Baba Kharak Singh was a Sikh political leader and virtually the first president
of the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee, was born on 6 June 1868 at
Sialkot, now in Pakistan His father, Rai Bahadur Sardar Hari Singh, was a
wealthy contractor and industrialist.
Kharak Singh, having passed his matriculation examination from Mission High
School and intermediate from Murray College, both at Sialkot, joined Government
College, Lahore, and was among the first batch of students who graduated from
the Panjab Univesity in 1889 He then joined law College, Allahabad, but could
not complete his coursc owing to the death of his father and elder brother in
quick succession He returned to Sialkot to manage the family property. He
started his public life in 1910 as chairman of the reception committee of the
5th session of the Sikh Educational Conference held at Siakot Three years later,
as president of the 8th session of the Conference held at Tarn Taran, he
surprised everyone by walking to the site of the conference breaking thc custom
of being carried in state on a buggy driven by six horses He also refused
permission for a resolution to be moved at the conference wishing victory to the
British in World War I.
It was the Jallianvala Bagh massacre of 1919 which brought Kharak Singh
actively into Sikh politics In 1920, he became president of the Central Sikh
league council, which under his direction led the Sikhs to participate in the
non-co-operation movement launched by Mahatma Galldlll In 1920'S, he was elected
president of the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee and in the year
following also president of the Punjab Provincial Congress Committee. He
successfully led in 1921-22 the agitation for the restoration to the Sikhs of
the keys of the Golden Templc treasury seized by the British Deputy Commissioner
of Amritsar, and underwent during this campaign the first of his numerous jail
terms. He was jailed on 26 November 1921 for making an anti government speech,
he was sentenced to six months' imprisonment on 2 December 1921, but was
released on 17January 1922 when the keys of the toshakhana were also surrendered
to him. He was, however, rearrested soon and, on 4 April 1922, was awarded one
year's jail for running a factory for manufacturing kirpans, one of the
religious symbols of the Sikhs, and another three years on charges of making
seditious speeches. He was sent to jail in distant Dera Gazi Khan (now in
Pakistan), where in protest against the forced removal of the turbans of Sikh
and Gandhi caps of non-Sikh political prisoners, he discarded all his clothes
except his kachahira or drawers. Despite the extreme weather conditions of the
place, he remained barebacked until he was released after his full term (twice
extended for non-obedience of orders) on 4 June 1927. He had unanimously been
elected president in absentia of the Gurdwara Central Board (later redesignated
Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Commitee) constituted under the Sikh Gurdwaras
Act, 1925, and was reselected to the high office after fresh elections in 1930.
He resigned soon after, although he continued to work both for national
independence andfor the protection of Sikh interests.
Earlier during 1928-29, he had vehemently opposed the Nehru Committee Report
until the Congress Party shelved it and undertook to secure Sikhs' concurrence
in the framing of constitutional proposals in the future. He opposed, though
without success, the Communal Award, which gave statutory majority to Muslims in
the Punjab, and was in and out of jail on several occasions for making what the
government held to be seditious speeches. He was a firm protagonist of national
unity and opposed both the Muslim League's demand for Pakistan and the Akali
proposal for an Azad Punjab. After 1947, he stayed in Delhi in virtual
retirement, and died there on 6 October 1963 at the ripe age of 95.
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