After the Nirankari and Namdhari movements of 19th Century. Fresh
century was about to be started with a new movement called Singh Sabha.
Nirankari and Namdhari movements had failed to stir Sikh people because of
their restricted scope and schismatic character they acquired. To quote
Sardar Harbans Singh in The heritage of the Sikhs "The Singh Sabha
which followed them had a much deeper impact. It influenced the entire Sikh
Community and reoriented its outlook and spirit. Since the days of the Gurus
nothing so vital had transpired to fertilize the consciousness of the Sikhs.
The Singh Sabha by leavening the intellectual and cultural processes brought
a new dimension to the inner life of the community and enlarged its
heritage. Starting in the seventies of the last century, it marked a
turning-point in Sikh history . It touched Sikhism to its very roots, and
made it a living force once again. The stimulus it provided has shaped the
Sikhs' attitude and aspiration over the past one hundred years."
The reason behind the success of the Singh sabha was the motivation
to search for Sikh identity and Self-assertion that we are not just another
sect of Hinduism. Earlier, Hindu philosophers had declared Sikhs as "another
sect of Hinduism". 2500 years ago, same thing was done to Budhism, when
Budha was made "another reincarnation of Vishnu" by Brahmins, thus ending
Budhism in India. Singh Sabha recognized this and started their campaign of
awakenings for rural Khalsa, which was under the direct threat of Christian
Missionaries, Muslim Maulalivis and Arya Samajis. Khalsa's moral force and
dynamic vitality was rediscovered and Singh Sabha started to look upon its
history and tradition with clear and self-discerning eye.
Everything that was against Gurus teaching was rejected. Rites and
customs considered consistent with Sikh doctrine and tradition were
established. For some, legal sanction was secured through government
legislation. With this came the reorganization of Sikh Shrines. Later in
1920's Sikh Historic Shrines like Nankana Sahib, Punja Sahib, Golden Temple,
TarnTaran Sahib, etc were freed from the hold of hereditary Mahants. These
mahants were practicing rites and ritual inconsistent with Sikhism,
Including not letting people of "lower caste" into Gurdwaras, publicly
smoking, Idol worshipping of various Gods and Goddesses, and holding
Shraddhs and other rituals not followed by the Sikh Gurus..
This period also witnessed the modern development and emergence of
new cultural and political aspirations. Higher level of literacy were
achieved by Sikhs. Famous Khalsa college at Amritsar and hundreds of Khalsa
Schools were opened through out punjab. Many Sikhs ventured outside India at
this period and settled at Malaysia, Canada, U.K, Africa and USA. In Punjab,
the Sikhs sought to secure recognition for themselves:
"An English newspaper writes that the Christian faith is making
rapid progress and makes the prophecy that within the next
twenty-five years, one-third of the Majha area will be Christian.
The Malwa will follow suit. Just as we do not see any Buddhists
in the country except in images, in the same fashion the Sikhs,
who are now, here and there, visible in turbans and their
other religious forms like wrist bangles and swords, will be
seen only in pictures in museums. Their own sons and grandsons
turning Christians and clad in coats and trousers and sporting
toadstool-like caps will go to see them in the museums and
say in their pidgin Punjabi: Look, that is the picture of a
Sikh-the tribe that inhabited this country once upon a time.'
Efforts of those who wish to resist the onslaught of Christianity
are feeble and will prove abortive like a leper without hands and
feet trying to save a boy falling off a rooftop.
This was a note which appeared in a Sikh newspaper, the Khalsa
Akhbar (Punjabi) of Lahore, May 25,1894, from the pen of its
editor, Giani Ditt Singh (1853-1901).
Reporting the observance of the first anniversary of the
Lahore Singh Sabha in its issue for April 22, 1905, the Khalsa
Advocate (English) referred to the occupant of a banga in the
precincts of the Tarn Taran Gurdwara who had embraced Christianity
and hung a cross on one of its walls to convert it into a
Christian chapel.
The Khalsa Akhbar, July 13, 1894, carried this letter
in its correspondence columns:
"In the village of Natta, Nabha state, a Sikh married off his
daughter according to Sikh custom Most of the population in
the village, including Brahmanical Hindus and some Sikhs,
became hostile. They did not let the marriage party stay
in the dharamsala. The host, firm in his faith, had to put up
the wedding guests in his own house."
A student by the name of Bir Singh contributed a letter to
the Khalsa Akhbar, February 12, 1897, saying:
"Near the Dukhbhanjani beri tree Lin the Golden Temple
precincts] there is a room on the front wall of which is
painted a picture. The picture depicts a goddess and Guru
Gobind Singh. The goddess stands on golden sandals and she
has many hands-ten or, perhaps, twenty. One of the hands is
stretched out and in this she holds a khanda. Guru Gobind
Singh stands barefoot in front of it with his hands folded."
A letter in the Khalsa Akhbar, October 8, 1897, reported:
"On Tuesday, Bhadon 31, the pujaris of the Tarn Taran
Gurdwara held the shradha ceremony in honour of Guru Arjan.
Those feasted were from outside the faith and they smoked."
A correspondent' s letter in the Khalsa Samachar of
Amritsar, edited by Bhai Vir Singh, June 25, 1902, said:
"Around the village of Singhpur, Christians and
Muhammadans are becoming very influential. The former
have two churches here and the latter two mosques.
In this area there is no dharamsala and the rural Khalsa
is rather neglectful of its religious duty."
" (These newspaper quotations were taken from Herigate of the
Sikhs, by Sardar Harbans Singh ji.)
