Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
India

31 Years After 'Blue Star', Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale Still Hero For Jammu Sikhs

IANS, 07 Jun, 2015 12:15 PM
    Thirty-one years after he was killed in 'Operation Blue Star' in Amritsar, Punjab, separatist militant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale is still regarded as a martyr and 'sant' by Sikhs living in Jammu.
     
    Sant Tejwant Singh, the chief Sikh priest at Dana Singh Gurdwara Sahib in the Sikh-dominated Nanak Nagar area of Jammu city, strongly believes Bhindranwale was a sant (saint) and martyr of the Khalsa Pant.
     
    "He sacrificed his life for the Sikh Pant. He was a sant who deserves all respect and honour from the Sikh community," Sant Tejwant Singh told IANS. Around 300,000 Sikhs live in the Jammu region. 
     
    Asked why did the militant Sikh leader gather arms inside the Golden Temple in Amritsar, he said: "It was the government that allowed free passage of arms into the Golden Temple."
     
     
    Hundreds of Sikhs earlier this week protested over the removal of posters of Bhindranwale in Jammu. Life began limping back to normalcy on Saturday as the authorities withdrew the army from areas that saw street protests.
     
    Sant Tejwant Singh said Bhindranwale lives in the hearts and minds of the community, and blamed the state administration for inciting trouble by removing his posters.
     
    "Was there any order not to display these posters? Posters of Sant Bhindranwale are displayed on vehicles and shirts in Punjab and elsewhere. Nobody objects to these outside Jammu and Kashmir. Why did police remove his posters in Jammu?" he asked.
     
    Advocate Surinder Singh, member of the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC) and former president of the Jammu Bar Association, said: "The way he (Bhindranwale) was killed, Sikhs believe he is a martyr and sant."
     
     
    "The Sikh Panth will always salute him for laying down his life to protect the sanctity of Harmandir Sahib (Golden Temple)."
     
    Virenderjeet Singh, president of the National Sikh Front, also believes Bhindranwale was a sant.
     
    "Bhindranwale will always be regarded as a sant because the Akal Takht decreed that he was martyred for the Guru's cause," he said.
     
    However, what was intriguing during the three-day protests in Jammu city was not that angry Sikhs raised pro-Khalistan slogans, but pro-Pakistan slogans at some places.
     
    Senior journalist Harbans Nagokay said it was "mere anger that prompted some Sikh youths to raise pro-Pakistan slogans".
     
    "Nobody should try to read too much into this. Sikhs have always been in the forefront of protecting India's honour in wars against Pakistan," he said.
     
     
    Hindus in Jammu city, however, do not want to get into any controversy discussing the sainthood of the militant Sikh leader.
     
    "We want to live peacefully with Sikhs and other communities in Jammu. How they deal with or discuss their saints and leaders is not our problem," said Sansar Chand, a 45-year-old resident.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Woman's Body Cut In 16 Pieces Found In Garbage In Rae Bareli

    Woman's Body Cut In 16 Pieces Found In Garbage In Rae Bareli
    The body of a woman, cut into 16 pieces and packed in a bag, was found in a garbage dumping site in Rae Bareli, 95 km from here, police said on Tuesday.

    Woman's Body Cut In 16 Pieces Found In Garbage In Rae Bareli

    IT Act Cannot Gag Freedom Of Speech: Indian Supreme Court Strikes Down Section 66a

    IT Act Cannot Gag Freedom Of Speech: Indian Supreme Court Strikes Down Section 66a
    The Supreme Court on Tuesday quashed the much-denounced Section 66A of the Information Technology Act after finding it violative of the freedom of speech guaranteed by the Constitution, triggering a frenzy of laudatory posts in the social media within minutes of the far-reaching judgment.

    IT Act Cannot Gag Freedom Of Speech: Indian Supreme Court Strikes Down Section 66a

    Feel Very Safe On Censorship Issues In India: Jeffrey Archer

    Feel Very Safe On Censorship Issues In India: Jeffrey Archer
    No alien to controversies, British author Jeffrey Archer says he's not a provocative writer and "feels very safe" in India when it comes to censorship issues.

    Feel Very Safe On Censorship Issues In India: Jeffrey Archer

    Ensure Cheap, Enough Beef For Easter, Goa Catholics Urge PM

    Ensure Cheap, Enough Beef For Easter, Goa Catholics Urge PM
    Troubled by the doubling of beef prices in the state, due to a prolonged shortage of the red meat here, an association of Catholics in Goa has implored Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chief Minister Laxmikant Parsekar to ensure cheap and sufficient beef for the Easter.

    Ensure Cheap, Enough Beef For Easter, Goa Catholics Urge PM

    Hurriyat Leaders At Pakistan Day, India Rules Out Third Party In Talks

    Hurriyat Leaders At Pakistan Day, India Rules Out Third Party In Talks
    Leaders of the Hurriyat Conference and other separatist outfits on Monday attended the Pakistan Day function here, even as India made it clear that there was no place for any third party while dealing with Kashmir and other issues with Islamabad.

    Hurriyat Leaders At Pakistan Day, India Rules Out Third Party In Talks

    Lies Being Spread, Land Bill Not Anti-farmer, Says Narendra Modi

    Lies Being Spread, Land Bill Not Anti-farmer, Says Narendra Modi
    Telling farmers that "lies" were being spread about the new land acquisition bill, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday asserted that the proposed law was in farmers' interest as it will improve infrastructure, employment, output and incomes in rural areas.

    Lies Being Spread, Land Bill Not Anti-farmer, Says Narendra Modi