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Originally named Sikh Desh Bhagat Parivar
Sahaik Committee, to help the families of patriots, was set up in
October 1920 under the chairmanship of Baba Vasakha Singh, a Ghadr
revolutionary who had been sentenced to transportation for life, but
was released from the Cellular Jail, Andamans, on medical grounds
in 1920. He reached his village, Dadehar in Amritsar district on 14
April 1920, and almost immediately started preparing lists of families
of other patriots who had been with him in the Andamans. As his poor
health did not allow him to travel, he contacted those families through
his younger brother, Magghar Singh, and communicated to them the news
of their relatives in detention. He was deeply touched to hear stories
of the hardships of these families, which had not only been deprived
of their bread-earners, but also had their properties confiscated.
He also gathered mailing addresses of many other families in similar
straits.
In October 1920, the Central Sikh League held
its second annual session in Bradlaugh Hall, Lahore. It had invited
some released freedom fighters to the session in order to honour
them. Baba Vasakha Singh was one of them. From the pulpit of the
Sikh League he made a fervent appeal, seeking help for the families
in distress. At his suggestion, the League resolved to set up to
this end Desh Bhagat Parivar Sahaik Committee. Baba Vasakha Singh
was unanimously chosen to be its chairman, an office he held throughout
its life. The aims and objects of the Committee were:
1. To provide economic assistance to needy families
of the patriots;
2. To look after the education and upbringing
of their children;
3. To visit detained patriots to convey to them
news of their families and to bring to the families news from them;
4. To create public opinion in order to press for release of political
prisoners; and
5. To defend political prisoners in courts of
law.
Baba Vasakha Singh and other members of the
committee made a tour collecting information about those detained
in jails for their political views or activities and acquainting
themselves with their problems which they brought to the notice
of the people through their press statements and public speeches.
The committee also raised a fund to aid the
families of detainees. Baba Vasakha Singh toured the entire country
and also went abroad to Burma, Singapore, Hongkong, Shanghai and
other places in South East Asia to collect donations. Donations
also began to flow from western. countries into the committee's
office set up in a hired building near the Darbar Sahib, in Amritsar.
Up to 1930, the committee's efforts were primarily
directed to meetings with political prisoners and to providing financial
assistance to their families. The second phase began when it started
mounting pressure for the release of political prisoners who had
already spent many long years in jails. By this time Baba Vasakha
Singh had also begun his work in the Kirti-Kisan (workers and peasants)
movement which the government distrusted because of its leftist
leanings and involvement.
The committee's sphere of activity extended
to ensuring the welfare of the families of those taken prisoners
in the Kirti-Kisan campaign. On the outbreak of World War II the
offices of the Desh Bhagat Parivar Sahaik Committee was raided by
police and the records seized.
After independence in 1947, when most
of the political prisoners were released by the new government,
the committee remained dormant until 1952 when it was reactivated
in Jalandhar to raise funds for a memorial in honour of the patriots.
In 1955, the Desh Bhagat Parivar Sahaik Committee was amalgamated
with the newly formed Desh Bhagat Yadgar Committee.
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