1978 Sikh–Nirankari clash explained

1978 Sikh–Nirankari clash
Place:Amritsar, Punjab, India
Side1:Sant Nirankari Mission
Punjab Police
Side2: Khalsa Sikh groups:
Akhand Kirtani Jatha
Damdami Taksal
Akali-Nihang
Date:13 April 1978
Leadfigures1:Gurbachan Singh
Leadfigures2:Fauja Singh
Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale
Casualties1:3 Sant Nirankaris killed
Casualties2:13 Khalsa Sikhs dead
150 injured
Methods:Protest
Howmany2:~200
Howmany1:Unknown
Fatalities:16
Causes:
  • Sikh-Sant Nirankari tensions stemming from the 1950s
  • Proclamations and actions by Sant Nirankari leader Gurbachan Singh seen as provocative to the Sikh community
  • Alleged state support to Sant Nirankaris, police presence
Arrests:62
Result:

The 1978 Sikh–Nirankari clash occurred between the Sant Nirankari Mission and Sikhs of Damdami Taksal and Akal Kirtani Jatha on 13 April 1978 at Amritsar, Punjab, India. Sixteen people—thirteen traditional Sikhs and three Nirankari followers—were killed in the ensuing violence, occurring when some Akhand Kirtani Jatha and Damdami Taksal members led by Fauja Singh protested against and tried to stop a convention of Sant Nirankari Mission followers. This incident is considered to be a starting point in the events leading to Operation Blue Star and the 1980s insurgency in Punjab.

Background

The Sant Nirankari Mission splintered from the Nirankari sect in the 20th century. Nirankari, a movement within Sikhism, started in the mid-19th century. Their belief in a living guru as opposed to the scriptural guru, Guru Granth Sahib, developing over the decades especially in one branch, resulted in their difference with traditional Sikhs, though they were tolerated.[2] A Nirankari hymn-singer, Boota Singh, had been removed from his paid duties due to "personal lapses" considered incongruous in a missionary organization, and in 1929 tried and failed to set up a rival organization in Peshawar, nominating his devotee Avtar Singh, a bakery shop owner, as his successor in 1943. Without having established any significant religious base, Avtar Singh moved to Delhi after partition, getting his group registered as the "Sant Nirankaris" in 1948, which were "much different" from the successors of the original Nirankari movement they splintered from.[3]

His son Gurbachan Singh succeeded him in 1963, and tensions with the Sikhs escalated as he subsequently proclaimed himself as a godman and incarnation of Guru Nanak,[4] styling himself as bājjāṅwālā (Punjabi for "master of the hawk") an epithet of Guru Gobind Singh, using the names of the Sikh Gurus for his servants, and coming out with publications like the Avtar Bani, which made derogatory references to the Guru Granth Sahib of the Sikhs;[4] a story in the Yug Purush narrated that, unlike the prophets of the world's major religions, refused to go back to earth to "spread God’s message", except for Avtar Singh, who decided to do so "only after God agreed that anyone blessed by him would go to heaven irrespective of worldly deeds".[4] By the 1970s, Gurbachan Singh had begun to put himself on par with the Guru Granth Sahib,[5] Sacrilegious versions of Sikh rituals, including administering to his sat sitāre, or seven stars, his version of the Panj Piare of Guru Gobind Singh, "charan amrit", the water used to wash his feet, in place of the amrit, or holy water mixed with sugar by a steel blade, as dictated by Guru Gobind Singh for the Amrit Sanchar.[4]

Clashes between the Sikhs and the Sant Nirankaris took place beginning in the early 1950s, and tensions simmered through the 1960s, during which the Damdami Taksal came to the forefront to counter Sant Nirankari influence,[4] as well as the Akhand Kirtani Jatha at many places in Punjab.[6] The skirmishes were attributed in significant part to political machinations to maintain a rift between the Shiromani Akali Dal and the Damdami Taksal, using the willing Sant Nirankaris to do so; Bhindranwale was being harassed and provoked by senior Sant Nirankari officials in the Punjab administration.[5]

