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This
section provides a list of important and prominent figures
from Anglo-Sikh History which have been listed in alphabetical
order, according to ethnicity and time period.
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A Gurdwara offciant and Akali politician who twice held office as
Jathedar (provost) of Sri Akal Takht at Amritsar, was born on 18 January
1892 in a farming family of modest means at Ghanienke, a village in
Lahore district. The youngest son of Hukam Singh and Gangi, he learnt
to read Gurmukhi letters and to recite the Scripture at the village
gurdwara. At the age of 15, he migrated to Burma, where he learnt
Burmese and Urdu. As he grew up, Achchhar Singh enlisted in the Burmese
military police. During World War I (1914-18), Burmese military police
was converted into a regular army battalion and drafted to Mesopotamia
(now Iraq).
Achchhar Singh served there for about three years. At the end of the
war in 1918, his unit was stationed at Tonk, in the NorthWest Frontier
Province, until its departure back to Burma in 1920. In 1919, Achchhar
Singh married Mahindar Kaur of Ichogil, a village in, his native district
of Lahore. He was promoted havildar, or sergeant, in 1920. The news
of the Nankana Sahib massacre on 20 February 1921 came as a great
shock to him. He resigned from the army and, returning to the Punjab,
he made a visit to Nankana Sahib to pay homage to the memory of the
martyrs. He joined the Central Majhi Khalsa Diwan and plunged into
the agitation for the reform of gurdwara management. As the Akali
campaign at Jaito started, the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee
and the Shiromani Akili Dal were outlawed on 12 October 1925, and
arrests began to be made all over the Punjab., Among those held were
two successive jathedars of the Akal Takht-Teji Singh Akarpuri and
Udham Singh Nigoke. Upon the latter's arrest, Achchhar Singh was,
on 10 February 1924, appointed to the high religious office. He, too,
was taken into custody on 7 May 1924, was tried,and sentenced to one
and a half years in jail. Upon his release from the Central Jail at
Mianwali at the end of 1925, he resumed his office in Amritsar which
he retained until Teja Singh Akarpuri was set free in September 1926.
Amar Singh, editor of the Sher-i-Punjab, who had been a co-prisoner
in Mianwali jail and who was now president of the Lahore gurdwara
committee, persuaded Jathedar Achchhar Singh to take over as granthi
at Gurdwiri Dehra Sahib in Lahore. For 14 years he served in this
position. In 1940, he moved to Amritsar as a granthi at the Harimandar
Sahib, and continued there until his resignation in 1962. From 1955
to 1962, he was also Jathedar of the Akal Takht. During the Punjabi
Suba agitation, he was arrested from the premises of the Darbar Sahib
on 4 July 1955, but was released two days later. He headed the Panj
Piare named to judge if Master Tara Singh had not violated the vow
undertaken at the Akal Takht before starting his fast-unto-death for
the realization of the Sikh political objective of a Punjabi-speaking
state. The Panj Piare made a close investigation of the circumstances
leading to "the abandonment of the fast and on 29 November 1961
pronounced Master Tara Singh guilty of having perjured his pledge
and blemished thereby the Sikh tradition of religious steadfastness
and sacrifice. They had no comments to make on Sant Fateh Singh's
fast which, they said, had been given up under the orders of the Panj
Piare and the sangat in general. He was, however, laid under expiation
for having acquiesced in Master Tara Singh breaking his fast. Master
Tara Singh was awarded a severer penance.
As the Shiromani Akali Dal split into two groups, one led by Sant
Fateh Singh and the other by Master Tara Singh, Jathedar Achchhar
Singh resigned the office of head of the Akal Takht to join the latter.
He was elected president of this party in November 1962. In his address
at the 15th All-India Akali Conference held under his chairmanship
at Karnal on 7 December 1968, he pleaded for unity between the two
Akali factions.
Jathedar Achchhar Singh died in the civil hospital at Amritsar on
6 August 1976 after a protracted illness.
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