SIKHS AND INDIA'S FIRST WAR OF INDEPENDENCE 1857: MYTHS AND FACTS
Shamsul Islam
[It is a
truncated version of author’s book Rebel
Sikhs of 1857 available in English, Hindi and Punjabi which appeared in
2008.]
In the
last 150 years, which followed the nation-wide rebellion of 1857 against the
rule of the East India Company in India, many of the misconceptions have been
put at rest and a number of myths demolished regarding the nature and course of
this great upheaval. For instance much has been written by the historians, both
Indian as well as foreign, supplemented with contemporary documents, upholding
the fact that it was not a ‘Mutiny’, on the contrary, a rebellion which drew
wide support from different sections of the Indian people in most of the
affected areas.
Even the then British rulers who initially
declared it as a mere ‘Mutiny’ of the ‘Poorbeah’ (people from eastern India,
the British used this term in derogatory sense) sepoys, ‘Budmashes’ (Urdu term
for rascals which the British often used to describe the rebels) and ‘Pandies’
(followers of the rebel Mangal Pandey), soon realized the hollowness of this
claim. Major W. S. R. Hodson (Commander of the British cavalry battalion which
was created in his name itself, the ‘Hodson Horse’ and chief of the army’s
intelligence wing) who played a major role in capturing Delhi, and was
responsible for mass killings of Delhites including Mughal Princes in the most
savage manner, in September 1857, in a letter to his wife from Delhi British
army camp [July 26, 1857], did admit the fact that it was “an entire army and a
whole nation” which was in revolt.1
Another
official, Thomas Lowe, commander of the medical corps, who accompanied the
British army in its campaign to crush rebellion in the Central India in
1857-58, and was present at the battle of Kotah-ki-Sarai (Gwalior, June 18,
1858) in which Rani Laxmi Bai was martyred, in his
narrative,
underscored the reality that it was not a ‘Mutiny’ but a national revolt
organized by the ‘cunning, educated fiends’ which united,
“the
infanticide Rajput, the bigoted Brahmin, the fanatic Musselman [sic],
and the luxury-loving, fat-paunched [sic] ambitious Mahrattah [sic]…they
all joined together in the cause; the cow-killer and the cow-worshipper, the
pig-hater and the pig-eater, the crier of ‘Allah is God and Mahomet [sic]
his prophet’ and the mumbler of the mysteries of Bram [Brahma].”2
However,
a terrible myth continues to flourish about the complicity of the Sikhs as a
community in helping the Firangees in
suppressing the 1857 revolt. There is no dearth of otherwise well-meaning
historians and commentators who even today argue that the 1857 War of
Independence was lost mainly due to the betrayal by Sikhs who either on the
orders of the Sikh native rulers of Punjab or on their own, recruited in the
British army in large numbers, thus playing crucial role in subjugating India,
which was then striving hard to liberate itself from the clutches of the
British imperialism. The Sikh community is thus presented as the main culprit
responsible for helping out the British in securing India in the aftermath of the
1857 rebellion.
Of
course, there are reasons for such a myth to exist, flourish and resonate. A
noted historian and an inexhaustible writer, R. C. Majumdar, who refused to
treat 1857 rebellion either as ‘national’ or ‘war of independence’ and out
rightly rejected the claim that it was led by any kind of ideal like ‘patriotism’,
was most vocal in propounding the theory that Sikhs as a community
whole-heartedly supported the British military campaign to crush the revolt
throughout the country and that too for religious reasons. According to his
logic, it was hatred for the Mughal rulers who persecuted Sikhs in the past
that the latter joined the British bandwagon to settle scores.