The Akalis claimed that the Sant Nirankaris were supported by the Indian National Congress to divide and undermine the Sikh community, while many Sikhs suspected that the Nirankaris were aided and abetted by the Central Government and the urban Hindu elite in Punjab,[4] who were the base of the Jan Sangh, the Akali Dal's coalition partner, and from whom the Sant Nirankaris received donations from, and hence why the Akalis had permitted the convention. This reported continuous support of the organization by the central government was also evidenced by the fact that, during a very short span, the Sant Nirankaris established 354 branches: 27 abroad and the rest in India, with large amounts of property. The organization created a paramilitary branch called the Seva Dal, with a membership of over 7,000, headed by a commander, called a mukhya shishak (chief teacher). The Akali Dal's Janata Party allies warned the Akalis not to intervene in the growing tensions on the pretext of "religious freedom", against the wishes of a large section of the Sikh community. Gurbachan Singh had met Prime Minister Morarji Desai who gave him assurances; major Sikh leaders, including Jagdev Singh Talwandi and Gurcharan Singh Tohra, responded by telling the press and government not to meddle in the "internal affairs" of the Sikhs by commenting on hukamnamas.[4]

Incident

On 13 April 1978, the day to celebrate the birth of Khalsa, a Sant Nirankari convention headed by their leader Gurbachan Singh was organized in Amritsar, with permission from the Akali-led State Government of Punjab. While the original Nirankaris, founded in the nineteenth century with a focus on mysticism, coexisted peacefully with mainstream Sikh tradition despite its differences, the practices of the "Sant Nirankaris" subsect were considered heretical by the orthodox Sikhism expounded by Bhindranwale, as they had begun to revere their new founder and successors as gurus and added their own scriptures to the Guru Granth Sahib, the Sikh holy book which is considered as the eternal guru, with Gurbachan Singh comparing himself to Guru Gobind Singh, saying that he would create the "sat sitārās" (seven stars) to complement the Panj Piare. The government's approval of the new sect's convention in Amritsar in 1978 was particularly galling to orthodox Sikhs, as it fell on 13 April, the founding day of the Khalsa; some felt that the entire Sant Nirankari episode had been provoked on purpose by the central government to destabilize and disunify Sikhs, given its sudden rapid growth in the 1960s, and the unusual composition of converts to the sect, with a preponderance of either gazetted officers and deputy commissioners that could allot land, and the extremely poor as followers they attracted with their wealth, meant that the breakaway sect was being manipulated to undercut the power of Sikhism in the state by the central government at the time, part of what was believed to be constant attempts to "divide and destroy" Sikhism.

The Nirankari held their precession in the morning and amassed a congregation of 50,000-100,000 people who peacefully passed throughout the city.[7] From the Golden Temple premises,[8] Bhindranwale delivered a sermon in which he declared that he would not allow this convention. A procession of about two hundred Sikhs led by Bhindranwale of the Damdami Taksal and Fauja Singh of the Akhand Kirtani Jatha, which had been founded by Randhir Singh, who had been active in the Ghadr and independence movements and had been imprisoned by the British during that period, left the Golden Temple, heading towards the Sant Nirankari Convention.[9] The subsequent Akali precession mutilated a shopkeeper on the way to the Sant Nirankari venue, whilst Bhindranwale was shouting inflammatory slogans.[10]

According to eyewitness accounts, the group, mostly men and joined by women who had refused the advice to stay back, headed out of the Darbar Sahib after an ardas and commitment to nonviolence. They were walked by Bhindranwale to the gates, where he was requested to not join, as he would be needed to lead in the event of casualties. The local police assigned to the Sant Nirankaris met the protesters and asked them to wait there, as they would go speak to the Sant Nirankaris about their controversial program. The police would return with armed Sant Nirankaris directly behind them, and in the ensuing melee, the police fired selectively at the Sikh protesters, killing several unarmed men as well as hitting Fauja Singh,[5] who according to KPS Gill (who was not present) attempted to behead Sant Nirankari guru Gurbachan Singh with his sword but was shot dead by Gurbachan's bodyguard.[11] In the ensuing violence, several people were killed: two of Bhindranwale's followers, eleven members of the Akhand Kirtani Jatha and two Sant Nirankaris. According to Kirpal Dhillon, former DGP of Punjab, the reported participation of some senior Punjab government officials in the convention also may have emboldened the Sant Nirankaris to initiate the attack; later police investigations revealed that the attack on the Sikhs was led by a man on horseback with armed attackers, taking place some 250-400 yards away from the venue.[12] Fauja Singh died as he was being rushed to the hospital, and the cremation of Fauja Singh and the 12 other Sikhs occurred in a large ceremony attended by tens of thousands; the photos of his maimed body, with a bullet wound in his left eye, spread along with the news of the death quickly.[5] This event brought Bhindranwale to limelight in the media.[13]

