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Was the younger son
of Raja Surat Singh (D. 1881). He was born on 17 February 1872 at
Majitha (31°-38'N, 74"-52'E), a village 18 km northeast
o£ Amritsar (hence the surname Majithia). He was educated
at Government School, Amritsar, and Aitchison College, Lahore, finally
joining Government College, Lahore, to pass the intermediate (undergraduate)
examination. Soon after leaving college, he joined Sri Guru Singh
Sabha, Amritsar, affiliated to the Khalsa Diwan, Amritsar, taking
over as its secretary in 1894. In. 1895, he became a member of the
governing council of the Khalsa College, Amritsar, for the establishment
of which he had worked with unsparing energy. He was the secretary
of the college council from 1902 to 1912 and president of the council
as well as of the college managing committee from 1920 till his
death in 1941. Sundar Singh was a founder-member of the Chief Khalsa
Diwan, established in October 1902, holding the office of secretary
from 1902 to 1920 and again from 1934 to 1937. In 1932-33, he acted
as the president of the Diwan. He took a leading part in the founding
of the Sikh Educational Conference in 1908, and presided at its
annual sessions in 1911, 1924 and 1935. He also inaugurated Khalsa
Advocate, an English monthly, to propagate the policy and activities
of the Chief Khalsa Diwan.
Sardar Sundar Singh's political career began
in 1909 when he was nominated a member of the Viceroy's Legislative
Council. In the Council he worked assiduously to steer the Anand
Marriage Bill which had been introduced by Tikka Ripudaman Singh
of Nabha during his tenure as a member. He was mainly instrumental
in having the ban on the carrying of a full-sized kripan or sword
by Sikhs as their religious emblem lifted throughout India and Burma
and in having a 20 per cent share for Sikhs reserved in government
services in the Punjab. On 16 November 1920, he was elected the
first president of the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee which
office he resigned early during the following year after his election
to the Punjab Legislative Council and appointment as an executive
councillor and revenue minister in the Punjab Government. At the
time of the Round Table Conference, he led a Sikh deputation which
met the Commander-in-chief on 8 July 1931 and the Viceroy on 9 July
1931 to present a charter of 17 demands on behalf of the Sikhs to
secure protection for them as a minority.
During the first legislative elections held
in 1936 under the Government of India Act 1935, Sundar Singh was
elected to the Punjab Legislative Assembly from Batala constituency
on the nomination of the Kalsa National Party which he and SirJogendra
Singh had founded, and joined, on 1 April 1937, the Unionist Coalition
government in the Punjab under the premiership of Sir Sikandar Hayat
Khan as revenue minister. He retained his Cabinet seat until his
death at Lahore shortly after the midnight of 1-2 April 1941. The
cremation took place at Amritsar on the premises of his permanent
residence.
Sundar Singh's field of activities extended
to commerce and industry as well. He was one of the founders of
the Punjab and Sind Bank established at Amritsar in 1908. He was
one of the pioneers of sugar industry in India and set up in 1911
a mill at Sardarnagar, in Gorakhpur district of Uttar Pradesh. He
was nominated one of the governors of the Imperial Bank of India
in 1933. In politics, Sundar Singh was essentially a moderate, and
he received from the British Government several honours and awards.
He was made a Sardar Bahadur in 1911 and Companion of the Indian
Empire (C.I.E.) in 1920. He was knighted in 1926. In 1926, the University
of the Punjab awarded him the degree of Doctor of Oriental Learning
(D.O.L) honoris causa.
Sundar Singh had in 1887 married the daughter
of Sardar Bishan Singh Kandaula, in Ludhiana district, maternal
uncle of Raja Bikram Singh of Faridkot. After her death the same
year, he married the daughter of Sardar Sir Attar Singh of Bhadaur.
He had three sons, two of whom Kirpal Singh Majithia and Surjit
Singh Majithia entered politics. After Independence, Surjit Singh
was elected to Parliament and became a deputy minister in Jawaharlal
Nehru's government.
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