Following
this logic, Majumdar in one of his prominent works on ‘Mutiny’ declared:
“It is
on record that high British officials in the Panjab [sic] were able to
persuade the Sikhs to caste in their lot with them by describing in vivid
language the injuries and insults they had suffered in the past in the hands of
the Mughal Emperors. Having impressed this point on their mind, they held out before
them the grand opportunity they now had of taking full vengeance. There can be
hardly any doubt that the Sikhs were largely influenced by such considerations
in whole heartedly offering their services to the British Government.”3
This
myth gets strengthened with the selective reading of the narratives of some of
the writers, mainly British, who either witnessed or played important role in
suppressing the rebellion. One such writer, often referred to and relied on, is
William Howard Russell, a well-known war correspondent who came to India
(1857-58) to cover ‘Mutiny’ for The Times,
London. In one of dispatches he wrote:
“Our
siege of Delhi, would have been quite impossible, if the rajahs [sic] of
Patiala and of Jhind [now known as Jind in Haryana] had not been our friends,
and if the Sikhs had not recruited (in) our battalions, and remained quite in
Punjab. The Sikhs at Lucknow did good service; and in all cases our garrisons
were helped, fed, and served by natives, as our armies were attended and
strengthened by them in the
field.”4
Russell
was with the British military commanders on March 9, 1858 when the Lucknow
defences of the army of Begum Oudh [Avadh, Awadh] were breached. He testified
the fact that these were the Sikh battalions which were the first to
enter the
city.5 Even
when Kaiserbagh, the
main Palace
of Oudh
rulers was attacked these
were Sikhs
who were
in the
forefront.6
The
crucial fact not to be missed here is that Russell while describing the
prominent role of the Sikh army men who had “slaughtered hundreds of the budmashes” during first attack on Lucknow
confused all Punjabis with Sikhs as he also wrote that these “men were the
wildest, finest looking fellows possible—part of Probyn’s detachment of Punjabi
Irregular [name of a British regiment]’ whom Russell also called as ‘savage Punjabis”.7
By the
end of 1858 the British were able to crush the rebellion to a great extent and
once again took control of India. Russell’s diary, dated October 9, 1858 contained
a detailed analysis of the factors responsible for the British victory. It gave
full credit to the Sikh princely states for the British victory. According to
Russell’s conclusion the colonial masters,
“must
have lost Delhi if the Rajah of Patiala had not, in conjunction with the chiefs
of the neighbouring States, kept open our communication with the Punjab, and
rendered the dispatch of supplies practicable…the authorities in the Punjab
were able to hold their own, and to organize that remarkable system of supplies
which enabled us to remain before Delhi till we got force sufficient to strike
the rebels a death-blow. But that system must have utterly failed if the Sikh
States south of the Sutlej had revolted, for we never could have maintained our
communication with the Punjab; and the political effects of such a rising would
have probably paralysed the efforts of Sir John Lawrence and his able
colleagues to raise the Sikh levies which gave us such invaluable aid.”8
The view
that ‘Sikh States’, specially the Patiala State, played the most crucial role
in the British victory was not Russell’s personal perception but was shared by
many among the then British top brass in India too, as we find while going
through his diary.
“I have
heard it said, over and over again, by good authority, India would have been
lost. Our Empire would have surely gone, had the Rajah [Raja of Patiala] thrown
off his allegiance in the hour of our trial,
when there was scarce a
straggling
fiber of the roots we had struck into the Indian soil which was not rudely torn
asunder, and when the great growth which had sprung up so rapidly, and had
spread its mighty shadow so swiftly over all the thrones of the East, was lying
prostrate in the dust. But the Rajah of Patiala never hesitated; his trumpets
gave no uncertain sound. Whether it was from love, or from calculation, or
political sagacity, that he acted with such spirit and resolution, and gave us
aid beyond price, it were ungracious and unprofitable to inquire.
“He at
once equipped and raised a large force, in addition to his regular army, and
placed it at our disposal, to clear the road, to escort baggage, stores, and
munitions of war. He gave us all the transport animals and carts he could
collect; and he opened his coffers, and, at a low rate of interest, and on
security which to any but very keen eyes was inappreciable, he lent us money
when silver was worth its weight in gold…all the physical power of his State
was devoted to the re-establishment of our rule, and to the overthrow
of the rebellion.”9
It is true that the Sikh regiments and Sikh
sepoys supplied by a number of the princely states, whose rulers professed
Sikhism, played important role in capturing Delhi for the British in September
1857, which according to William Kaye (the British official historiographer of
the ‘Mutiny’), “was a turning point in the life of our Anglo-Indian Empire”.10 The contemporary British official records corroborate the fact that
the Sikh rulers of the princely states like Patiala, Jind, Nabha and Kapurthala
rendered immense help in supplying war materials as well as levies (sepoys) to
the British army which marched from the then Punjab, went out to crush the
rebellion and finally captured Delhi and Lucknow; two most prominent centres of
the nation-wide uprising. There is enormous British archival material
available, which greatly sings the praises of these Sikh rulers and glorifies
their support to the British cause.
