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157 years of colonialism
and subjugation of the Sikh Nation
August 15th is not
the day of Sikh liberation, but of Sikh capitulation to
modern India
The year 2006 marks the Sikh
Nation’s 157th year under foreign rule. Of these 157
years, 98 were spent under British occupation. The
remaining 59 have been spent under the rule of modern
India. A secular democracy on paper, but a Hindu dominated
and Brahmin manipulated state in practice.
In 1849 the Sikh Kingdom, an
independent and sovereign state founded by Raja Ranjit
Singh some five decades earlier, finally succumbed to the
might of the British Empire after having defeated the
Sikhs in two separate “Anglo-Sikh Wars”. The Sikh Nation
was just one of the many nations in South & South East
Asia that had been occupied by the British and
consolidated into what later became known as the “Indian
Empire” or “British India”.
Upon the decision to finally
abandon their colony in 1947 a final humiliation was
inflicted upon the Empire’s subject peoples of British
India. This being the implementation of the flawed ‘Two
Nation Theory’; an insulting lie which had proposed that
British India consisted of only two nations, Hindu and
Muslim. This cruel, unjust and fabricated theory which had
been conceptualized by a few elitist “Brown Sahibs” and
supported by their British masters denied the Sikhs and
the many other distinct peoples and nations of the former
British India their independence and freedom from
colonialism, exploitation and oppression.
As a direct consequence of
the ‘Two Nation Theory’ the Sikhs suffered perhaps more so
than any other nation within British India. With the
division of the Punjab province between Pakistan and
India, the Sikh population as a distinct and indigenous
socio-religious and political entity of the region was
split almost equally between the two new countries. The
intolerant nature of the Muslim League towards Hindus and
Sikhs and the Sikh leadership’s opposition to and mistrust
of Pakistan boiled over and climaxed into the worst
communal violence witnessed in any of the former provinces
of British India and saw one of the largest displacements
of populations in recorded history.
Many thousands of Sikhs were
massacred in the Punjab province’s western and central
districts while many millions more were forced by the
situation of the time to take refuge in the eastern Punjab
which had been awarded to the newly created India.
Gurdwaras were desecrated and torn down, Sikh properties
were looted and their young and women kidnapped, converted
or raped. Stories of Sikh women choosing suicide over
molestation and dishonour by jumping into wells to their
deaths were well recorded during this chaotic period. The
near civil war conditions in the Punjab between the Muslim
and non-Muslim populations, full of stories of train
carriages filled with dead bodies arriving at Amritsar and
Lahore, resulted in the Sikh population as a whole ending
up almost exclusively in the eastern Punjab and in Delhi.
The Muslims of eastern Punjab too suffered a similar fate
as had the Sikhs and Hindus of western Punjab and were
driven off almost in their entirety to Pakistan.
While the common man and
woman belonging to the Punjab’s three major communities
had suffered the criminality of the ‘Two Nation Theory’ in
1947 equally, it was the Sikhs as a collective whole who
were the biggest losers. Notwithstanding the cost in human
lives, the Sikhs had been forced to make the greatest
sacrifice by leaving behind their sacred places and
canal-colony lands turned rich and fertile through the
hard toil of Sikh farmers and pioneers. But the biggest
loss to the Sikhs at the end of the “British Raj” was that
their sovereignty as a people and as a nation was not
transferred back to them but was handed over from one
colonial power to another; this being from the British to
the neo-colonial “Brown Sahibs” of Hindustan.
Although the Sikh Nation had
been betrayed and left with no alternative in 1947 but to
forfeit much of their sacred and ancestral lands to
Pakistan and throw in their lot with India, the proceeding
decades have shown that India is not the homeland of the
Sikhs, nor are Sikhs treated or seen as an equal partner
and heir to modern India; a country for which Sikhs had
comparatively sacrificed the most number of lives for the
independence of. Since India’s creation on August 15, 1947
not a single promise made by the Indian leadership to the
Sikh Nation has ever been honoured. The Sikh homeland in
Punjab was never given autonomy within modern India as
promised by Nehru. In fact, the policy of modern India
towards the Sikh Nation has been the complete opposite of
autonomy. Rather than respect the independent character
and identity of the Sikhs, the policy of the Indian state
and Hindutva ideologues has been to entrap and assimilate
the Sikhs religious, political, cultural and linguistic
identities into a pan-Hindu and Hindi-speaking entity. The
attempts to synthesise the identity and soul of the
minority peoples with the majority Hindus is nothing short
of a cultural genocide and polluting of the non-Hindu
peoples of India.
The Operation Bluestar
launched in June of 1984 which caused immense physical
damage to the Sikhs most holiest of sites followed by the
November 1984 anti-Sikh pogroms and the decade of
militarization and conversion of the Sikh homeland into a
police state rife with extra-judicial killings, torture
and brutalizing of ordinary Sikh civilians by the security
forces have been the highlights of modern India’s
repayment to the Sikh Nation for all of the sacrifices
made by it for modern India.
In hindsight of the history
of modern India and its treatment and relations with the
minorities currently trapped within its borders, August
15th has clearly come to represent for the Sikhs and for
the many other freedom-seeking nations a black day and day
of betrayal on which the Hindi-speaking Hindus of northern
and central India, specifically those from their “upper
caste” communities, were gifted an empire by the British
at the expense of all the other peoples and nations of
modern India. The declaration of Khalistan by the Panthic
Committee at the Akal Takht during the Sarbat Khalsa in
1986 was the Sikh Nation’s defining moment in their
assertion of their sovereignty as a nation whose destiny
lay outside of India. The declaration of Khalistan in 1986
is one of the many practical examples since 1947 which has
proven the ‘Two Nation Theory’ to be false and a failure
and that British India was never sincerely or successfully
decolonized according to the true wishes and aspirations
of all of the former subject peoples and nations.
Just as the Indian National
Congress, the Muslim League and many other political
factions had once campaigned for independence from the
British Empire, on what moral grounds do these same
parties now oppose the right to self-determination being
sought for in Nagalim, Jammu & Kashmir, Khalistan, Assam
and in the other nations that had been deprived of their
independence in 1947 or had subsequently been annexed into
modern India within a few years of its creation?
This is the question that
should be in the minds of every freedom loving person when
the sun rises over South Asia on August 15th and as the
Indian tricolour is being unfurled over the Red Fort in
New Delhi by India’s puppet Sikh Prime Minister, the
unelected Dr Manmohan Singh.
Celebrating freedom and
independence can only be done once this has been achieved,
and for the Sikh Nation, this is yet to be realized.
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