The Sant’s Son

November 4th, 2009 by Chaitanya Kalbag on Ishar Singh Source: www.outlookindia.com

The traffic noise from the flyover outside the window was deafening and I could barely hear what Baljit Singh Brar was saying. Brar edits Jalandhar’s Aaj Di Awaz newspaper, aptly named, amid the din. “Where is Bhindranwale’s son?” I had to shout. He pointed at the man sitting quietly at the corner of his desk.

So this was the elder of the two sons of India’s most dreaded “separatist leader” from a quarter century ago. Light brown eyes, five foot ten, tight black turban, flowing salt-and-pepper beard, ready smile, his two cellphones blinking. Ishar Singh looked like your friendly neighbourhood realtor, somebody you could trust enough to buy your house from.

That is exactly what Ishar Singh does for a living. He buys and sells property just 80 kilometres from the Sikhs’ most violent and traumatic battle in centuries, if you do not include the savagery of India’s partition in 1947.

Ishar Singh is 37, the same age his father was the night he was killed in the devastated Akal Takht after the army sent tanks into the parikrama of the Golden Temple. “My father died four days after his birthday,” Ishar said.   
 
    “I am very, very proud of him,” says Ishar of his father. “I can never be bigger than him. I cannot add to his name, only reduce it.”   
        
He remembers that an uncle, a subedar in the army, identified the body. It took the Shiromani Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee and the Akal Takht nearly two decades to acknowledge that Bhindranwale was dead. On June 6, 2003, Ishar Singh was honoured with a siropa at the Golden Temple, watched by an assortment of old Khalistani diehards like Jagjit Singh Chohan and Wassan Singh Zaffarwal. Matters had been delayed because Bhindranwale’s successor at the Damdami Taksal, Baba Thakkar Singh, had persisted in proclaiming that the Sant was not dead, would reappear one day, and lead the Sikhs to glory. Every year now, Ishar Singh dutifully turns up at the Golden Temple for a memorial for his father on June 6, the anniversary of the climactic Bluestar battle. The Akal Takht organises an akhand path of the Guru Granth Sahib.

There is a certain morbid fascination with the families of history’s most infamous characters. What were the wives and children like? What did they come to? Were those men good husbands and fathers? So we know about Hitler and Eva Braun (no offspring); Saddam Hussein (wife and two daughters in exile in Jordan, both sons dead, both sons-in-law killed on Saddam’s orders); Velupillai Prabhakaran (killed with older son in final ltte battle, wife, daughter and younger son dead in separate battle). What about Bhindranwale?


Ishar was just five years old when Jarnail Singh Brar was anointed the 12th jathedar of the Damdami Taksal. He left home and adopted the name “Bhindranwale” after the village of Bhindran Kalan where the sect was originally located. “After that we only saw our father at his satsangs,” Ishar said. “But we were well looked after.” Did he miss his father? “From the family point of view I was sad, but from a Sikh point of view I was very happy.” The Jalandhar editor waved a laminated family photograph at me—a very young Ishar Singh with his eyes shut, an oddly self-conscious Sant Bhindranwale, his younger son Inderjit, his wife Pritam Kaur.

When he was 10, Ishar Singh was sent to study Gurbani under Mahant Jagir Singh at Akhara village near Jagraon. Immediately after Operation Bluestar, Pritam Kaur moved with her young sons to her brother’s home in Bilaspur village in Moga district.

Ishar does not have his father’s piercing gaze. He has a good sense of humour, but not the earthy wit that Jarnail Singh flashed as he held court on the rooftop of the Guru Nanak Niwas in Amritsar. Ordinary folk tiptoed into a meeting with him. There was always a hint of menace, helped by the young men lounging nearby with their rifles.


(l to r) Baba Nihal Singh - Taruna Dal Jathedar, Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale - Damdami Taksal Jathedar, Gurcharan Singh Tohra - SGPC President, Gurdial Singh Ajnoha - Akal Takhat Jathedar, Yogi Harbhajan Singh, Bhai Amrik Singh - All India Sikh Students Federation President

 
“I was detained for two days by the police in 1988 and tortured,” Ishar says, “but they had to let me go.” He was a good student, and stood first in his Class 10 examination in Sangrur district, winning a scholarship for the final two years of his matriculation. But just then, in 1991, he married Amandeep Kaur, whose father Joginder Singh perished with Bhindranwale in the fighting at the Golden Temple. Ishar never went to university. “My wife completed her BA,” he says proudly. He himself became a dairy farmer, and grew two crops, kank (wheat) and jhona (rice) on the family land.

