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To his followers 'Guru' Hari Singh, was
the younger brother of Baba Ram Singh, founder of the Namdhari or
Kuka movement. He was born in September 1819, the son of Bhai Jassa
Singh and Mali Sada Kaur of Rilpur Raian (now Bhaini Sahib) in Ludhiana
district.
He lived the life of a householder in his native
village untill the time his elder brother, on the Baisakhi day of
1857, formally declared himself to be the initiator of the Namdhari
movement. Buddh Singh was among the first batch of disciples to
be initiated by Baba Ram Singh, and he undertook the responsibility
of looking after the ever-increasing stream of devotees who flocked
to Bhaini Sahib to have a glimpse of the new leader and to receive
'nam' or initiation into the new sect.
Baba Ram Singh had no male offspring. Therefore
when he was seized by police on 18 January 1872 for transportation
to Burma, Baba Buddh Singh took over the reins of the nascent community
as its caretaker religious head. It was during 1874 that one Darbara
Singh, a Kuka devotee, met Baba Ram Singh at Rangoon and brought
from there the latter's hukamnama orwritten order formally nominating
Buddh Singh as the successor his and renaming him Hari Singh.
With the ruthless suppression by the British
of the Namdharis, banishment of Baba Ram Singh, and posting of a
police picket at Bhaini Sahib, the movements of Baba Buddh Singh
(Hari Singh) were restricted to the village itself. While this limited
active religious preaching by him, he did not abandon the anti-British
policies and programme of his predecessor.
The boycott of British goods, courts and educational
institutions by Kukas continued and contacts with the rulers of
Kashmir and Nepal, already established, were maintained. These contacts
had not been fruitful because the British were too powerful for
these insignificant local states to be partners in any plot against
them or to permit any anti-British activity within their territories.
However, a new situation was developing across
the northwestern borders of India of which Baba Buddh Singh decided
to take full advantage. Europe's sleeping giant, Russia, had risen
from a long slumber and was stretching its limbs to the West and
the East. After her ambitions in the West had been frustrated by
her defeat at the hands of the British in the Crimean War (1854-56),
Russia diverted her attention to Central Asia. Bokhara became a
dependency of Russia in 1866, Samarkand was acquired in 1868, followed
by Khiva in 1873. A new province of Russian Turkistan bordering
on Afghanistan was formed and a Russian base established at Tashkent.
British involvement in the second Anglo Afghan
war from 1878 onwards brought the British face to face with their
strong rival, Russia. Baba Buddh Singh deputed Suba Gurcharan Singh,
a Kuka preacher who knew Pashto and Persian, to contact the Russians.
It is not known how many times and with what success Gurcharan Singh
visited the Russians, but a letter from a British spy, Gulab Khan,
confirms his return from Central Asia to Afghanistan on 1 May 1879,
and his being honoured by the Russians during a subsequent visit
on 1 October 1879. He was told on this latter occasion "to
return to the Punjab and strengthen the friendship between the Russians
and the Kukas." A later statement of the spy mentions that
"on 9 April 1880 Gurcharan Singh sent another letter to Samarkand...
This was from Baba Ram Singh, but in the handwriting of his younger
brother (Baba Buddh Singh alias Hari Singh)." Gulab Khan, the
spy, met Gurcharan Singh at Peshawar and won his confidence posing
as a Russian secret agent and got from him two letters for Russian
officers which he made over to the Commissioner of Peshawar. Gurcharan
Singh, however, was not arrested there and was allowed to return
to Bhaini Sahib, in India, and was ultimately apprehended at his
native village Chakk Pirana (or Chakk Ramdas) in Sialkot district.
Gulab Khan also met Baba Buddh Singh on 3 January 1881 and won the
latter's full confidence.
The detention of Gurcharan Singh did not dampen
the Baba's enthusiasm for secret negotiations with the Russians.
These continued through another Kuka missionary, Suba Bishan Singh.
Upon the arrival of Maharaja Duleep Singh in Russia in 1887, Bishan
Singh met him and the two together made up plans to secure Russian
support for invading the Punjab. The invasion, however, never took
place, and Baba Buddh Singh's plans aborted.
From 1890 onwards, Baba Buddh Singh diverted
his attention to preaching Namdhari doctrines and consolidating
the Kuka movement in the Punjab. He died at Bhaini Sahib on Saturday,
Jeth vadi 10, 1963 Bk/19 May 1906.
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