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This
section provides a list of important and prominent figures
from Anglo-Sikh History which have been listed in alphabetical
order, according to ethnicity and time period.
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Akali Dal,
Central
A Political Organisation
of the Sikhs. 1934.
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A political organization of the Sikhs set up in March 1934 as a parallel
body to the Shiromani Akali Dal. The latter was formed on 14 December
1920 to assist the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee in its
campaign for the reformation of the management of the Sikh places
of worship and, under pressure of the agitation it had launched, the
Punjab Legislative Council passed on 7 July 1925 the Sikh Gurdwaras
Act, providing for a Central Board elected by the Sikhs to.take over
control of the shrines. On 9 July 1925, the Governor of the Punjab
announced that such of the Akall prisoners as accepted the provisions
of the Act and were willing to work by them would be freed. Some of
the agitation leaders gave the required assurance and were released,
but 15 of them, including Master Tara Singh and Teja Singh Samundari,
refused and preferred to stay back in jail. This split the Akalis.
Those released tried to capture the Central Board through the first
elections under the Sikh Gurdwaras Act held in June 1926, but could
win only 26 out of a total of 120 seats, 85 going to the Shiromani
Akali Dal represented by those still under detention. Government withdrew
the ban on the Akalis on 27 September 1926 and the remaining batch
of leaders was released from custody. At the first meeting of the
Central Board held on 2 October 1926, Sardar Kharak Singh (stilll
in jail convicted in connection with the Guru ka Bagh agitation) and
Master Tara Singh were unanimously elected president and vicepresident,
respectively. The Board, renamed at that first meeting Shiromani Gurdwara
Parbandhak Committee, assumed charge of Gurdwara management on 27
November 1926.
The Shiromani Akali Dal functioned as a well-knit party for the next
three year's under the leadership of Baba Kharak Singh, but fissures
began to appear in the wake of elections to the Shiromani Gurdwara
Parbandhak Committee in 1930. Baba Kharak Singh not only resigned
the presidentship of the Shiromani Akali Dal, but also left the party
along with Sardar Bahadur Mehtab Singh, Jathedar Kartar Singh Jhabbar
and Harbans Singh Sistani. Master Tara Singh took over as president
of the Shiromani Akali Dal and remained at the helm of Sikh affairs
for the next three decades. The question of constitutional reforms
in the country under discussion at the time prompted the two groups
to sink their differences for a while. But the next Gurdwara elections
coming off in February 1933 brought the differences to the surface
again. At the Sikh National Conference convened at Lahore on 24-25
March 1934, Baba Kharak Singh presiding, the formation of a separate
party-at first called Sikh National League and then renamed Central
Akali Dal-was announced. The Conference, while rejecting the Communal
Award as injurious to the Sikhs and to the cause of intercommunal
harmony in the country, demanded 30 per cent representation for the
Sikhs in the Punjab legislature. It exhorted the Sikhs to be ready
to make all possible sacrifices for the achievement of their political
objective and declared that the party would enlist one lakh volunteers
for this purpose. Baba Kharak Singh became president of the Central
Akali Dal, with Amar Singh, editor of the Sher-i-Punjab, as working
president and Giani Sher Singh and Harbans Singh Sistani as vice-presidents.
Among the members of the executive committee were Jaswant Singh Jhabal,
Master Mota Singh Anandpuri, Gopal Singh Sagari and Jang Bahadur Singh.
The Central Akali Dal's major concerns were safeguarding the religious
entity of the Sikhs and ensuring a political status for them in the
national setup. With the Shiromani Akali Dal it remained in constant
conflict, especially because of the latter's alignment with the Indian
National Congress. In the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee,
it formed a strong opposition block led by men of the stature of Giani
Sher Singh and Amar Singh of the Sher-i-Punjab. It controlled under
the provisions of the Gurdvaras Act some of the important Sikh shrines
such as those at Amritsar (the Golden Temple), Nankana Sahib and Muktsar.
In the 1936-37 general elections under the Government of India Act
of 1935, Central Akali Dal supported the newly formed Khalsa National
Party which had the upper hand as against the Shiromani Akali Dal.
But gradually the influence of the Central Akali Dal waned. It convened
All-India Akhand Hindustan Conference at Lahore on 6 June 1943 to
protest against the Muslim League's demand for Pakistan and the Azad
Punjab scheme sponsored by the Shiromani Akali Dal. It held an Anti-Azad
Punjab Conference at Panja Sahib
on 16 August 1943 and another Akhand Hindustan Conference at Chakval
on 15 September 1943. One of its last political acts was the submission
of a memorandum to the British Cabinet . Mission in 1946. The demands
set forth in the Memorandum included grant of complete independence
to a united India with a strong Centre and without the right for the
provinces to secede; the establishment of a special court to guarantee
and safeguard the rights of the minorities; special representation
for the Sikhs in the Constituent Assembly and in the Central legislature;
representation for the Sikhs in the Punjab legislature on an equal
footing with the Hindus and Muslims; joint electorates, with reservation
of seats for the minorities; guarantee for the protection of the religious
and cultural interests of the Sikhs and of their share in the armed
forces of the country.
The All-India Sikh League, controlled by the Central Akali Dal, passed
a resolution in its Lahore session on 4 June 1946 asking
the British Government "to fix a date for the immediate withdrawal
of British forces of occupation; to wipe out the undemocratic feudal
and semi-feudal system of Indian states and the privileged position
of the Princes; to limit the over-riding powers of the Viceroy only
to foreign policy during the period of the Interim National Government;
to purge the Cabinet Mission's proposal of the communal virus being
injected through the system of provincial grouping and representation
on communal basis; and to take immediate steps for the liquidation
of the Indian debt through the transfer of British vested interests
in finance and industry..." It further demanded that the Interim
National Government be composed of elected members of the Central
legislature and that complete sovereignty be granted to the Constituent
Assembly without reservation and limitations. No efforts were made
to revive the Central Akali Dal in Independent India. One of its principal
architects, Sardar Amar Singh of the Sher-i-Punjab, died on 9 July
1948. Baba Kharak Singh spent last sixteen years of his life in political
retirement in Delhi.
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