Amarinder Singh’s Fall to Political Irrelevance Will Go Down in History

In offering a hand of friendship to the BJP—currently the most hated political organisation in Punjab due to the farm laws—he has not only dug his political grave, but also runs the risk of tarnishing his previous achievements.

The highest political office that any individual can occupy in any state in India’s federal system is that of chief minister (CM). For the last 25 years – since the assassination of Punjab’s Congress party CM Beant Singh in August 1995 – that office was held in Punjab by Parkash Singh Badal (for 15 years) and Amarinder Singh (for 9.5 years).

Badal appears to have withdrawn from politics due to old age and the debacle suffered by the Akali Dal in the 2017 Punjab assembly elections. He was the most astute bourgeois politician in Punjab, with a clear understanding of the state’s public mood, to which he often referred as the ‘Sikh pyche’. He understood that a major reason for the electoral debacle suffered by the Akali Dal was the widely-held suspicion that his party was hobnobbing with the now discredited Sacha Sauda sect for petty electoral gains, and that his government had mishandled the investigation into the sacrilege of the holy Sikh scripture because of the suspected involvement of the sect.

Amarinder Singh (of the Patiala royal family) seems to be following a different trajectory. The Badal and Patiala families are among the wealthiest families and largest landowners in Punjab, though most of the wealthiest families are located in the industrial belt of Ludhiana and the steel town of Gobindgarh. Due to the religious demographics of Punjab’s population, the wealthy industrial bourgeoisie of these towns mainly belonging to the minority Khatri Hindu community, tend to lie low in political competition but use access to state power to expand their business empires. This business-politics nexus may change in the future; a subject that will repay attention and analysis.

Individuals assume importance in socio-political life when they become signifiers of the undercurrents in the social-political community they belong to, or they provide a lead in articulating socio-political trends in the community. Conversely, individuals become irrelevant when they misread what the Italian Marxist philosopher and revolutionary Antonio Gramsci called the ‘common sense’ of the socio-political community.

Using this Gramscian analytical framework of ‘common sense’, we examine here the rise, fall and what is appearing to be the further fall of Amarinder Singh.

Also read: How Will Amarinder Singh’s New Party Affect the Political Winds in Punjab?

First the rise. Before 1984, Amarinder was known mainly to the residents of Patiala city who had elected him as a member of the Indian parliament. He won on a Congress ticket, but it was not his association with the Congress party that led to his victory; rather, it was because he was descended from the royal family of Patiala for whom many residents of the city still cherished a feudalistic reverence.

Outside Patiala and some areas around the family’s ancestral town of Mehraj, he had no political influence. The Operation Bluestar assault on the Golden Temple in June 1984 thrust him into the limelight not only in Punjab and Indian politics, but also internationally. He took the bold step of resigning from the Congress party and from parliament to protest the Bluestar action. He was one of only two Congress MPs who resigned; the other, Devinder Singh Garcha, stepped down primarily, as became widely known then, because of family pressure – Garcha’s father had rung him up to say that he could only return to the family home if he resigned.

Amarinder resigned on principle due to his family’s claimed association with the sixth Sikh guru Hargobind (who had built the Akal Takhat which was destroyed during Operation Bluestar) and explained his decision in forceful terms in his letter of resignation. Although he did not outline any political vision beyond his decision to resign, he suddenly found himself the unofficial spokesman of the beleaguered and traumatised global Sikh community, which was feeling leaderless at this critical juncture, not least because the entire Akali leadership, even the second rung, had been arrested. In a similar manner, Khushwant Singh temporarily became the voice of the community after he returned the Padma Shri award and made a devastating speech in the Rajya Sabha criticising the Bluestar action. Both Amarinder and Khushwant at that time articulated the collective views – the ‘common sense’ – of the Sikh community.

Amarinder joined the Akali Dal, and during that phase of his political life he attracted respect in the Sikh academic community for one contribution which is not commonly known. The late Professor Harbans Singh who compiled the monumental four-volume Encyclopaedia of the Sikhs, invited Amarinder to write the chapter on the historic Anandpur Sahib Resolution. He did a good job of writing the introduction to the Resolution and provided a very competent English translation of the Resolution itself. Every entry in the Encyclopaedia is a document of lasting importance, and it is a sign of the intellectual, political and moral weakness of most Punjabi politicians that Amarinder has lately criticised the Resolution without reflecting on the contribution he himself made to its wider circulation among the academic community as a document of great significance.

He later rejoined the Congress party, and while his political profile was on the rise, his other major act was when, during his first term as Punjab’s CM, he achieved the abrogation of the River Acts (which were injurious to Punjab’s river water rights) in the Punjab state assembly. This was a hugely bold action that embarrassed the central leadership of his party and drew wrath from the Delhi-based nationalist media, but he stood his ground.

A further moment of glory came when in 2014 he decisively defeated Arun Jaitley, a prominent Bharatiya Janata Party leader, from the prestigious Amritsar parliamentary constituency. This was partly the result of luck; his party had decided to field him against Jaitley in Amritsar. Had he contested from his traditional Patiala seat, he would have been defeated by the leftwing AAP leader Dharamvir Gandhi, who in fact defeated Preneet Kaur, Amarinder’s wife, by a massive margin during the AAP surge in the Malwa region. However, Singh’s victory in Amritsar contributed to his leading the Congress party to victory in the Punjab assembly elections in 2017 and led to his becoming the CM of Punjab for the second time.

