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Was born on 4 April 1885, the son of Lakhmir Singh Kamboj and Ram
Kaur, of the village of Bahoru, 12 km south of Amritsar. The family
later moved to the canal colony in Sheikhupura district where they
founded a new village, Chakk No. 18 Bahoru. Having completed his
early education in Bahoru and in Shahkot, district Sheikhupura,
Sundar Singh took his B.A. (Honours) degree at Khalsa College, Amritsar,
and his B.T. at Government Training College, Lahore.
In 1908, he joined Master Tara Singh, the future
Akali supremo, to teach at Khalsa High School, Lyallpur, on an honorarium
of barely 15 rupees a month. Later he served successively at Khalsa
High School at Chakk No. 41 and at Sangla.
What brought Master Sundar Singh Lyallpuri into
politics was his contact with Sardar Harchand Singh of Lyallpur,
active in the nationalist movement. In 1908, the Punjab Government
changed the constitution of the governing body of the Khalsa College,
Amritsar, in order to ensure firmer control over the affairs of
the college. Master Sundar Singh published, in July 1909, a strongly-worded
pamphlet entitled Ki Khalsa College Sikkha Da Hai ? ( "Does
the Khalsa College belong to the Sikhs?" ). He argued therein
that the British intended to rob the Sikhs of their college as they
had, by a grave breach of faith, previously swallowed up their kingdom.
He also castigated Sundar Singh Majithia, the secretary of the Khalsa
College Council, for having brooked official interference. The same
year, he started publication from Lyallpur of a Punjabi newspaper,
Sachcha Dhandora ( "The True Proclamation" ). According
to a report from the then Assistant Director of Criminal Intelligence,
dated 11 August 1911, it printed "largely echoes of the violently
nationalistic writings which were then appearing in the Punjab press
and which culminated in a series of press prosecutions during 1909-10."
Sachcha Dhandora too fell a victim to prosecution and suppression.
Sundar Singh was also in the forefront of the agitation against
the demolition of a wall of Gurdwara Rikabganj to suit the government's
construction plans in New Delhi.
To promote the cause of Gurdwara reform, Master
Sundar Singh launched from Lahore on 21 May 1920 a daily newspaper,
the Akali. The main objectives announced by the Akali were democratic
control of Sikh shrines and of the Khalsa College, reconstruction
of the demolished wall of Gurdwara Rikabganj, political and national
awakening among the Sikh masses, and the establishment. of a representative
Sikh body based on democratic principles. Sohan Singh Josh, Akali
Morchian di Itihas, describes Master Sundar Singh as "the life
and soul of the Akali. " In July 1922, Akali was amalgamated
with Pradesi Khalsa and published as Akali te Pradesi from Amritsar.
Master Sundar Singh was arrested on 26 November 1921 at Ajnala during
the agitation for the restoration to the Sikhs of the keys of the
Golden Temple treasury and was sentenced to six months' imprisonment
with a fine of 4,000 rupees. However, he did not support the agitation
launched by the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak. Committee in 1923
for the reinstatement of the deposed Maharaja of Nabha. He was of
the view that it would not be correct for the Shiromani Committee
which was a religious body to involve itself in politics and that
the Nabha question had better be dealt. with by the Central Sikh
League. Master Sundar Singh was among the Akali detenues who refused
to accept release from jail on the condition that they would implement
the Sikh Gurdwaras Act of 1925.
Besides his articles in his newspaper, Master
Sundar Singh published tracts on burning topics of the day in which
he also made use of his poetic talent. The topics covered varied
from the lives of the Gurus to the evil of drinking and scenes from
Guru ka Bagh agitation. In 1924, he restarted the Akali, this time
in Urdu, from Lahore, and launched the Hindustan Times from Delhi,
but they did not long survive his arrest soon after they had made
their appearance. The Guru Khasa, Daler Khalsa, Melu, Kundan and
Navan Yug were some of the other papers he started, but none of
them lived long. Sundar Singh tried his hand at business and set
up a shop in Bombay, but it had to be closed down within two years.
After Independence, he was awarded a pension and allotted some land
in Hissar district. He died at. his new home on 5 January 1969.
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