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He was master of many-sided
learning. Besides Sikh theology, he was vastly learned in philosophy,
history and literature. He was born into a farming family, at the
village Chakk in Ludhiana district on 2 March 1909. His father's
name was Didar Singh. Sirdar Kapur Singh received his Master's degree,
first class first, at the prestigious Government College, Lahore,
after which he went to Cambridge to take his Tripos in Moral Sciences.
He was a distinguished linguist and had mastered several of the
languages of the east and the west. Besides English which he could
spin around his fingers with extraordinary subtlety and finesse,
he had facility in Persian and Arabic as well as in Sanskrit.
In addition to these, he claimed easy acquaintance
with such discrete fields as astrology, architecture and space science.
In spite of his knowledge covering many disparate areas, Sirdar
Kapur Singh's principal focus was Sikh literature and theology.
He was a stickler for accuracy of fact and presentation. He stood
up foursquare to any misrepresentation or falsification of any shade
of Sikh thought and belief. He was most vigilant and unbending in
this respect.
He was selected into the Indian Civil Service
and served in various administrative posts in the cadre. In 1947,
he was appointed deputy commissioner of Kahgra. He was particularly
irked by the growing narrow politics of the government biased against
the Sikhs. What incensed him most was a circular letter dated 10
October 1947, issued by the state governor, Chandu Lal Trivedi,
warning district authorities in the Punjab against what was described
as the criminal tendencies of the Sikh people. Kapur Singh filed
a strong protest against this utterly wild accusation. He thereby
invited the governor's wrath. Charges were brought against him which
led to his dismissal from the service.
Sirdar Kapur Singh became an ardent supporter
of the Akali demand for a Punjabi speaking state. After a brief
stint as Professor of Sikhism under the authority of the Akal Takht,
he joined active politics. In 1962, he was elected to the lower
house of Indian Parliament and a member of the Punjab Vidhan Sabha
(State Legislative Assembly) in 1969. He was forthright in speech
and an unrelenting critic of government's policies where they crossed
the path of the Sikhs. As a Sikh ideologue he was the moving spirit
behind the Anandpur Sahib resolution adopted by the Shiromani Akali
Dal in 1973, which like several other of his pronouncements became
a crucial enunciation of modern Sikh political formula and policy.
A very stirring Sikh document of the modern
period was the Presidential address given at Hari Singh Nalva conference
convened at Ludhiana on 14 July, 1965. Although it was nowhere specified,
all important Sikh political or intrinsically scholarly documents
of this period bear the imprint of Kapur Singh's penmanship. In
sonorous phrase, the conference resolution said:
1. This Conference in commemoration of General
Hari Singh Nalwa of historical fame reminds all concerned that the
Sikh people are makers of history and are conscious of their political
destiny in a free India.
2. This Conference recalls that the Sikh people
agreed to merge in a common Indian nationality on the explicit understanding
of being accorded a constitutional status of co-sharers in the community,
which solemn understanding now stands cynically repudiated by the
present rulers of India. Further, the Sikh people have been systematically
reduced to a sub-political status in their homeland, the Punjab,
and to an insignificant position in their motherland, India. The
Sikhs are in a position to establish before an impartial international
tribunal, uninfluenced by the present Indian rulers, that the law,
the judicial process, and the executive action of the State of India
is consistently and heavily weighted against the Sikhs and is administered
with unbandaged eyes against Sikh citizens.
3. This Conference, therefore, resolves, after
careful thought, that there is left no alternative for the Sikhs
in the interest of self-preservation but to frame their political
demand for securing a self-determined political status within the
Republic of Union of India.
The author's name is not mentioned here, but
it is clearly the handiwork of Sirdar Kapur Singh. The Shiromani
Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee's publication at the time of the Nirankari
attack on the Sikhs is described thus:
THEY MASSACRE SIKHS
A White Paper by
Sikh Religious Parliament
(Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee)
Sirdar Kapur Singh, besides being an extraordinarily
learned man, was a prolific writer. In addition to his Parasarprasna,
in English, which ranks as a classic on Sikh philosophy, his other
works include Hashish (Punjabi poems), Saptasring (Punjabi biographies),
Bahu Vistar (Punjabi essays), Pundrik (Punjabi essays on culture
and religion), Mansur-al-Hallaj (monograph on a Sufi saint), Sachi
Sakhi (memoirs), Sacred Writings of the Sikhs (a UNESCO publication),
Me Judice (English miscellany), Sikhism for Modern Man, Contributions
of Guru Nanak, The Hour of Sword, and Guru Ai jun and His Sukhmani.
Sirdar Kapur Singh died after a protracted illness
at his village home in Jagraon in Ludhiana district on 13 August
1986.
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