A front of the Sikh youth studying in schools,
colleges and universities formed in 1944, at Lahore, with Sarup
Singh, then a senior law student, as president. Its primary object
was the promotion among the Sikh youth of the Sikh principles and
values and to bring to them a living consciousness of their religious
inheritance. The search was for the authentic Sikh personality and
to this end all of their conscious energy and formulations were
then directed. After the partition of India in 1947 the Federation
shifted from Lahore and made its home in Amritsar.
Before the Federation carne into being, there existed Bhujafigi
Sabhas, societies of the Sikh youth, in schools to nurture Sikh
ideals. Most of the Sikh schools had their Bhujangi Sabhas. The
origin was traced to 1888 when the first Sikh Vidyarthi Sabhas or
Khalsa Clubs came into existence. These were the product of the
new religious and cultural awakening the Sikhs were then experiencing.
They had started questioning and cavilling at some of the prevalent
-practices which were considered contrary to the teachings of the
Gurus. The Sabhas met every Saturday after which members went to
the Harimandar Sahib chanting the holy shabads. Another nomenclature
then gaining the vogue was Sikh Youngmen's Association. The first
President of the Association was Bhai Harnam Singh, a graduate of
the Panjab University who later took a doctorate at London. The
Association started publishing in 1905 a quarterly journal named
Khalsa Youngmen's Magazine. It also sponsored tracts on religious
and social topics.
The Sikhs entered the modern phase of their educational enterprise
with the founding of that magnificent complex at Amritsar which
went by the name of Khalsa College. In the line of distinguished
men who led the movement were some of the British principals of
the institution. The most popular among them was Mr. G.A. Wathen
who initiated Coats Off Movement, encouraging students to participate
in manual work on behalf of the college. That massive programme
of labour of the two hands the youth willingly volunteered to join.
Among them was that strappingly handsome youth, S. Pratab, of the
village of Narangval, in Ludhiana district, then reading at the
Khalsa College. He was born son of Col Hira Singh on 1 June 1896
at the far-away capital of the princely state of Rewa where the
latter had been, in his day, like his father, Rai Bahadur Capt Hazura
Singh, commander of the state infantry. After his education at the
Khalsa College, S. Pratab proceeded to Great Britain where he qualified
for service on the railways, but. he chose to be in the Indian Civil
Service. After his stints at Simla, Delhi and Lahore, he steered
past the toughest challenge of his life - Gurdwara Shahidganj agitation
- smoothly. He dealt with the highly combustible situation with
extraordinary coolness of mind.
The Sikh Students Federation came into being as such in the forties
of the twentieth century. The purpose mainly was to stimulate Sikh
thought and ideals among the youth and to counteract the corrosive
influence of Muslim and other groups which were forcing their identity
issue rather obstreperously. The response of the Sikhs lay in energizing
their own body-politic.
With the independence of India drawing close began the more dynamic
phase of the Federation. The sphere of its activities widened. Sikh
youth camps became the order of the day. Young men and old and tried
leaders joined in enthusiastically, committed to carrying them through
in their training in Sikh lore and scholarly discipline. The series
was weighed in with the camp at Paonta Sahib which ranked as historic.
Even the senior Sikh politicians of the day considered it a privilege
to join and address these camps. Much intellectual novelty flowed
from the discussions and lectures at these camps. The Sikh Panth
felt. the glow of a new life process through these camps and their
influence which indeed was widespread and many-sided. The youth
took to their work with a new zeal which brought to the Panth a
completely fresh image of its future and destiny. Many new names
sprang up on the Sikh horizon, and older men were filled with a
new eagerness for action.
The camps became very popular and brought a new dimension to Sikh
life. Many Sikhs from among the older generation came forward. Famous
among them was Hukam Singh, jurist and parliamentarian, whose photographs
can still be seen bathing in the knee-deep waters of the Yamuna.
Hukam Singh was followed by a series of brilliant. youth leaders
such as Surjit Singh Barnala, Amar Singh Ambalvi, Jaswant Singh
Neki, Gurmeet Singh, Satbir Singh, Bhai Harbans Lal and Santokh
Singh of Indore. There were many others who had made themselves
famous in their respective spheres. In fact, there is hardly a Sikh
of any eminence who had not been touched by the Federation and its
ideology. Men like India's fabulous finance minister Manmohan Singh
were no exception. Another name that became a legend was that of
Bhai Amrik Singh (1948-84), son of Giani Kartar Singh Khalsa, who
was elected president on 2 July 1978. He remained its president
even during his internment from July 1982 to August 1983 and thereafter
until his death during Operation Blue Star in June 1984. This was
a glorious period of Sikh youth resurgence and the Sikh youth found
themselves profoundly moved. This was a momentous experience for
the entire body of the Sikh youth and its impact lasts to this day.
A permanent. ambition of one of the senior members of the Federation
who is internationally famous in his profession is to write a history
of the Federation.
Apart from this political orientation the Sikh youth received from
this experience a fresh religious leaven. This way they felt quickened
to a new pace of life.
Morning and evening religious services took place at. these camps
regularly. Prayers constantly mingled with the murmur of the river
water. Guru ka Langar was always ready to be served. The same regimen
of prayer and meditation was repeated in the evening.
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