FATEH SINGH, SANT who enjoyed wide religious esteem among the Sikhs (sant, lit.
a holy man) and who during the latter part of his career became a dominant political figure,
was born, on 27 October 1911, the son of Bhai Channan Singh, a resident of Badiala in present-
day Bathinda district of the Punjab. He had no formal schooling and started learning to read
Punjabi only at the age of 13. In view of his interest in religious texts, his father
apprenticed him to a well-known scholar, Sant Ishar Singh, of Sekha, a village near Barnala,
In company with Sant Channan Singh, another holy man, he migrated to Ganganagar district of
the then princely state of Bikaner in Rajasthan, where a large number of Sikh peasants had
settled down in the newly established canal colony. Having established himself at Buddha
jauhar, a little-known place which he made famous, Fateh Singh moved from village to village
preaching the Sikh faith through kirtan and discourse and administration of amrit or the vows
of the khalsa. He simultaneously worked for the promotion of education among the masses and
was instrumental in the construction of, besides a number of gurdwaras, several schools and
colleges, an orphanage and a centre for imparting training in kirtan. In this task he was
assisted by Sant Channan Singh who, though senior in age, always acknowledged him as his
elder, and their partnership and their respect for each other lasted till the very end. His
pious way of living earned Fateh Singh the title of Sant.
Sant Fateh Singh made his debut in politics when he
joined the Punjabi Suba agitation (1955-56), a campaign launched by the Shiromani Akali Dal
under the leadership of Master Tara Singh for the creation of a new state comprising
Punjabi-speaking areas carved out of the then-existing Punjab. His rise in the Akali
hierarchy was very rapid. As the Punjabi Suba agitation entered its second phase, Fateh
Singh unfolded at a specially convened conference at Amritsar (12 October 1958) the plan
of action to be pursued by the Shiromani Akali Dal of which he had by that time become the
senior vice-president. On 15 March 1959 he led a massive march of Sikhs in the Indian capital,
New Delhi. As the Punjabi Suba movement gathered momentum in May 1960, the responsibility of
directing its course fell to Sant Fateh Singh. He displayed rare qualities of leadership and
restraint in running in a most orderly manner the seven-month-long agitation in which,
according to one estimate, 57129 Akali volunteers courted arrest.
In a final bid for the attainment of a
Punjabi-speaking stale, Sant Fateh Singh put his own life at stake and started on 18
December 1960 a fast-unto-death. Before submitting himself to the ordeal he offered
prayers at the Akal Takht and at the Harimandar, and addressed a mammoth gathering of
the Sikhs adjuring them to remain calm and peaceful in any eventuality.
There was universal applause for the purity of Sant
Fateh Singh's motive and no one questioned the sincerity of his resolution. Yet everybody
wished that the worst might somehow be averted. There was intense activity in government and
political circles. Indian leaders of diverse opinion tried to intervene and persuade Sant
Fateh Singh to abandon the fast. The Prime Minister of India, Jawaharlal Nehru, issued several
conciliatory public statements, but Sant Fateh Singh judged them as falling short of his
stipulation. At last the one issued on 8 January 1961 was pronounced by Master Tara Singh
and the Working Committee of the Shiromani Akali Dal to be satisfactory and they as well as
Panj Piare or the Five Elect, speaking for the entire Khalsa Panth, asked him to end his fast.
On the morning of 9 January 1961, Fateh Singh took his first sip of nourishment in twenty-two
days-a glass of juice from the hands of Bhai Chet Singh, one of the Golden Temple priests.
Political negotiations ensued between the
Government of India and the Akali Dal. Sant Fateh Singh had three meetings with Prime
Minister Nehru - on 8 February, 1 March and 12 May 1961, but with no positive result.
His personal political authority had however been firmly established among the Sikhs.
In July 1962, he directly challenged Master Tara Singh, forming his own Akali Dal which
on 2 October 1962 wrested control of the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee from
the hands of the latter. In the Gurdwara elections on 17 January 1965, Sant Fateh Singh
annexed 90 of the elected seats, conceding only 45 to Master Tara Singh. To force the
issue of Punjabi Suba, he proclaimed from the Akal Takht on 16 August 1965 that he
would restart his fast from 10 September 1965 and that, if he survived the fast for
15 days with his demand still not conceded, he would commit self-immolation by burning
himself alive on the 16th day. But as hostilities between India and Pakistan broke out
in September 1965, he not only-postponed the fast but also issued an appeal to all his
countrymen, particularly Sikhs, to rally behind the government. The war ended on 22
September 1965 and on 23 September, the Home Minister of India announced in Parliament
the setting up of a Cabinet Committee consisting of Indira Gandhi, Y.B. Chavan and
Mahavir Tyagi to pursue further the question of the formation of a Punjabi-speaking
state. He also requested the Speaker of the Lok Sabha and the Chairman of the Rajya
Sabha to form for the same purpose a Parliamentary Consultative Committee. Matters
moved fast thereafter. The report of the Parliamentary Committee, headed by Speaker
Hukam Singh, was made public on 18 January 1966, recommending the reorganization of
the existing slate of Punjab on linguistic basis. Mrs Indira Gandhi who had, after
the sudden death of Lal Bahadur Shastri, taken over as Prime Minister, finally conceded
the demand on 23 April 1966. On 3 September, the Punjab Reorganization Bill was
introduced in the Lok Sahha and on 1 November 1966 Punjabi-speaking state became a
reality. A lifelong bachelor, Sant Fateh Singh greeted the event with the words:
"A handsome baby has been born into my household."
The demarcation of the boundaries of the new Punjab
basically on the recommendations of a commission appointed by the Government of India, however,
started a new polemic. Sant Fateh Singh protested that Chandigarh, city built as capital for the
Punjab after Partition, and some Punjabi-speaking areas had been left out of the new state. On
5 December 1966 he announced that to have this injustice undone he would sit afasting on 17
December 1966 and commit self-immolation on 27 December 1966 if he survived till that day and
his demands remained unfulfilled. The demands were:
- Inclusion of Chandigarh and the
Punjabi-speaking areas assigned to Himachal Pradesh and to the newly created state of Haryana
in the Punjab.
- Severance of common links (governor, high court, etc.) between Punjab and
Haryana, and Punjab.
- Sant Fateh Singh began his fast on the appointed day (17 December). Simultaneously,
moves were initiated by government and influential political leaders to have him terminate the
fast and thus avert the threatened tragedy. At last, Hukam Singh, the Lok Sabha Speaker, and
Giani Gurmukh Singh Musafir, Chief Minister of the Punjab, communicated to him assurances on
behalf of the Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and persuaded him to break his fast. Sant Fateh
Singh ended the fast on 27 December 1966.
Sant Fateh Singh thereafter became a
controversial figure and his influence began to decline. He started another
fast-unto-death on 26January 1970, with self-immolation to follow on 1 February 1970 if
Chandigarh was not merged with Punjab by then. On 29 January, the Union Government
announced that "the capital project area of Chandigarh should as a whole go to Punjab,"
but this was hedged round by stipulations such as the transfer of Fazilka tahsil from
Punjab to Haryana. The All-Parties Action Committee and the Akali Dal High Command at
their separate meetings on 30 January 1970 passed resolutions welcoming the decision
regarding Chandigarh, but opposing that on Fazilka. These resolutions were conveyed to
Sant Fateh Singh, who was persuaded to end (30 January 1970) the fast he was going
through. On 25 March 1972, he announced his retirement from active politics.
Sant Fateh Singh died at Amritsar on 30 October 1972.
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