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On 17th May 1936 a
baby boy was born to a rural family in District Gurdaspur
in Punjab.The baby’s father Sardar Surain Singh was a
middle-class farmer by trade who, after the formation of
Pakistan, took his family and all their belongings to
Gazneepur, a small village found on the Gurdaspur Dera
Baba Nanak road.
From a young age,
Fauja Singh was very popular and would lead the local
village boys no matter what game they played. Although he
was given Amrit whilst studying at school he did not
receive the fruits of Naam, so the spiritual hunger within
him did not cease, although his mind remained aloof.This
spiritual thirst would not go away. In fact, even at this
tender age he displayed a detached state of mind, so much
so that he vanished for a whole month. He went to seek
spiritual guidance from Sants and Sadhus. Naturally, this
caused considerable stress to his parents. Eventually, he
returned home.
He went on to pass
his exams and although he enrolled in the Khalsa College,
Amritsar, his mind remained elsewhere. Unconcerned with
day-to-day life, he disappeared again and even though his
family looked everywhere, and placed advertisements in the
local press, they couldn’t find their carefree son.
Meanwhile, Fauja Singh stayed with various holy people at
their Deras and meditated on a Mantar. His family finally
found him two years later and afterreturning home, he
returned to college.
Whilst at college,
Bhai Fauja Singh mixed with harmful company. This was to
tear him away from Sikhi, but Guru Sahib Ji in his mercy
quickly put the young Singh back on the right path. In
1964 he received Amrit at a Smagam organised by the Akhand
Kirtani Jatha, where the Panj Pyare brought him into the
fold of the Khalsa Order. In Vaisakhi 1965 he married Bibi
Amarjit Kaur. Bhai Jeevan Singh Ji performed Kirtan at the
occasion.
Bhai Fauja Singh
increasingly began to apply his body and mind to the study
of Gatka and persuaded other young Sikhs to also study and
practise it closely. He was acknowledged as the best Gatka
practitioner in the area and there was nobody around who
could beat him. Professor Gurmukh Singh, who was well
acquainted with Bhai Fauja Singh, felt that there was
something special about him, which stood out amongst the
Sangat:
“I have been in
the Jatha for quite a while now and have been lucky enough
to meet many highly spiritual Sikhs of the Guru. Bhai
Fauja Singh was different; he had Bir Ras and Naam Ras.
Bhai Fauja Singh was always ready to fight against
falsehood and stand up for the truth. Some highly
spiritual Singhs from the Jatha told him to just
meditate.They did not think that in these peaceful times
there would be a need for our people to give Shaheedi.The
Sikhs gave Shaheedi at the time of the Gurus because the
Hindu Rajas, Mughal and Pathan rulers were trying to
destroy the Sikh religion. But now the situation was
different. Some brothers even joked about his Bir Ras.”
After 1970 Bhai
Fauja Singh immersed himself in Sewa. His and his wife’s
wages were spent on serving Gursikhs. Bibi Amarjit Kaur
told us that sometimes he used to say; “All the money we
spend on ourselves is wasted but the money we spend on
doing Sewa for the Gursikhs is not wasted and is saved in
our bank”. At other times he would say rather ominously;
“The tenth Guru formed the Khalsa by shedding his
blood.When this plant gets dried-up it needs more blood.
Then the Guru`s beloved ones spill their blood to keep the
Khalsa flag flying.This cycle repeats itself approximately
every fifty years”. He would tell his close companions
that there was a lot of disrespect emerging, targeted
directly at the heart of the Sikh Dharam. He believed
future generations would rightfully ask what their
forefathers and mothers were like; who accepted everything
so quietly and passively. The spiritual bliss that martyrs
get from reading Gurbani verses like: “Purja Purja Kat
Marai Kab Hoo Nah Shadai Keth”, only they know. It also
seems that the words spoken by Shaheeds are special. Bibi
Amarjit Kaur says that during his last six months, Bhai
Fauja Singh kept saying to her; “Visualise an image of my
dead body. Will you be able to bear it? Be strong and
don’t despair.” Bibi Ji realised that one day her husband
was destined to give his life for the Panth.
