Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale (Punjabi: [d͡ʒəɾnɛːlᵊ sɪ́ŋɡᵊ pɪ̀ɳɖrãːʋaːɭe]; born Jarnail Singh Brar;[4] 2 June 1947[5]– 6 June 1984) was a Sikh militant.[6][7][8][9][10] After Operation Bluestar, he posthumously became the leading figure for the Khalistan movement.[11][12][13][5]: 156–157 [14]

Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale
Born
Jarnail Singh Brar[1]

(1947-06-02)2 June 1947
Rode, Moga, Punjab Province, British India
(present-day Punjab, India)
Died6 June 1984(1984-06-06) (aged 37)
Cause of deathKilled in gunfight during Operation Blue Star
MonumentsGurdwara Yaadgar Shaheedan, Amritsar[2]
Occupations
EraAround 1984
OrganizationDamdami Taksal
TitleSant[3]
SuccessorBaba Thakur Singh
MovementDharam Yudh Morcha
Spouse
Pritam Kaur
(m. 1966)
Children2

He was the thirteeth jathedar or leader, of the prominent orthodox Sikh religious institution Damdami Taksal.[15][16] An advocate of the Anandpur Sahib Resolution,[17][18][19][20][21] he gained significant attention after his involvement in the 1978 Sikh-Nirankari clash. In the summer of 1982, Bhindranwale and the Akali Dal launched the Dharam Yudh Morcha ("righteous campaign"),[22] with its stated aim being the fulfilment of a list of demands based on the Anandpur Sahib Resolution to create a largely autonomous state within India. Thousands of people joined the movement in the hope of retaining a larger share of irrigation water and the return of Chandigarh to Punjab.[23] There was dissatisfaction in some sections of the Sikh community with prevailing economic, social, and political conditions.[24] Over time Bhindranwale grew to be a leader of Sikh militancy, organizing killer squads to eliminate those he perceived as enemies of Sikhism.[25][26][27]

In 1982, Bhindranwale and his group moved to the Golden Temple complex and made it his headquarters. Bhindranwale would establish what amounted to a "parallel government" in Punjab,[28][29] settling cases and resolving disputes,[28][30][31] while conducting his campaign.[32] In 1983, he along with his militant cadre inhabited and fortified the Sikh shrine Akal Takht. Scholars hold him responsible for launching attacks on Hindus and state institutions from the complex; his targeting of Hindus was intended to drive them out of Punjab.[33][34][35][36] Bhindranwale's relocation to the Harmandir Sahib complex was to strategically preempt his arrest by the government, as attacks on Hindus by his cohort escalated.[37][38][39] In June 1984, Operation Blue Star was carried out by the Indian Army to remove Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale and his armed followers from the buildings of the Harmandir Sahib in the Golden Temple Complex,[40] which resulted in hundreds to thousands of deaths according to various reports, including that of Bhindranwale.[41]

Bhindranwale has remained a controversial figure in Indian history.[42] While the Sikhs' highest temporal authority Akal Takht describe him a 'martyr',[43] with immense appeal among rural sections of the Sikh population,[29][44] who saw him as a powerful leader,[44] who stood up to Indian state dominance and repression,[45][46] many Indians and academic critics saw him as spearheading a "revivalist, extremist and terrorist movement".[44][47][48][49][50] His stance on the creation of a separate Sikh state remains a point of contention.[57]

Early life

Bhindranwale was born on 2 June 1947,[5]: 151  as Jarnail Singh Brar to a Jat Sikh family, in the village of Rode,[3] in Moga District (then a part of Faridkot District),[58] located in the region of Malwa.[1] The grandson of Sardar Harnam Singh Brar, his father, Joginder Singh Brar was a farmer and a local Sikh leader, and his mother was Nihal Kaur.[4] Jarnail Singh was the seventh of eight siblings of seven brothers and one sister.[59] He was put into a school in 1953 at the age of 6 but he dropped out of school five years later to work with his father on the farm.[60]

Marriage

He married Pritam Kaur, the daughter of Sucha Singh of Bilaspur at the age of nineteen.[3][61] The couple had two sons, Ishar Singh and Inderjit Singh, in 1971 and 1975, respectively.[4] After the death of Bhindranwale, Pritam Kaur moved along with her sons to Bilaspur village in Moga district and stayed with her brother.[61] She died of heart ailment at age 60, on 15 September 2007 in Jalandhar.[62]

Damdami Taksal

Early years

In 1965, he was enrolled by his father at the Damdami Taksal also known as Bhindran Taksal, a religious school near Moga, Punjab, named after the village of Bhindran Kalan where its leader Gurbachan Singh Bhindranwale lived.[4][63] Though based out of Gurdwara Akhand Parkash there, he took his pupils on extended tours of the countryside.[58] After a one-year course in scriptural, theological and historical studies with Gurbachan Singh Khalsa, partly during a tour but mostly during his stay at Gurdwara Sis Asthan Patshahi IX near Nabha, he rejoined his family and returned to farming, marrying in 1966.[58] Maintaining ties with the Taksal, he continued studies under Kartar Singh, who became the new head of the Taksal after Gurbachan Singh Khalsa's death in June 1969, and would establish his headquarters at Gurdwara Gurdarshan Prakash at Mehta Chowk, approximately 25 kilometers northeast of Amritsar.[58] He quickly became the favourite student of Kartar Singh.[30] Unlike other students he had had familial responsibilities, and he would take time off from the seminary and go back and forth month to month to take care of his wife and two children, balancing his familial and religious responsibilities.[64]

Successor to the Taksal

Kartar Singh Khalsa died in a car accident on 16 August 1977. Before his death, Kartar Singh had appointed the then 31-year-old Bhindranwale as his successor.[3] His son, Amrik Singh,[30] would become a close companion of Jarnail Singh.[26] Bhindranwale was formally elected the 14th jathedar of the Damdami Taksal at a bhog ceremony at Mehta Chowk on 25 August 1977.[1][4] He adopted the name "Bhindranwale" meaning "from [the village of] Bhindran [Kalan]", the location of the Bhindran Taksal branch of the Damdami Taksal,[1][63] and attained the religious title of "Sant".[1] He concluded most of his family responsibilities to dedicate full time to the Taksal, thus following a long tradition of “sants”, an important part of rural Sikh life.[64] Henceforth his family saw him solely in Sikh religious congregations known as satsangs, though his son Ishar Singh would describe his youth as being "well looked after" and "never in need."[1] As a missionary Sant of the Taksal, he would tour the villages to give dramatic public sermons and reading of scripture.[26] He preached the disaffected young Sikhs, encouraging them to return to the path of the Khalsa by giving up consumerism in family life and abstaining from drugs and alcohol,[14] the two main vices afflicting rural society in Punjab,[30] and as a social reformer, denounced practices like the dowry, and encouraged a return to the simple lifestyle prior to the increased wealth of the state[30] and the reversal of the decline in morals following the Green Revolution.[65] As one observer noted, "The Sant's following grew as he successfully regenerated the good life of purity, dedication and hard work.... These basic values of life...had been the first casualty of commercial capitalism."[30] His focus on fighting for the Sikh cause appealed to many young Sikhs. Bhindranwale never learned English but had good grasp of Punjabi language. His speeches were released in the form of audio cassette tapes and circulated in villages.[66] Later on, he became adept with press and gave radio and television interviews as well.[26] His sermons urged the centrality of religious values to life, calling on the members of congregations to be:

"…one who takes the vows of faith and helps others take it; who reads the scriptures and helps others do the same; who avoids liquor and drugs and helps others do likewise; who urges unity and co-operation; who preaches community, and be attached to your Lord's throne and home."[14]

From July 1977 to July 1982, he extensively toured cities and villages of Punjab to preach the Sikh faith. He also visited other states and cities in India, mostly in gurdwaras, in Punjab, Haryana and Chandigarh.[67] His meetings were attended by rapt "throngs of the faithful – and the curious."[67] He advocated against decreasing religious observance, cultural changes occurring in Punjab, rising substance abuse, and use of alcohol and pornography, encouraging religious initiation by taking amrit (the administration of which had been his primary task during his tours)[58] and fulfilling religious obligations, including wearing the outward religious symbols of the faith, like the turban and beard.[30] He appeared at a time when leaders were not engaged in the community, traveled from city to city instead of being based in an office or gurdwara and delegating, solved domestic disputes and showed no interest in a political career, seeing himself foremost as a man of religion.[66] People soon began to seek his intervention in addressing social grievances, and he began to hold court to settle disputes. This reflected the widespread disenchantment among the masses with expensive, time-consuming bureaucratic procedures that often did not ensure justice. Bhindranwale's verdicts were widely respected and helped to gain him enormous popularity,[30] as well as his "remarkable ability" as a preacher and his ability to quote religious texts and evoke the relevance of historical events in the present time.[68]

Khushwant Singh, a critic of Bhindranwale, allowed that

“Bhindranwale's amrit parchar was a resounding success. Adults in their thousands took oaths in public to abjure liquor, tobacco and drugs and were baptized. Videocassettes showing blue films and cinema houses lost out to the village gurdwara. Men not only saved money they had earlier squandered in self-indulgence, but now worked longer hours on their lands and raised better crops. They had much to be grateful for to Jarnail Singh who came to be revered by them."[69]

Politics

Bhindranwale was active in politics. It has been claimed that Indira Gandhi's Congress party attempted to co-opt Bhindranwale in a bid to split Sikh votes and weaken the Akali Dal, its chief rival in Punjab.[23][70][71][32]: 174  Congress supported the candidates backed by Bhindranwale in the 1978 SGPC elections. The theory of Congress involvement has been contested on grounds including that Gandhi's imposition of President's rule in 1980 had essentially disbanded all Punjab political powers regardless,[72] with no assistance required to take control, and has been challenged by scholarship.[73][74][75][70]

The Congress CM (and later President) Giani Zail Singh,[76] who allegedly financed the initial meetings of the separatist organisation Dal Khalsa,[23][77] amid attempts to cater to and capitalize on the surge in Sikh religious revivalism in Punjab.[78] The Akali Dal would also attempt to cater to the same electoral trend during the same period following electoral defeats in 1972 and 1980,[79] resulting from a pivot to a secular strategy in the 1960s[80] and the accompanying coalition partnerships necessary to guarantee electoral success, most notably with the Jan Sangh, a party of urban Hindu communalism.[79] This later turned out to be a miscalculation by Congress, as Bhindranwale's political objectives became popular among the agricultural Jat Sikhs in the region,[25] as he would advocate for the state's water rights central to the state's economy, in addition to leading Sikh revivalism.[79]

In 1979, Bhindranwale put up forty candidates against the Akali candidates in the SGPC election for a total of 140 seats, winning four seats.[81] A year later, Bhindranwale used Zail Singh's patronage to put up candidates in three constituencies' during the general elections,[82] winning a significant number of seats from Gurdaspur, Amritsar and Ferozepur districts.[78] Despite this success, he would not personally seek any political office.[83] He had the acumen to play off of both Akali and Congress attempts to capitalize off of him, as association with him garnered Sikh votes while putting other constituencies at risk.[84] According to one analysis,

“Nearly every academic and media source on the rise of Bhindranwale notes his apparent ties to the Congress party, particularly through Giani Zail Singh, the president of India, up through the early 1980s. The intent was allegedly to use Bhindranwale as a pawn against the Akali Dal, Congress’ chief political rival in Punjab. Several of my interlocutors claim an opposite scenario: that is, that the Akali Dal itself started rumors of Bhindranwale's links to Congress as a way of thwarting his growing popularity among its own constituency. There is evidence for both of these possibilities, and I believe Robin Jeffrey may be most accurate in his assessment when he writes that “the evidence suggests that Bhindranwale exercised a cunning independence, playing the factional antagonisms of Punjab politics with knowledge and skill…. In this independence lay much of Bhindranwale's appeal. If left him untainted by close association with any of the older political leaders, yet at the same time suggested that he knew how to handle them." Whatever ties Bhindranwale may have had with Congress in the early days, it would be misleading to suggest that Congress "created" the Bhindranwale phenomenon. It was in my opinion, sui generis. Help may have been received from outside [later on during the insurgency], but the dynamic to be understood here is internal. Emphasizing the role of outside agencies, rather, is a way of minimizing the seriousness of the challenge presented by Bhindranwale himself.”[73]

Bhindranwale himself addressed rumors of being such an agent, which were spread by Akali leadership during mid-1983, as his expanding support came at the expense of the Akali Dal amid mass leadership defections,[75] seeing them as attempts to reduce his by-then huge support base in Punjab. He would refute this in April 1984 by comparing his actions to the Akalis, referring to the granting of gun licenses to Akalis by the Congress administration while his had been canceled, and that he did not enter the house of any Congress-aligned faction (including congressites, communists, and socialists), Sikhs associated with him being arrested and their homes confiscated, and police destruction on his property, while Akali politicians would have dinners with figures aligned with Congress, like former chief minister Darbara Singh, who Bhindranwale would accuse of atrocities against Sikhs.[83]

Bhindranwale did not respect conventional SGPC or Akali Dal apparatchiks, believing them to have "become mealy-mouthed, corrupt and deviated from the martial tenets of the faith,"[78] after they had failed to support the Sikhs during the 1978 Sikh-Nirankari clashes due to pressure from their coalition partners. Described as having "unflinching zeal and firm convictions," Bhindranwale did "not succumb to the pressure of big-wigs in the Akali Party nor could he be manipulated by the authorities to serve their ends." According to Gurdarshan Singh, "Those who tried to mend him or bend him to suit their designs underestimated his tremendous will and ultimately lost their own ground. He never became their tool. People who promoted his cause or helped him to rise to prominence were disillusioned, when he refused to play the second fiddle to them and declined to tread the path laid down for him. Paradoxical though it may seem, they became his unwilling tools. Thousands listened to him with rapt attention at the Manji Sahib gatherings. He had tremendous power to mobilise the masses. His charisma and eloquence overshadowed other leaders."[16]

In order to overcome the hegemony of the Akali Dal, rather than being used, Bhindranwale would exploit the Congress and then the Akali Dal itself.[74] The Akali Dal had begun to neglect Sikh needs in favor of maintaining political alliances necessary to keep power, resulting in their electoral loss in 1972, and the resulting Anandpur Sahib Resolution, meant to win back Sikh support, remained neglected while the party focused on reversing the overcentralization of political power that had taken place during the Emergency.[79] Described as "a rational actor with his own goals," his first concern was to rejuvenate Sikhism as a leader of the community.[74]

Further, the Damdami Taksal already had a history of openly opposing and criticizing Congress government policies before, as Kartar Singh Khalsa Bhindranwale, the leader of the institution prior to Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale, had been a severe critic of the excesses of Indira Gandhi's Emergency rule, even in her presence as far back as 1975.[29][3] Kartar Singh had also gotten a resolution passed by the SGPC on 18 November 1973, condemning the various anti-Sikh activities of the Sant Nirankaris, which were based in Delhi.[85] Both Kartar Singh Bhindranwale and the Damdami Taksal had commanded such a level of respect in Sikh religious life that the Akali ministry had given him a state funeral upon his death on 20 August 1977.[86] Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale would also mention the Sikhs facing the government with 37 major protests against Emergency rule under Congress during this era as fighting against tyranny.[67] Emergency rule had initially been utilized to avert criminal charges on Gandhi, who was linked to misuse of government property during the upcoming election, which would have invalidated her campaign, and endowed the central government with powers including preemptive arrests, as well as the arrest of many political opponents.[citation needed]

On Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale becoming leader of the Damdami Taksal, another of the Taksal students explained, “[Nothing changed] in political terms. It was just the same way. The Indian government thought that maybe although they could not stop Sant Kartar Singh [Bhindranwale], maybe Sant Jarnail Singh [Bhindranwale] would be weaker. That was not the case.”[64]

Clash with Sant Nirankaris

On 13 April 1978, the anniversary of the founding of the Khalsa, a Sant Nirankari convention was organized in Amritsar, with permission from the Akali state government. The practices of the "Sant Nirankaris" subsect of Nirankaris was considered as heretics by the orthodox Sikhism expounded by Bhindranwale,[87] though the conflict between the Sikhs and the Sant Nirankaris preceded Bhindranwale; the Sant Nirankaris had been declared by the priests of the Golden Temple as enemies of the Sikhs in 1973,[88] and the Damdami Taksal had opposed them since the 1960s,[89] during the time of Kartar Singh Khalsa.[58] They had exemplified both the internal and external threats to Sikhism that Bhindranwale spoke of in speeches, as their scriptures made derogatory references to the Guru Granth Sahib,[89][90] the sect's leader proclaiming himself as a guru in its place and calling himself the baja-wala (a reference to Guru Gobind Singh),[91] and because of their undermining of the Sikh structure[58] and affiliation with Congress.[88]

From the Golden Temple premises,[92] Bhindranwale delivered a stirring sermon,[88] where he announced he would not allow the Nirankari convention to take place. According to Tully and Jacob, Bhindranwale declared "We are going to march there and cut them to pieces!"[93] According to Harjot Singh Oberoi, Bhindranwale and other Sikh religious leaders delivered inflammatory speeches prompting a Sikh congregation to confront the Nirankaris.[94] After the speech a large contingent of about two hundred Sikhs led by Bhindranwale and Fauja Singh, the head of the Akhand Kirtani Jatha, left the Golden Temple and proceeded to the Nirankari Convention with the intention of stopping its proceedings.[93] An agitated Sikh within the procession cut the arm of a Hindu shopkeeper whilst Bhindranwale's contingent were shouting slogans against Nirankaris.[95][93] The protest of the Sikhs was shot at by the armed guards of the Nirankari chief,[96] subsequently resulting in an armed clash between the two groups. Fauja Singh allegedly attempted to behead Nirankari chief Gurbachan Singh with his sword but was shot dead by Gurbachan's bodyguard. [97][98] In the ensuing violence, several people were killed: two of Bhindranwale's followers, eleven members of the Akhand Kirtani Jatha and three members of the Sant Nirankari sect.[98] This event brought Bhindranwale to the limelight in the media,[99] and brought him into the political arena.[58] 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 attack the protestors.[100]

Sikhs reacted to the clashes by holding massive demonstrations, some violent, in both Punjab and Delhi. A religious letter of authority was released by Akal Takht,[91] the governing Sikh body, which directed Sikhs to use "all appropriate means"[101] to prevent the Sant Nirankaris from growing and flourishing in society, and forbid Sikhs from keeping social ties with the Nirankaris[102][91] and threatened those who did not do so with religious punishment (left ambiguous, though clarified by the jathedar to mean by standard religious teaching).[101][91]

A criminal case was filed against sixty two Nirankaris, by the Akali led government in Punjab.[91] The investigation concluded that the attack on the Sikhs was planned by a number of accused, including Gurbachan Singh. All the accused were taken into custody except Gurbachan Singh, who was arrested later in Delhi, but only after a personal audience with the Prime Minister Morarji Desai.[103] The Sant Nirankaris had firmly supported the Emergency, and developed close links with many Congress politicians and bureaucrats, creating a strong foothold in Delhi political circles, as well as engendering opposition from the Akalis and the Damdami Taksal during the same period.[102]

The case was heard in the neighbouring Haryana state, and all the accused were acquitted on grounds of self-defence[97] on 4 January 1980, two days before the Lok Sabha poll.[58] 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,[104] the Punjab government Chief Minister Prakash Singh Badal decided not to appeal the decision.[105][106] The case of the Nirankaris received widespread support in the Hindi media in Punjab and from Congress, which upon returning to central power also dismissed the Akali government in Punjab, where fresh elections were held and a Congress government installed;[58] orthodox Sikhs considered this to be a conspiracy to defame the Sikh religion.[97]

Bhindranwale increased his rhetoric against the enemies of Sikhs. The chief proponents of this rhetoric 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 after the events; and the All India Sikh Students Federation.[97] His "very public" rhetoric of Indira Gandhi's involvement in the trials was one of the initial reasons the central government became concerned with Bhindranwale, as well as the historic martial identity Sikhs were returning to because of him. Under Bhindranwale, the number of people joining the Khalsa increased. The rhetoric that were based on the "perceived 'assault' on Sikh values from the Hindu community", also increased in this period.[26]

In the subsequent years following this event, several murders took place in Punjab and the surrounding areas, regarded[by whom?] to be committed by Bhindranwale's group or the newly founded Babbar Khalsa, which opposed Bhindranwale and was more inclined towards committing sectarian violence and enforcing Sikh personal law[97][107] The Babbar Khalsa activists took up residence in the Golden Temple, where they would retreat to, after committing "acts of punishment" on people against the orthodox Sikh tenets. On 24 April 1980, The Nirankari head, Gurbachan was murdered.[108] The First Information Report named twenty people for the murder, including several known associates of Jarnail Singh Bhindrawale, who was also charged with conspiracy to murder.[109] Bhindranwale took residence in Golden Temple to allegedly escape arrest when he was accused of the assassination of Nirankari Gurbachan Singh.[110] Bhindranwale remained in hiding until the Home Minister of India, Zail Singh announced to Parliament that Bhindranwale had nothing to do with the murder. Shortly after, Bhindranwale announced that the killer of the Nirankari chief deserved to be honored by the high priest of Akal Takht, and that he would weigh the killers in gold if they came to him.[111][112] It would turn out that 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.[citation needed]

The AISSF

Bhindranwale's message was enthusiastically received by an emerging underclass of educated rural Sikhs,[113][114] whose suffered from the unequal distribution of benefits from the Green Revolution.[115][116] Punjab had enjoyed the second-highest percentage of children in school after Kerala at the time, along with high college enrollment,[117] at the same time with unemployment rates among college graduates far above the national average.[118] Unemployment was caused by distortions caused by the disparity between agricultural growth and a stunted industrial sector;[119][116] marginal and poor peasants could not reap the benefits of the land nor find employment in the industrial sector.[116] By the late 1970s the educations of rural Sikhs, many from the Majha area, did not reap financial benefit, many found the urban college environment alienating, and the Akali Dal was engaged in political activities that bore little relation to the demands of educated but unemployed rural Sikhs youth.[120] Bhindranwale's message increasingly appealed to them,[120] and their support grew with police excesses, and as Bhindranwale expressed concern over the many breaches of civil rights, and those killed during and after 1978 in protests.[114] The class dimension was described by India Today in 1986[121] as follows:

“The backbone of the Taksal and the AISSF are the sons and daughters of Punjab's middle and low-level peasantry and agricultural workers. The challenge to the Akali and SGPC leadership, which is dominated by leaders from the Malwa region [(of Punjab)], comes from what was once its base – the small and middle peasants. The socio-economic roots of the Taksal and the AISSF leaders are totally different from [the Akali leaders] ... Barnala, Badal, Balwant, Ravinder and Amrinder, all of whom come from the landed gentry classes of the state.”[121]

The All-India Sikh Students Federation, or AISSF, founded in 1943[120] to attract educated Sikh youth to the Akali movement,[121] had traditionally followed the direction of the Akali Dal and fought for more political power for the Sikhs, fighting for an independent Sikh state before Partition, and afterwards taking up the Punjabi Suba cause.[120] After the establishment of Punjab state, the AISSF had fallen into disarray by the 1970s, and during this period of increasing economic pressures on the state, student politics were dominated by rural Communist organizations.[122] Amrik Singh was elected president in July 1978,[120] and his organizational skills and Bhindranwale's legitimacy as the head of a respected religious institution restored the Federation as a powerful political force,[123] and the AISSF and Bhindranwale were further united in being anti-Communist.[122] With a well-educated leadership, many with advanced degrees,[121] membership exploded from 10,000 to well over 100,000, and under Amrik Singh, the AISSF's first concern was the Sikh identity.[122]

AISSF secretary-general Harminder Singh Sandhu ascribed the preceding period of youth politics as resulting from the passivity of the Akali leadership in relation to the central government, seen as betraying Sikh interests, which caused resentment among the AISSF.[122] By 1980 they felt ready to redefine Punjab's relationship with the center,[122] and the revival of the AISSF and the presence of Bhindranwale put enormous pressure on the Akali Dal.[121]

Bhindranwale was suspicious of Sikh elites, describing them as a class possessing the ability for multiple allegiances, and therefore, could not be relied upon by a mass movement based upon religious foundations which justified protest against discrimination and abuses of power and repression.[45] As such he was often opposed particularly by some Sikh members of the class with business and land interests outside of Punjab, and those occupying high administrative positions.[114] As part of a preaching tradition, he saw the lives of such Sikhs, described as sycophants of Indira Gandhi for power,[45] as a departure threatening the distinct identity of the Sikhs.[20] He saw that path as having to be corrected, along with deviationist and Communist trends, of Sikh officers whose loyalty lay with the state over the Sikh panth tradition, emphasizing unification of the community[114] and pushing those officers in government service to work for such unity.[45]

In May 1981, the AISSF led a protest against tobacco and other intoxicants in the religious city of Amritsar. The Arya Samaj had also led protests against alcohol and meat in the city, though it would be with Bhindranwale and the Sikhs that the police clashed on 31 May, resulting in a dozen Sikh deaths and adding to tensions.[124]

Incident at Chando Kalan

On 9 September 1981, Lala Jagat Narain, the founder editor of the newspaper Punjab Kesari, was murdered. He was viewed as a supporter of the Nirankari sect and had written several editorials that had condemned Bhindranwale.[108] An Arya Samaji known for his staunch communal tendencies reflected in his daily newspaper in Punjab,[125] Lala had urged Hindus of Punjab to reply to government census that Hindi and not Punjabi was their mother tongue and decried the Anandpur Sahib Resolution. His paper played a significant role in "fanning the flames of communal hatred between Hindus and Sikhs,"[126] and the Hindi press based in Jalandhar consistently vilified the Sikhs,[127] without making any distinction between one Sikh group or another.[124] Narain had been present at the clash between the Nirankaris and the Akhand Kirtani Jatha and had served as a witness in the court case of the incident.[128]

Punjab Police issued a warrant for Bhindranwale's arrest in the editor's murder,[92] as he had often spoken out against the well-known editor. Bhindranwale, who at the time was on a preaching tour, was camped in Chando Kalan, a village in Hissar district in Haryana,[58] 200 miles from Amritsar. A combined force of Punjab and Haryana Police planned a search operation in an attempt to locate and arrest Bhindranwale on 14 September 1981. According to veteran Indian journalist Kuldip Nayar, the Haryana Chief Minister, Bhajan Lal was instructed by the Home Minister, Zail Singh, to not arrest Bhindranwale.[129] While Bhindranwale had relocated to Mehta Chowk, but the police fired upon his band of disciples, looted their luggage, and burned their religious texts.[58] Bhindranwale and others Sikh religious leaders also relayed that police had behaved illegally with the Sikh inhabitants of the village during the search in which the valuables from homes belonging to Sikhs were reported to have been looted and two buses owned by the Damdami Taksal containing a number of Birs (copies) of the Guru Granth Sahib were set on fire.[130]

There was violence in Chando Kalan when the Punjab Police team reached the location, between supporters of Bhindranwale and police. The Punjab Police, incensed that the Haryana Police had allowed Bhindranwale to flee, set his vans which had contained written records of sermons of Bhindranwale for posterity on fire. According to the official version: When the Punjab Police arrived to Chando Kalan to arrest Bhindranwale, some followers of his fired upon the police, resulting in exchange of fire and incidents of arson.[129][131] The clashes with the police resulted in the deaths of at least 11 people.[108] The burning of his sermons had angered Bhindranwale, who secured himself in his fortified Gurdwara Gurdarshan Parkash located at Mehta Chowk.[98] Bhindranwale at this point turned against Zail Singh and other senior congress leaders with whom he was previously associated with.[132]

Arrest at Mehta Chowk

As his location became common knowledge, the police surrounded the gurdwara at Mehta Chowk. Darbara Singh insisted on Bhindranwale's arrest, though the central government feared the possibility of clashes as large numbers of Sikhs had gathered at the gurdwara in his support.[133] For negotiating Bhindranwale's surrender, the senior officers went inside the gurdwara. Bhindranwale agreed to surrender for arrest at 1:00 p.m. on 20 September 1981, but added a condition that will do so only after addressing the religious congregation. This condition was accepted by the police. At the agreed time he emerged address a large crowd of his followers who armed with spears, swords and several firearms. Several prominent Akali leaders such as Gurcharan Singh Tohra, Harchand Singh Longowal and the Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee's Jathedar Santokh Singh were present. Bhindranwale delivered a sermon proclaiming his innocence[134] and against the state government trying to have him arrested,[133] receiving the support of almost every senior Akali leader,[134] also against the perceived injustices done to the Sikhs and himself. He ended his speech asking the mob not to act violent after his arrest. Bhindranwale then offered himself to the police for arrest on 20 September 1981,[58] and was taken to a circuit house instead of prison. Shortly after Bhindranwale courted arrest, agitated Sikhs clashed with the police and paramilitary forces, resulting in the death of 18 protestors.[132]

On the day of his arrest, three armed men on motorcycle opened fire using machine guns in a market in Jalandhar in retaliation,[135] killing four people and injured twelve.[133] The next day, in another incident at Tarn Taran one Hindu man was killed and thirteen people were injured. On 25 September, in Amritsar a goods train was derailed. On 29 September, Indian Airlines Flight 423 was hijacked and taken to Lahore. The hijackers demanded Bhindranwale's release. Several bomb blasts were made in Punjab's Amritsar, Faridkot and Gurdaspur districts.[98] Several violent incidents happened in Punjab during the next 25 days after the arrest. The Akali Dal leadership was in the process of reestablishing its Sikh credentials after its secular administration during its protests against the Emergency,[134] and under Longowal decided to publicly support Bhindranwale, the most popular Sikh religious leader in Punjab at that point.[134] Bhindranwale also got support from the President of the SGPC, Tohra and the Jathedar of the Akal Takht, Gurdial Singh Ajnoha.[108] India's Home Minister, Giani Zail Singh, then announced in the Parliament that there was no evidence against Bhindranwale in his involvement in Lala Jagat Narain's murder, and on 14 October 1981 Bhindranwale was released by the Punjab Police.[58] After his release he was able to keep the party on a strongly nationalist course,[134] and released a public statement approving the murders of Gurbachan Singh and Lala Jagat Narain and that the killers deserved to be honoured and awarded their weight in gold, according to KPS Gill.[98] In a statement regarding Narain in early 1982 for the publication India Today, Bhindranwale stated:

