This period witnessed the Asian Games, the
Operation Bluestar and the Third Holocaust in the Sikh
History.
19.1
The Akali Janta coalition government of Punjab under Prakash
Singh Badal which took office on 28 June 1977 resigned on 17
February 1980 when President's rule was promulgated in
Punjab.
19.2
At the Centre, the Janta Government led by Morarji Desai
broke up and in July 1979 Charan Singh, the Jat leader, took
over as the Prime Minister with the active support of
Congress (1). The Congress withdrew its support a month
later and the parliament was dissolved. New elections were
fixed for January 1980.
19.3
Congress won the January elections and Mrs. Indira Gandhi
returned to power as the Prime Minister. She took the oath
of office on 14 January 1980. Soon after gaining power at
the centre, Mrs. Gandhi ordered fresh elections in several
states including Punjab. Congress (1) won 64 seats out of
117 assembly seats and formed the next government in Punjab.
Sardar Darbara Singh became the next Chief Minister of the
state. Giani Zail Singh was the new Home Minister in the
Central Cabinet.
19.4
Baba Gurbachan Singh, the Nirankari leader, was assassinated
on 24 April 1980, by a 35 year old Sikh named Ranjit Singh.
Suspicion of the killing was roused against Sant Jarnail
Singh Bhinderwale, who was the head of Damdami Taksaal and
had come into prominence with his untiring missionary work
in the Punjab Villages. He had also publicly declared that
whosoever had performed the task of killing Baba Gurbachan
Singh deserved to be honoured at the Akal Takhat.
19.5
Sant Jarnail Singh was a Sikh preacher before he came to the
political stage. He was born in January 1947 in the village
of Rode in the district of Moga in Punjab. He was educated
at the Taksaal at Mehta Chowk, a small township some 20
miles from Amritsar. He had first come to the attention of
the public in the clash with neo-Nirankari sect at Amritsar
in April 1978. He was implicated with Baba Gurbachan Singh's
murder due to his fiery speeches.
19.6
On 9 September 1980, Lala Jagat Narain proprietor-editor of
Hind Samachar, a widely circulated Urdu daily published from
Jullundur, was murdered. The Lala was not only supporting
the Nirankari movement but was also opposing the Punjabi
language issue. He also frequently wrote against the loyalty
of the Sikhs for their motherland. Bhinderwale had spoken
against the Lala in his speeches. Bhinderwale was arrested
in 1981 but was soon set free, as no charge was brought
against him. His arrest was also very dramatic. When the
Punjab Chief Minister, Darbara Singh, sent the police at
Chowk Mehta to arrest him, he sent back word that he would
offer himself for arrest voluntarily on 20 September. The
government, fearing violence, had no choice but to agree. On
20 September the Sant came out from the Taksaal, addressed a
huge gathering and offered himself for arrest.
19.7
Sant Harcharn Singh Longowal of village Longowal in Sangrur
district was a Sikh preacher. He also became an Akali MLA.
He was soft spoken and of a loving nature. He influenced the
Sikh masses as no one else could do at that time. He was
elected president of Akali Dal in 1981 and was assassinated
in August 1985. Under his leadership a number of morchas
where launched, Nehar Roko (stop the canal), Rasta roko
(stop the traffic) and Rail Roko (stop the train) in 1981.
On 4 August 1982, he announced a peaceful 'Dharam Yudh'
morcha (holy war) against the government. The demands of the
Sikhs, submitted to the government were both socio-economic
and religious. The important ones were:
19.8
On 14 March 1981, the fifty-fourth All India Sikh Education
Conference was held at Chandigarh. An American resident
Sikh, Ganga Singh Dhillon, president of the Nankana Sahib
Foundation at Washington, chaired the meeting. In this
address he declared that the Sikhs were a nation and not a
community. A month later, on 15 April 1981 the Shiromani
Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee also passed a resolution
declaring that the Sikhs were a nation, and that the
Government of India should settle their long standing
grievances, so that the Sikhs could also breathe the air of
freedom.19.9
On 26 July 1981, a Sikh convention was called by the Akali
Dal at Gurdwara Manji Sahib, Amritsar, where a charter of 45
demands was adopted. A series of meetings was arranged
between the Akali Dal leadership and Prime Minister Indira
Gandhi during this period but without any results.
19.10
In December 1982 the Asian Games were held in New Delhi.