These quotations reveal the identity crisis that Sikhism faced at the
dawn of new century.
An editorial in the Khalsa Advocate (English), December 15, 1904,
summed up the situation which existed before the emergence of the Singh
Sabha thus:
". . . false gurus grew up in great abundance whose
only business was to fleece their flock and pamper their
own self-aggrandizement. Properly speaking, there was no
Sikhism. Belief in the Gurus was gone. The idea of brotherhood
in the Panth was discarded. The title of 'Bhai' so much
honoured by Sikhs of old, fell into disuse and contempt.
Sikhs grovelled in superstition and idolatry... It [Sikhism]
had thus lost all that was good and life-giving in the faith."
Singh Sabha movement not only reform the Sikh institutions of the
rituals and rites like casteism but also made sure that in future, these
rituals would not creep back in. Before Singh Sabha, situation was so bad
that even Giani Ditt Singh, a very much honored literary giant of Singh
Sabha movement had to withdraw from gurdwara when Karah Prashad was
to be served, reason being that he was from "low caste", and many priests as
well well educated devotees were followers of this anti-Sikhism casteism
ritual.
As Sardar Harbans Singh ji say " The decline had started in the very
heyday of Sikh power. In the courtly splendor of the days of Maharaja Ranjit
Singh, Sikh practice had been utterly subverted. The faith was weakened by
the influx of large numbers of those who had adopted the Sikh form to gain
material advantage, but whose allegiance to its principles and traditions
was only tentative. In the words of a character in one of Sir Jogendra
Singh's English novels, Rasili: "We failed because we did not obey the Guru.
People established kingdoms and principalities and neglected their poor
brethren. The result is what you see-the Khalsa has fallen." But the
protagonist is aware of the massive reformation that was taking place. He
says, "Sikhism is now casting off external influences and returning to the
solid rock of its own pure faith and divine teachings." In a general way,
the Singh Sabha was an expression of the impulse of the Sikh community to
rid itself of the base adulterations and accretions which were draining away
its energy and to rediscover the sources of its original inspiration. Unlike
other Indian reform movements of the period which were the creation of the
elite, the Singh Sabha was a mass upsurge. Besides the awareness that
Sikhism as commonly practiced was a corruption of what it originally was,
two other motivating factors were at work: a reaction to what was happening
in the neighborly religious traditions and defensiveness generated by
Christian missionaries activities."
The Christian missionary activity had started in the Punjab with the
influx of the English. Even while Ranjit Singh, the Sikh sovereign, reigned
in Lahore, an American Presbyterian mission had been set up at Ludhiana, the
north-western British outpost near the Sikh frontier. The factors for the
choice of this area as "the best field of labour" were its "numerous and
hardy population....a better climate than the lower provinces and....a ready
access to the lower ranges of the Himalaya mountains in case of the failure
of health." Another reason was the Sikh population "to whom our attention at
first was specially directed," as says John C. Lowrie in his book Travels in
North India. With the end of Sikh rule in 1849, the Ludhiana Mission
extended its work to Lahore. Two of its members, C.W. Forman and John
Newton, were set apart for this duty and sent to the Punjab capital
immediately. English and vernacular schools as well as welfare institutions
like hospitals and orphanages followed. C.W. Forman turned out regularly for
bazaar preaching.
John Lawrence, who was one of the triumvirate which ruled the Punjab
after it was annexed to Britain, was a zealous patron of Christian
proselytization. He contributed towards the Mission funds a sum of Rs. 500
annually out of his own pocket. OtherEnglish of fixers followed his example.
It was his ambition to see the conquest of the Sikh dominions followed by
large-scale conversions to Christianity.
Amritsar, headquarters of the Sikh faith, became another important
seat of Church enterprise. In 1852, T.H. Fitzpatrick and Robert Clark, the
first missionaries of the Church of England appointed to the Punjab, arrived
in station. In the valedictory instruction given them, they had been told:
"Though the Brahman religion still sways the minds of a large portion of the
population of the Punjab, and the Mohammedan of another, the dominant
religion and power for the last century has been the Sikh religion, a
species of pure theism, formed in the first instance by a dissenting sect
from Hinduism. A few helpful instances lead us to believe that the Sikhs may
prove more accessible to scriptural truth than the Hindus and
Mohammedans...."
The English missionaries were joined by Daud Singh recorded to be the
first Sikh ever to have embraced Christianity. He had been baptized in
Kanpur by the Rev. W.H. Perkins, and was transferred to Amritsar as pastor
in 1852. The Mission houses were built in the city by the Deputy
Commissioner. Construction of the station church was started. In the wake of
the Mission came a vernacular school, a high school, a school for girls and
midwifery hospital. The evangelizing work was rewarded with the conversion
of men like Shamaun, i.e. Simeon, a Sikh granthi (reader of the Holy Book or
priest), formerly Kesar Singh of Sultanwind, Imad-ud-Din, a Muslim maulavi
and Rulia Ram, a Hindu Khatri from Amritsar, who had attended the Mission
School and passed the Calcutta entrance examination. Sub-stations of the
Mission were opened in important towns of the Sikh tract of Majha such as
Tarn Taran, Ajnala and Jandiala.
Singh Sabha movement was helped by the missionaries activities of
Mohammadens and Christians. It grew out of nowhere to become a founding
father of current SGPC and Akali party. Singh Sabha Movement brought back
the old ways of Khalsa and restored the pride and dignity of common urban
and rural Sikhs.