“Many people offered to help us,” Ishar said. “We were never in need. My father did everything for the people, and they loved him.”

What had his father left him, besides the name? “What more can he give me?” Ishar said. “I’m very, very proud of him. I can never be bigger than him. I can’t add to his name, only reduce it.”

Ishar Singh does not believe his father ever preached violence. Could he begin to imagine the tension in Punjab in the early 1980s, Bhindranwale’s defiant, gun-toting drive through Delhi, the skirmishes on the periphery of the Golden Temple, the drive-by shootings of innocent civilians in Delhi, the assassinations of prominent opponents, and the terror in the air?

“My father never threatened, he only replied (to threats),” Ishar Singh said in the Jalandhar office. “He was accused of ordering the deaths of 70 Hindus for every dead Sikh. He was misquoted. Bal Thackeray had said India has 70 crore Hindus and two crore Sikhs and there are 35 Hindus to every Sikh. The Tenth Guru (Gobind Singh) had said each Khalsa can fight 1,25,000 enemies. My father only said each Khalsa can take on 70 enemies, and this was distorted.”

Whatever the ratio, I remember a tense journey in a state transport bus from Amritsar to Delhi in early 1984. The Sikh passengers were clustered near the driver, and the Hindu passengers were huddled in the rear. Nobody spoke. Only when the bus reached Ambala, and Punjab was behind us, did everybody relax. Today Punjab’s highways are four-lane and traffic moves at high speed, save for the occasional tractor or the farmer with his wife riding pillion. Sometimes Bluestar seems 25 light years away.

So were Ishar Singh, his brother and his mother content with anonymity after the carnage of 1984 in Punjab and Delhi? Both he and Inderjit applied for passports, he said, and were turned down. “But you know how it is in India. Somebody pulled strings and we got our passports.” Inderjit emigrated to Canada in 1999; Ishar is reticent about where his brother works. A plastic factory, is all he will say. He himself has travelled to Britain, Australia, New Zealand and Canada.     
 
On the outskirts of Toronto, a gurudwara sports a large portrait of Bhindranwale on its gate. The dreams of Khalistan linger among the diaspora. Bhindranwale is alive and well on YouTube, where you can watch him make his straight-from-the-holster speeches. He has a Facebook fan group, and is a “trending topic” on Twitter.

“In England, small children used to say to me, can I touch you?” Ishar said with a smile. “My father did not become so popular in one day. There are seven or eight thousand sants in Punjab. Why are you asking me only about him?” Brar, the editor, jumped in to say younger Sikhs were admirers of Bhindranwale. “You should see the number of cars with Santji’s pictures on the dashboard,” he said. “There are Bhindranwale ringtones. Many gurudwaras perform ardas for him regularly.”

Ishar said his father never believed in politics, only in dharma. “Politics is based on deception, religion on morals,” he said. So how did he reconcile this with his own work as a property dealer, where so much black money is sloshing around? His reply was elliptical. “The government wants 45 lakh rupees to convert one acre to residential use,” he said. “How can this be honest?”

We were meeting on the eve of Gandhi Jayanti. Did he think Gandhi.... Ishar did not let me complete my question. “Don’t talk about Gandhi,” he said. “He betrayed the Sikhs in 1947.” And Brar the editor said, “Whenever we talk about a weakling, we call him ‘Gandhi’.” Ishar Singh laughed heartily, his eyes shining.

What about his own children? Ishar Singh spoke proudly about his daughter Jeevanjyot, who is 16. She studied “non-medical” subjects like physics, chemistry and mathematics, he said. What did she want to be? An interior designer, he said. That would be a lucrative choice, I said. He laughed again, in agreement. His son Gurkanwar is 13 and he does not know where his life will lead.

As we parted, Ishar Singh said, very much the realtor: “Tell me if you need a car. I have two or three. I can arrange anything. People are always prepared to help me.” We agreed to meet the following day at the Golden Temple for pictures.

The next morning Ishar Singh came to the Golden Temple with Bhai Ajaib Singh, an old associate of his father’s. Ajaib Singh said Ishar was the president of the Sant Kartar Singh Educational Trust, which runs two schools and a hospital in and near

Mehta Chowk where the Damdami Taksal is headquartered. A tall Sikh in traditional attire was walking down the jute matting atop the marble parikrama, and both Ishar Singh and his companion stooped to touch his feet. “That was Giani Jaswinder Singh, the head granthi of the Harmandir Sahib,” Ishar said.