Bhajan Lal was the Chief Minister of Haryana. The Government
feared disruption of the games and asked Bhajan Lal to block
the way of the Akal protesters from Punjab, who had to cross
through Haryana territory to reach Delhi. Bhajan Lal and his
administration took this opportunity to insult every Sikh
including the high military personnel and IAS officers, who
passed Haryana by car, bus or train.
19.11
The Asian games passed without disruption but the
indiscriminate humiliation and insult of the Sikhs at large
by the Haryana government stuck in the psyche of the Sikh
community and gave a new turning to the Akal agitation. In
the post Asaid period of law and order situation in Punjab
worsened. During 1982 - 84 more than 300 people were killed
in cold blood. The killed people included both Hindus and
the Sikhs. On 25 April 1983, a Sikh Deputy Inspector General
of Police, A.S. Atwal, was shot dead on a visit to the
Golden Temple.
19.12
Punjab's Congress government was dismissed on 6 October 1983
and President's rule was imposed. Punjab was declared a
'Disturbed Area' giving the police unlimited powers of
arrest and detention. The kil11ings however increased.
19.13
Most of the young Sikhs' organisation, like Dal Khalsa,
Dashmesh regiment, All India Sikh Students' Federation and
Bhinderwale Tigers owed their allegiance to Sant Jarnail
Singh Bhinderwale who was radical and violent in his
approach. He wanted a limb for a limb lost rather than
turning the other cheek to the enemy. But Babbar Khalsa and
Young Akalis organisations stood by Sant Harchard Singh
Longowal who advocated peaceful means of achieving the
goals. Both leaders became sceptical of each other. To
diffuse the confusion which had sat in the minds of Sikhs,
Sant Bhinderwale swore before a huge Sikh congregation on 13
April 1983 that he was standing firmly behind Sant Longowal
and would do all his best to make the morcha a success.
19.14
The Government now turned its guns towards Sant Bhinderwale
whose influence was growing amongst the young and the
radical Sikhs and whose personality had sent a wave of fear
amongst the Punjab police and the Punjab judiciary. Earlier
he had toured India with armed bodyguards around him, he
himself carried a AK47 with him. Gradually he had become the
hero of the Sikh youth and terror for tile police. The
government now issued specific instructions to arrest
Bhinderwale. On 15 December 1983, the Sant moved his
headquarters to Akal Takhat to avoid unnecessary harassment
and humiliation at the hands of the Government. Gurcharan
Singh Tohra, the president of SGPC gave the Sant permission
to take refuge at the sacred shrine despite the protests of
Sardar Kirpal Singh, Jathedar of Akal Takhat.
19.15
In February 1983, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi had gone to
Gurdwara Bangla Sahib and amongst the cries that' Sat Siri
Akal' had declared the acceptance of the Sikh religious
demands but no mention was made of the other demands. The
Sikh leadership was fed up with these concessions. They
wanted all their demands to be met in full and without
conditions.
19.16
The last meeting between the Akalis and Indira Gandhi,
before the Operation Blue Star, was held on 26 May 1984 but
failed to breed any positive results. the government blamed
the Punjab violence for the failure of talks, violence which
they insisted must end before any fruitful meetings could
take place. The Akalis repudiated any responsibility for the
Punjab violence. They blamed the Government and anti-social
elements for the Punjab violence.
19.17
Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was accused by the opposition
of wooing Hindu votes by not resolving the Punjab problem.
They even accused her of having lost the nerve to rule the
country .
19.18
Another agitation, nicknames' Panth Azad' (Free Sikh nation)
was launched by Sant Longowal on 24 April 1984 in Delhi.
Sardar Prakash Singh Badal tore a page of Indian
Constitution on which section 25 (Explanation II) was
inscribed compromising the identity of the Sikhs as a
separate faith, and burnt it. This act of burning was to be
repeated by the Akalis all over the country. Badal and Tohra
were arrested with thousands of other supporters.
19.19
The Akali leader and the dictator of the morcha, Sant
Harchand Singh Longowal also gave a call to the Punjab
farmers for a non-cooperation movement with the Government.
They were asked to withhold their crops from reaching the
market and to refuse to pay taxes from 1 June 1984.