Aftermath

The clash triggered mass demonstrations, some violent, in Punjab and Delhi. The day following the clash, 250 Nihang Sikhs, armed with spears and guns, stormed a human unity Sant Nirankari conference, triggering further clashes, in which 28 people were killed and more than 140 were injured.[14] Immediately following the clash, Sant Nirankari sites and holy places were beleaguered and threats of physical violence were meted out.[15] [16] The Akal Takht later issued a hukamnama expelling the Sant Nirankaris out of the Sikh community and proscribing any interlocution with them. They further directed Sikhs to use "all appropriate means" to prevent the Sant Nirankaris from "grow[ing] and flourish[ing] in society".[17] The SGPC and the Akali Dal further called for a ban on Sant Nirankari religious books and the Punjab government outlawed Gurbachan Singh's entry in the state, an order later annulled by the Supreme Court of India in January 1979. Between 1981 and 1984, there were more than 34 gun and bomb attacks perpetrated against the Sant Nirankaris.[18]

A criminal case was filed against sixty two Sant Nirankaris, charged with the murder of 13 Sikhs, by the Akali-led government in Punjab. The investigation concluded that the attack on the Sikhs was planned by a number of accused, including Gurbachan Singh, all of whom were taken into custody except for Gurbachan Singh himself, who was arrested later in Delhi only after being permitted a personal audience with the Prime Minister Morarji Desai. The Sant Nirankaris had firmly supported Emergency rule, and developed close links with many Congress politicians and bureaucrats, creating a strong foothold in Delhi political circles; this gave rise to opposition from the Akalis and the Damdami Taksal during the same period.

The case was heard in the neighbouring Haryana state, and all the accused were acquitted on grounds of self-defence on 4 January 1980, two days before the Lok Sabha poll.[19] Though the case failed as authorities in Punjab were unable to ensure that the prosecution witness remained uncompromised by interested parties and police in Karnal, the Chief Minister of Punjab Prakash Singh Badal decided not to appeal the decision.[20] The Sant Nirankaris received support from the media, who portrayed the incident as "inter-sect wars" and proof of rising Sikh orthodoxy,[5] and Desai put the entire blame on the Sikhs; orthodox Sikhs saw this as an attempt to manipulate the sect as a way to undercut Sikhism in Punjab. The government's apathy towards apprehending the perpetrators also caused outrage among the Sikhs, with the ruling Akalis accused of shielding them.[5] The death of unarmed protesters had strongly affected the Sikhs, including those formerly apolitical;[5] Bhindranwale increased his rhetoric against the perceived enemies of Sikhs. A letter of authority was issued by Akal Takht to ostracize the Sant Nirankaris. A sentiment was created among some to justify extrajudicial killings of the perceived enemies of Sikhism.[21] The chief proponents of this attitude were the Babbar Khalsa founded by the widow, Bibi Amarjit Kaur of the Akhand Kirtani Jatha, whose husband Fauja Singh had been at the head of the march in Amritsar; the Damdami Taksal led by Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale who had also been in Amritsar on the day of the outrage; the Dal Khalsa, formed with the object of demanding a sovereign Sikh state; and the All India Sikh Students Federation.

On 24 April 1980, the Sant Nirankari guru, Gurbachan Singh was assassinated. The Babbar Khalsa, who opposed Bhindranwale, claimed responsibility for the killing of Sant Nirankaris. Several of Bhindranwale's associates and relatives were arrested. The FIR named nearly twenty people involved in the murder, claimed to have had ties to Bhindranwale.[22] A member of the Akhand Kirtani Jatha, Ranjit Singh, surrendered and admitted to the assassination three years later, and was sentenced to serve thirteen years at the Tihar Jail in Delhi. Ranjit Singh later became head of Akal Takht. Ranjit Singh spent 12 years in jail as an under-trial from 1984 to 1996.[23] [24] [25] Several other members of Sant Nirankari Mission were also killed later.[26]