"We are no extremists or communalists. Give us one instance when we insulted or hit anyone. But the Government terms us extremists. We are extremists if we protest when our Gurus are painted as lovers of wine and women by the Lala's newspapers. I preach that all Sikhs must observe their tenets and be the Guru's warriors. Let all Hindus wear their sacred thread and put tilak on their foreheads, we shall honour them. I stand for Hindu-Sikh unity. Let the Hindus at least once declare that they stand for Sikh-Hindu unity. Let the prime minister, whose forefathers our Guru Tegh Bahadur saved by sacrificing his life, declare that she is for unity."[67]

Bhindranwale's arrest and subsequent release raised his stature among the Sikh populace and especially the youth, who, comparing him to the ineffectual Akali leadership, flocked to him. He would become increasingly outspoken toward the Congress government, which would attempt to harass and detain him and other senior members of the Taksal several times in 1982.[58]

Dharam Yudh Morcha

The Anandpur Sahib Resolution, and the 1978 Ludhiana Resolution based on it, put socio-economic concerns at the core[136] and called for an end to the center's control of Punjab's river waters and its unjust distribution, state control of the headworks, and better procurement prices and subsidies for the state's farmers.[22][137] These issues were of particular concern to the state's rural Sikh population who supported them, as the Sikhs dominated the agricultural sector and rural areas.[22] Other demands included the maintenance of the ratio of Sikhs in the army, protections of Sikhs outside Punjab, Punjabi as a second language for states with significant Punjabi-speaking populations, amendments to tax and property policies for rural populations, a broadcasting station and a dry port at Amritsar, and a stock exchange at Ludhiana.[137]

From a set of 45 economic, political, religious, and social policies formulated in September 1981, a list of 15 demands would be prepared in October,[138] of which five were economic.[22] The Dharam Yudh Morcha would champion these preliminary demands. The subsequent inclusion of religious demands were a result of polarization of Akali goals following failed negotiations in November[138] with the Congress government, which would raise the spectre of separatism to exploit the fears of Hindu voters and push the Akalis into a corner.[84] Other factors included attempts to ally with, or outbid, more militant Sikh factions, which gained traction following the lack of progress in talks, and the growing religious revivalism that both the Akalis and Congress[78] would attempt to play to gain influence.[22] According to Atul Kohli,

"The repeated failure of the Akalis to wrest power from Congress had left open a political space for those who argued that increased militancy was the only means for protecting Sikh interests. Bhindranwale stepped into that space."[84]

As a result of his rising popularity, Bhindranwale faced opposition from all sides, including the government and rival Sikh factions, both political and militant. One of Bhindranwale's main concerns in his speeches was condemning factionalism and internal disunity among the Sikhs.[68] The Akali Dal leadership had initially opposed Bhindranwale.[23] While Bhindranwale ceded leadership to the Akali Dal and disavowed political ambition,[83] in 1980 the Akali Dal faced a serious challenge from Bhindranwale and his mass support from the AISSF, the Akali youth wing.[134] As Bhindranwale became increasingly influential, the party decided to join forces with him. In August 1982, under the leadership of Harcharan Singh Longowal, the Akali Dal launched the Dharam Yudh Morcha, or "righteous campaign,"[22] in collaboration with Bhindranwale to win more autonomy for Punjab. At the start of the protest movement, in response to long-standing wrongs not addressed by the state's economic and political process,[139] the Akali leaders had, in their Ardas, or prayer, at the Akal Takht, resolved that they would continue the struggle until the Anandpur Sahib Resolution was accepted and implemented by the Government. The Akalis, in their subsequent electoral defeat in 1980, would be forced by the presence of Bhindranwale and his huge base of support in the AISSF to return to its Sikh base,[113] for whom the Anandpur Sahib Resolution had originally been written to regain the declining support of,[140] before it had fallen by the wayside.[80]

Later, noting Indira Gandhi's intransigence, it appeared that the Akali leaders were willing to water down their demands. Bhindranwale reminded his audiences that it had been Gurcharan Singh Tohra, Surjit Singh Barnala, Balwant Singh and other leaders who had been were signatories to the Anandpur Sahib Resolution and that he was not present when the Resolution was adopted. He insisted, however, that having said the Ardas at the Akal Takht, no Sikh could go back on his solemn word. Longowal's core political base began to wither; about a third of his SGPC members and district Akali presidents reportedly defected to Bhindranwale.[75] Bhindranwale promised the Sikh masses that he would not allow the chief Akali leadership to fail them as during the Punjabi Suba movement.[20]

Despite the Resolution's endorsement of "the principle of State autonomy in keeping with the concept of Federalism," Indira Gandhi and the central government took a hard line, emphasizing the Sikh demands and treating them as tantamount to secession, thus putting moderate Sikh politicians at a competitive disadvantage in an increasingly frustrated and militant political arena.[75] She would be later characterized by prime minister Charan Singh as following "a megalomaniacal policy based on elitist philosophies,"[75] and her successor Rajiv Gandhi would later describe the Resolution as "not secessionist but negotiable,"[75] recognizing the failures of her autocratic style of governance.[141] Thousands of people joined the movement as they felt that it represented a real solution to their demands, such as a larger share of water for irrigation, and return of Chandigarh to Punjab.[23] By early October, more than 25,000 Akali workers courted arrest in Punjab in support of the agitation.[142]

Protests

The basic issues of the Dharam Yudh Morcha were related to the prevention of the digging of the SYL Canal, the redrawing of Punjab's boundaries following the Punjabi Suba movement to include left-out Punjabi-speaking areas, the restoration of Chandigarh to Punjab, the redefining of relations between the central government and the state, and greater autonomy for the state as envisioned in the Anandpur Sahib Resolution and as was constitutionally due.[143] The most important demand was the restoration of the state's river waters as per constitutional, national and international norms based on riparian principles; more than 75% of the state's river water were being drained from the state,[144][143] to Rajasthan and Haryana, which were non-riparian states,[145] and its accompanying hydropower potential, powered by Punjab's only natural wealth.[144][145]

Following failed talks, the Nehr Roko Morcha, or “struggle to stop the canal,”[22] was launched on April 24, 1982, by the Akali Dal at the village of Kapuri, Punjab to prevent the initial digging of the SYL Canal[146] which would have diverted most of the state's water to Haryana,[22] resulting in volunteer arrests.[146] The protest, despite massive support from the Sikh peasantry, was not yielding results as Kapuri, where the Prime Minister had inaugurated the digging of the canal, was a remote border village distant from Akali headquarters, and the Akalis would decide to relocate the agitation to Amritsar in August.[58] Meanwhile, an attempt had been made to arrest Bhindranwale on 20 April 1982 while he was staying in the Singh Sabha Gurdwara in Dadar in Mumbai, though he would successfully reach the safety of his base in Mehta Chowk.[58] However, he would leave his base in Chowk Mehta for the security of the Guru Nanak Niwas in the Golden Temple complex on 20 July and call for a Panthic convention there on 25 July for the release of his men,[58] after Amrik Singh was arrested on 19 July with two other followers; Amrik Singh had offended the appointed Punjab Governor Marri Chenna Reddy by protesting the mass arrest of the Akali volunteers and pleading their case,[147] while Thara Singh, another leading member of the Taksal, was arrested the following day, highly provoking Bhindranwale.[58] He joined his movement for their release to the larger Akali movement, which was then already designated dharam yudh, for their political, economic, cultural, and religious demands.[147]

Further morchas included the Raasta Roko, Kamm Roko, and Rail Roko morchas;[148] with the exception of the Rasta Roko morcha in which some 20 protesters were killed in police firing, all others had ended peacefully.[149]

The Dharam Yudh Morcha was launched later that year on 4 August, following an Akali Dal meeting in July at Amritsar; Bhindranwale and Jathedar Jagdev Singh Talwandi were persuaded to lead it under the Akali Dal banner and the leadership of Longowal,[147][150] to whom Bhindranwale swore loyalty.[58] The movement began with Akalis courting arrest with a large number of volunteers.[147]

During the implementation of various agricultural restrictions under Congress, the Akali Dal had accomplished little in response, and in addition, the possibility of forging an Akali-Congress partnership in Punjab was being privately explored. This caused the decline of support for the Akalis and the concurrent increase of support for Bhindranwale's message among both educated orthodox Sikhs and the rural population, along with what was increasingly seen as the ineffectual Akali approach of protests and inter-party collaboration in producing results for Punjab, leaving open a political space for those who argued that increased militancy was the only means for protecting Sikh interests.[84]

The Akali movement gained momentum in August and September, and the government began to run out of room in jails for the over 25,000[151] volunteer protesters.[147] Over 100,000 protesters would be arrested over the course of the morcha.[151] The central government, instead of preempting any Akali agitation in regard to the Punjab by constitutionally referring all the legal issues to the Supreme Court, which the Akali Dal had demanded, played up the threat of extremism and law and order, and appeared disinclined to solve the issues justly or constitutionally.[152][153][154] As late as May 1984, the Congress government continued to frame the protest as a religion-based stir, as opposed to a comprehensive movement driven by political, economic, and territorial issues central to the Declaration and in the interests of all residents of Punjab.[155][152] The considered view of the Governor of West Bengal sent to Punjab, B. D. Pande, that a political problem required a political solution, went unheeded.[156]

In response to demands that the Supreme Court be consulted in regards to concerns that the center was unconstitutionally usurping water from Punjab, the central government found loopholes to circumvent such a demand, instead offering a tribunal, which did not have the authority to override the Punjab Reorganization Act to begin with, and never issued a final decision over an issue critical to agricultural growth and state development.[116]

Later, in May 1984, one day after an Akali procession in Amritsar against a ban on tobacco and meat products in the vicinity of the Golden Temple, the Hindi Suraksha Samiti, which had been formed in response to the Akali protest, organized a counterdemonstration in favor of tobacco.[157]

Police

The Punjab Police, due to colonial policing traditions different than those in the rest of the country, which resulted from being from the last region to be annexed by the British (in 1849) and the extremely turbulent early years of British rule, had had much more free rein to act than in other provinces; the influence of those policies persisted after independence.[158] The police would react to incidents by rounding up and illegally detaining suspects in large numbers for prolonged aggressive interrogation, often killing detainees in staged encounters. There was little faith in complaint inquiries from ordinary citizens, due to lawless police activity having tacit approval from the state police leadership.[158]

Under the pretext of maintaining law and order, central state actions in the form of false encounters, tortures and killings in police custody, as well as extrajudicial police invasions and oppressive lockdowns in rural Punjab, increased.[153] It became known that during the period, certain police officials and others had been guilty of excesses or violence. Atrocities committed by named officers were narrated in open meetings by Bhindranwale or the concerned victims,[127] but neither the charges of the victims, reports to the authorities, nor other complaints were responded to by the administration to rectify current complaints or improve future procedures, much less for punishing the offenders.[153] This perceived official apathy and callousness led many began to believe that what was happening was at the behest of the administration, and that state violence was being practiced to defame Sikhs to turn public opinion in order to sidetrack the real issues of state resources and constitutional procedure, as neither issues nor reported rights violations were being addressed.[153] Bhindranwale spoke of staged crimes, in which Sikhs were accused of theft or violence, with the intention of linking the falsely accused to Bhindranwale, with any declared act being said to be on his orders, and that many of the Sikhs arrested on false accusations were tortured and killed. Accusations of violent force on the Sikhs also included the earlier burning of buses belonging to the Damdami Taksal containing Sikh scriptures, and Sikh train passengers being singled out and beaten on false pretenses.[citation needed]

Out of 220 deaths during the first 19 months of the Dharam Yudh Morcha, 190 had been Sikhs, with over 160 Sikhs killed during the first 16 months,[153] with the Akalis alleging that reactive killings were being done by agent provocateurs, and reports appearing that such communal incidents had been initiated by Congress to inflame Hindu feelings. Despite emphatic demands for a detailed judicial inquiry, the central government was unwilling to initiate any such process.[153] Extrajudicial killings by the police of orthodox Sikh youth in rural areas during the summer and winter of 1982 and early 1983 resulted in retaliatory violence.[127]

Bhindranwale was particularly upset about the police atrocities and the murder of scores of Sikhs in the garb of false and contrived police encounters.[159] He was often heard criticizing the double standards of the Government in treating Hindu and Sikh victims of violence, citing various incidents like the immediate appointment of an inquiry committee to probe Lala Jagat Narain's murder while not for the killing of the Sikhs, including the firing on peaceful Sikh protesters in the successful Rasta Roko agitation on 4 April 1983,[31] killing 24,[151][149] believing that this partisan behavior of the Government was bound to hasten the process of alienation of the Sikhs.[159] He reprimanded the press for suppressing incidences of police atrocities,[159] and of the double standards of dealing with Sikhs.[160]

A team sponsored by the PUCL, with Justice V. M. Tarkunde as chairman and famed journalist Kuldip Nayar as a member, to assess the police excesses against Sikhs. It reported:

"We had no hesitation in saying in our report that the police had behaved like a barbarian force out for revenge. They had even set houses of a few absconders on fire and destroyed utensils, clothes and whatever else they found in them. Relatives of the absconders were harassed and even detained. Even many days after the excesses committed by the police, we could see how fear-stricken the people were. Villagers gave us the names of some of the police sub-inspectors and deputy superintendents involved; some of them, they said, had a reputation of taking the law into their hands.”[161]

In the words of Mark Tully and Satish Jacob, BBC correspondents, these deadly encounters were justified as a reasonable method of avoiding lengthy court trials:[162]

"There was a series of what the Indian police call 'encounters'- a euphemism for cold-blooded murder by the police. Darbara Singh admitted as much to us."[163]

Though Akali demands were largely for the developmental welfare of the state of Punjab as a whole, with demands only made to the government and not in regards to other communities, police killings, including extrajudicial actions of fatal torture and mutilations of detainees, with some subsequently declared as escapees, as well as unprovoked attacks on innocent individual Sikhs, were carried out by mobs of the Hindi Suraksha Samiti, mobilized by the Arya Samaj. These incidents sparked off retributory attacks against them by Sikh youths.[163] After the launch of the Dharam Yudh Morcha, and subsequent governmental inaction in regards to police brutality,[153] Sikh activists began committing retaliatory[153] acts of political violence. An assassination attempt was made on Chief Minister of Punjab Darbara Singh and two Indian Airlines flights were hijacked.[142]

Following protester deaths, Swaran Singh restarted negotiations on behalf of Gandhi with the Akalis after releasing all arrested Akali volunteers, reaching agreements on Chandigarh, river waters, Centre-State relations, and the Amritsar broadcast, which were approved by a cabinet subcommittee. While Swaran Singh relayed the government's approval of the agreement, Gandhi had changed it significantly before submitting it to Parliament. The talks would collapse[142] after this action, and Longowal would announce in November 1982 the continuation of the protests in Delhi during the 1982 Asian Games.[142][146] Another round of talks between the Akalis and Congress MP Amrinder Singh was successful, but was sabotaged by Bhajan Lal, the Chief Minister of Haryana, who stated that protests, which were largely stifled, would not be allowed in Haryana during the event, and ensured that Sikhs allowed to pass through, regardless of social position, whether retired military, politician, or ordinary citizen, were subjected to various procedures including invasive friskings[142][164] and removal of turbans;[165] Sikhs travelling from Punjab to Delhi or back were indiscriminately stopped, searched, and humiliated,[58] and Sikhs understood this humiliation not just individually but as a community; according to journalist Kuldip Nayyar, "from that day their feeling of alienation [had] been increasing."[165] A few months after the Asian Games, anti-Sikh riots in Panipat on 14 February 1983 resulted in many Sikh deaths, damage to property of Sikhs, and extensive damage to gurdwaras, during which the state police remained inactive.[166]

