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A Muslim divine whose real name was Badr
ud-Din and who was an admirer of Guru Gobind Singh, was born on 13
June 1647 in a prosperous Sayyid family of Sadhaura, in presentday
Ambala district of Haryana. Because of his simplicity and silent nature
during his early childhood he was given the nickname of Buddhu (lit.
simpleton) which stuck to him permanently. He was married at the age
of 18 to a pious lady, Nasiran, who was the sister of Said Khan, later
a high-ranking officer in the Mughal army.
It is not certain how Buddhu Shah first became
acquainted with Guru Gobind Singh, but it is recorded that he called
on him in 1685 at Paonta, on the bank of the Yamuna. At his recommendation,
the Guru engaged 500 Pathan soldiers under the command of four leaders,
Kale Khan, Bhikhan Khan, Nijabat Khan and Hayat Khan. In 1688, when
Guru Gobind Singh was attacked by a combined force of the hill chiefs,
led by Raja Fateh Shah of Srinagar (Garhval), all the Pathans with
the exception of Kale Khan deserted him and joined the hill monarch.
The Guru conveyed the news of the treachery
to Pir Buddhu Shah, who immediately rushed to Bhangani, the battlefield,
with 700 of his followers, including his brother and four sons.
Many of the Pir's disciples as well as two of his sons, Ashraf and
Muhammad Shah, and his brother, Bhure Shih, fell in the action.
After the battle Guru Gobind Singh offered rich
presents to the Pir which the latter politely declined to accept.
However he, as the tradition goes, begged the Guru to bestow upon
him the comb from his hair and the turban he was going to tie. The
Guru gave him the two articles and a small kirpan or sword which
the Pir and his descendants kept in the family as sacred heirlooms
until Maharaja Bharpur Singh of Nabha (1840-63) acquired them in
exchange for a jagir or land grant. The relics are still preserved
in the family's palace at Nabha (in the Punjab).
The Rajput chiefs defeated at Bhangani remained hostile towards
Guru Gobind Singh, and wished to evict him from Anandpur to where
he had returned. To solicit help from the imperial government, they
sent to the emperor reports describing the Guru as a dangerous rebel.
Complaints also reached the authority against Pir Buddhu Shah who
had rendered assistance to the Guru. The faujdar of Sirhind, under
whose jurisdiction the parganah of Sadhaura then fell, directed
a local official, 'Usman Khan, to chastise the Pir. The latter marched
on Sadhaura, arrested Buddhu Shah and had him executed-on 21 March
1704.
Banda Singh Bahadur avenged the Pir's execution
in 1709 by storming Sadhaura and killing 'Usman Khan. Pir Buddhu
Shah's descendants migrated to Pakistan in 1947. Their ancestral
house in Sadhaura has since been converted into a gurdwara named
after Pir Buddhu Shah.
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