The police crackdown in the state resulted in an average of 50 youths detained and 6 six killed per week, prompting a wider acceptance of Bhindranwale's claim that the government was out to destroy the Sikhs. The People's Union for Civil Liberties, an Indian human rights group, accused the Punjab Police of behaving like a "barbarian force." In response, Akali initiatives like Raasta roko ("Block the Roads") and Kamm Roko ("Stop Work" i.e. strike) drew massive popular support in Punjab, and seven other states supported Sikh demands for greater autonomy for Punjab and the decentralization of government power.

Later clashes

Another clash occurred soon after in Kanpur on September 26, 1978. A frenzied mob of 500 Sikhs armed with guns, swords and spears attacked a Sant Nirankari congregation. According to police reports, the Sikhs had set fire to the tents outside the venue and forcibly entered the meeting hall. In this clash more than a dozen Sikhs were killed in firing by police.[27] [28] In November 1978, another clash occurred in Kanpur after Akali Sikhs, armed with weapons, protested against a three-day Nirankari convention. The police were compelled to disperse the rioters with tear gas and rifle shots after they had attacked the police with swords.[29]

Allegations of Congress involvement

According to Apurba Kundu, Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale's instigations had engendered the clash, yet he was subsequently vindicated by the Congress apparatus, a gesture requited by Bhindranwale's campaigning for Congress candidates in the 1980 general elections.[30] After the clash, Bhindranwale had associated with politicians with ties to Sanjay Gandhi. He was assisted in fielding candidates against the Akali Dal to contest the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC) elections in 1979; his candidates were handily defeated.[31]

On the other hand, the Sant Nirankari's had, “…forged close links with many Punjab Congress politicians and bureaucrats.” The Sant Nirankaris were also supporters of the Emergency.[32]

Legacy

Gurdwara Shaheed Ganj, Amritsar was raised in the memory of the 13 Sikhs killed in the clash.[33]

Satpal Baghi of Ferozepur in the Indian Express, notes:

Tavleen Singh wrote:[34]

Khushwant Singh wrote:

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Link: Indian Newsmagazine . 1978 . 24 . en.
  2. Book: Marty. Martin E.. Appleby. R. Scott. Fundamentalisms and the State: Remaking Polities, Economies, and Militance. 1 July 1996. University of Chicago Press. 978-0226508849. 272. 1. registration.
  3. Book: J. S. Grewal. The Sikhs of the Punjab. registration. 1998. Cambridge University Press. 978-0-521-63764-0. 215.
  4. Book: Chima. Jugdep S. The Sikh Separatist Insurgency in India: Political Leadership and Ethnonationalist Movements. 2010. SAGE Publication. New Delhi. 41–44. 9788132105381.
  5. Book: Mallika Kaur. Faith, Gender, and Activism in the Punjab Conflict: The Wheat Fields Still Whisper. 14 January 2020. Springer Nature. 978-3-030-24674-7. 225.
  6. Book: Dhillon. Gurdarshan Singh. Truth About Punjab SGPC White Paper. SGPC. Amritsar. 29 August 2014. 9 February 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150209154356/http://globalsikhstudies.net/pdf/white%20paper.pdf. dead.
  7. Book: Jeffrey, Robin . What's Happening to India?: Punjab, Ethnic Conflict, and the Test for Federalism . 2016-07-27 . Springer . 978-1-349-23410-3 . 132 . en.
  8. Book: Guha . Ramachandra . India After Gandhi: The History of the World's Largest Democracy . 2008 . Macmillan . 9780330396110 . illustrated, reprint .
  9. Book: Mark. Tully. Satish. Jacob. Amritsar: Mrs. Gandhi's Last Battle. registration. 1985. 59.
  10. Book: Madan, T.N. . Fundamentalisms Observed . 1994 . University of Chicago Press . 978-0-226-50878-8 . 598 . en.
  11. Web site: Punjab: The Knights of Falsehood -- Psalms of Terror. Satp.org. 29 October 2017.
  12. Book: Dhillon . Kirpal S. . Identity and Survival: Sikh Militancy in India, 1978-1993 . 2006 . Penguin Books . London, United Kingdom . 9780143100362 . 82.
  13. News: Mitra . Chandan . Bhindranwale's rise from a small-time priest was meteoric . 6 July 2018 . India Today 35th anniversary . 15 December 2011.
  14. News: April 15, 1978 . Indian president appeals for an end to violence . 22 . The Calgary Herald .
  15. Book: Gates . Scott . Unconventional Warfare in South Asia: Shadow Warriors and Counterinsurgency . Roy . Kaushik . 2016-02-17 . Routledge . 978-1-317-00540-7 . 1996 . en . Between 1978 and 1980, Bhindranwale's gang started to kill the Sant Nirankaris throughout Punjab. The Sant Nirankari Bhawans were and attacked..
  16. Book: Chadha, Vivek . Low Intensity Conflicts in India: An Analysis . 2005-03-04 . SAGE Publications India . 978-81-321-0201-4 . 197 . en . Thereafter, a series of murders planned and executed by Bhindranwale's men took place, culminating in the killing of Baba Gurbachan Singh.
  17. News: 6 October 2002 . Akali ex-minister attends Nirankari meet function Dal Khalsa sees red . The Tribune . 5 September 2014.
  18. Book: Singh, Ramesh Inder . Turmoil In Punjab: Before and After Blue Star: An Insider's Account . 2022-06-20 . Harper Collins . 978-93-5489-909-6 . Chapter 3 . en.
  19. Book: Siṅgh, Major Gurmukh (retd.) . Siṅgh . Harbans . Sant Jarnail Siṅgh Bhiṇḍrāṅvāle . 1997 . Punjab University, Patiala, 2011 . Patiala, Punjab, India . 978-8173805301 . 352–354 . 3rd . en.
  20. Gopal Singh, A History of the Sikh People, New Delhi, World Book Center, 1988, p. 739.
  21. Singh (1999), pp. 365–66.
  22. Web site: Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale – Life, Mission, and Martyrdom . Sikh Educational and Religious Foundation . Sandhu . Ranbir S. . May 1997 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080529153236/http://sikhcoalition.org/SantJarnailSingh.pdf . 29 May 2008 .
  23. News: Trouble over Pardon. 28 August 2014. India Today. 10 November 1997.
  24. News: Swami. Praveen. A Jathedar is free. 28 August 2014. Frontline. 15–28 November 1997.
  25. Book: Sandhu, Amandeep . Panjab: Journeys Through Fault Lines . 2022-12-05 . Penguin Random House India Private Limited . 978-93-5492-859-8 . en.
  26. Gill. Sucha Singh. Singhal. K. C.. The Punjab Problem: Its Historical Roots. Economic and Political Weekly. 7 April 1984. 19. 14. 603–608. 4373137.
  27. Web site: 2018-09-27 . September 27, 1978, Forty Years Ago: Nirankaris Attacked . 2023-06-12 . The Indian Express . en.
  28. News: September 27, 1978 . Religious riot kills 12 persons . 2 . The Phoenix .
  29. News: Religious Conflict Sparks Pitched Street Battle . 3 . The Sydney Morning Herald .
  30. Kundu . Apurba . 1994 . The Indian Armed Forces' Sikh and Non-Sikh Officers' Opinions of Operation Blue Star . Pacific Affairs . 67 . 1 . 50 . 10.2307/2760119 . 2760119 . 0030-851X.
  31. Book: Bates, Crispin . Subalterns and Raj: South Asia since 1600 . 2013-09-16 . Routledge . 978-1-134-51382-6 . en.
  32. Book: Narang, Amarjit S. . Region, Religion and Politics: 100 Years of Shiromani Akali Dal . 2022-10-06 . Taylor & Francis . 978-1-000-78305-6 . en.
  33. News: Walia. Varinder. History comes full circle. 28 August 2014. The Tribune. 26 January 2008.
  34. Book: Kaur . Amarjit . The Punjab Story . Aurora . Lt Gen Jagjit Singh . Singh . Khushwant . Kamanth . M. V. . Gupta . Shekhar . Kirpekar . Subhash . Sethi . Sunil . Singh . Tavleen . 2012-08-10 . Roli Books Private Limited . 978-81-7436-912-3 . 32 . en.