Like all
Chardi-Kalaa Gursikhs, Bhai Fauja Singh possessed the
precious gifts of honesty, contentment and divine
meditation. He ate what he received happily and was never
greedy, constantly seeking to live by the Will of Waheguru.
Professor Gurmukh Singh believed that even beyond this,
Bhai Fauja Singh was extraordinary for many reasons: “I
first met Bhai Fauja Singh in 1972 at the Darbar Sahib.He
did not know me but said his Fateh to me and met me like
we had been old friends.He took me to where he was staying
and kept me here for two or three days.
During this first
meeting he told me something very secretive, which I am
now only sharing with the readers after his Shaheedi. He
told me that in his previous life he was in Baba Deep
Singh’s Jatha and became Shaheed at Lohgarh. Now, again,
he has done Shaheedi for the Khalsa Panth in the holy city
of Amritsar near Lohgarh.Those that have seen and met Bhai
Fauja Singh all agree that he was filled with the spirit
of; ‘Mohai Murnai Ka Chow Hai’. Shakespeare says,“What is
in a name?” The name Bhai Fauja Singh given to him by his
parents, from the Hukamnama of Guru Granth Sahib Ji, was
definitely a true picture of him. Bhai Fauja Singh really
was a soldier of the Guru`s army, not only in this, but
also his previous life.”
In late 1977
whilst in Gurdaspur Jail, Bhai Fauja Singh wrote a poem
under the title of Kurbani. This was probably the only
poem written by him because as far as it is known, he was
not a poet. It was written about eight months before his
Shaheedi and now with hindsight, its underlying theme is
worthy of attention. It centres upon the declining state
of the Khalsa Panth and the problems facing the Sikh
nation. It also serves to relay the emotions of a soul
that in its last life shed the mortal frame for the sake
of righteousness. How could that soul now have accepted
the present day situation, where Guru Sahib Ji was being
disrespected openly? This insight goes some way towards
explaining why Bhai Fauja Singh who was now forty-two
years old found the events taking place in Amritsar
absolutely intolerable.
Even before
Vaisakhi 1978, Bhai Fauja Singh’s personality showed its
true colours when in 1972 after the Misri Bajar incident;
Guru Granth Sahib Ji was treated with disrespect. Bhai
Fauja Singh was disgusted at the police who were too
scared to make the arrest of the criminals involved. It
was then that he decided to apprehend the miscreants and
after catching them, he punished them accordingly. He was
deeply saddened by the fact that our ‘Panthic leaders’
tried to keep the whole incident quiet in case it would
lead to some sort of Hindu-Sikh conflict.This political
expediency, which sidestepped any notion of love and
respect for Guru Sahib Ji, deeply saddened him. He simply
could not understand how Sikhs could quietly sit by whilst
others insulted and treated Guru Granth Sahib Ji with
total disrespect. One question constantly began to etch
itself within his mind;‘What has happened to the Khalsa
Panth?’
This question
arose again on 17th October 1975 when the Sikh Sangat
celebrated Sangrand at Gurdwara Bhai Salo Jee. Langar was
being served when a gang of thugs came and treated Guru
Granth Sahib Ji with disrespect and the assaulted the
sewadar and Granthi of the Gurdwara.They even made plans
to burn down the Gurdwara Guru Keh Mehal that night.
When Bhai Fauja
Singh heard about this incident in the evening he got
together some Gursikhs and went there straight away. First
they went to see for themselves the disrespectful
treatment of Guru Granth Sahib Ji and the damage done to
the Gurdwara building. After seeing this, the Gursikhs
started chanting Jaikaras and then stood outside, ready to
defend the Guru’s House.The thugs soon surrounded them
from tall buildings on all four sides, and then started
throwing stones, bricks and acid bottles at them. Even
though the Gursikh’s clothes and bodies were drenched in
blood, they managed to protect the Gurdwara from being
burnt down.After 1972, this was the second painful event
to have taken place at the Sikh headquarters in
Amritsar.The Panthic leaders at that time pretended as if
nothing had happened and quite predictably accepted no
responsibility.