Then his fall began. During his rise, he represented the dominant views of the community, so unsurprisingly his fall began when he went against them.

Also read: Channi vs Sidhu Tensions Reach a Flashpoint After Drama Over Punjab AG’s Resignation

The most dramatic blow to his reputation came when he criticised the opening of the corridor to Kartarpur Sahib during the celebration of the 550th anniversary of Guru Nanak’s birth. He appeared petty when he belittled the initiative of his political rival, Navjot Sidhu, in getting the corridor ready for the anniversary celebrations. He misread the mood in Punjab and in the global Sikh community. The Punjabis did not want confrontation with Pakistan, they did not want a war with Pakistan, and they enthusiastically welcomed the Pakistani government’s action in facilitating access to the sacred place where the guru had spent the last 18 years of his life.

Contrary to Punjabi and Sikh sentiments, Amarinder started indulging in ‘security-speak’ that resembled the BJP’s anti-Pakistan and anti-Muslim propaganda. Newly resurgent mutual affection between the Punjabis on either side of the border was being expressed both culturally and in literature, and there was a pronounced dislike of the security establishments in both countries who were undermining this trend. Amarinder was swimming against the tide. His growing political unpopularity led to his replacement as the state’s CM by the central leadership of his party.

And now came the further fall. After losing his chief ministership, if Amarinder had simply left the political field (as Parkash Singh Badal did), he would have retained the honour he had earlier earned for his actions on Bluestar and the river water disputes, and for his contribution to the Encyclopaedia. Instead, in offering a hand of friendship to the BJP (currently the most hated political organisation in Punjab due to the introduction of the new farm laws) through his newly-formed Punjab Lok Congress Party, he has not only dug his political grave, but also runs the risk of tarnishing his previous achievements. The farmers’ movement against the BJP government has overwhelming support among the population of Punjab and now represents the state’s ‘common sense’. He is out of tune with general opinion in Punjab and is unlikely to find any political allies within the state.

He has further damaged himself by supporting the BJP government’s recent move to extend the reach of the Border Security Force from the existing 15 km from the international border to 50 km from the border, which covers the area around the Golden Temple in Amritsar. His self-inflicted damage is so severe that any dissident Akali faction offering alliance with him will damage itself. The fact that Sukhdev Singh Dhindsa of Akali Dal (United) publicly refuted Amarinder’s claims of a possible alliance with the Dhindsa led Akali Dal has only heaped further humiliation on Amarinder.

Future political analysts and historians will use Amarinder as an example of how once-prominent individuals can be relegated to irrelevance if they lose touch with the views – the ‘common sense’ – of their socio-political community.

Pritam Singh is Professor Emeritus at the Oxford Brookes Business School, Oxford, UK, and the author of Economy, Culture and Human Rights: Turbulence in Punjab, India and Beyond.

Wounds That Never Heal: Remembering Operation Bluestar

The military action at the Golden Temple in 1984 has left a lasting impact on generations of Sikhs, leaving many to try and piece together fragments of painful pasts.

It happened 37 years ago but it feels as if it was yesterday – the heart, body and mind still feel the tremors of the emotional earthquake it caused. The force of those tremors intensifies every year when June 6 approaches. Operation Bluestar (saka neela tara), a fancy-sounding name given to a dreadful military action at the Sikhs’ holiest shrine, the Golden Temple in Amritsar, was launched on June 2, 1984, with a ‘national broadcast to the nation’ by then prime minister Indira Gandhi. It was claimed to have been completed successfully on June 6 with the ending of the last resistance by Sikh combatants to the army’s entry at the Temple. State media (TV and radio) and other non-state media outlets praised the operation for saving India’s ‘unity and integrity’ from ‘anti-national’ Sikh secessionism.

The most reliable estimates of the total number of deaths during Operation Bluestar range from 5,000 to 7,000. It was a tragedy that could have been avoided if – and it is a big if – Indira Gandhi had had the vision to reach a political settlement with the moderate Akali leadership. Most Akali Dal demands – regarding federal decentralisation, river water rights, territorial readjustment and the transfer of Chandigarh to Punjab as its capital – could have been negotiated. Rajiv Gandhi did agree to each of these demands, and many more besides, in the 1985 Rajiv-Longowal Accord. He implemented none.

Indira Gandhi’s political decision to use the ‘Hindu card’ to gain electoral victories led her to choose a dangerous path of confrontation, first with the Akalis and eventually with the entire Sikh community. This miscalculation cost Mrs Gandhi her life, and left the communities of Punjab and of India in general scarred and polarised. This polarisation peaked with the genocidal violence against the Sikh minority in Delhi and many other North Indian Hindu majority towns in November 1984 after the assassination of Indira Gandhi by two of her Sikh security guards. Sikh nationalists in Punjab were eventually defeated, at least militarily, by the 1990s, but Hindu nationalism was promoted so powerfully that the Hindu nationalists succeeded within a few decades in capturing the Indian state.

