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Revenue minister at Lahore under two successive Mughal viceroys;
Zakariya Khan (1726-45) and Yahiya Khan (1745-47). He came of a
Hindu Khatri family of Kalanaur, in Gurdaspur district of the Punjab.
In 1736 when Zakariya Khan organized a mobile column of 10,000 to
scour the country in search of Sikhs then condemned to indiscriminate
murder and slaughter, Lakhpat Rai and Mukhlis Khan, the governor's
own nephew, were put in command of this force. The Sikhs with their
fighting force, the Buddha Dal, were driven to take refuge in the
jungles south of the Sutlej. They, however, soon struck back and
Buddha-Dal and Taruna Dal jointly fell upon Lakhpat Rai, defeating
his mobile column at Hujra Shah Muqim, near Lahore. Among the Mughal
officials killed was Lakhpat Rai's nephew, Duni Chand.
In 1736, Lakhpat Rai was deputed to proceed
to Amritsar to molest Sikhs gathering for the Divali festival permission
for holding which had been secured from the governor himself.This
caused confusion and the failure of the revered Bhai Mani Singh
to pay the stipulated amount to the Mughal satrap owing to attenuated
attendance was made an excuse for his capture and execution (AD
1737). In the eyes of the Sikhs, Lakhpat Rai was principally responsible
for Bhai Mani Singh's martyrdom.
Nadir Shah's invasion of 1739 dealt a severe
blow to the Mughal government. Light cavalry bands organized by
Zakariya Khan to suppress the Sikhs impoverished the peasantry by
their extortions as a result of which revenues dwindled and the
treasury became empty. Zakariya Khan, holding Diwan Lakhpat Rai
responsible for this financial breakdown, imprisoned him for his
failure to discharge the dues of the army. But Lakhpat's brother,
Jaspat Rai, himself an influential courtier paid a large sum from
his personal treasure and secured Lakhpat's release and reinstatement.
Lakhpat Rai continued as diwan under Yahiya Khan, when he succeeded
Zakariya Khan in 1745.
The death of his brother, Jaspat Rai, at the
hands of the Sikhs in 1746 greatly enraged him and he vowed revenge,
declaring that he would not put on his headdress, nor claim himself
to be a Khatri until he had "scourged the entire Sikh Panth."
As a first step, he had the Sikh inhabitants of Lahore rounded up
and ordered their execution. Intercession by a group of prominent
Hindu nobles led by Diwan Kaura Mall was of no avail. Lakhpat Rai
ignored the request even of his guru, Sant Jagat Bhagat Gosain,
that the killing should not be carried out at least on the Amdvas,
the last day of the dark half of the month which, falling on a Monday,
is especially sacred to the Hindus.
Executions took place as ordered on that very
day, 13 Chet 1802 Bk/10 March 1746. The angry Diwan then set out
at the head of a large force, mostly cavalry supported by cannon,
in search of the Sikhs who were reported to have taken shelter in
the swampy forest of Kahnuvan, on the right bank of River Beas,
15 km south of Gurdaspur. He also mobilized the local populace in
these operations. The besieged Sikhs put up a determined fight but
were severely outnumbered and scattered with heavy losses. They
were chased into the hills and, "to complete the revenge"
says Syad Muhammad Latif, the Muslim historian of the Punjab, "Lakhpat
Rai brought with him, 1,000 Sikhs in irons to Lahore, and having
compelled them to ride on donkeys, barebacked, paraded them in the
bazars. They were, then, taken to the horse-market, outside Delhi
Gate, and there beheaded one after another without mercy."
On this site was later raised a memorial shrine known as Shahid
Ganj.
More than seven thousand Sikhs lost their lives
at Kahnuvan (1 May 1746). In Sikh history, this devastation is referred
to as Chhota Ghallughara or Minor Massacre as distinguished from
Vadda Ghallughara or the Great Massacre that took place on 5 February
1762.
Lakhpat Rai, in order to ensure total extinction
of the Sikhs, ordered their places of worship to be destroyed and
their holy books burnt. He decreed that anyone uttering the word
guru should have his belly ripped. Considering that the word gur,
meaning jaggery, sounded like guru, he prohibited its use.
When in March 1747, Shah Nawaz Khan, brother
of Yahiya Khan and governor of Multan, occupied Lahore, he imprisoned
Yahiya Khan and Lakhpat Rai, but Ahmad Shah Durrani who seized Lahore
in January 1748 set up a local government in the Punjab, with Jalhe
Khan as governor and Lakhpat Rai as his diwan. The Durrani, defeated
by the Mughals in the battle of Manupur on 11 March 1748, beat a
hasty retreat to his own country, and Win ul Mulk, commonly known
as Mir Mannu, became the governor of Lahore.
Mir Mannu imprisoned Jalhe Khan and Lakhpat
Rai and appointed Kaura Mall his deputy and diwan. He demanded from
Lakhpat Rai an indemnity of three lakh rupees which he was not able
to pay. Diwan Kaura Mall, who had opposed Lakhpat Rai's repressive
policy towards the Sikhs in 1746, now offered to make up the balance
provided the prisoner was handed over to him. Mir Mannu agreed and
transferred charge of Lakhpat Rai to Kaura Mall, who gave him into
the custody of the Dal Khalsa. He was thrown into a dungeon where
he died a miserable death after six months of indignity and torture
(1748).
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