Darshan Singh was born
at the village of Pheruman, in present-day Amritsar district, on
1 August 1885. His father's name was Chandi Singh and his mother's
Raj Kaur.
After passing his high school examination, he
joined in 1912 the Indian army as a sepoy. Two years later, he resigned
from the army and set up as a contractor at Hissar. He was doing
well as a contractor, when a taunt from his mother, who was deeply
religious, led him to give up his business and plunge into the Akili
movement for the reform of Gurdwara management.
In 1921, he was arrested in the morcha launched by Sikhs for recovering
from the British deputy commissioner of Amritsar keys of the Golden
Temple treasury he had seized, and was imprisoned for one year.
In December 1924, he led the 14th Shahidi jatha
to jaito, and was jailed for ten months. He also took part in the
non-cooperation movement launched by the Indian National Congress,
serving a 14-month term in jail.
In 1926, he visited Malaya where he was detained
by the British on the basis of his political record in India. While
in jail, he went on a fast in protest against the orders forbidding
the wearing of kachha or drawers, one of the five symbols of Khalsa
discipline. He continued the fast for 21 days, ending it only when
he had won his point.
Returning home, Darshan Singh joined the Civil
Disobedience movement and courted imprisonment thrice. He took part
in the Quit India campaign during the Second World War.
For a number of years, he was a member of the
Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee and its general secretary
for two terms. He was elected a member of the Rajya Sabha as a nominee
of the Indian National Congress and retained his seat up to 1964.
In 1959, he severed his connection with the Congress and joined
the Swatantra Party of which he was one of the founders.
In August 1969, Darshan Singh resolved to lay
down his life to atone for what he termed as resilement on the part
of some of the Sikh leaders from the solemn pledges they had taken
at Sri Akal Takht and to have their default in not being able to
secure the inclusion of Chandigarh and some other areas in the newly-demarcated
Punjab redeemed. So determined, he went on a fast unto death inside
the Central Jail at Amritsar on 15 August. He stuck to his vow and
stubbornly refused to have any nourishment until his demand for
the amalgamation with the Punjab of the Punjabi-speaking areas kept
out of the new Punjab was conceded. On 27 October 1969, which was
the 74th day of his fasting, he died. For the supreme sacrifice
he thus made to rewrite the sanctity of a Sikh's plighted word,
his name is honoured among the martyrs of the Sikh faith.
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