From the late
1970s to the early 1990s, the movement for an independent
Khalistan, a Sikh
nation in Punjab, threatened to sever this vital region from
India.
Its major
proponent, Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale, who had been
head of the
orthodox Sikh religious school Damdami Taksal, would symbolize the
Sikh separatist movement.
To some,
Bhindranwale is remembered as a martyr to a movement which
stood up to Indian
state dominance. To others, he represents a dark period in
Punjab’s history of
militancy, violence and state repression in that period.
When India
became independent in 1947, Punjab was partitioned. East
Punjab with a Hindu
and Sikh majority population became a part of India and the
Muslim majority
West Punjab became a part of Pakistan.
When the
Indian Punjab was reorganized after independence as a Punjabi
speaking state in
1966, the Sikhs for the first time became a majority religious
group there.
But the
failure of the moderate constitutionalist Sikh Akali Dal to
make progress in
advocating for further Sikh demands contributed to the rise of
popularity of
Bhindranwale.
These included
the transfer of Chandigarh as a capital city to Punjab—it was
serving as the
joint capital of Punjab and Haryana states – and the
restructuring of federal
arrangements to allow more administrative and financial powers
to the states.
This last demand
was articulated in the 1973 Anandpur Sahib Resolution.
Initially, Indian Prime Minister Indira
Gandhi’s Congress
Party supported Bhindranwale in a bid to split Sikh votes and
weaken the Akali
Dal, its chief rival in Punjab.
In 1982,
Bhindranwale entered the political struggle against the
policies of the central
government. He took up residence in the Golden Temple complex
in Amritsar and his
popularity grew.
Gandhi
decided to take action. In October 1983, emergency rule
was imposed in
Punjab. Operation Blue Star,
the military assault on the Golden Temple began June 1,
1984.
Bhindranwale
and most of the militant leadership were killed. It also
resulted in the deaths
of a large number of Sikh civilians, while the heavy artillery
severely damaged
the Temple.
In response
Gandhi’s two Sikh bodyguards assassinated her on Oct. 31. This
was followed by
anti-Sikh riots that lasted four days in many parts of India.
Upwards of 2,000
Sikhs in Delhi and several other cities were murdered by
rampaging mobs.
The following
decade saw thousands of civilian casualties, hundreds of
detentions without
charge or trial, and thousands of extrajudicial executions and
“disappearances.”
It is estimated that upward of 25,000 people were killed, the
majority of them
Sikhs.
In the 1990s
Punjab began a process of recovery from the previous two
decades of violence and
draconian police actions.
But Operation
Bluestar has not been forgotten, and the symbol of
Bhindranwale has re-emerged.
His defiance
and sacrifice has been hailed as resembling those of the great
Sikh martyrs of
the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
The many
Sikhs in support of him should caution us from believing the
demand for a
sovereign Khalistan has ceased completely.
This ideal
has a long-term attraction to Sikhs who feel a strong identity
as a nation and
draw on their historical 19th century Sikh kingdom
under Ranjit
Singh as a precedent.
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