Also read: How Sabotage By Indira Gandhi’s Advisors Paved the Way for Operation Blue Star

In the Sikhs’ collective memory of 1984, the deaths by army action in June and those by genocidal mob violence in November constitute two ends of the same arc of killings. The two cannot be separated and, therefore, remain indelibly linked to the memory of Operation Bluestar, which is seen as the trigger both for the killings and for later disappearances, killings in custody and deaths by ‘encounters’ during the military operations against the armed Sikh opposition movement after the events of 1984.

Operation Bluestar is gradually finding a place in the Sikh practice of ardaas (prayer). This practice is unique in the history of world religions because it gives collective memory a central place. On all important occasions – birth, marriage, death, new job, promotion, passing an examination, new house, Gurpurab celebrations (in honour of the gurus’ birthdays), or even the daily rituals in a gurdwara – the ardaas recounts in capsule form the history of the Sikh faith.

The ardaas narrative starts with the founding of the faith by Guru Nanak, its continuation by his nine successors and the sacrifices made by the tenth guru Guru Gobind Singh’s four sons (sahibzade), the five Beloved Ones (panj piare), the 40 Liberated Ones (chali mukte) and numerous other martyrs right up to the present time. Sikhs have a long memory. Udham Singh waited for 21 years to avenge the Jallianwala Bagh massacre of 1919 by assassinating Michael O’Dwyer in 1940. The Naxalite Sikhs punished a Sikh landlord Ajaib Singh Kokri, a witness against the revolutionary Bhagat Singh, by assassinating him in 1974, 43 years after Bhagat Singh was hanged in 1931. The socialisation from early childhood of anyone growing up in a Sikh household (irrespective of the political affiliation of the household) involves such a focused exercise in historical remembrance that most adult Sikhs remember the ardaas by heart, whether they are illiterate farmers or university academics. The ardaas contributes to the making of an active historical being who remembers the past, relates that past to the present and imagines the shaping of the future.

Operation Bluestar has come to be remembered as the teeja Ghallughara (the third holocaust). Many gurdwaras outside India and perhaps some even in India have incorporated the remembrance of the teeja Ghallughara in the ardaas. In Sikh historical memory, there have been two Ghallugharas before Operation Bluestar – the chhota Ghallughara (the small holocaust) and the wadda Ghallughara (the big holocaust). The chhota Ghallughara took place in May 1746 when, according to estimates made by the celebrated Sikh historian Professor Ganda Singh, about 10,000 Sikh men and women were killed. The wadda Ghallughara took place in February 1762 when about 30,000 Sikh men, women and children were slaughtered. According to one as yet unconfirmed estimate, about half of the total Sikh population was liquidated during the wadda Ghallughara.

These were the darkest times in the history of the Sikhs. These massacres could have demoralised them to the point of extinction, but, inspired by the memories of their gurus and martyrs, they regrouped and within a few decades of the wadda Ghallughara, emerged literally from the ashes to become the de facto rulers of Punjab in the last quarter of the 18th century. By 1799, one of them (Ranjit Singh) formalised that de facto rule to become the Maharaja of Punjab. The force of memory weighed upon him too and he ruled, therefore, in the name of the gurus. Some features of feudal degeneration which emerged during his rule were the result of his dissociation from the memory of the path of the gurus.

During the dark times the Sikh community faced from 1716, when the Sikh warrior Banda Singh Bahadur was martyred, to 1799 when Ranjit Singh came to power, Harmandar Sahib (later known more popularly as the Golden Temple) became the nerve centre for the moral, political, military, spiritual and even economic empowerment of the community. While living the life of guerrilla combatants against the Moghul powers, the leading members of the community would meet twice a year on Vaisakhi and Diwali for deliberations and collective decision-making for the future survival of the community. Once in the precincts of the Harmandar Sahib, they considered themselves protected by the Guru and had no fear of any earthly powers such as the Moghul rulers they had to confront. The mystique of the Harmandar grew and this mystique has continued and strengthened over the centuries. The Golden Temple has literally become the heart of the community.

The Golden Temple in Amritsar. Credit: Reuters

The death, destruction and sacrilege caused during Operation Bluestar pierced the heart not only of the Sikhs but also of many Punjabi Hindus. The devastation it caused in the personal lives of so many millions has still not been fully recorded and acknowledged because the political divide over the attitudes towards Operation Bluestar has overshadowed the human stories.

The most adversely affected were the community’s elders – both men and women. I will share two stories from my family. One relative was an Akali activist who had faced imprisonment and police beatings during the long-drawn-out Punjabi Suba movement (the struggle for a Punjabi speaking state that succeeded partially in 1966); nevertheless, he was very proud of having lived a life of dignity. He was in his eighties when Operation Bluestar happened. He lost his mental balance – one moment, he would swear at Indira Gandhi, the Indian prime minister who ordered the army action at the Golden Temple, and the next he would laugh uncontrollably. Sometimes, he would regain some normality and would question why he lived the last years of his life in so much pain. His tortured inner life came to an end within a few years.