The Harmandir Sahib looked as glorious in the sunshine as it did 25 years ago. The Akal Takht, blackened and pocked by tank shells and heavy gunfire during the bloody fighting, had been restored to its old splendour. At the rear rose rows of whitewashed rooms where pilgrims could speed up the long waiting lists of akhand paths. The government has acquired land around the temple and landscaped it, except in the front where old shops still stand cheek by jowl, doomed to be moved soon. The quiet and peace was punctuated only by the shabad kirtan broadcast round the clock from the inner sanctum.

Thousands of people hurried about their devotions, oblivious of Ishar Singh as he posed for the photographer. Nobody came up to him in awe or reverence. He wore a saffron turban on this day, and he looked like just another pilgrim come to pay his respects.

Waiting to bid him farewell, I watched while Ishar Singh fiddled with one of his two cellphones, standing still among the milling worshippers. He appeared to be looking for something. Finally he said, “I want to show you something. Let’s move to the shade in the portico.” There, he proudly held out a picture on his phone. “My family,” he said. “That’s me, my wife, my son, my daughter.”

(The author, an award-winning journalist, covered the events in Punjab for Reuters in the 1980s.)

Comments

Hmmm! Majority Wins!!

In that case we should all becoem Christians..as that is what the majority prevails??

I meant humanity/human race

I meant humanity/human race not organised religions.

??

??

very nice!!!!

argument wont lead to destination............as said in above article there are now seven to eight thousand sants in Punjab........sf whats the progress on various issues like justice to victims of 84 genocide,,.following the Sikh teachings,,being sabot soorat Sikh,,ect etc etc.....i guess the result is not very good though we have so many sants to guide us..but still the result is ZERO................Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale Ji atlest made the Sikhs awake and made them fight for there rights and land......since Sikhs were always betrayed since partition till now.....and are on the brink of extinction as the current situation is prevailing .

Majority of the sikhs

Majority of the sikhs themselves do not like to look like a sikh.Why do they blame others for their own shortcomings?Self-proclaimed custodians of religion in all communities are nothing but exploiters of religious sentiments of common people.Their deeds always use to bring a bad name to community they represent.

I'll tell you what...................

I'll tell you what - I just learned something new today. Look at the photo above. Harbajjan Singh Yogi is sitting in the grace and presence of Sant Jarnail Singh Ji Bhindranwale. I have always had mixed feelings about him, but not anymore. If Harbajjan Singh Ji hung out with the great souls like Sant Jarnail Singh Ji, Harbajjan Singh Yogi was one of us. He was on our side. This is so cool to learn. This means that his followers are mainstream Sikhs, not some offshoot brand of Yoga. I will never look at Harbajjan Singh Yogi the same again. Much respect due to him for being in the company of real Sants like Bhindranwale.

The people who specialize in

The people who specialize in exploiting religious sentiments of actually religious masses can be seen in pictures with politicians,pretenders,movie-stars,sports-stars,their own enemies and enemies of the state.

1st be a sikh than ...

Oye Niazi dont be nazi ...to make comment on sant ji first you should be in the shoe of sikh to understand the feelings of victims and sant sipahi who warned us before the bloodshed he is still alive in our hearts...

Why did his own son not

Why did his own son not follow his footsteps?Sant sipahis and jehadis were needed when there was no rule of the law, there were no organised system of governance and there was no constitution and political boundaries.What do we use to gain by our uncivilised activities in civilised world?

I WISH TO FOLLOW HIM!!

Sant Bhindranwale woke up the SIKHs its simple and if you fail to realize this and support the government who yet still has not given the victims justice is outrageous in my opinion. The truth is coming out and i hope in my life time i witness another victory from Khalsa. Whatever the Indian government does will never repay the victims of such heinous crimes Raj Karge ka Khalsa by this i mean truth The Khalsa panth has shown such valor through out history even when there are evil individuals trying to distort Gurus History I cant wait to see the Lions Roar Sikhi is far from extinction and its only growing to like minded soul hearten people who have compassion for the truth of being one with Waheguru ........ BRRUURRRAAAAH

If you want to follow him do

If you want to follow him do simiran and read bani as much as you can.

Were sikhs sleeping before he

Were sikhs sleeping before he emerged?Can you list out the gains,benefits and achievements sikhs made during and after his times?It is better for you and likeminded sikhs to actually wake-up.

You seem to be

You seem to be sleeping..during the time sikhs were being treated unfairly...Sant Jarnail Singh Ji fought againt the injustice against the sikhs by the indian government. We gained a whole lot. Lots of people have tried to wipe out the sikhs but all of them will be stopped.

