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Founded in 1914. The moving spirit behind it was Bhai Mahitab Singh
Bir, whose father, Maulawi Karim Bakhsh had, along with his children,
embraced Sikhism in June 1903 and become famous as Sant Lakhmir
Singh. Bhai Mahitab Singh convened a meeting of the Sikhs from backward
classes in 1914 in Bhai Dasaundha Singh's dharamsala near Sri Darbar
Sahib, Amritsar, at which it was resolved to establish a society
called Khalsa Baradari with the object of preaching Sikh tenets
among them, bring them into the Khalsa fold by administering to
them the rites of amrit and reforming their social customs such
as the giving of dowry and ostentatious display at weddings.
Ishar Singh of Sarhala Qazidh, Jalandhar district,
was chosen president and Mahitab Singh general secretary. Besides
the central office in Amritsar, branches of Khalsa Baradari were
opened at several places in the districts of Amritsar, Lahore, Sialkot
and Sheikh ftpura. Bhai Mahitab Singh also launched a weekly journal
in Punjabi, the Bir, to promote the interests of the Baradari and
to campaign especially against caste and untouchability.
On 11 and 12 October 1920, the Khalsa Baradari
held a big religious gathering in the Jallianvala Bagh at Amritsar
which was attended by some professors of the Khalsa College. Elixir
of the Khalsa was administered to a large number of Mazhabi and
Ramdasia Sikhs. At the end of the ceremonies on 12 October the congregation
proceeded to the Darbar Sahib where the newly initiated Sikhs were
to make offering of karah prasad, the Sikh sacrament, for distribution
among the sangat. The priests of the Darbar Sahib refused to accept
the karah prasad and recite ardas on their behalf. Protest was raised
against this discrimination towards Sikhs from certain castes. A
compromise was at last reached and it was decided that the Guru's
word be sought. The Guru Granth Sahib was, as is the custom, opened
and the first verse on the page to be read was:
"He receiveth
the meritless (lowly) into grace, and puts them in the path of righteous
service..." (GG, 638). The Guru's verdict was clearly
in favour of those whom the clergy would not accept as full members
of the community. The group thereafter marched to the Akal Takht
to offer prayers, but found that the priests had disappeared, leaving
the shrine unattended. The reformist Sikhs, Bhai Kartar Singh Jhabbar
and Bhai Teja Singh Bhuchchar, filled the gap and a committee consisting
of 25 Sikhs including a few members of the backward classes was
formed to take over control of the Akal Takht. In this way the Khalsa
Baradari indirectly heralded the Gurdwara Reform movement for wresting
control of Sikh shrines from the hands of the conservative and effete
priestly order, securing at the same time recognition for the so-called
low-caste Sikhs as equal members of the community.
During 1939-41, Khalsa Baradari organized a
series of conferences urging members of the backward classes to
enlist themselves as Sikhs at the ensuing census (1941) and demanding
reservation of seats for them in the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak
Committee, a representative body of the Sikhs for managing Sikh
shrines. It also demanded enrolment of Mazhabi and Ramdasia Sikhs
in the armed forces. With most of its demands conceded in course
of time, the Baradari became redundant. It virtually ceased to exist
after the death in 1960 of its founder, Bhai Mahitab Singh Bir.
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