19.20
The Government realised the seriousness of the situation and
announced that the government was ready to appoint
Commissions to look into various Sikh demands including the
amendment of Section 25 of the Constitution. Gurcharan Singh
Tohra was flown to Amritsar in a government plane to
persuade Sant Bhinderwale and Sant Longowal to give up the
morchas. The Akalis and Sant Bhinderwale refused to accept
the hollow promises of the Government, for such promises had
been made and broken by the government many times in the
past twenty years.
19.21
On 29 May 1984, the Indian Administration ordered the Indian
Army to blockade Punjab. On the same day the government
imposed a two month ban on the reporting, transmission or
publication of anything relating to the crisis in Punjab or
the operation of the security forces. On 2 June 1984, Indira
Gandhi went on the Indian Television and appealed to the
Akalis to withdraw the agitation. She spoke about the
contribution of the Sikhs towards the defence and the
economy of the country. She spoke about the mission of Guru
Nanak Dev and the teachings of the Sikh gurus. She did not,
however, give any definite promises of accepting the Sikh
demands. Her speech was mere words and no firm commitments.
The Sikhs had had a taste of broken pledges and forgotten
assurances in the past, so they wanted something more solid
and precise. By 2 June the Punjab was completely sealed and
all the telephone lines and other communication systems had
been cut by the security forces.
19.22
On the same day when the Prime Minister was trying to befool
the nation by making a passionate appeal to Sikhs to
withdraw their agitation, the heavily armed troops
surrounded the Golden Temple in Amritsar and a 36-hour
curfew was imposed on the entire Punjab.
19.23
3 June was Guru Arjan Dev's martyrdom day, so a large number
of pilgrims had come to the Golden Temple to pay their
homage. The pilgrims who had come from distant places were
staying in the guest houses built all around the pari karma
and in guru Ramdas serai in the Golden Temple complex. The
Akali leaders including the morcha dictator, Sant Longowal
and SGPC president G. S. Tohra were housed at Guru Nanak
Niwas in the same complex. The Government wanted all of them
to surrender and come out from the Golden Temple complex and
court arrest.
19.24
The army officers who were in direct control of the
operations included the army Chief General A. S. Vaidya, Lt.
General Sunderji and Major Generals K. S. Brar and R. S.
Dayal (General A. S. Vaidya was later killed by an
assassin's bullet in 1988 as a revenge for the army action).
Such secrecy was maintained about the assault of the Golden
Temple by the Prime Minister, that the President of India
Giani Zail Singh, a Sikh, who is according to the Indian
Constitution the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed forces, was
not taken into confidence.
19.25
On 3 June, a force of 15,000 troops moved to surround the
Golden Temple's 70 acre site. The army expected to take over
and control that holy shrine, and kill or arrest the morcha
leaders in about 48 hours. Instead it took more than 4 days.
19.26
On 4 June, the pre-dawn calm around the Golden Temple
complex was shattered when the army opened fire at 4.40
a.m.; as expected their fire was returned. the firing
stopped at about 9 a.m. When the firing stopped, G. S. Tohra
went to Sant Bhinderwale at the Akal Takhat and pleaded with
him to surrender. The Sant declined and said that if he
would die like a lion and not like a coward.
19.27
On 5 June at 7 p.m., the army launched its main attack. On
the night of 5 June and the early morning of 6 June the
generals brought into the holy precincts the heavy artillery
guns and the army tanks. Havoc prevailed all over. the tanks
and the artillery shelled fire for more than 48 hours
killing indiscriminately and destroying the holiest of the
holy shrine of the Sikhs. The guns fell silent on the
morning of 7 June. How long could 300 followers of Sant
Bhinderwale and 3000 pilgrims including women and children
last against the mighty Indian army? The body of Sant
Bhinderwale riddled with 72 bullets was found in front of
the Akal Takhat. In this massacre about 3000 people died,
mostly innocent pilgrims. The massacre in the Golden Temple
was reminiscent of Brigadier General Regional Dyer's
Jallianwala Bagh massacre of 1919 (but even General Dyer
could not dare to put a tiny scratch on the holy shrine).
The only difference was that in 1919 it was a slave India
and the horror of death was unleashed by a British General
to kill the innocent people; in 1984 it was a free India and
the dread of killing was ordered by the Indian Generals to
kill their own brethren, sisters and children. The people
killed were no enemy, but were the descendants of those
great martyrs whose blood still flows freely even toady. all
over the Indian borders and who had died defending their
motherland - the land of Guru Nanak Dev, Lord Krishan,
Gautam Buddha and Lord Mahavir.