Dhan Dhan Sri Maan Sant Baba Jarnail Singh Jee Khalsa Bhindranwa

Dhan Dhan Sri Maan Sant Baba Jarnail Singh Jee Khalsa Bhindranwale...Vaheguroo Vaheguroo Vaheguroo Vaheguroo Vaheguroo

Jarnail Singh is not

Jarnail Singh is not Waheguru. You got to decide who do you want to follow a human being or Waheguru. There is no comparison between both of them.

Good one.

Good one.

Do you wish to follow

Do you wish to follow him?There is no place for religious fanatics in modern world.

OK Niazi, anyone that

OK Niazi, anyone that disagree's with a point of view you hold dear in automatically a 'religious fanatic'. What a shallow and sad world you do live in, where no one can have an opinion and everyone must conform to your opinion and your opinion alone. If having an opinion makes me a 'religious fanatic', well them am i very proud one. The world didn't revolve around the dictator Indira Gandhi and nor does it revolve around you!

We should conform to the

We should conform to the opinion of majority/civilised world.YOUR VIEWS ARE A JUSTIFICATION TO DEMOLISHING OF MOSQUES,KILLING OF MUSLIMS IN KASHMIR AND GUJARAT AND KILLING OF SIKHS IN DELHI BY HINDU FANATICS.THERE IS NOTHING LIKE GOOD OR BAD AND LEGITIMATE OR ILLEGITIMATE FANATICISM.

You need help!

Wow...you got all that from my comment...you seriously need to see a doctor. How dare you say that i am a well wisher of the massacres that have been committed on Sikhs/Hindus/Christians or Muslims anywhere! I haven't got the time to spend wasting on someone who seriously is that narrow-minded and see any good in others.

My comments were in response

My comments were in response to your support to and justification of fanaticism.