Also read: Book Review: Exploring Punjab’s Convoluted Past

The other story is very close to me personally. It is about my uncle (my mamaji, my mother’s brother) whom I was very fond of. It is through him that I was first introduced, at the age of 12, to the world of communism when he brought a local communist activist to the house for a meal. My uncle was a brave and a very lively person. He was so devastated by the pain caused by the army action at the Golden Temple that he never laughed again afterwards. He would not talk too much about it except once in a while in anger. It saddened me deeply to see him suffering silently in this way. He lived for about 15 years after the Operation, and a few years before his death, I told him once, wanting to cheer him up, that I wanted to give him a present and that he could choose what to receive. He took only a few seconds and said that he wanted me to buy a kesari (saffron) coloured turban for him. The world of renunciation and sacrifice, even if it was symbolic, was all that was left for him.

For me, the memories of my uncle’s pain and that of Operation Bluestar are inextricably linked.

A whole generation has grown up after the Operation and many in this new generation have become parents. They hear and read about the Operation and try to understand the meaning of it to reconnect to the history of their parents, their grandparents and before. Many of them are devising new tools and media to relate to that history. Of many doctoral dissertations I have evaluated as an external examiner, one by Shruti Devgun of Rutgers University, USA on ‘Re-Presenting Pasts: Sikh Diasporic and Digital Memories of 1984’ stands out for its subject and methodology. Her thesis focuses on the work of an intergenerational cohort of Sikhs in the diaspora (in the US and Canada) who are trying to piece together the fragments of painful pasts ‘to give cultural meaning and shape to broken traumatic experiences’.

Through their work, they are puncturing, and perhaps demolishing, the Indian State’s narratives of Operation Bluestar. This painful ‘memory work’ is creating new spaces for them to understand and connect with the pain of the victims of many other genocides e.g., the Jews, the Palestinians, the Armenians and the Rwandan Tutsis.

The wounds may never heal but by connecting your pain to the pain of others, the meaning and experience of pain is transformed.

Pritam Singh is Professor Emeritus at the Oxford Brookes Business School, Oxford, UK, and the author of Economy, Culture and Human Rights: Turbulence in Punjab, India and Beyond.

Facebook and Instagram ‘Mistakenly Blocked’ #Sikh for Almost Three Months

“Our processes fell down here, and we’re sorry,” Instagram said in an official statement.

New Delhi: Facebook and Instagram users who tried to use the #Sikh (hashtag Sikh) were unable to do so for the past three months, the two social media platforms admitted on Wednesday night.

Over the last week, members of the global Sikh community started raising concern over the blocking of the hashtag Sikh, an issue that gained more attention due to the anniversary of Operation Blue Star.

Prominent members of the community, including Canadian author Rupi Kaur, questioned the social media giant over the apparent blocking of the hashtag.

“Zuckerberg says FB’s principles prohibit him from blocking Trump as he incites violence & hate. Meanwhile as Sikhs raise their voice to mark the injustices of 1984: sikh hashtags are blocked,” Kaur tweeted.

On Wednesday night, Instagram, which is owned by Facebook, responded and noted that it had carried out an investigation and found that the hashtag had been “mistakenly blocked” on March 7 following a report that was inaccurately reviewed by its teams.

“We became aware that these hashtags were blocked today following feedback we received from the community, and quickly moved to unblock them. Our processes fell down here, and we’re sorry,” the digital platform said in an official statement.

Instagram added that it understands this is an incredibly important, painful time for the Sikh community.

“We designed hashtags to allow people to come together and share with one another. It’s never our intention to silence the voices of this community, we are taking the necessary steps so this doesn’t happen again.”

Fighting Fatalism, 35 Years After the Anti-Sikh Pogroms

As Sikhs live through their collective trauma, we have entered a phase where silence around violence against minorities is sanctioned.

“My father sat praying, meditating through the night. I was in the room with my parents and two younger brothers. They were three and five. My father stood up at 4 am and said, ‘This day, you’ll remember forever’!”

Thirty-five years after this father of five went down fighting for his life in the anti-Sikh pogrom that engulfed India, survivors’ memories are still met without acknowledgement of the mass crimes and with an increasingly clear message: those deemed less should swallow injustice and call it fate.

The blueprint of 1984 was and is followed by politicians vying for hero status as the vanquishers of terror and external interference (of next-door Pakistan) by terrorising internal “enemies.”

In 1984, Sikhs were fodder for the machinery of the next election, won by those at the forefront of the anti-Sikh pogroms. Now, the first state assembly elections since the Kashmir Valley was locked down by the Indian Army (after the change of Kashmir’s historic constitutional status by forceful fiat), represent further popular support for those at the forefront of this humanitarian crisis.

The “K2 plan” rhetoric used to justify the decision on Kashmir; the institutionalised punishing of dissent; and the insultingly absent or slow legal processes that routinely excuse perpetrators—shamelessly, in the name of humanity as was done in Punjab last week;  all prove how 1984’s unaddressed unpunished crimes taught all the wrong lessons, now being employed in corrosive majoritarian electoral politics.

Indira Gandhi, whose assassination set off the pogroms. Photo: Public.Resource.Org/Flickr CC BY 2.

