|
Thakar Singh, Doctor Ghadr Activist (1885-1945) |
|
|
|
|
Jun 03, 2008 at 11:11 AM |
|
Thakar Singh, Doctor
Ghadr Activist (1885-1945)
|
|
| |
A Ghadr activist who also took part in the Akali
movement of 1920-25, was the son of Sher Singh of Ikolaha, in Ludhiana
district of the Punjab. He was an undergraduate at Khalsa College,
Amritsar, when he gave up his studies to go to China. He was employed
as a sanitary inspector on the Canton-Kowloon railway where his duties
included dispensing medicines to sick employees which earned him the
popular title of "Doctor". The Ghadr movement which took birth on the
west coast of the United States and Canada in 1913 soon spread to Asian
countries, collectively known as the Far East. Thakar Singh was among
the first immigrants to join it. He sailed for India at the end of 1914
with the intention of preparing ground for a revolution in the country.
Meva Singh, another member of the Ghadr party, who had been chief
officer of the French Consular Police at Canton had written a letter to
Harchand Singh of Lyallpur commending Thakar Singh to him. This letter
was apparently intercepted by government, for on arrival in India
Thakar Singh was restricted to his village. No certain evidence coming
forth against him he was permitted to go to Hong Kong in May 1915. A
letter of his written in November 1915 from Canton and addressed to
Giani Bhagvan Singh, granthi or scripturereader at San Francisco and a
Ghadr revolutionary, was intercepted. This letter spelt out a plan for
a simultaneous outbreak at Ludhiana and Firozpur and for establishing a
state in which all property would be held in common, all necessities of
the people supplied and all men trained for military service. Doctor
Thakar Singh was arrested at Hong Kong and sent to India where he was
interned on arrival in October 1915. He was tried at Ludhiana and
sentenced to five years' rigorous imprisonment and a heavy fine. Soon
after his release in early 1920, he joined the Akah movement for
Gurdwara reform. He was arrested on 18 February 1922 for joining a
demonstration against the visit of the Prince of Wales and sentenced to
three years' imprisonment and fine in lieu of which a major portion of
his land was attached.
As he reached Amritsar on 30 December 1924 after his release from the
Mianvali jail, Doctor Thakar Singh was honoured with a siropa or robe
of honour at Sri Akal Takht. By this time the Jaito morcha or agitation
in the princely state of Nabha had come into full swing. The Shiromani
Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee and Shiromani Akali Dal had been
outlawed. Thakar Singh acted as vice-president of Shiromani Akali Dal
from 7 November 1925 to the end of January 1926. He became head of the
District Akali Jatha, Ludhiana, on 23 March 1926. By the end of 1926,
most of the Akali leaders were released frorn jail and the Gurdwara
Reform movement had come to an end. Doctor Thakar Singh retired from
active politics and went to live in Rajasthan. He, however, died in his
native Ikolaha on 12 August 1945.
|
|
| |
![]()
Source: Encyclopaedia of Sikhism, Harbans Singh Website link
|
|
Please login or register to add comments
|
|
Last Updated ( Jun 03, 2008 at 11:17 AM )
|