Born at Majitha, a village in Amritsar district, was the eldest son
of Raja Surat Singh Majithia. Umrao Singh went to school at Amritsar
and later joined the Aitchison College, Lahore. He was married to
Narindar Kumari, daughter of Gulab Singh of Atari. Together they visited
England in 1896. They went again in 1897 to attend the Diamond jubilee
of Queen Victoria. As head of the Majitha family, Umrao Singh was
privileged to attend the Coronation darbars in 1903 and 1910. But
the feeling that he belonged to a subject race always weighed heavily
on his mind. Although he had many friends among the English, he kept
virtually aloof amid all social glitter. He began to be looked upon
with suspicion by the British and, in secret official correspondence,
he was termed `disaffected.'
Umrao Singh's second wife, Madame Antoinette, was a Hungarian lady
whom he had met in Lahore at the house of Princess Sofia Duleep
Singh. He married her in 1911. In the autumn of 1912, he went with
her to Budapest. While he was still there, World War I broke out
and he found himself stranded in an `enemy' country. Owing partly
to his being a man of culture and intellect and partly on account
of his wife not having abjured her Hungarian nationality, he was
not interned. He had his sympathies with the India-Germany group,
then conspiring against the British. The Germans aimed to use this
group to raise troops to invade India through the northwest. Raja
Mahendra Partap was chosen to head the movement. An expedition under
Von Hentig, equipped with a personal letter from Kaiser William
II to the King of Afghanistan and letters from German Government
to various ruling princes of India, was despatched in 1915 along
with Raja Mahendra Partap, to travel overland to Kabul. Their plan
was to win over Afghanistan and march a German-Afghan army into
India. Mahendra Partap was in touch with Umrao Singh who was related
to him through the Atari family. In the autumn of 1915, the fortunes
of the war hung in the balance evenly. From Baghdad Mahendra Partap
wrote a letter to Umrao Singh which made him feel as if his friend
had begun to waver.
Umrao Singh wrote to him a long letter to lift his morale. The
letter, unfortunately, fell into the hands of the British. The Germans
had a liaison office at Shiraz. In the winter of 1916-17, the German
party had to escape precipitately leaving behind all their baggage.
Among the papers then seized by the British was Umrao Singh's letter.
Complicity of Umrao Singh in anti-British activities could no longer
be in doubt. Steps were initiated in India to confiscate all his
estates. Umrao Singh returned to India in 1921, after the general
amnesty had been granted by the King for political offences during
the war.
Umrao Singh eschewed politics for the rest of his life. From 1929
to 1934, he lived in Paris for the education of his two daughers,
Amrita and Indira. It was during this period that Amrita Shergil
got the training in art that was to make her a world famous painter.
The family finally returned to India in 1934. Umrao Singh had his
estate in Gorakhpur, in Uttar Pradesh, and had built a house in
Summer Hill, Shimla, where he spent most of his time amidst his
vast collection of books. The death of their daughter Amrita in
1941 was a tremendous shock. His wife, Antoinette, passed away in
1948. Umrao Singh died in Delhi on 17 December 1954
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