On October 31, 1984, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was assassinated. In contravention of their usual practice of not revealing information that might incite communal violence, All India Radio quickly noted that the prime minister had been gunned down by her Sikh bodyguards.

Images of her corpse were re-run on state-run television, cementing Sikhs as violent ‘others’ in the Indian imagination, even as armed gangs marched to deliver death on Sikhs. The Sikh community was then still reeling from the physical and psychological assault of the Indian Army across Punjab (the only Sikh majority state) by Indira Gandhi earlier that year.

The Indian Army’s attack in June 1984, epicentred at the heart of Sikhs, the Darbar Sahib, the “Golden Temple”— akin to the Vatican, Mecca, or the Temple of David — had elicited a visceral reaction from religious, irreligious, and non-religious Sikhs alike, and indeed many non-Sikhs.

An estimated 10,000 never returned to claim their shoes, slipped off at gurdwara entrances across Punjab in June. But the armed Sikh fighters in the gold-domed complex in Amritsar, totaling about 400, largely consumed Indian discourse: focus was retained on the actions or inactions of the victimised minority community.

The following months saw a surge in the popularity of Indira Gandhi as India’s “saviour” who had resisted the Sikh threat head-on. Then external affairs minister Narasimha Rao gave statements about the “foreign hand” that had threatened the country and said that “if the government had not initiated the Army action against the terrorists in Punjab, the security of the country would have been in peril” (June 28, The Tribune).

British documents, declassified under a 30-year rule, have now revealed letters between Margaret Thatcher and Indira Gandhi, deliberating over British Special Air Service (SAS) support for an attack on Amritsar. These communications are dated February 1984, four months before the reportedly exigent and unavoidable Bluestar.

The attacks’ political benefit to Gandhi’s next election was openly discussed at the time.

“Elections in October?” ran a headline in The Tribune on June 27, 1984.

Gandhi was shot dead on October 31, 1984. After Army operations code-named Bluestar and Woodrose had seared through its countryside, Punjab was eerily uneventful in November 1984, while an anti-Sikh pogrom unfolded everywhere outside the Sikh heartland, starting with New Delhi.

File image of protesters in Amritsar demand justice for the 1984 massacre of Sikhs. Photo: PTI

“On three successive occasions in 1984, Sikhs as a people were attacked. On each of those three occasions, their social class, their family background, their service to and positions in the structures of the state signified nothing. The fact that they were Sikh removed their status and their rights from them,” writes anthropologist Joyce Pettigrew.

Every Sikh was a target in November 1984. “He had not even for a second entertained the neighbours’ suggestions of cutting his hair. He knew what was about to come. My father was proud and he was committed. He told me, ‘Take your brothers, open their topknots, make plaits, and dress them in some frocks from the neighbours.’ I did as I was told,” says the child who saw her father die fighting his murderers in 1984.

The attempts at survival were valorous and varied.

Sikh parents tried to protect young boys from the genocidal violence by disguising them as girls, trying to decrease the immediate risk to their lives. Then they realised their girls had also been marked prey.

Other parents painfully cut their children’s lovingly grown and groomed hair, hoping the orders to kill were limited to identifiable Sikhs. The turban tan-lines gave many away nevertheless.

And no group of Sikhs was protected when the armed men came. They came with lists and information about Sikh households and killed without discriminating between the less and more adherent.

When the “mob” descended on her family’s home, the daughter remembers witnessing the fight put up by her father: “Our next door neighbors, they were very nice…They hid my father. But then another neighbour reported, ‘The sardar is hiding here’.”

“So the mob tightened around the room my father was hiding in. My father was young, agile, knew gatka [Sikh martial art]… and jumped out with a large stick. At this, the stunned mob retreated. He jumped over the wall, on to the roof. And then, they came back. And started raining stones on him. As more hit him, he fell down. He kept fighting them, with just one stick. And then from behind, someone struck him hard. And more and more gathered on top and beat him… my little sister and my mother were trying to intervene. My sister was hit and her head split open. Lots happened. He was killed.”

She blinks.

The torture inflicted on her father’s body pre- and post-death is quietly detailed by her husband only later. With the resolve she developed as a child, she continues, “And 10-15 days later, I went to school. It was important for me to go to school. I had exams. And some of the girls there said, ‘So your Papa was killed too?’ And I just burst out crying. Some of these girls told me, ‘If this happens with us Balvinder, you please save us, okay?’ From these conversations I realised that their families were the ones used, were involved…and they were now thinking that there may be retaliation.”

The rumours of impending Sikh violence had spread afar immediately after Gandhi’s assassination, providing further instigation:

‘Sikh boys from Khalsa College are coming to rape our girls!’

‘The Sikhs have poisoned the Delhi municipal water supply!’

‘Trains are returning from Punjab with bodies of butchered Hindus!’

Meanwhile, eyewitnesses remember the foot soldiers of the carnage: otherwise impoverished and vulnerable people were suddenly given power to loot, rape, pillage, kill, and exhibit power on the new national enemy. Those orchestrating the crimes kept their hands milky clean, greeting world leaders for a somber state funeral.