Bhindranwale, then regarded as the "single most important Akali leader," announced that nothing less than full implementation of the Anandpur resolution was acceptable to them.[142] The Sikh volunteers who answered his call on 3 September 1983 were not satisfied with either the methods or the results of Longowal's methods, as a rift emerged between the two leaders, with Bhindranwale referring to Longowal's rooms in the Golden Temple complex as "Gandhi Niwas" ("Gandhi residence"), and Longowal referring to his rooms as a wild "Chambal" region.[31] Bhindranwale would denounce the double standard of Congress-supporting hijackers, who had demanded the release of Indira Gandhi after her post-Emergency arrest, being rewarded with seats in the Uttar Pradesh legislative assembly, while demanding punishment for Sikh protesters who had done the same. He would comment in 1982, "If the Pandey brothers in Uttar Pradesh hijack a plane for a woman (Mrs. Gandhi) they are rewarded with political positions. If the Sikhs hijack a plane to Lahore and that too for a cause, they are dubbed traitors. Why two laws for the same crime?"[67] With the release of Amrik Singh in July 1983, Bhindranwale felt confident of the advancement of the movement without the Akali leadership; they would part ways in December, two months after the imposition of President's rule.[134]

Press disinformation

There would be significant government interference in information released to the media itself. According to Cynthia Keppley Mahmood, "The clearly distorted account of the event released to the media does not speak well for India's vaunted freedom of press. Stories of prostitutes and drugs at the Akal Takht were printed on front pages one week, that recanted in back pages the next. A story suggesting that Bhindranwale had committed suicide was followed by one describing his body as riddled with bullets from head to toe. There is no doubt that an entire apparatus of fear dissemination worked to convince India that the Sikhs were to be distrusted. And by and large, it succeeded,"[167] adding that "Compromises with press freedom were accompanied by draconian legislation that was a target of criticism from human rights communities around the world."[167]

According to a journalist traveling with Bhindranwale during 1982, the Central intelligence department, or CID, which had taped every public speech listening for "seditious" remarks, had heard none by April 1982, and Darbara Singh, despite being ready to "act" against Bhindranwale, had found no grounds to do so.[67]

Insurgency

When the insurgency against the central government began, it was against the main backdrop of unresolved Anandpur Sahib Resolution claims and an increased sense of disillusionment with the democratic process, which when it worked seemed to end up with Sikhs’ not achieving satisfactory representation, and when it did not, ended up with the dictatorship of Emergency rule, as well as the backdrop of communal conflict on the subcontinent which gave Sikhs a historical justification to fear for the future of their religion in a Hindi-dominated state.[168] The failure of the central government to address political, social, and economic problems of the Sikhs facilitated the rise of militancy.[169] Sikh demands had been fundamentally political rather than religious,[75] while prolonged intransigence by the central government[75] on water, state border, and devolutionary issues, in addition to centralization,[170] led to alienation[170] and militancy.[75] Bhindranwale accused Indira Gandhi of sending Darbara Singh, former Congress chief minister of Punjab, to "wreak atrocities on the Sikh nation."[83]

On 8 February 1984, the Akalis held a successful bandh to demonstrate their strength and continued commitment to non-violent struggle.[31] The following week, a tripartite talk with five cabinet ministers, five Akali leaders, and fifteen leaders from opposition parties came close to a successful settlement, but was deliberately sabotaged once again by Bhajan Lal with more anti-Sikh violence in Haryana.[171] This was followed by Akali to express frustration in further protests, leading to their arrest along with many volunteers.[171] On 25 May 1984, Longowal announced another morcha to be initiated on 3 June, the day Operation Blue Star would be launched,[171][172] practicing civil disobedience by refusing to pay land revenue, water or electricity bills, and block the flow of grain out of Punjab. Gandhi's emissaries met Akali leaders on 27 May to once again suggest the negotiation of a settlement, but though the Akalis showed signs of yielding, Bhindranwale would accept nothing short of the full implementation of the Anandpur Sahib Resolution.[171]

According to Gandhi's principal secretary P. C. Alexander, it would be Longowal's announcement of withholding Punjabi grain and tax from the central government that had been the true "last straw" for Gandhi to send the army when she did,[173] as opposed to any militancy.

In the midst of the protests, police violence, and the burgeoning insurgency ensuing, it would be increasingly clear that the government would seek a military rather than a political solution to the unrest in Punjab, and Bhindranwale would instruct the people to be prepared for a showdown with the government.[58] Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale had with himself a group of devoted followers armed with firearms who served as his bodyguards and acolytes, occasionally as willing and unpaid assassins.[92] Bhindranwale urged all Sikhs to buy weapons and motorcycles, which would be helpful to fight state oppression, instead of spending on television sets.[97] He believed that amritdharis (baptized Sikhs) should also be shastradharis (weapon bearers),[97] as had been required by Guru Gobind Singh for defensive purposes.[174] Bhindranwale and Amrik Singh started carrying firearms at all times, hearkening to the Sikh religious duty of carrying a kirpan, which is also a weapon,[26] and police brutality on Sikh protesters. Upon the imposition of President's rule and the designation of Punjab as a disturbed area, the police were given broad powers to search, arrest, and shoot whom they would, immune from legal action.[58]

Bhindranwale's call to Sikhs to keep weapons was, “For every village you should keep one motorcycle, three young baptized Sikhs and three revolvers. These are not meant for killing innocent people. For a Sikh to have arms and kill an innocent person is a serious sin. But Khalsaji for Sikh to have weapons and not to get their legitimate rights is a greater sin.”[175] Indira Gandhi began to use the term "extremists," a term meant to push Punjab back into line with the government, Sikhs were relieved of duty from police and military forces in large numbers. Sikhs in government positions were profiled by police across India from the 1970s to the 1990s, who arrested and tortured suspected criminals at will.[citation needed]

On 12 May 1984, Ramesh Chander, son of Lala Jagat Narain and editor of Hind Samachar group was alleged by Kuldip Nayar to have been murdered by "supporters" of Bhindranwale.[70] Lala's paper had had a "shrill tone when reporting on Sikh issues," and "was widely dubbed pro-Hindu," with its "tone" changing only subsequently.[176] In 1989, seven editors and seven news hawkers and newsagents were assassinated. Punjab Police had to provide protection to the entire distribution staff and scenes of armed policemen escorting news hawkers on their morning rounds became common.[176]

According to KPS Gill, a few Sikh leaders raised their voice against Bhindranwale's presence in the Akal Takht complex. Giani Partap Singh, an eighty year old former Jathedar of the Akal Takht, had criticised Bhindranwale for the arsenal of modern weapons in the Akal Takht, and was shot at his home in Tahli Chowk, as were Niranjan Singh the Granthi of Gurdwara Toot Sahib, Granthi Jarnail Singh of Valtoha, and Granthi Surat Singh of Majauli.[98] The police, reportedly on instructions from superiors, did not check the trucks used for kar sevā (religious service) that brought in supplies needed for the daily langar. During a random check, one truck was stopped and guns and ammunition were found.[98]

Militant organizations would lose popular support by the late 1980s, years after Bhindranwale's death, once their membership had begun to attract lumpen elements that joined the movements for the allure of money, rather than the long cherished cause of a separate homeland for the Sikhs.[177] Separatists were accused by Indian authorities and critics for being responsible for crimes including assassination, bank robbery, home invasion, organising training camps, and stockpiling weapons.[178]

The Babbar Khalsa were opposed to Bhindranwale and his initial strategy of opting to join the Akalis' protest movement for Punjab's rights instead of immediately pursuing more militant means; it was more focused on propagating its view of Sikh religious life than on politics and states' rights, and contested with Bhindranwale for dominance of the movement. The rivalry intensified in April and May 1984, with the two groups blaming each other for several assassinations. Bhindranwale would subsequently be regarded as the head of the movement.[179]

Relocation to the Akal Takht

In July 1982, at the start of the Dharam Yudh Morcha, the President of Shiromani Akali Dal, Harchand Singh Longowal had invited Bhindranwale to take up residence at the Golden Temple compound. He called Bhindranwale "our stave to beat the government."[180] On 19 July 1982, Bhindranwale took residence with approximately 200 armed followers in the Guru Nanak Niwas guest house, on the precincts of the Golden Temple. Bhindranwale developed a reputation as a man of principle who could settle people's problems about land, property or any other matter without needless formality or delay, more expediently than the legal system. The judgement would be accepted by both parties and carried out. This added to his popularity.[181] Bhindranwale led the campaign in Punjab from the complex guest house,[32] from where he met and was interviewed by international television crews.[citation needed]

 
Bhindranwale and his followers moved to the Akal Takht complex in December 1983

On 23 April 1983, the Punjab Police Deputy Inspector General A. S. Atwal was shot dead as he left the Harmandir Sahib compound by a gunman from one of the several groups residing there, in apparent revenge for police conduct.[182] The assassination was never solved. The government promptly blamed militant groups, though all militant factions, as well as the Akalis, Bhindranwale, and the AISSF, all vehemently denied all accusations and unequivocally condemned the incident.[183]

On the assassination, Longowal stated, "Whenever the situation becomes ripe for settlement, some violent incident takes place. I think there is a government conspiracy behind the DIG's murder." When asked who could be responsible, he implied Darbara Singh's involvement: "The one who is afraid of losing his seat (of power);" observers had noted that Darbara Singh had been on the verge of being replaced by the Congress high command, partly on Akali request and partly due to ineptitude.[183] Bhindranwale condemned it as "the handiwork of the Punjab [Congress] government," and "an attempt to foil the Akali agitation and to malign the Sikhs." The president of the AISSF termed the shooting "anti-Sikh" and carried out by certain elements in the Congress party, demanding a judicial inquiry.[183]

The CRPF, a central paramilitary police force, had been deployed in Punjab during President's rule as an alternative to the Punjab Police, who due to its mostly Jatt Sikh composition were seen with apprehension by the central government, which imposed a recruitment ban on it for a time. CRPF troops first fired on the Golden Temple in February 1984 following the Panipat riots the same month, furthering misgivings among Sikhs. The Punjab Police, traditionally seen as oppressive, were briefly seen by Sikhs as a counterbalance to the CRPF, even resulting in frayed relations and even a few clashes between the two forces, before the militancy would take off after Blue Star when it would again become the primary opposing force.[184] When J S Aurora had visited the Golden Temple with his wife in December 1983, while Bhindranwale was living in the Guru Nanak Niwas, and looked at various areas of the complex, he had noticed no defensive preparations anywhere. Visiting again on 24 February the next year, when Bhindranwale had moved to the Akal Takht building, he only saw sandbags on the langar complex which "did not appear very formidable," which he was told was placed for protection after the CRPF had fired on the complex in February. He would visit again a month after the operation, attributing the professional defenses that had been built between March and June to Shabeg Singh who had served under him.[185]

Reportedly, militants responsible for bombings and murders were taking shelter in some gurdwaras in Punjab.[23] In turn, some members of the Congress-led Punjab assembly alleged that the murder in the temple premises confirmed the charges that the extremists were being sheltered and given active support in religious places and the Guru Nanak Niwas, and that Bhindranwale was openly supporting such elements.[186] However, the central government would later claim that it could not enter the gurdwaras for the fear of hurting Sikh sentiments.[23] After President's rule was imposed in Punjab,[187][165] the burning of a gurdwara at Churu, Rajasthan by the Jai Hindu Sangh on 26 November increased the violence, and on 14 February the Hindi Suraksha Samiti vandalized a train station by destroying a model of the Golden Temple and pictures of the Sikh gurus.[156] Anti-Sikh mob violence in Haryana from 15 to 20 February 1984, mobilized by CM Bhajan Lal at the behest of leaders in Delhi, and the killing of eight Sikhs in Panipat on 19 February in view of the police station, provoked retaliations.[156]

As the days went by the law and order situation further deteriorated and violence escalated. While the Akalis pressed on with their two-pronged strategy of negotiations and massive campaigns of civil disobedience directed at the Central Government, others were not so enamoured of nonviolence. Communists known as "Naxalites", and armed Sikh groups – the "Babbar Khalsa" and "Dal Khalsa", both of which opposed Bhindranwale, sometimes worked hand in hand and clashed with the police. A covert government group known as the Third Agency was also engaged in dividing and destabilising the Sikh movement through the use of undercover officers, paid informants and agents provocateurs.[188] Bhindranwale himself always kept a revolver and wore a cartridge belt and encouraged his followers to be armed.[189] However, a Chandigarh officer in an interview with the December 1983 issue of India Today explained that the worst offense Bhindranwale could be accused of was "harsh speech rhetoric."[190]

The earliest demands for army intervention, under the guise of terms like "martial law," "army rule," "army takeover, and "imposition of Emergency," were made by organizations like the RSS, Hindi Suraksha Samiti, and the BJP.[191] Later joined by other outwardly secular parties, the Congress would seek to consolidate its vote bank along communal lines.[192] During the debate in the Parliament of India members of both the houses demanded the arrest of Bhindranwale. Sensing a prospect of his arrest from the hostel premises, he convinced the SGPC president Tohra to set up his headquarters on the Akal Takht complex.[193] While the move was supported by Gurcharan Singh Tohra, an Akali who was then President of the SGPC, it was opposed by Harchand Singh Longowal, leader of the Akali political party. On 15 December 1983, Bhindranwale was asked to move out of Guru Nanak Niwas house by members of the Babbar Khalsa who acted with Longowal's support. Longowal by now feared for his own safety.[194][page needed] Tohra then convinced the high priest to allow Bhindranwale to reside in Akal Takht.[193] On 15 December 1983, Bhindranwale and his supporters moved to the Akal Takht complex and began fortifying the complex with sand bags and light weaponry. Longowal attempted to block the move by persuading Giani Kirpal Singh, then Jathedar (head priest) of the Akal Takht, to use his authority and issue a Hukamnama (edict) disallowing Bhindranwale from relocating to the complex.[195] The temple high priest protested this move as a sacrilege since no Guru or leader ever resided in Akal Takht that too on the floor above Granth Sahib but Tohra agreed to prevent Bhindranwale's arrest,[193] In the end, while Giani Kirpal Singh did protest the move, Bhindranwale's was permitted to relocate.[196] as Bhindranwale believed that the Morcha leader Longowal was negotiating with the government for his arrest.[193] By December 1983, Bhindranwale and his followers, now joined by senior ex-military personnel like Major general Shabeg Singh, retired Major General J.S. Bhullar, retired Brigadier Mohinder Singh, and others, had made the Golden Temple complex an armoury and headquarters,[197] fortifying it with sandbags in preparation for a siege.[58] Mark Tully and Satish Jacob wrote, "All terrorists were known by name to the shopkeepers and the householders who live in the narrow alleys surrounding the Golden Temple... the Punjab police must have known who they were also, but they made no attempt to arrest them. By this time Bhindranwale and his men were above the law."[198] However, Bhindranwale presented himself, along with over 50 of his supporters, at the Deputy Commissioner's residence on the day he moved to the Darbar Sahib complex, revealing his purpose in moving there was not to hide from the law,[199] as the District Magistrate at Amritsar, until shortly before the invasion, was on record as having assured the Governor of the state that he could arrest anyone in Darbar Sahib at any time, though not seeing a need to.[199][67]

