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Was from the Puhla
village, now in Amritsar district of the Punjab. He was a pious
Sikh who tilled his land diligently and lived frugally. Whatever
he saved went to his Sikh brethren forced into exile by government
persecution. Spied upon by Harbhagat Niranjania of Jandiala, a government
informer, Taru Singh was hauled up before Zakariya Khan, the governor
at Lahore (1726-45). As the Prachin Panth Prakash narrates the story,
Zakariya Khan once asked his men, "From
where do the Sikhs obtain their nourishment ? I have debarred them
from all occupations. They realize no taxes. They do not farm, nor
are they allowed to do business or join public employment. I have
stopped all offerings to their gurdwaras. No provisions or supplies
are accessible to them. Why do they not die of sheer starvation."
Harbhagat, a sworn
foe of the Sikhs, remarked, "There
are Sikhs in this world who would not eat until they have fed their
brethren. They may themselves go without food and clothing, but
cannot bear their comrades' distress. They would pass the winter
by fireside and send them their own clothes. They would sweat to
grind corn and have it sent to them. They would do the roughest
chore to earn a small wage for their sake. They migrate to distant
places to eke out money for their brothers in exile." In the
village of Puhla in Majha,"
continued Harbhagat,
"lives one Taru Singh. He
tills his land and pays the revenue to the officials. He eats but
little and sends what he saves to his brothers in the jungle. His
mother and sister both toil and grind to make a living. They eat
sparingly and wear the coarsest homespun. Whatever they save, they
pass on to the Sikhs."
Taru Singh was arrested, imprisoned and tortured.
Eventually, when presented before the governor, he defiantly greeted
him with the Sikh salutation: Vahiguru ji ka Khalsa Vahiguru ji
ki Fateh. Charged with sedition, he stated
"If we till your land, we pay the revenue.
If we engage in commerce, we pay taxes. What is left after our payments
to you is for our bellies. What we save from our mouths, we give
to our brethren. We take nothing from you. Why then do you punish
us?" The governor was in a rage and pronounced the usual alternatives,
Islam or death. To quote again from the Prachin Panth Prakash, Taru
Singh calmly asked, "Why must I become a Mussalman ? Do not
the Mussalmans ever die ?"
A torturous death by scrapping the scalp off
his head was the verdict announced by the gadi, the court law-giver.
The sentence was carried out on 1 July 1745. Taru Singh was then
barely 25 years of age. The dead body was cremated outside Delhi
Gate at Lahore, where a shahidgahj, or martyrs' memorial, was later
constructed. It became a place of pilgrimage for the Sikhs.
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