Indira Gandhi’s funeral was belatedly held on November 3. An orgy of violence had been unleashed by then: politicians met mercenaries met opportunists met religious bigots.

Also read: Photo Essay: Thirty-Three Years on, Wounds of the Anti-Sikh Massacre Are Still Fresh

“Certain images had to be burned into the psyche,” reported journalist Ivan Fera. “How else to explain the fact that the men were not merely killed but tortured to death—limb severed from limb, eyes gouged out, burnt while they were still alive—in instance after instance, all over the city, in the very presence of their children and their wives? The killings were ritualistic: in several cases the hair of the victim were shorn off, and their beards set on fire before they were killed.”

Sikh women were ferociously targeted, often in front of their families, including through individual and gang rape, in some cases lasting over multiple days.

Inderjit Singh Jaijee, who had found himself quitting a corporate job to return to his home state of Punjab in 1984 to begin pursuing human rights work (that continues till date), said, “Civil rights groups in Delhi wrote reports almost immediately.”

The November pogroms had taken place right under the noses of the crème de la crème of modern India’s intellectuals, lawyers, artists. It could not be ignored, despite the government’s best efforts. But the grisly Delhi reports captured only a fraction of the destruction.

“On trains all over India, especially those coming through Haryana, or coming into Delhi, Sikh passengers were sitting ducks,” said Jaijee.

Jaijee began demanding answers from the government. “They had logs, they had the manifests from which it could easily be assessed which passengers never arrived at their ticketed destination…And when we got a meeting with the Railway Minister at that time he said, ‘Sorry, government has told us we can’t release list of Sikh passengers… only Rajiv Gandhi can.’ After three-four trips that I made to his office, he did say around 700 or so were killed. So easily, I thought, at least 2,000-3,000 [would have been killed]. … a real death census is sorely needed!”

Not only trains headed to the murderous capital, but Sikhs at home in various states in India faced deathly violence. In Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, story after story reiterated how Congress workers had given free rein to local criminals, strongmen, and anyone with a score to settle against any Sikh. Tellingly, wherever individual civil servants or police officers defied the general orders, civilian deaths were quickly curtailed. But the overwhelming sentiment, including of the non-Congress leaders and workers, was to allow bloodletting.

An indeterminate number of Sikhs were killed across India; at least three thousand perished in New Delhi alone.

A girl and her father pray at the 1984 martyrs museum in Tilak Vihar, New Delhi. Photo: Shome Basu

This was a spontaneous eruption of outrage, ran the official narrative, since the masses were blinded by their anguish at the assassination of the prime minister.

Meanwhile, the murderers came meticulously armed with lists, weaponry, and a standard operating procedure. “Often, the earlier mob limited itself to beating up the Sikhs till they fainted or died; the second mob burnt their bodies to destroy the evidence of murder,” write Manoj Mitta and Phoolka in their book When a Tree Shook Delhi.

“[F]ar from being spontaneous expressions of “madness” and of “grief and anger” at Mrs. Gandhi’s assassination, as made out by the authorities,[they] were the outcome of a well-­organised plan marked by acts of both deliberate commission and omission by important politicians of the Congress and by authorities in the administration,” noted The People’s Union for Civil Liberties and the People’s Union of Democratic Rights.

Overwhelmingly, the violence was condoned as appropriately employed against a reportedly treacherous community that had forgotten its place. Uma Chakravarti and Nandita Haksar, who were part of the relief efforts and extensively interviewed citizens immediately after the pogroms, noted “The most typical statement of Hindu assertion throughout the months following November were, ‘It’ll teach them a lesson;’ ‘Now they have been effectively cowed down.’”

The political currency of the November 1984 carnage won Gandhi’s Congress a landslide victory in the next month’s general elections. Rajiv Gandhi took his oath on December 31, 1984; his thumping election victory remains unparalleled in India. 

Union minister H.K.L. Bhagat, who eyewitnesses reported on the scene of many massacres, and whose constituency saw widespread decimation of Sikhs, won with the second greatest margin of votes throughout India. The Sikh genocide had received electoral applause. 

The first and only significant Congress party leader was convicted last year, 34 years later: Congress MP from the Outer Delhi constituency in 1984, Sajjan Kumar, was sentenced to life imprisonment. The Delhi high court identified the killings between November 1 and November 4, 1984 as “crimes against humanity.” Kumar appealed and the Supreme Court is hearing his case: summer 2020 was declared as the next hearing date, confirmed one of the prosecutors last week.

Also read: A Journey to a Past that Will Not Pass

Meanwhile, even as the current anti-Congress BJP government continues to make promises to investigate 1984, actual processes remain farcical. In September, the Special Investigating Team constituted in February 2019 to investigate the pogrom deaths in Kanpur, in the state of Uttar Pradesh, reported the files had all mysteriously disappeared.

Thirty-five years after some of the terrified survivors had dared to register cases. Those who continue to dare do so amidst the generally required resignation: that one party will gain from violence against an entire community during its tenure, and then the alternate party will come in and do the same while mildly chastising the first party, till the first party swings back into power.

Still, the dual party system is not killing India. Parties don’t kill people. People in power do.