After Blue Star, Lieutenant general J S Aurora commented on the lack of sophisticated weapons, mentioning a number of light machine guns and two rocket launchers, but the lack of medium machine guns or mortars, with the only weapons bearing foreign markings being 60 self-loading rifles. He would ascribe most of the weaponry to either simply having been picked up from misplaced weapons drops during border wars, issued by the government to people living close to the border for security purposes, government gun-running, or from Punjab's long-established rural trade of unaccounted guns, used in family feuds, property disputes, dacoit bands and the like. Describing the weaponry seized after the operation, he stated, "Quite a lot, yes, but the impression that has been built up in the public mind of foreign governments deliberately arming the terrorists with a view to overthrowing the government is grossly overdone."[200]

Views on Khalistan

Bhindranwale was not an outspoken supporter of Khalistan, although he often emphasized the separate identity of the Sikhs.[14] Bhindranwale stated his position on Khalistan, a movement which was first introduced in concept during the 1946 independence negotiations.[201] During interviews with domestic and foreign journalists and public speeches through his phrase that "Sikh ik vakhri qaum hai" (or, "Sikhism is a distinct nation"),[97] using the word 'Qaum' (nation, people, or also religion) when referring to the Sikh population of Punjab,[202] though others have argued that "national" is a mistranslation of 'qaum,' as India was a nation of various races and 'qaums.' In a speech given by Bhindranwale on 27 March 1983:

I stayed ten days in Delhi. There I too was asked, just as they ask me here all the time when friends from the newspaper come, [They ask] "Sant Ji, do you want Khalistan?’ I replied; “Brothers, I don't oppose it nor do I support it. We are silent. However, one thing is definite, if this time the Queen of India does give it to us, we shall certainly take it. We won't reject it. We shall not repeat the mistake of 1947. As yet, we do not ask for it. It is Indira Gandhi's business and not mine, nor Longowal's, nor of any other of our leaders. It is Indira's business, Indira should tell us whether she wants to keep us in Hindustan or not. We like to live together [with the rest of Indians]; we like to live in India.”[203][204][121][205]

While Bhindranwale never explicitly supported Khalistan,[206] in a BBC interview, he stated that if the government agreed to the creation of such a state, he would not refuse and repeat the mistakes made by Sikh leadership during the 1946 independence: “How can a nation which has sacrificed so much for the freedom of the country want it fragmented but I shall definitely say that we are not in favor of Khalistan nor are we against it.”[206][207] adding that the Sikhs would opt for a separate state only if they were discriminated against and were not respected in India, or if their distinct Sikh identity was in any way threatened.[14] In regards to the idea of the Indian government attacking the Darbar Sahib, he stated, "if the Indian Government invaded the Darbar Sahib complex, the foundation for an independent Sikh state will have been laid."[208]

In his final interview to Subhash Kirpekar, Bhindranwale stated that "Sikhs can neither live in India nor with India. If treated as equals it may be possible. But frankly speaking I don't think that is possible."[209] Kuldip Brar, who would later head Operation Blue Star, would subsequently put forth that per the Indian intelligence sources in early June 1984, there was a "strong feeling" and "some sort of information" among the government that Bhindranwale was supposedly planning to declare Khalistan an independent country any moment with support from Pakistan, that Khalistani currency had allegedly already been distributed, and that this declaration would have increased chances of Punjab Police and security personnel siding with Bhindranwale.[210]

In later disclosures from former R&AW special secretary G.B.S. Sidhu, R&AW itself helped "build the Khalistan legend," actively participated in the planning of Operation Blue Star. While posted in Ottawa, Canada in 1976 to look into the "Khalistan problem" among the Sikh diaspora, Sidhu found "nothing amiss" during the three years he was there,[18] stating that "Delhi was unnecessarily making a mountain of a molehill where none existed," that the agency created seven posts in West Europe and North America in 1981 to counter non-existent Khalistan activities, and that the deployed officers were "not always familiar with the Sikhs or the Punjab issue."[18] Describing the secessionist movement as a "chimera" until the attack on the Darbar Sahib, after which the insurgency would start,[18] he would later contend that:

Bhindranwale never raised the demand for Khalistan or went beyond the Akali Anandpur Sahib Resolution, while he himself was prepared for negotiations to the very end. All talks with the more moderate Akalis had already failed. The hawks had taken control of Mrs Gandhi and so the worst was to happen and the Sikhs never forgave her for what happened.[18]

According to a New York Times article written just a few weeks after the operation:

Before the raid on the Golden Temple, neither the Government nor anyone else appeared to put much credence in the Khalistan movement. Mr. Bhindranwale himself said many times that he was not seeking an independent country for Sikhs, merely greater autonomy for Punjab within the Indian Union....One possible explanation advanced for the Government's raising of the Khalistan question is that it needs to take every opportunity to justify the killing in Amritsar and the invasion of the Sikhs' holiest shrine.[19]

Khushwant Singh had written that "considerable Khalistan sentiment seems to have arisen since the raid on the temple, which many Sikhs, if not most, have taken as a deep offense to their religion and their sensibilities," referring to the drastic change in community sentiments after the army attack.[19]

Negotiations

Amarinder Singh, who had a close relationship with Indira Gandhi and her son Rajiv Gandhi, met with Bhindranwale on behalf of the government in 1982, serving as an MP in the Lok Sabha at the time. After abortive attempts to set up meetings between Bhindranwale and Indira Gandhi in Punjab and Delhi, as neither was willing to leave their territories, Amarinder Singh, on Bhindranwale's request, was able to arrange a meeting between Bhindranwale and Rajiv Gandhi in Punjab, also a Congress MP at the time who agreed to meet. Two meetings were planned, though neither took place as Rajiv failed to appear both times; both Amarinder and Rajiv had been summoned back by Indira each time as they were about to embark from Safdarjung Airport in Delhi. Amarinder believes that intelligence agencies induced Indira to interfere in the occurrence of both meetings.[211]

Amarinder nevertheless continued efforts to keep negotiations with other parties going, often flying from Delhi to Punjab in a series of what the government called "secret talks" to continue to meet Bhindranwale and Longowal on various occasions, right up until the army operation.[212] His 2017 autobiography states that:

"My first impression of Bhindranwale was that he was a very simple man," notes Amarinder. "He was very much open to discussion and ideas and gave the feeling that he was ready to listen and work for peace. You asked him a straight question and he gave you a straight reply. He was prepared to negotiate, but it was the politics [played by] the Centre and his growing popularity that kept him glued to his hard-line position and drove him to the point of no return."[213]

On Bhindranwale's objectives, Amarinder states,

"At some stage, Bhindranwale had taken it upon himself to get the 1973 Anandpur Sahib Resolution passed. Incidentally, Bhindranwale had never asked for a separate Sikh state, but was fighting for the implementation of the 1973 resolution.... Bhindranwale, in fact, had always opined that he never asked for Khalistan, but if it was offered, the Sikhs would not give up the offer as they did during partition in August 1947."[17]

During the days before the assault, government representatives, led by Ambassador Daljit Singh Pannun, met with Bhindranwale in a last-ditch effort to avert the army operation, which Bhindranwale had agreed to initiate dialogue toward.[52] Bhindranwale sought a commitment from Pannun that Sikh youths taken in captivity during the protest movement would no longer be tortured by police.[52] He also sought comment from Gandhi stating that all the problems afflicting the state of Punjab would be resolved through mutual discussion; Pannun offered a window of one month to await comment while Bhindranwale offered one week; the parties settled on a window of ten days, during which Bhindranwale and his men would disarm.[52] Bhindranwale warned of a backlash by the Sikh community in the event of an army assault on the Golden Temple, if the plan was sabotaged, and wanted assurance that if any mishap took place, that Gandhi would not blame his men.[52] The documentation of the reports sent to the central government before Operation Blue Star reads, “We ended this meeting in utmost cordiality and understanding and were happy at the outcome. In fact, I found there was nothing that would frighten the government of India, nor anyone else.”[52] Pannun asserted that Bhindranwale had repeatedly told him that he did not want Khalistan,[52] that Bhindranwale was “grossly misunderstood,”[52] and that had Pannun been treated with honesty and consideration (as he had been "kept in the dark about the impending army operation by vested interests"),[52] Operation Blue Star would have never taken place, and "many innocent lives could have been saved."[52] The comment awaited from Gandhi would never come.

On the 30th anniversary of the operation, journalist Rajinder Puri disclosed that the "fundamental truth" of the operation being "deliberately or otherwise ignored" was the fact that it had been unnecessary because Bhindranwale had categorically agreed to a settlement acceptable to both the government and to Longowal exactly one month prior.[53] Puri had personally met Bhindranwale, approached by fellow journalist Jatindra Tuli on behalf of Rajiv Gandhi for help in achieving a settlement with Bhindranwale, describing this as "not a new disclosure" but one that had been subsequently ignored. Puri met Rajiv Gandhi in the residence of Romi Chopra and consented to help, and through his brother General Prikshat Puri, contacted Bhindranwale's elder brother Captain Harcharan Singh Rode, decorated for valour in the 1965 war, who served under General Puri.[53][54]

Agreeing to cooperate, Rode escorted Rajinder Puri from Rode's post in Jalandhar to Amritsar to meet Bhindranwale, where Bhindranwale was assured through Rode that Puri spoke for the government. During the course of the hour-long conversation, Bhindranwale agreed to abide with the terms of a settlement to be discussed between Puri and Longowal, also housed in the temple complex, and asked Bhindranwale to confine himself to Sikh spiritual and religious matters, which Bhindranwale also agreed to.[53][54] Puri also asked him directly if he wanted Khalistan, and relayed that "[Bhindranwale] had never demanded Khalistan but if it was offered to him on a plate he would not reject it."[53][54] Puri and Longowal would then agree to a settlement were "unexceptionable and acceptable to the government", and Puri would inform Chopra of the success and to inform Gandhi, who, however, never got back to Puri even after multiple contact attempts, leaving Puri with a "lasting impression" of Gandhi which was "very poor".[53] He had also gotten word that a former MP from Amritsar, R.L. Bhatia, had also obtained assurances from Bhindranwale.

Puri would write that "all the arguments about why Operation Bluestar became necessary need to be nailed":[53]

"The assumption that Bhindranwale was insisting on Khalistan and rigidly denied any compromise is the biggest lie. What needs investigation is why Indira Gandhi despite having obtained an agreement with Bhindranwale that rendered Operation Bluestar redundant nevertheless launched the military action that led to her own death and to the tragic aftermath. What was her compulsion? Who was advising her?"[53]

In addition to Capt. Harcharan Singh Rode,[60] another of Bhindranwale's elder brothers, Harjit Singh Rode, has also said that Bhindranwale had never demanded Khalistan, saying that he had wished for "no more and no less" than the full implementation of the Anandpur Sahib Resolution, a demand that the central government had "overlooked" as it mischaracterized his position.[55]

Indian politician Subramanian Swamy met Bhindranwale multiple times, stayed with him for several days, and closely observed the developments in Punjab during the 1990s.[214] Swamy himself referred to Bhindranwale as a "Sant" and "short tempered person".[215][216] He has remained adamant that Bhindranwale had never demanded Khalistan, and that the USSR was the main force behind the disinformation campaign that would lead to Operation Blue Star,[214] aided by state politicians like Harkishan Singh Surjeet of the CPI, who according to Swamy had conveyed a message to the USSR warning that increased Sikh religiosity in Punjab would cause the decline of Communist politics in the state.[217] Swamy contends that the USSR sought to make India more dependent on them against Pakistan as it expanded southward from its position in Afghanistan at the time.[218] Later disclosures from declassified Soviet documents would confirm the role that the Soviets had played in feeding Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi, her perceived successor, misinformation about a secessionist movement supposedly being fomented by foreign entities:

One of the main aims of KGB active measures in the early 1980s was to manufacture evidence that the CIA and Pakistani intelligence were behind the growth of Sikh separatism in the Punjab. In the autumn of 1981 Service A launched operation KONTAKT, based on a forged document purporting to contain details of the weapons and money provided by [the ISI] to the militants seeking to bring about the creation of an independent Sikh state of Khalistan. In November the forgery was passed to a senior Indian diplomat in Islamabad. Shortly afterwards the Islamabad residency reported to the Centre that, according to (possibly optimistic) agents' reports, the level of anxiety in the Indian embassy about Pakistani support for Sikh separatists indicated that KONTAKT was having the alarmist effect that Service A had hoped for.[219]

The forged document was presented to Gandhi on 13 May 1982. Later that year Yuri Andropov, shortly after becoming the leader of the USSR, approved a proposal by KGB head Vladimir Kryuchkov to fabricate further Pakistani intelligence documents detailing ISI plans to foment religious disturbances in Punjab and promote the creation of Khalistan as an independent Sikh state, to be passed to the Indian ambassador in Pakistan. The KGB appeared by now "supremely confident that it could continue to deceive her indefinitely with fabricated reports of CIA and Pakistani conspiracies against her," and would go on to successfully persuade Rajiv Gandhi, presumed to be Indira Gandhi's successor by 1983, of CIA subversion in Punjab, as the Dharam Yudh Morcha continued, and the USSR, like the CPI, "quickly expressed full understanding of the steps taken by the Indian government to curb terrorism" when she ordered Operation Blue Star, and "once again, Mrs. Gandhi took seriously Soviet claims of secret CIA support for the Sikhs."[219]

On the KGB role in facilitating the operation, Swamy would state in 1992, "The 1984 Operation Blue Star became necessary because of the vast disinformation against Sant Bhindranwale by the KGB, and repeated inside Parliament by the Congress Party of India."[220] Calling Bhindranwale a friend, and referring to his frequent press conferences and open meetings with dignitaries, he has controversially always refused to term him a terrorist, saying that "only declassification of files can uncover the truth."[214]

Government maneuvers

The planning for Operation Blue Star was initiated long before Bhindranwale had relocated to the complex in December 1983 and begun to fortify it[221][222] running sand-model exercises for the attack[223][224][225] on a Golden Temple replica in the Doon Valley over 18 months prior,[221][222] and over 125 other Sikh shrines were simultaneously attacked.[222] According to Gen. S.K. Sinha, it had not been a last resort, but on Gandhi's mind since after the 1982 Akali agitations.[222] During publicly recorded speeches in May and July in 1983 (still several months before relocating to the Akal Takht and initiating efforts to fortify it) Bhindranwale warned that senior officers of the CID were planning to initially occupy Taksal and Nihang camps of Mehta, and gradually take control of the Golden Temple.[226] A previous request to solicit the use of army personnel and tanks had been made by Chief Minister Darbara Singh and Prime Minister Gandhi to aid in the arrest of Bhindranwale at Mehta Chowk in 1982. However, then military commander Lt. Gen. S.K. Sinha, a "dear friend" of Major General Shabeg Singh,[227] Bhindranwale's military advisor, viewed the request as "very strange" and advised against the use of military force considering the sanctity of the complex and potential repercussions.[223] While Bhindranwale surrendered peacefully at Mehta Chowk, Sinha would opt for early retirement when the same request came again two years later for him to deploy tanks and army personnel to conduct Operation Blue Star, and what he advised against, his replacements Gen. A. S. Vaidya (selected by Gandhi to supersede Sinha) and Lt. Gen. Krishnaswamy Sundarji did "gladly."[223]

