r . ]
Fateh Singh. Suchet Singh. Kharak Singh, Amir Singh-
1
Teja Singh. A tar Singh. Sohan Singh. Siijan Singh,
148
CHAPTER XIX.
Conclusion.
Bhai Karm Singli, the author of the.
Ourmukhi Banda Bahadur, gives a description of
Banda
the personal appearance and character of ;
The End.
PLEASE DO NOT REMOVE
CARDS OR SLIPS FROM THIS POCKET
DS Sohan Singh
461 Banda the brave
.9
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