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Was born in 1872 at the village of Saidpur in Kapurthala district
of the Punjab. His father, Bhai Deva Singh and grandfather, Panjab
Singh were in their day celebrated ragis or musicians who recited
Sikh kirtan to the accompaniment of saranda, a stringed instrument.
Javala Singh excelled at taus, another stringed instrument, and
at harmonium. He had at his command such an abundance of traditional
and classical tunes, composition of some of which was traced back
to the times of the Gurus themselves, that he did not have to repeat
a tune even when singing for weeks on end. He possessed a vast treasure
of dhunis or tunes, partals, ritis or musical styles and traditional
compositions.
Bhai Javala Singh learnt to read Punjabi from
Baba Pala Singh, a granthi, or scripturereader, in his own village.
Then he was sent to the Nirmala dera or monastery at the village
of Sekhvati, in Firozpur district, and put under the charge of Baba
Sardha Singh, who taught him music. At the dera, he also studied
the religious texts. For further training in music, Baba Sardha
Singh sent him to Amritsar to be under the tutelage of another maestro,
Baba Vasava Singh, popularly known as Baba Rangi Ram Singh. After
completing his course at Amritsar, Javala Singh returned to his
village, Saidpur.
Gradually he made his mark as a leading Sikh
musician who was much in demand for performing kirtan at congregations
at far-flung places. He subscribed to the Singh Sabha ideology which
he zealously preached and, when the Akali movement for the reformation
of Gurdwara management got underway, he jumped into it with equal
enthusiasm. He courted arrest in the agitation for recovering the
keys of the Golden Temple treasury taken away by the British deputy
commissioner of Amritsar and in the Jaito morcha as a member of
the first jatha or band of protesting volunteers as well as of the
last.
He was present at the cremation of the Nankana
Sahib martyrs (1921) and, with the holy precincts reeking of blood,
he most movingly recited, sitting by the side of the heap of corpses,
Guru Nanak's hymn: "khun ke sohile gaviahi Nanak ratu ka kungu
pai ve lalo - Paens to blood are being sung, says Nanak (such are
the times), and the saffron of blood is now the adornment, O Lalo!"
Javala Singh presided over the first all India
Ragis Conference held at Amritsar in 1942. He died on 29 May 1952
at his village Saidpur.
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