On 14 April 1984 Surinder Singh Sodhi was killed while drinking tea in a shop in Amritsar by Surinder Singh Shinda and Baljit Kaur.[228][229] Baljit Kaur had attempted to assassinate Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale on April 13, but backed out.[230][231] Baljit Kaur, would go to the Golden Temple after the killing and confessed to the murder.[232] Baljit Kaur would be interrogated by Bhidnranwale. She would admit to the other killer being her boyfriend Surinder Singh Shinda and to being paid 200,000 rupees (3.1 million rupees in 2023. 37,500 USD in 2023.) by Gurcharan Singh, the general secretary of Akali Dal led by Harchand Singh Longowal, to do the killing. She also implicated others.[230] Bhindranwale in a speech would say, "They (Akali Dal) killed our young men. They severed my right arm... I know what role that... played in seeking vergency for the martyrs".[231] Bhindranwale and his men killed multiple responsible. He put a signboard up in view of Longowal's office saying, "Sodhi's murder avenged within 48 hours. The other conspirators should look after themselves now."[230][228][233][234][235][236] Longowal feared that he would be killed and managed to have Babbar Khalsa side with him. 130 Akali leaders and 40 SGPC members revolted against Longowal and sided with Bhindranwale. With this Akali Dal under Longowal and Indira Gandhi agreed they had to 'neutralize' Bhindranwale.[231]

The government made elaborate plans for an army action while feigning readiness for negotiations and denying any intention of sending armed forces inside the Darbar Sahib complex.[58] Six additional divisions of the army including especially trained para commandos were inducted into Punjab by the end of May 1984.[58] The government sent a team led by Narasimha Rao,[108] which proved unsuccessful,[237] as Bhindranwale's firm position was nothing short of full implementation of the Anandpur Sahib Resolution, rejecting, for instance, the offer to give Chandigarh to Punjab in exchange for areas of southwestern Punjab state,[203] as Chandigarh had been promised exclusively to Punjab in a formal communication issued by the Union government on January 29, 1970.[238] The Sikhs would ultimately withdraw, believing they had seen a commando unit move into the city.[239] Indira Gandhi tried to persuade the Akalis to support her in the arrest of Bhindranwale. These talks ended up being futile.[108] On 26 May, Tohra informed the government that he had failed to convince Bhindranwale and that Bhindranwale was not under anyone's control.[240] As Gandhi had no intention of implementing the Anandpur Sahib Resolution and feared the loss of Hindu electoral support, and as the Akali Dal also feared losing power, as over 40 SGPC members and 130 Akali leaders, including former legislators, had revolted against Longowal's leadership in favor of Bhindranwale, Akali Dal and central government interests had finally converged.[203] Faced with imminent army action and with Longowal abandoning him, Bhindranwale declared "This bird is alone. There are many hunters after it".[240]

Army action in the Punjab, which had been discussed in December 1983 to consolidate Hindu votes for Congress, began on 3 June, the day of Longowal's planned morcha.[171] Punjab's borders were sealed off and intrastate movement was disabled by the troop presence, with the water and electricity supply to the Golden Temple cut off. Exploratory fire was attempted on 4 June, with army commandos and CS gas proving ineffective on 5 June. The use of tanks on the complex began on 6 June, with tanks, helicopters, and other means used to deter the thousands of upset villagers attempting to gather in Amritsar, along with any other attempted gathering at over 125 other gurdwaras which had been taken over preemptively by the state.[241] The main action was concluded by 6 June, in which a large number of pilgrims, including women and children, had been killed, and young men shot, by incensed troops who had entered the complex, with their hands tied back with their own turbans, with others dying of suffocation in the guest rooms set up as detainment camps.[241] The operation resulted in 700 army casualties and 5,000 civilian deaths.[241]

Chandan Mitra wrote after observing the insurgency:[242]

Looking back, I am not sure if Bhindranwale was a terrorist by conviction who seriously sought Punjab's separation from India through force or if he painted himself into a corner and became a puppet in the hands of Pakistan's ISI which was looking for a face to project in its war of a thousand cuts against India to avenge East Pakistan's dismemberment. Maybe he was carried away by crowds that thronged his pravachans in rural Punjab in which he railed against decrepit practices creeping into Sikhism and exaggeratedly spoke of the alleged betrayal of his community by New Delhi, particularly the "biba", meaning Indira Gandhi. In that sense, he was the latest in a long line of Sikh leaders who led episodic agitations to distance the faith from Hindu influences, worried that the preponderant assimilative thrust of Hinduism would overwhelm Sikhism the way it had done Jainism and Buddhism.

Death

In June 1984, after the negotiations, Prime Minister of India Indira Gandhi ordered Operation Blue Star, an Indian Army operation carried out between 1 and 8 June 1984, to remove Bhindranwale and his armed militants from the buildings of the Harmandir Sahib complex in Amritsar, Punjab.[243] Bhindranwale was killed in the operation.[244][245] Army officers and soldiers commented on 'the courage and commitment' of the followers of Bhindranwale who died in action.[241]

According to Lieutenant General Kuldip Singh Brar, who commanded the operation, the body of Bhindranwale was identified by a number of agencies, including the police, the Intelligence Bureau and militants in the Army's custody.[244] Bhindranwale's brother also identified Bhindranwale's body.[246][60] Pictures of what appear to be Bhindranwale's body have been published in at least two widely circulated books, Tragedy of Punjab: Operation Bluestar and After and Amritsar: Mrs Gandhi's Last Battle. BBC correspondent Mark Tully also reported seeing Bhindranwale's body during his funeral.[citation needed]

In 2016, The Week quoted former members of the confidential Special Group (SG) of India's Research and Analysis Wing as stating that SG had killed Bhindranwale using AK-47 rifles during Operation Blue Star, despite the Para SF claiming responsibility for it.[247]

Views and attacks on Hindus

After Bhindranwale was arrested on suspicion of his involvement in Lala Jagat Narain's murder, three Sikhs fired at Hindus in a market in Jalandhar, killing four and injuring twelve others. The next day, a similar incident occurred in Taran Taran, killing one Hindu and injuring thirteen others.[248] According to The Oxford Handbook of Sikh Studies, bands of young Sikhs began indiscriminately killing Hindus in response to Bhindranwale's arrest.[249]

By 1982, Bhindranwale's campaign to stroke tensions among Sikhs and Hindus was underway; a particular tactic employed by Sikh militants was to throw the heads or other body parts of cows into temples. Bhindranwale hoped his campaign of instilling fear and intimidation within Hindus would provoke their mass flight from Punjab, and vice versa, embolden Hindus to retaliate against Sikhs outside the state, forcing Sikhs to seek refuge in Punjab, and hence vitiate their links with the rest of India.[250]

Mark Tully and Satish Jacob report that as Bhindranwale's influence within Punjab grew, legends surrounding Bhindranwale's hit list began to circulate. While they describe certain stories vis-à-vis the hit-list as exaggerations or myths, they assert that Bhindranwale's hit-list did exist. Recounting an incident in which a woman pleaded to Bhindranwale to eliminate her husband, Bhindranwale refused, reportedly stating: "I only finish those who are enemies of the Sikh faith like policeman, government officials, and Hindus."[251] Hindus were particularly angered when Bhindranwale labelled Hindus as "spindle-legged cowards" and when his hit squads targeted Punjabi Hindus.[252]

Bhindranwale and his cohort regularly delivered anti-Hindu slogans, speeches and songs at the Golden Temple. Hoping to maintain the religious fervour among his followers by pitting them against certain enemies, Bhindranwale targeted the Hindu community. By September 1983, various attacks against Hindus began. On 28 September 1983 in Jagraon, Sikh militants shot indiscriminately at Hindus out on their morning walk. On 5 October 1983, Sikh militants targeted a bus in the Kapurthala district, and shot the Hindu passengers on board.[253] The following month, another bus was targeted.[254] During 1983, many bombings of Hindu temples and congregations, as well as the sabotage of rail lines that caused deadly train accidents took place.[255] Bhindranwale's incitements to violence were followed by a wave of terror activity in Punjab. Between September 1981 and April 1983, there were nearly one hundred incidents of Sikh militants murdering Nirankaris, minor government officials, and bomb explosions.[254]

Throughout February 1984, incidents including raids on Hindu temples, bank robberies, militants firing indiscriminately against the police, and indiscriminate firings at Hindus were reported on a daily basis.[256] Shortly after, a bomb was thrown in a Hindu temple by a Sikh suspect.[257]

By April 1984, Sikh militants had spread throughout Punjab's countryside, largely due to Bhindranwale's injunctions for Sikhs to arm themselves and attack enemies of the faith. On 26 April 1984, Sikh motorcyclists shot a Hindu commission agent in Bhikiwind and a Hindu shopkeeper in Samadh Bhai. At this point, Bhindranwale's plan to trigger a Hindu exodus was coming into fruition as many Hindus had fled Punjab. Fear among Punjabi Hindus drove them to adopt Sikh garb, Hindus who travelled by bus were frequent targets of Sikh militants and began growing beards and wearing turbans.[258]

Often operating in pairs on motorcycles with British-made Sterling submachine guns and hand grenades, the terrorists usually work at night, seeking out government officials, policemen, prominent Hindu leaders, newspaper editors and rival Sikhs whose names appear on a "hit list" that is openly discussed by radical Sikhs. Bhindranwale, in an interview, referred several times to the "hit list," and obliquely lent credence to reports that the name of Gandhi's 39-year-old son, Rajiv, general secretary of the ruling Congress (I) Party, is on it.

— William Clairborne, Wave of Sectarian Killings Sweeps Through Indian State, The Washington Post (April 23, 1984)

According to the Indian government's figures, Bhindranwale's militants had killed 165 Hindus and 39 Sikhs between August 1982 and June 1984.[259] According to an April 1984 Washington Post report, more than 100 people were killed in Punjab between mid-February and April 1984, and more than 300 people died in Sikh-Hindu violence in the past 20 months.[260]

Legacy

Cynthia Keppley Mahmood states that "Largely responsible for launching Sikh militancy, he is valorized by militants and demonised by enemies and the accounts from the two divergent sources seem to refer to two completely different persons."[26]

Though journalist Khushwant Singh was opposed to Bhindranwale, he allowed that the Sikh preacher-become-activist genuinely made no distinction between higher and lower castes, and that he had restored thousands of drunken or doped Sikh men, inured to pornographic films, to their families,[261] and that Operation Blue Star had given the movement for Khalistan its first martyr in Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale.[262] In 2003, at a function arranged by the Shiromani Gurdwara Prabandhak Committee, at Akal Takht Amritsar under the vision of president SGPC Prof. Kirpal Singh Badungar and Singh Sahib Giani Joginder Singh Vedanti, former jathedar of the Akal Takht made a formal declaration that Bhindranwale was a "martyr" and awarded his son, Ishar Singh, a robe of honour.[263]

A movie named Dharam Yudh Morcha, released in 2016, was based on Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale, mostly depicting the Sikhs' struggle for preserving Punjabi language and the Anandpur Sahib resolution. Though the movie was banned to avoid controversy, it is available on online platforms.[citation needed]

