PEOPLE
This section provides a list of important and prominent figures from Anglo-Sikh History which have been listed in alphabetical order, according to ethnicity and time period.


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Harchand Singh Laungoval, Sant

Political Sikh Figure (1932-1985)


A holy man of shy habits who became in the course of years a vital political figure in the annals of modern Sikhism. He was born on 2 January 1932, the son of Mansa Singh and Karam Kaur, a couple of modest means living in Gidariani, a village then in the princely state of Patiala but now a part of Sangrur district in the Punjab. At the age of five, Harchand Singh started attending the local gurdwara school, but soon transferred himself to the seminary at Maujo close by. There, under the tutelage of Sant Jodh Singh, he studied Sikh theology and Sikh texts and practised Sikh music. Although his active participation in political matters was to commence much later, the seed had been sown by his religious mentor Sant Jodh Singh, who as a member of the Akali Dal took interest in current Sikh affairs.

Leaving Maujo at the age of 21, Harchand Singh served as a granthi, scripture-reader and custodian at the village gurdwara at Kiron Kalan, moving the following year to Laungoval, a small town 16 km southwest of Sangrur. There he rasied a gurdwara in memory of the celebrated eighteenth-century Sikh scholarly personage and martyr, Bhai Mani Singh, who was a native of Kaimboval village, then a ruined mound. In 1962,

Harchand Singh was named jathedar or head of the shrine at Damdama Sahib (Talvandi Sabo) but he carried to the new station the word "Laungoval" which had got permanently suffixed to his name. In June 1964 he led out a jatha or band of Akali volunteers to Paonta Sahib, in Himachal Pradesh. This was the beginning of a dramatic political career. In 1965, he became the president of the Akali Jatha of Sangrur district and a member of the working committee of the Shiromani Akali Dal. In the mid-term poll held in 1969, he was elected, as a nominee of the Shiromani Akali Dal, to the Punjab Legislative Assembly, defeating the Congress heavyweight, Babu Brish Bhan, who had been chief minister of Patiala and East Punjab States Union. In the 1977 general elections in the country he was given the Akali nomination for Parliament from a constituency in the Punjab, but he declined the offer which enhanced his political reputation and stature. In 1975 when he was the acting president of the Shiromani Akali Dal, he was called upon to run the agitation against the national emergency clamped down upon the country by the prime minister Indira Gandhi in 1975 extinguishing all civil liberties. As the emergency was lifted in 1977, Hachand Singh retired from active politics, but was recalled in 1980, this time to take up the reins of the Shiromani Akali Dal as its president.

His presidentship of the party was a period of extreme turmoil and trial for the Sikhs. The worst came when the army was ordered by the prime minister into the Golden Temple premises and the holy shrines suffered attack and desecration. The assassination of prime minister Indira Gandhi by two of her Sikh security staff on 31 October 1984 brought in its wake heavy reprisals for the Sikhs. However, the general elections of January 1985 saw the Sikhs busily involved in electioneering. Sikhs who had been in an angry mood and had felt totally disenchanted since the army's attack on their sacred shrines were drawn into the political arena once again.

Then followed the signing of an accord between the new prime minister of India, Rajiv Gandhi, and the president of the Shiromani Akali Dal, Sant Harchand Singh Laungoval. But before the process had come full circle, the Sant was shot by an unidentified young man presumed to be an extremist Sikh youth. This happened on 20 August 1985 at the gurdwara in Sherpur, not far from Laungoval.









 


Source: Encyclopaedia of Sikhism, Harbans Singh




 
 
 

 

 
 
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