However, the
troublemakers now knew that there were at least a few
brave lions amongst the sheep and this was more than
enough. After this second incident, Bhai Fauja Singh did
not sit quietly at home. In October 1975 Bhai Fauja Singh
no longer worked in the office. Referring to the benefits
he was receiving, he laughingly said to Professor Gurmukh
Singh in 1978 that; “Satguru is having his Sewa done
whilst ensuring that I receive my wages from the Punjab
Government.”
After the 1975
incident Bhai Fauja Singh co-ordinated a new Gursikhi
Parchaar programme. He mentions in his poem that; “the
light of faith which seems to be dwindling...” He now
decided to rectify this. In 1976 a group of Gursikhs
started preaching the Guru’s message in ten villages
within Gurdaspur. Professor Gurmukh Singh was amongst this
Jatha. Bhai Fauja Singh felt that the Sikhs living in
cities were not prepared to sacrifice their lives for
their Guru; several previous incidents had proved this. So
he now turned his attention to the villages so that
perhaps the sleeping Panth, which lay dormant within rural
life, could be awakened from its slumber.
The programmes
covered Sikh history, Gurbani, Kirtan and also included
Amrit Sanchaars. This Jatha would also hold amazing Gatka
demonstrations.After Kirtan, Bhai Fauja Singh would often
talk to the Sangat and this had a truly inspiring effect
upon them.
A Smagam was held
in March 1977 over fifteen days at Khalsa Farm, during
which Bhai Fauja Singh introduced young Sikhs to Gatka and
told them about the problems that the Sikh Panth was
facing.There they performed Kirtan and meditated and
contemplated on ideas and ways to address various problems
affecting the Sikh nation.
It was during this
period that a Hindu woman was arrested by the Police.
During her interrogation, the Police officers raped her.
Her husband unable to stop her from being gangraped went
to the magistrates to secure her release; he also filed a
formal complaint against the Police. However there was no
intervention. By this time point he had become completely
exasperated. He then went to various community leaders,
including Pundits and Mullahs for help, but none of them
wanted to challenge the perpetrators. It was at this point
that he decided to approach the Gursikhs.
Various people had
told him about one Gursikh called Fauja Singh of Amritsar.
Due to his fearless attitude, Bhai Fauja Singh had become
quite well known in the region.The aggrieved husband went
to see him. Bhai Fauja Singh, along with some Gursikh,
went straight to the Police station and upon seeing the
pitiable state of the woman, they ensured her immediate
release.The guilty police officers were then severely
punished. After this incident he was brandished a
‘criminal’ and sent to prison. His actions were
reminiscent of our past history, when Gursikhs went on
daring and dangerous missions to liberate women from
marauding Afghan armies.
However, it wasn’t
just invaders and isolated individuals who perpetrated
heinous crimes; Bhai Fauja Singh also learnt about those
groups who wished to subvert and corrupt the message of
our Guru Sahib, which for him was the greatest crime of
all. In his poem Kurbani, Bhai Fauja Singh warns the
Khalsa Panth about the disrespect shown to Guru Granth
Sahib taking place everywhere.The insults directed at Guru
Sahib Ji by the Nirankaris inflicted deep wounds upon the
hearts of Gursikhs.
At the end of his
poem, Bhai Fauja Singh states that; “Whenall else fails,
in the hour of need, we will sacrifice our heads at your
altar.” Bhai Fauja Singh along with twelve other fearless
Gursikhs received the opportunity to honour their promise.
On 13th April
1978, about one hundred and twenty-five Sikhs went to
peacefully protest against the Nirankari procession and
Nirankari chief Gurbachan Singh’s grievous insults towards
Guru Granth Sahib Ji.
We all receive
Amrit on the precondition that our head will henceforth
belong to Guru Sahib Ji.When the need arises we are
expected to lay it down for the sake of righteousness.We
hear and read daily in the Ardaas about our forefathers
and mothers who gave their lives to protect Dharam and
remained committed to the principles of Sikhi until their
very last breath.All these events seemed like distant
history. Some of us even began to question if such things
were possible.The massacre at Amritsar enlivened the
memory of those great Shaheeds, and also turned that,
which many thought was now myth, into a firm and shocking
reality. |