See also

Notes

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f "The Sant's Son". outlookindia.com/. 5 February 2022.
  2. ^ Chopra, Radhika (2018). Amritsar 1984: A City Remembers. Patiala, Punjab, India: Rowman & Littlefield, 2018. pp. 2, 24. ISBN 978-1498571067. Retrieved 22 February 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d e Mahmood 1996, p. 75.
  4. ^ a b c d e Singh, Sandeep. "Saint Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale (1947–1984)". Sikh-history.com. Archived from the original on 24 March 2007. Retrieved 18 March 2007.
  5. ^ a b c Singh, Khushwant (2017). "Chapter 12: Rendezvous with Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale". Captain Amarinder Singh: The People's Maharaja: An Authorized Biography. Hay House. pp. 150–160. ISBN 978-93-85827-44-0. Retrieved 2 September 2022.
  6. ^ "Who is Iqbal Singh Lalpura, ex-cop who arrested Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale and newest member of BJP's top body?". Firstpost. 17 August 2022. Bhindranwale was a militant leader and leading figure of the Khalistan movement who was killed in Operation Blue Star in 1984.
  7. ^ "Controversy over Punjabi film, song glorifying militant on death row". NDTV. 22 February 2019. Bhindranwale was a militant leader who had holed up with his supporters
  8. ^ Malji, A. (2022). Religious Nationalism in Contemporary South Asia. Elements in Religion and Violence. Cambridge University Press. p. 50. ISBN 978-1-108-91118-4. Bhindranwale was a militant Sikh
  9. ^ Sinha, C. (2019). The Great Repression: The Story of Sedition in India. Penguin Random House India Private Limited. p. 231. ISBN 978-93-5305-618-6. Bhindranwale was a militant religious leader and the leader of the Khalistani Movement
  10. ^ Bakke 2015, p. 144.
  11. ^ Larson, G.J. (1995). India's Agony Over Religion: Confronting Diversity in Teacher Education. SUNY Series in Religious Studies. State University of New York Press. p. 230. ISBN 978-0-7914-2412-4. Within a few years Bhindranwale developed his own power base quite apart from the Congress ( I ) and began to emerge as the key figure in the Sikh separatist movement that was demanding a new independent state for Sikhs in the Punjab, an independent state to be known as "Khalistan" (the "Land of the Khalsa" or the "Land of the Pure"). He and his followers took control of the Sikh Golden Temple and the Akal Takht (the "Eternal Tower"), the central shrine and symbol of the Sikh faith, in Amritsar early in 1984, stockpiling huge caches of weapons and apparently preparing for armed insurrection.
  12. ^ Juergensmeyer, M. (2020). God at War: A Meditation on Religion and Warfare. Oxford University Press. p. 26. ISBN 978-0-19-007919-2. Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale, the key figure in the Khalistan movement
  13. ^ Aspinall, E.; Jeffrey, R.; Regan, A.J. (2013). Diminishing Conflicts in Asia and the Pacific: Why Some Subside and Others Don't. Online access with subscription: Proquest Ebook Central. Routledge. p. 89. ISBN 978-0-415-67031-9. By 1981, he had become the leading figure of an aggressive movement for a Sikh state.
  14. ^ a b c d e Deol 2000, p. 170.
  15. ^ Sinha, C. (2019). The Great Repression: The Story of Sedition in India. Penguin Random House India Private Limited. p. 123. ISBN 978-93-5305-618-6. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  16. ^ a b Dhillon 1996, p. 160.
  17. ^ a b Singh 2017, p. 156: "At some stage, Bhindranwale had taken it upon himself to get the 1973 Anandpur Sahib Resolution passed. Incidentally, Bhindranwale had never asked for a separate Sikh state, but was fighting for the implementation of the 1973 resolution...."
  18. ^ a b c d e f Dulat, A. S. (13 December 2020). "Genesis of tumultuous period in Punjab". The Tribune. Retrieved 13 June 2021. Bhindranwale never raised the demand for Khalistan or went beyond the Akali Anandpur Sahib Resolution, while he himself was prepared for negotiations to the very end.
  19. ^ a b c d Stevens, William K. (19 June 1984). "Punjab Raid: Unanswered Questions". The New York Times. Retrieved 12 June 2021. Mr. Bhindranwale himself said many times that he was not seeking an independent country for Sikhs, merely greater autonomy for Punjab within the Indian Union.
  20. ^ a b c Pettigrew 1987, p. 12.
  21. ^ Aspinall, E.; Jeffrey, R.; Regan, A.J. (2013). Diminishing Conflicts in Asia and the Pacific: Why Some Subside and Others Don't. Online access with subscription: Proquest Ebook Central. Routledge. p. 89. ISBN 978-0-415-67031-9. Retrieved 31 July 2022.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h Bakke 2015, p. 143.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g Akshayakumar Ramanlal Desai (1991). Expanding Governmental Lawlessness and Organized Struggles. Popular Prakashan. pp. 64–66. ISBN 978-81-7154-529-2.
  24. ^ Van Dyke 2009, p. 980.
  25. ^ a b Fair 2005, p. 128.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g Mahmood 1996, p. 77.
  27. ^ Jetly 2008: "He also organised killer squads in each village to eliminate the 'enemies' of the Sikh faith, thereby increasing his visibility and reach across the state"
  28. ^ a b Mahmood 1996, p. 67.
  29. ^ a b c C. K. Mahmood (1996). Why Sikhs Fight (Anthropological Contributions to Conflict Resolution). The University of Georgia Press. p. 17. ISBN 978-0820317656.
  30. ^ a b c d e f g h Deol 2000, p. 168.
  31. ^ a b c d Grewal 1998, p. 225.
  32. ^ a b c Robert L. Hardgrave; Stanley A. Kochanek (2008). India: Government and Politics in a Developing Nation. Cengage Learning. p. 174. ISBN 978-0-495-00749-4.
  33. ^ Muni, S. D. (2006). Responding to Terrorism in South Asia. Manohar Publishers & Distributors. p. 36. ISBN 978-8173046711. Archived from the original on 8 July 2018. Retrieved 8 July 2018.
  34. ^ Guidry, John; Kennedy, Michael D.; Zald, Mayer (22 December 2000). Globalizations and Social Movements: Culture, Power, and the Transnational Public Sphere. University of Michigan Press. p. 327. ISBN 978-0-472-06721-3.
  35. ^ Ganguly, Sumit; Mukherji, Rahul (1 August 2011). India Since 1980. Cambridge University Press. p. 152. ISBN 978-1-139-49866-1. Not surprisingly, these rampant attacks on Hindus, orchestrated by Bhindranwale from the Golden Temple in Amritsar, the holiest of Sikh shrines, led to a Hindu backlash across northern India
  36. ^ Ahmed, Ishtiaq (1 January 1998). State, Nation and Ethnicity in Contemporary South Asia. A&C Black. p. 129. ISBN 978-1-85567-578-0.
  37. ^ Bonner, Arthur (20 February 1990). Averting the Apocalypse: Social Movements in India Today. Duke University Press. p. 381. ISBN 978-0-8223-1048-8. Bhindranwale attracted a coterie of terrorists who robbed banks and killed hundreds of Hindus and those dubbed Sikh apostates. [...] However, when the terrorists began random killings of Hindus, hoping to precipitate mass flight, thereby creating a de facto Khalistan, Bhindranwale could no longer count on behind the scenes government support and moved to the sanctuary of the Golden Temple.
  38. ^ Ganguly, Sumit; Mukherji, Rahul (1 August 2011). India Since 1980. Cambridge University Press. p. 152. ISBN 978-1-139-49866-1. Not surprisingly, these rampant attacks on Hindus, orchestrated by Bhindranwale from the Golden Temple in Amritsar, the holiest of Sikh shrines, led to a Hindu backlash
  39. ^ Ganguly, Sumit; Fidler, David P. (7 May 2009). India and Counterinsurgency: Lessons Learned. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-00808-7. Bhindranwale used terrorism to frighten and intimidate Hindus
  40. ^ Swami, Praveen (16 January 2014). "RAW chief consulted MI6 in build-up to Operation Bluestar". The Hindu. Chennai, India. Archived from the original on 18 January 2014. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
  41. ^ "Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 22 August 2020.
  42. ^ "BBC documentary 'provokes furious response from Sikhs". The Times of India. 18 January 2010. Retrieved 11 January 2019.
  43. ^ "Akal Takht declares Bhindranwale 'martyr'". Archived from the original on 20 October 2012. Retrieved 13 April 2012.
  44. ^ a b c "An echo of terrorism". A martyr is declared in Punjab. The Economist. 12 June 2003. Retrieved 11 January 2019. FOR most Indians, Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale was a terrorist. But to Sikhs he was a powerful leader who led a violent campaign for an independent state called Khalistan
  45. ^ a b c d Pettigrew 1987, p. 15.
  46. ^ Singh, Pritam; Purewal, Navtej (2013). "The resurgence of Bhindranwale's image in contemporary Punjab". Contemporary South Asia. 21 (2): 133–147. doi:10.1080/09584935.2013.773291. ISSN 0958-4935. S2CID 145419188.
  47. ^ Crenshaw, Martha (2010). Terrorism in Context. Penn State. p. 381. ISBN 978-0271044422. the fulcrum of politics shifted increasingly to the revivalist, extremist, and terrorist movement symbolized by Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale
  48. ^ Fair, C Christine (29 September 2008). Treading on Hallowed Ground: Counterinsurgency Operations in Sacred Spaces. Oxford University Press. p. 39. ISBN 978-0-19-534204-8. Bhindranwale emerged as a high profile leader of the Sikh militancy in the 1980s and cultivated many allies in the quest for Khalistan
  49. ^ Rapaport, David C. (2013). Inside Terrorist Organizations. Taylor and Francis. p. 7. ISBN 978-1135311780. drawing on the speeches of Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale, the most prominent of the terrorist leaders, who was killed in 1984 when the Indian Army stormed the Golden Temple
  50. ^ Aspinall, E.; Jeffrey, R.; Regan, A.J. (2013). Diminishing Conflicts in Asia and the Pacific: Why Some Subside and Others Don't. Online access with subscription: Proquest Ebook Central. Routledge. pp. 89, 231. ISBN 978-0-415-67031-9. Retrieved 31 July 2022.
  51. ^ Deol 2000, p. 170 "Bhindranwale was not an outspoken supporter of Khalistan, although he often emphasized the separate identity of the Sikhs."
  52. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Walia, Varinder. "Man who made efforts to avert Op Bluestar is no more" Archived 29 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine, "Tribune India", Amritsar, 18 December 2007.
  53. ^ a b c d e f g h Puri, Rajinder (7 June 2014). "Biggest Lie about Bluestar!". The Statesman. Kolkata. Retrieved 1 April 2021. The assumption that Bhindranwale was insisting on Khalistan and rigidly denied any compromise is the biggest lie.
  54. ^ a b c d Puri, Rajinder (2 November 2003). "Remembering 1984". Tribune India. Retrieved 9 June 2021.
  55. ^ a b Chandel, Shamsher (9 May 2022). "Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale Never Asked For Khalistan, Claims Elder Brother Harjit Singh Rode". India Ahead. Noida, India. Archived from the original on 28 August 2022. Retrieved 28 August 2022. "He never demanded Khalistan.... All that Bhindranwale wanted was the implementation of the Anandpur Sahib resolution of 1973. Operation Bluestar and Bhindranwale's death was the main reason that the demand for Khalistan found currency, even among the hardliners," added Harjit.
  56. ^ Singh 2017, pp. 156–157: "Incidentally, Bhindranwale had never asked for a separate Sikh state, but was fighting for the implementation of the 1973 resolution.... Bhindranwale, in fact, had always opined that he never asked for Khalistan...."
  57. ^ [18][19][51][52][53][54][55][56]
  58. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Siṅgh, Major Gurmukh (retd.) (2011) [1997]. Siṅgh, Harbans (ed.). Sant Jarnail Siṅgh Bhiṇḍrāṅvāle (3rd ed.). Patiala, Punjab: Punjab University, Patiala. pp. 352–354. ISBN 978-8173805301.
  59. ^ Singh, Tavleen (14 January 2002). "100 People Who Shaped India". India Today. Archived from the original on 20 June 2008. Retrieved 28 October 2006.
  60. ^ a b c Rode, Harcharan Singh (2 June 2014). "My brother Bhindranwale was misunderstood by the govt: Harcharan Singh Rode". Mint. Jaideep Mehta. HT Media. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
  61. ^ a b "The Sant's Son". outlookindia.com. 19 October 2009. Retrieved 19 May 2019.
  62. ^ "Bhindranwale's widow dead". The Tribune. 16 September 2007. Archived from the original on 8 October 2007. Retrieved 19 March 2008.
  63. ^ a b Singh, Pashaura, Michael Hawley (2012). Re-imagining South Asian Religions: Essays in Honour of Professors Harold G. Coward and Ronald W. Neufeldt. Brill. p. 38. ISBN 978-9004242371.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  64. ^ a b c Mahmood 1996, p. 55.
  65. ^ Dhillon 2006, pp. 82–83.
  66. ^ a b Deol 2000, p. 169.
  67. ^ a b c d e f g Thukral, Gobind (30 April 1982). "What kind of man is Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale?". India Today. Living Media India Limited. Retrieved 20 April 2020.
  68. ^ a b Deol 2000, p. 171.
  69. ^ Singh, Khushwant (1991). A History of the Sikhs, Volume 2: 1839–1988 (2nd ed.). Delhi: Oxford University Press. p. 329. ISBN 978-0195626445. Retrieved 14 September 2020.
  70. ^ a b c Nayar, Kuldip (2012). Beyond the Lines: An Autobiography. Roli Books. ISBN 978-8174368218.
  71. ^ Crenshaw, Martha (2010). Terrorism in Context. Penn State Press. p. 381. ISBN 978-0271044422. Archived from the original on 8 July 2018. Retrieved 8 July 2018.
  72. ^ Jetly 2008, p. 63.
  73. ^ a b Mahmood 1996, p. 80.
  74. ^ a b c Telford 1992, p. 974.
  75. ^ a b c d e f g h i Crenshaw, Martha (2010). Terrorism in Context. Penn State Press. pp. 382–388. ISBN 9780271044422.
  76. ^ Amritsar: Mrs. Gandhi's last battle by Mark Tully. Pan in association with Cape, 1986. p. 57 ISBN 978-0-330-29434-8
  77. ^ Stanley Jeyaraja Tambiah (1996). Leveling crowds: ethnonationalist conflicts and collective violence in South Asia. University of California Press. p. 106. ISBN 978-0-520-20642-7.
  78. ^ a b c d "Bhindranwale's rise from a small-time priest was meteoric". India Today. 15 December 2011. Archived from the original on 4 November 2019. Retrieved 10 July 2018.
  79. ^ a b c d Telford 1992, p. 971.
  80. ^ a b Telford 1992, p. 970.
  81. ^ Singh, Khushwant (2005). A History of the Sikhs: Volume II: 1839–2004. New Delhi: Oxford University Press. p. 332. ISBN 0195673093.
  82. ^ Tully (1985), p. 177.
  83. ^ a b c d Pettigrew 1987, p. 17.
  84. ^ a b c d Jetly 2008, p. 64.
  85. ^ Dhillon 1996, p. 159.
  86. ^ Dhillon 1996, p. 158.
  87. ^ Mahmood 1996, p. 78.
  88. ^ a b c Telford 1992, p. 975.
  89. ^ a b Chima, Jugdep S (2010). The Sikh Separatist Insurgency in India: Political Leadership and Ethnonationalist Movements. New Delhi: SAGE Publication. pp. 41–44. ISBN 978-8132105381.
  90. ^ Grewal 1998, pp. 215–216.
  91. ^ a b c d e Grewal 1998, p. 216.
  92. ^ a b c Guha, Ramachandra (2008). India After Gandhi: The History of the World's Largest Democracy (illustrated, reprint ed.). Macmillan. ISBN 978-0330396110. Retrieved 10 July 2018. Excerpts
  93. ^ a b c Tully & Jacob 1985, p. 59.
  94. ^ Marty, Martin E.; Appleby, R. Scott (1993). Fundamentalisms and the State: Remaking Polities, Economies, and Militance. University of Chicago Press. p. 273. ISBN 978-0-226-50884-9.
  95. ^ Madan, T.N. (1994). Fundamentalisms Observed. University of Chicago Press. p. 598. ISBN 978-0-226-50878-8.
  96. ^ Mahmood, Cynthia Keppley. Fighting for Faith and Nation: Dialogues with Sikh Militants. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 79. He (Gurbachan Singh) did have a group of guards, who opened fire on the orthodox Sikhs
  97. ^ a b c d e f g h Mahmood 1996, p. 79.