India has increasingly been perfecting its default: fatalism. Silence around violence against the less powerful is sanctioned. Glee around the plight of demonised populations, under lockdown in their own state and own homes, has been expressed unchecked.

Whether around the violence against women in their own homes, or around the silent majority of India (the Dalits, so-called “untouchables”) considered doomed by divine caste, or around many areas of active internal armed conflict, like Kashmir or Chhattisgarh, or around regions that are still reeling from devious abnormality, like Punjab, but presented, at all costs, as returned to “normalcy.”

But the child survivor left fatherless in a decimated low-income colony still speaks about truth and justice: her voice, the only succour to the victims of 1984, refuses to be silenced.

Mallika Kaur is a lawyer and writer, and teaches at UC Berkeley School of Law. Her forthcoming book on human rights defenders, Faith, Gender, and Activism in the Punjab Conflict: The Wheat Fields Still Whisper, is being published by Palgrave Macmillan.

Punjab’s Politicians Are Using the Bogey of Militancy Again

The Congress’s victory in Punjab’s Lok Sabha seats was despite its poor governance in the state. So what explains its performance in the state?

The Lok Sabha election result in Punjab has been heralded by the commentariat as a rejection of right-wing communal forces. It has been presented as an outlier in North India, where the “Modi wave” of majoritarian nationalism has been halted. However, this laudatory narrative betrays a limited understanding about the cultural-social context and history of the border state, which finds its interests marginalised in the national electoral and political agenda.

The Congress’s electoral victory in Punjab came despite the lack of commitment shown by the Amarinder Singh government towards its own promises of redressing the crisis of farm suicides and rural distress. Rather, what explains its unlikely electoral success is the ease with which it was able to revert to a historical pattern of using the bogey of militancy to confuse the electorate.

Also Read: Why Punjab’s Sikh Majority Shunned Modi’s Hindutva to Give Congress Eight Seats

In the recently concluded Lok Sabha elections, the Behbal Kalan firing incident of 2015 was given a pronounced emphasis across the political divide, despite the farm crisis, the problems of rampant drug abuse and unemployment. This can be evidenced by a careful reading of the political climate, speeches and campaign agendas.

Punjab chief minister Amarinder Singh with Rahul Gandhi. Credit: PTI

Historical continuities

Even as we remember the painful legacy of Operation Blue Star conducted by the army between June 3-6, 1984, the widespread metanarrative about it needs to be critiqued. According to Lt Gen S.K. Sinha, who headed the Army’s Western Command, the armed forces prepared for the military operation for over 18 months in the Doon Valley. This means the Doon training had commenced long before militants started entering the Golden Temple.

Historical events show that this happened in the aftermath of the Akali Agitation of 1982 for more provincial autonomy and decentralisation within the constitutional framework of India.

Much like other aspects of Punjab’s history, the socio-economic basis for the mass mobilisation which took place in the early 1980s has been disregarded to emphasise religious or communal aspects. Mainstream historical analysis of Operation Blue Star fails to acknowledge the impact of the huge farmers’ agitation in March 1984. Through the course of these protests, the Raj Bhavan in Chandigarh was regularly gheraoed by 50,000-60,000 farmers who slept on the streets and occupied the area around Sukhna lake and converted the elite vicinity into a ‘Kisan Nagar’.

It is important to understand that the Bhartiya Kisan Union (BKU) and the Akalis had similar economic interests and the same modes of resistance. Many in the union were Akali sympathisers as the union jathas used to participate in the Akali agitation. Even as Sharad Joshi’s Shetkari Sanghatana lent support to this farmer protest led by the BKU, the protest was suspended on March 18 as the government promised a committee would resolve the matter. Talks reached an impasse and the Akalis immediately announced that they would withhold wheat going to the rest of India.

Also Read: How Sabotage By Indira Gandhi’s Advisors Paved the Way for Operation Blue Star

By May 1984, the movement catapulted into even more vigorous manifestations through the iconic slogans of kanak roko, karja roko and gaon roko. This evoked public support due to strong resistance against corruption, misgovernance, apathy to farmers and human rights violations by the security forces and the state police. The resistance emerged stronger after the BKU established a parallel government where people blocked the entry of public officials and bureaucrats into villages, picketed police stations and ensured the suspension of corrupt and oppressive police personnel. At times, the hitherto high-handed policemen were forced to apologise for their actions.

These became one of the many reasons for Operation Blue Star and it can be emphatically argued that there was more to it than the goal of killing a particular political figure – Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale –  even as the culture of mass resistance and self-assertion was targeted. In 1984, Indira Gandhi’s official propaganda resorted to holding a ‘foreign hand’ responsible for the situation in Punjab while delegitimising the mass movement.

Unfortunately, this projection of foreign funds and involvement for revival of religious fundamentalism has continued in the current context to delegitimise public causes. While a part of this propaganda is no doubt true given the evidence in Pakistani, this does not amount to a major threat with even extremist groups like the Dal Khalsa saying that the atmosphere is not conducive for any such movement.