my response

to Mukhtiar Nazi, I agree with brother Ksingh;it seems like you are the one who is a fanatic. First and foremost half a knowledge is a dangerous thing. S Sant Jarnail Singh Khalsa Bhindranwale (February 12, 1947–June 6, 1984) was the leader of the Damdami Taksal, a great Sikh organization having three century long history. Bhindranwale carried heavy influence among Sikhs in all around the world during his time. He tried to spread the original values of Sikhism and persuaded young people to follow the original rules and tenets of the Sikhism. Sant Jarnail Singh Ji attracted the youth with his warrior like appearance. He asked Sikhs youth to return to their faith and stop them from cutting their hairs. His speeches attracted all Sikhs and many returned to Sikhi. In 1981, Bhindranwale was arrested for his suspected involvement in the murder of Jagat Narain, the proprietor of the Hind Samachar Group. Although he willingly surrendered to police and later released due to lack of evidence, Bhindranwale was kept on close watch by Indian police officials. Sant Ji opposed discriminatory policies of Indan State and asked the government to stop discrimination with the Sikhs. He argued that Sikhs want to live in India but as equal citizen and not as citizens of lower grade. Sant Ji made it clear to Sikhs that we are politically slaves in the Indian System. Dharm Yudh Morcha started by Sant Jarnail Singh Ji on 19 July 1982 received tremendous support from Sikh Masses. Sant Ji was martyred along with Bhai Amrik Singh Ji (President AISSF(All India Sikh Students Federation)), General Shabeg Singh Ji and other Sikhs in an attack on Darbar Sahib and Sri Akal Takht Sahib by the Indian Army during June 1984. In year 2000 Sikhs from all around the world found and declared him as “Great Sikh of Twentieth Century.Sant Jarnail Singh Ji Khalsa was born on 12 February, 1947 in village Rode (District Faridkot) Punjab. His father Bapu Joginder Singh was a Sikh Farmer and was affiliated to Damdami Taksal. Once Sant Gurbachan Singh Ji, then head of Damdami Taksal, came to village Rode and asked Baba Joginder Singh to admit one of his seven sons to the Taksal. In this way Jarnail Singh, who was younger of all, became a student of Damdami Taksal. The successor to Sant Gurbachan Singh Khalsa Bhindranwale, Sant Kartar Singh Khalsa Bhindranwale, who died in a road accident on August 16, 1977, mentioned Sant Jarnail Singh Khalsa Bhidranwale as being the new head of the Damdami Taksal. Sant Ji was formally elected as 14th Head of Damdami Taksal at a bhog ceremony at Mehta Chowk on August 25, 1977.In Punjab, Sant Bhindranwale went from village to village as a religious missionary talking with Sikh people. He asked Sikhs to live according to the rules and tenets of Sikhism. He would give long speeches and encourage numerous youths to take Amrit, the holy nectar. Bhindranwale preached to young Sikh men who had lost their path, encouraging them to return to his path of Khalsa by giving up vices like lust for women, drugs, addictions, etc. His focus on fighting for some cause made him a hero in the eyes of young Sikhs. Sant Ji realized that Sikhs are not treated at par with Hindus in India and we are Slaves under Indian System. So he made Sikhs, especially the youth, aware of this fact. He lead to a long struggle against opressive and discriminatory policies of Indian State. Indian Government, lead by Indira Gandhi, was committing planned attacks on Sikhs and Sikhism. Nirankari Mandal’s anti-Sikh preaching was also a part of this plan. Sant Kartar Singh Ji had earlier identified this problem and tackled it in a peacefully. On April 13, 1978, Nirankari Mandal was holding a function at Sri Amritsar, where Nirankari Head personified himself as Guru Gobind Singh Ji and did such other acts which outraged religious feelings of Sikhs. Sikhs protested against this function peacefully and were attacked by Nirankaris with fire-arms and sharp-edged weaponsThe confrontation led to the murder of thirteen Sikhs. Legal Proceedings against the Nirankaris resulted in nothing. On April 24, 1980, the leader of Nirankaris, Gurbachan Singh, was killed. On September 9, 1981, Lala Jagat Narain, the proprietor of the Hind Samachar Group which was play anti-Sikh role, was shot dead near the Amaltas Motel. Lala Jagat Narain was a prominent opponent of Bhindranwale. Two days after the assassination, police issued warrants for the arrest of Bhidranwale. A police search in Chando Kalan, a Haryana village, failed to produce an arrest but burned buses of Damdami Taksal. Gurbani was also burnt there. Sant Bhidranwale publicly announced that he would surrender on September 20. On September 20, 1981, Bhindranwale was arrested on charges of orchestrating Lala Jagat Narain's murder. Over the next 25 days while Bhindranwale was held in custody, sporadic fights erupted in areas where Bhindranwale's accomplices had gathered. Bhindranwale was released on bail on October 15 as India's Home Minister; Giani Zail Singh announced in the Parliament that there was no evidence against Bhindranwale. n On 19 July 1982, Bhai Amrik Singh (President of All India Sikh Students Federation) was arrested by Punjab Police. Sant Jarnail Singh Ji launched a morcha after performing Ardas at Sri Akal Takht Sahib. This morcha was later joined by Shiromani Akali Dal and all other Sikh organizations. Demand of implementation of Anandpur Sahib Resolution became goal of this struggle. This struggle was peaceful but government many times tried to outrage Sikhs and give a violent turn to the morcha. Governments’ planning was to make an attack on Sri Akal Takht Sahib (the highest Political Authority of Sikhs) as the base of Dharm Youdh Morcha was at Sri Akal Takht Sahib Ji. On June 03, 1984 Indian Army attacked on Sri Akal Takht Sahib Ji. This was the day of Martyrdom Anniversary of Fifth Sikh Guru, Sri Guru Arjan Sahib Ji. Sikhs in a large number was gathered at Sri Darbar Sahib. Army used tanks and heavy Guns in this attack. Sant Jarnail Singh Ji Bhindranwale, Bhai Amrik Singh Ji, General Shabeg Singh Ji and some other Sikh warriors defended Sri Akal Takht Sahib and Sri Darbar Sahib till their death. Heavy loss was caused to Indian Army during this attack which showed how bravely Sikh repeated their history in protecting their religious places. Sant Jarnail Singh Ji was martyred on 6 June 1984. Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale was praised by many Sikhs as a martyr of common time. Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale is hailed by some for his efforts to preach the philosophy of the Guru Granth Sahib to the Sikh people. In 2003, at a function arranged by the Shiromani Gurdwara Prabandhak Committee, Joginder Singh Vedanti, the present jathedar of the Akal Takht made a formal declaration that Bhindranwale was a "martyr" and awarded his son, Ishar Singh, a robe of honor. Harbans Singh's The Encyclopedia of Sikhism describes Bhindranwale as "a phenomenal figure of modern Sikhism."

To Nhang Singh: Who is

To Nhang Singh: Who is fanatic is evident from your views on killing of nonsikhs by sikh terrorists.I had not sought A BIASED ESSAY on Bhinderanwala and associates.I have already read a lot on contraversial religious leaders of world including those of my own faith.Osama and Taliban leaders are not less "phenomenal figures". My question was very simple to understand. What gains and achievements sikhs and sikhism have made during and after his times?Socalled sikhs in terms of anything have not yet been able to prove and establish whether they are hindus or muslims or something else.Can you tell me what percentage of sikhs really and actually like people like bhinderanwala?It is not more than .001% who are either outlaws or helpless heads of religious bodies.

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