  98. ^ a b c d e f g Gill, K.P.S. (2008). Punjab: The Knights of Falsehood – Psalms of Terror. Har Anand Publications. ISBN 978-8124113646. Archived from the original on 14 October 2017. Retrieved 29 October 2017. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  99. ^ Mitra, Chandan (15 December 2011). "Bhindranwale's rise from a small-time priest was meteoric". India Today 35th anniversary. India Today. Archived from the original on 6 July 2018. Retrieved 6 July 2018.
  100. ^ Dhillon 2006, p. 82.
  101. ^ a b Chima, Jugdep S. (2008). The Sikh Separatist Insurgency in India. SAGE Publications. pp. 43–44. ISBN 978-8132105381.
  102. ^ a b Dhillon 2006, p. 69.
  103. ^ Dhillon 2006, p. 74.
  104. ^ Dhillon 2006, p. 75.
  105. ^ Mahmood 1996, pp. 58–60.
  106. ^ Gopal Singh, A History of the Sikh People, New Delhi, World Book Center, 1988, p. 739.
  107. ^ Fair, C Christine (2008). Treading on Hallowed Ground: Counterinsurgency Operations in Sacred Spaces. Oxford University Press. p. 41. ISBN 978-0-19-534204-8.
  108. ^ a b c d e f Gill, K.P.S. and Khosla, S (2017). Punjab: The Enemies Within : Travails of a Wounded Land Riddled with Toxins. Bookwise (India) Pvt. Limited. ISBN 978-8187330660. Archived from the original on 21 June 2018. Retrieved 8 July 2018.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) Excerpt
  109. ^ Singh, Khushwant (2006). The Illustrated History of the Sikhs. Oxford University Press. p. 220. ISBN 978-0195677478.
  110. ^ India in 1984: Confrontation, Assassination, and Succession, by Robert L. Hardgrave, Jr. Asian Survey, 1985 University of California Press
  111. ^ Khanna, Hans Raj (1987). Terrorism in Punjab: Cause and Cure. Panchnad Research Institute. p. 61.
  112. ^ Aakrosh: Asian Journal on Terrorism and Internal Conflicts (Volume 2). Forum for Strategic and Security Studies. 1999. p. 42.
  113. ^ a b Telford 1992, p. 987.
  114. ^ a b c d Pettigrew 1987, p. 11.
  115. ^ Telford 1992, pp. 970, 979.
  116. ^ a b c d Jetly 2008, p. 65.
  117. ^ Telford 1992, p. 979.
  118. ^ Telford 1992, p. 980.
  119. ^ Grewal 1998, p. 210.
  120. ^ a b c d e Telford 1992, p. 981.
  121. ^ a b c d e f Telford 1992, p. 983.
  122. ^ a b c d e Telford 1992, p. 982.
  123. ^ Telford 1992, pp. 981–982.
  124. ^ a b Grewal 1998, p. 219.
  125. ^ Dhillon 1996, p. 166.
  126. ^ Mark Tully, Satish Jacob (1985). Amritsar; Mrs. Gandhi's Last Battle (e-book ed.). London: J. Cape. p. 66. Retrieved 8 July 2018.
  127. ^ a b c Pettigrew 1987, p. 24.
  128. ^ Jalandhri, Surjeet (1984). Bhindranwale. Jalandhar: Punjab Pocket Books. p. 25.
  129. ^ a b Mark Tully, Satish Jacob (1985). Amritsar; Mrs. Gandhi's Last Battle (e-book ed.). London: J. Cape. p. 259. Retrieved 8 July 2018.
  130. ^ Sandhu 1999, p. 252.
  131. ^ Mark Tully, Satish Jacob (1985). Amritsar; Mrs. Gandhi's Last Battle (e-book ed.). London: J. Cape. p. 262. Retrieved 8 July 2018.
  132. ^ a b Chima, Jugdep S (2008). The Sikh Separatist Insurgency in India: Political Leadership and Ethnonationalist Movements. SAGE Publications. p. 64. ISBN 978-8132105381.
  133. ^ a b c Mark Tully, Satish Jacob (1985). Amritsar; Mrs. Gandhi's Last Battle (e-book ed.). London: J. Cape. p. 68. Retrieved 8 July 2018.
  134. ^ a b c d e f g Telford 1992, p. 984.
  135. ^ Mahmood 1996, p. 81.
  136. ^ Bakke 2015, p. 142.
  137. ^ a b Grewal 1998, p. 215.
  138. ^ a b Grewal 1998, p. 220.
  139. ^ Pettigrew 1987, p. 14.
  140. ^ Telford 1992, pp. 971, 987.
  141. ^ Jetly 2008, p. 67.
  142. ^ a b c d e f Chima, Jugdep S (2008). The Sikh Separatist Insurgency in India: Political Leadership and Ethnonationalist Movements. Sage Publications India. pp. 71–75. ISBN 978-8132105381. Retrieved 19 August 2018.
  143. ^ a b Dhillon 1996, p. 5.
  144. ^ a b Bakke 2015, p. 153.
  145. ^ a b Dhillon 1996, p. 207.
  146. ^ a b c Grewal 1998, p. 221.
  147. ^ a b c d e Grewal 1998, p. 222.
  148. ^ Dhillon 2006, pp. 95–96.
  149. ^ a b Dhillon 2006, p. 175.
  150. ^ Dhillon 1996, pp. 188–189.
  151. ^ a b c Sethi, Sunil; Thukral, Gobind; Chawla, Prabhu (30 April 1983). "Punjab burns as violence grips the state, acts of terrorism become daily routine". India Today. Living Media India Limited. Retrieved 29 July 2020.
  152. ^ a b Pettigrew 1987, p. 20.
  153. ^ a b c d e f g h Dhillon 1996, pp. 197–198.
  154. ^ Dhillon 2006, pp. 149–150.
  155. ^ Dhillon 2006, p. 135.
  156. ^ a b c Grewal 1998, p. 224.
  157. ^ Dhillon 2006, p. 134.
  158. ^ a b Dhillon 2006, p. 111.
  159. ^ a b c Dhillon 1996, p. 198.
  160. ^ Dhillon 1996, p. 180.
  161. ^ Dhillon 1996, pp. 198–199.
  162. ^ Amritsar: Mrs Gandhi's last battle by Mark Tully. Pan in association with Cape, 1986. Preface ISBN 978-0-330-29434-8.
  163. ^ a b Dhillon 1996, p. 199.
  164. ^ Sanjay Sharma (5 June 2011). "Bhajan Lal lived with 'anti-Sikh, anti-Punjab' image". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 10 June 2011. Retrieved 26 December 2011.
  165. ^ a b c Grewal 1998, p. 223.
  166. ^ Dhillon 2006, p. 108.
  167. ^ a b Mahmood 1996, p. 88.
  168. ^ Mahmood 1996, p. 121.
  169. ^ Jetly 2008, p. 61.
  170. ^ a b Jetly 2008, p. 72.
  171. ^ a b c d e Grewal 1998, p. 226.
  172. ^ Dhillon 2006, p. 174.
  173. ^ Dhillon 2006, p. 167.
  174. ^ Mahmood 1996, p. 188.
  175. ^ Appleby, R. Scott (2000). The Ambivalence of the Sacred: Religion, Violence, and Reconciliation. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 89. ISBN 978-0-8476-8555-4.
  176. ^ a b Pachauri, Pankaj (15 August 1989). "Terrorists adopt new strategy to intimidate media in Punjab". India Today. Archived from the original on 14 July 2018. Retrieved 13 July 2018.
  177. ^ Jetly 2008, p. 73.
  178. ^ Government of India (1984). "White paper on the Punjab agitation", p. 2. Government publication, National government publication.
  179. ^ Crenshaw, Martha (2010). Terrorism in Context. Penn State Press. p. 385. ISBN 978-0271044422. Archived from the original on 8 July 2018. Retrieved 8 July 2018.
  180. ^ Khushwant Singh, A History of the Sikhs, Volume II: 1839–2004, New Delhi, Oxford University Press, 2004, p. 337.
  181. ^ Khushwant Singh, "The Genesis," The Punjab Crisis: Challenge and Response, Abida Samiuddin, ed., Delhi, K.M. Mittal, 1985, p. 98; Lt. Gen. J.S. Aurora, "If Khalistan Comes – The Sikhs will be the Losers", Punjab – The Fatal Miscalculation: Perspectives on Unprincipled Politics, eds. Patwant Singh and Harji Malik, New Delhi, Patwant Singh, 1984, p. 140.
  182. ^ Bhanwar, Harbir Singh (13 October 2013). "Interview". ABP News. Archived from the original on 26 July 2018. Retrieved 7 June 2018.
  183. ^ a b c Dhillon 2006, p. 115.
  184. ^ Dhillon 2006, pp. 109–110.
  185. ^ Dhillon 2006, p. 177.
  186. ^ Tully & Jacob 1985, p. 393.
  187. ^ Clarence Augustus Martin, ed. (2011). The Sage Encyclopedia of Terrorism (2nd ed.). Sage Publications. pp. 544–. ISBN 978-1-4129-8016-6.
  188. ^ Gopal Singh, A History of the Sikh People, New Delhi, World Book Center, 1988, pp. 755–756; Zuhair Kashmiri and Brian McAndrew, Soft Target: How the Indian Intelligence Service Penetrated Canada, Toronto, James Lorimer and Company, 1989, pp. 93, 130; Singh (1999), pp. 366–367, 373, 398.
  189. ^ Singh (1999), pp. 380–381, 387–388.
  190. ^ Gupta, Shekhar (31 December 1983). "Golden Temple complex begins to resemble a military base on full alert". Retrieved 25 August 2020.
  191. ^ Dhillon 2006, p. 150.
  192. ^ Dhillon 2006, p. 154.
  193. ^ a b c d Tully & Jacob 1985, p. 405.
  194. ^ Tully & Jacob 1985.
  195. ^ The Gallant Defender – Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale p. 84
  196. ^ Khushwant Singh, A History of the Sikhs, Volume II: 1839–2004, New Delhi, Oxford University Press, 2004, pp. 339–340; Gopal Singh, A History of the Sikh People, New Delhi, World Book Center, 1988, p. 753.
  197. ^ "Sikh Leader in Punjab Accord Assassinated". Los Angeles Times. Times Wire Services. 21 August 1985. Archived from the original on 29 January 2016. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  198. ^ Tully, p. 94.
  199. ^ a b Sandhu, Ranbir S. (May 1997). "Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale – Life, Mission, and Martyrdom" (PDF). Sikh Educational and Religious Foundation. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 May 2008. Retrieved 10 March 2008.
  200. ^ Dhillon 2006, p. 131.
  201. ^ Globalization and Religious nationalism in India: The Search for Ontological Security by Catarina Kinnvall. Routledge, ISBN 978-1-134-13570-7. p. 106
  202. ^ Globalization and Religious nationalism in India: The Search for Ontological Security by Catarina Kinnvall. Routledge, ISBN 978-1-134-13570-7. p. 170
  203. ^ a b c Chima, Jugdep S (2008). The Sikh Separatist Insurgency in India: Political Leadership and Ethnonationalist Movements. Sage Publications India. p. 91. ISBN 978-8132105381. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  204. ^ Sandhu 1999, pp. lvi, 73–74.
  205. ^ Dhillon 1996, p. 186.
  206. ^ a b Juergensmeyer, Mark (2008). Global Rebellion: Religious Challenges to the Secular State, from Christian Militias to Al Qaeda (revised ed.). Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 217. ISBN 978-0520255548. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  207. ^ Sandhu 1999, p. vi.
  208. ^ Sandhu 1999, p. lvii.
  209. ^ Tully & Jacob 1985, p. 555.
  210. ^ Amberish K Diwanji (3 June 2004). "Pakistan would have recognised Khalistan". The Rediff Interview/Lieutenant General Kuldip Singh Brar (retired). Rediff.com. Archived from the original on 29 January 2009. Retrieved 23 January 2009.
  211. ^ Singh 2017, p. 158–160.
  212. ^ Singh 2017, p. 160.
  213. ^ Singh 2017, p. 157.
  214. ^ a b c Singh, Surjit (29 April 2018). "Bhindranwale never demanded Khalistan: Subramanian Swamy". Hindustan Times.
  215. ^ ""Bhindrawale Was a 'Sant' and Short-Tempered Person" – Subramanian Swamy". YouTube. 15 June 2018.
  216. ^ "Dr Subramaniam Swamy at San Jose California Gurudwara Sahib". YouTube. 5 May 2017.
  217. ^ India.com News Desk (23 April 2016). "Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale was not a 'terrorist', declassify Operation Blue Star files: Subramanian Swamy". india.com.
  218. ^ The Week Web Desk (7 June 2019). "'Operation Blue Star was Soviet conspiracy; Sonia urged Indira to attack'". theweek.in.
  219. ^ a b Christopher Andrew (2006). The World Was Going Our Way: The KGB and the Battle for the Third World: Newly Revealed Secrets from the Mitrokhin Archive. Basic Books. pp. 615–620. ISBN 978-0-465-00313-6.
  220. ^ Subramanian Swamy (1992). Building a New India: An Agenda for National Renaissance. UBS Publishers' Distributors. p. 18. ISBN 978-81-85674-21-6.
  221. ^ a b Dhawan, Prannv; Singh, Simranjit. "Punjab's Politicians Are Using the Bogey of Militancy Again". The Wire. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  222. ^ a b c d Singh, Dabinderjit (16 January 2014). "The truth behind the Amritsar massacre". politics.co.uk. Senate Media. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  223. ^ a b c Sharma, Cf. Brig. Man Mohan (1998). What Ails the Indian Army: A Report to the Supreme Commander of the Indian Armed Forces. Noida, India: Trishul Publications. pp. 273–275. ISBN 978-8185384252. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  224. ^ Sunday Times, London, June 10, 1984.
  225. ^ Spokesman Weekly, July 16, 1984, pp. 28–29
  226. ^ Sandhu 1999, p. 186.
  227. ^ Dutta, Sujan (6 February 2014). "Rethink on sledgehammer swagger – Bluestar disclosures renew debate on roles of celebrated generals". The Telegraph. Ananda Publishers. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
  228. ^ a b Tully & Jacob 1985, pp. 130–133.
  229. ^ White Paper on the Punjab Agitation. 1984. p. 145.
  230. ^ a b c "Tension and terror envelop Golden Temple as extremists take over the complex". India Today. 15 May 1984. Retrieved 21 June 2023.
  231. ^ a b c Chima, Jugdep S. (11 March 2010). The Sikh Separatist Insurgency in India: Political Leadership and Ethnonationalist Movements. SAGE Publishing India. ISBN 978-93-5150-953-0.
  232. ^ "Sikh terrorist killed by female assassin". UPI. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  233. ^ The Spokesman-Review. The Spokesman-Review.
  234. ^ ਖਾੜਕੂ ਯੋਧੇ in Punjabi by Maninder Singh Baja
  235. ^ The Bulletin. The Bulletin.
  236. ^ Sarasota Herald-Tribune. Sarasota Herald-Tribune.
  237. ^ Mark Tully. Amritsar Mrs. Gandhi's Last Battle (p. 138),
  238. ^ Sura, Ajay (5 September 2019). "In 1970, Centre decided to give Chandigarh to Punjab". The Times of India. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
  239. ^ Doward, Jamie (28 October 2017). "British government 'covered up' its role in Amritsar massacre in India". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 28 October 2017. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  240. ^ a b Sandhu, Ranbir S. (May 1997). Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale – Life, Mission, and Martyrdom (PDF). pp. 57–58. Archived (PDF) from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  241. ^ a b c d Grewal 1998, p. 227.
  242. ^ "'Bhindranwale's rise from a small-time priest was meteoric'". India Today. 15 December 2011.
  243. ^ "Operation Blue Star: India's first tryst with militant extremism – Latest News & Updates at Daily News & Analysis". Dnaindia.com. 5 November 2016. Archived from the original on 3 November 2017. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  244. ^ a b Brar, K. S. (1993). Operation Blue Star: The True Story. New Delhi: UBS Publishers. p. 114. ISBN 81-85944-29-6.
  245. ^ Kaur, Naunidhi (23 June 2001). "The enigma of Bhindranwale". Frontline. Archived from the original on 21 February 2007. Retrieved 17 March 2007.
  246. ^ Akbar, M. J. (1996). India: The Siege Within: Challenges to a Nation's Unity. New Delhi: UBS Publishers. p. 196. ISBN 81-7476-076-8.
  247. ^ "Close encounters of the covert kind". The Week. 9 October 2016. Archived from the original on 21 August 2019. Retrieved 21 November 2019.
  248. ^ Tully & Jacob 1985, p. 69.
  249. ^ Singh, Pashaura; Fenech, Louis E. (2014). The Oxford Handbook of Sikh Studies. OUP Oxford. p. 389. ISBN 978-0-19-969930-8.
  250. ^ Tully & Jacob 1985, p. 80.
  251. ^ Tully & Jacob 1985, p. 101-102.
  252. ^ Malik, Yogendra Kumar; Vajpeyi, Dhirendra Kumar (1988). India: The Years of Indira Gandhi. BRILL. p. 17. ISBN 978-90-04-08681-4.
  253. ^ Tully & Jacob 1985, p. 104.
  254. ^ a b Kapur, Rajiv A. (1 May 2024). Sikh Separatism: The Politics of Faith. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-040-02990-9.
  255. ^ Barlow, Hugh D. (3 December 2015). "The Khalsa Sikhs and the Game of Love". Dead for Good: Martyrdom and the Rise of the Suicide Bomber. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-26156-8.
  256. ^ Tully & Jacob 1985, p. 118.
  257. ^ Tully & Jacob 1985, p. 120.
  258. ^ Tully & Jacob 1985, p. 130-131.
  259. ^ Tully & Jacob 1985, p. 147.
  260. ^ "Wave of Sectarian Killings Sweeps Through Indian State". The Washington Post. 23 April 1984.
  261. ^ Khushwant Singh, "I Felt I Should Reaffirm My Identity as a Sikh," The Punjab Crisis: Challenge and Response, Abida Samiuddin, ed., Delhi, K.M. Mittal, 1985, p. 320; Khushwant Singh, A History of the Sikhs, Volume II: 1839–2004, New Delhi, Oxford University Press, 2004, pp. 329–30.
  262. ^ Singh (1999), p. 378.
  263. ^ "Takht accepts Bhindranwale's death". The Tribune. 6 June 2003. Archived from the original on 30 September 2007. Retrieved 25 June 2007.

Bibliography