The Golden Temple at Amritsar, site of Operation Blue Star. Credit: Flickr/ The National Archives UK

The Golden Temple at Amritsar, site of Operation Blue Star. Credit: Flickr/ The National Archives UK

Contemporary political conundrum

In the context of the October 2015 farmer agitations in Punjab, the challenge of political apathy and de-legitimisation has become even more pronounced. The agitation for fair MSPs and public procurement had led to a rail roko agitation on a massive scale. The state government, led by Parkash Singh Badal, initiated a meeting with the agitating farmers on the evening of October 12. As talks failed, farmers called for stronger agitations from the next day. Simultaneously, there was a small protest against the desecration of the Guru Granth Sahib. As police fired on these peaceful protestors at Behbal Kalan, there was widespread outrage across the state. The fierce outrage also subsumed and ultimately silenced the farmers’ agitations, as farmers, who also happen to be Sikhs, joined these protests. The timing of this unnecessary firing, as found by the investigators, raises an important question: was it merely to divert and suppress the fierce farmers’ agitation?

The impact of delegitimisation of mass movements through the smokescreen of communal conspiracies was more pronounced in the 2017 assembly elections. The state was in policy paralysis and the dysfunction of the two-party rule helped the AAP emerge as a third front. Facing a competent challenger which was willing to go beyond the unwritten rules of political duopoly, the SAD and the Congress projected the Arvind Kejriwal-led party as aligning with the hardliners. The issue of Kejriwal staying at an ex-militant’s house was raked up by the SAD, even as the Maur blast attack on the Congress candidate strengthened this narrative just a few days before the elections. Hence, the hope for securing a political alternative to solve Punjab’s myriad troubles was derailed by the communal narrative.

Also Read: Farmers’ Suicide Dictated Her Marriage, and Now Drives Her to Fight an Election

The situation has continued even after the elections, as Captain Amarinder Singh’s government has kept people in fear of the deterioration of law and order through claims that Pakistan is sponsoring attempts to revive militancy. This is done so that any mass movement could be easily suppressed by diverting attention to such issues and using the revival of militancy as an excuse. Even the propaganda is logically incoherent. A case in point is the Jalandhar blast, allegedly committed by a Kashmiri somewhere on the outskirts of Jalandhar.

The challenges that the people of Punjab, especially the farming community and rural population face, are polycentric and complex. They require multiple vibrant mass mobilisations so as to reorient the priorities of the ruling political-economic establishment, which has always delegitimised and suppressed legitimate political movements by diverting them through communal conspiracies. While the Lok Sabha elections did provide another moment for such an alternative to emerge, it was also silenced in the cacophony of the establishment’s propaganda about religious desecration and the Khalistan issue.

Prannv Dhawan and S. Singh are at the National Law School of India University, Bangalore. Dhawan is also the founding editor of Law School Policy Review.

In Letter to Modi, Sikh Forum Denounces ‘Deliberate’ Khalistan Spin to Trudeau’s Visit

The letter also noted that by not keeping its promises about releasing documents on Operation Bluestar and punishing the 1984 pogrom accused, the NDA governments have merely performed ‘lip service’.

The letter also noted that by not keeping its promises about releasing documents on Operation Bluestar and punishing the 1984 pogrom accused, the NDA governments have merely performed ‘lip service’.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, his wife Sophie Gregoire, daughter Ella Grace and son Xavier pose for photographers during their visit to the Golden temple in Amritsar on February 21. Credit: Reuters/Adnan Abidi

New Delhi: In a letter addressed to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the Sikh Forum, an apolitical body of community intellectuals based in Delhi, has expressed serious concern at the manner in which Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s recent visit was allegedly “used to tarnish the image of Sikhs by both the officialdom and the media”.

Stating that it was distressed at the “attempts to cast aspersions on the community as ‘anti-national’”, when in reality “the sacred and secular fabric of our country is sought to be torn apart by elements of irresponsible leadership at various levels in India itself”, the Forum said it was in complete support of the joint statement issued by India and Canada on February 23 reaffirming that the relations between the two nations were based on “fundamental principle of respect for sovereignty, unity and territorial integrity of the two countries”.

However, the Forum said, “the ‘bogey’ of Sikh separatism had overshadowed what could have been an extremely positive visit by the Canadian Prime Minister” considering that a large number of Indians, including Sikhs, have achieved great success in Canada.

But, the Forum said “instead of expressing pride and offering cooperation for mutual advantage, a communal divide has been accentuated by irresponsible reporting in the media. The group said it was agitated at the manner in which the Jaspal Atwal matter was handled. “If amnesty and visa was given to this Canadian national, why then was this issue allowed to create a public spectacle and cast aspersions on the entire Sikh community?” the Forum asked.

Noting that while there may be a problem with some Sikhs in Canada, there is no issue of Khalistan remaining in India or in the state of Punjab, the Forum president Pushpinder Singh Chopra and secretary general Partap Singh said though successive NDA governments have promised to bring to justice the culprits of the 1984 pogrom “apart from paying lip service on the issue, little of substance have been done”.

Likewise, stating that the documents pertaining to Operation Bluestar have also not been made public, the group said what has instead been raised is the issue of Khalistan through which aspersions have been cast on the entire community. This, the Forum said, was “completely unacceptable”.