The Imperial Gazetteers of India series
in 25 volumes which contains the most authentic British version of the
‘Mutiny’, describes the contribution
of Maharaja Narendra Singh of Patiala State in the following words:
“The conduct of the Maharaja on the, outbreak
of the Mutiny is beyond praise…On hearing of the outbreak, he marched that
evening with all his available troops in the direction of Ambala. In his own
territories he furnished supplies and carriage, and kept the roads clear. He
gave a loan of 5 lakhs to Government and expressed his willingness to double
the amount. His troops served with loyalty and distinction on many occasions
throughout the campaign.”11
Patiala
ruler’s loyalty to the British was not only acknowledged but fully rewarded
too.
“After
1857 Narendra Singh’s splendid services were rewarded with the gift of
sovereign rights in the Narnaul division of the forfeited State of the Jhajjar
Nawab…also permitted to purchase the Kanaud pargana
of Jhajjar and the taluka of Khamaon in perpetual sovereignty…Narendra
Singh was made a K.C.S.I., in 1861…The Maharaja ranks first in the precedence
list of the Native States in the Punjab and enjoys a salute of seventeen guns.
He is entitled to be received
and visited
by His Excellency the Viceroy.”12
Raja
Sarup Singh of Jind State too sided with the British with all his might. The
contemporary British documents testify the fact that as an old supporter his
“loyalty
was again conspicuous during the mutiny. He occupied the cantonment of Karnal
with 800 men, and held the ferry over the Jumna at Bhagpat, twenty miles north
of Delhi…The Raja was personally engaged in the battle of Alipur on the 8th of
June, and received the congratulations of the Commander-in-Chief, who presented him with
one of he captured guns. His contingent ultimately took a prominent part in the
assault on Delhi, scaling the walls with the British troops, and losing many of
their number in killed and wounded. Raja Sarup Singh was the only chief who was
present in person with the army at Delhi…
“After
the fall of Delhi the Raja sent 200 men with General Van Cortlandt to Hansi,
110 more with Colonel R. Lawrence to Jhajjar, while 250 remained to garrison
Rohtak…These splendid services received a fitting reward in the bestowal upon
him of the Dadri territory covering nearly 600 square miles, forfeited for
disloyalty by the Nawab of Bahadurgarh. He was also given thirteen villages,
assessed at Rs. 1, 88,000 in the Kalaran Pargana, close to Sangrur, where the
Raja now has his capital, and a house at Delhi valued at Rs. 6,000, together
with additional honorary titles, was conferred on him. His salute was raised to eleven guns…”13
The Raja was nominated a Knight Grand Commander
of the Star of India a few months before his
death.
Another
Sikh ruler who openly sided with the British in 1857 was Bharpur Singh of Nabha
State. According to the British archival material,
“He
acted throughout with exemplary loyalty, performing services not less
distinguished than these of the other chiefs of the Punjab. He held charge of
the station of Ludhiana and of the neighbouring Sutlej ferries at the
commencement of the outbreak, and a Nabha detachment of 300 men took the place of the Nasiri Battalion
which had been detailed to escort a siege train from Phillaur to Delhi, but had
refused to march…The Raja also dispatched a small contingent to Delhi, which
did good service at the siege…
“His
services were rewarded with the grant
of the divisions of Bawal and
Kanti, assessed at over a lakh of rupees, in
the confiscated territory of Jhajjar, on conditions of military and political
service in times of general danger and disturbance. Like the other Phulkian
Chiefs he was also formally granted the power of life and death over his
subjects…In precedence the Raja of Nabha ranks fourth among the chiefs of the
Punjab, and is entitled to a return visit
from the
Viceroy.”14
Raja
Randhir Singh of Kapurthala State was another prominent Sikh ruler who helped
the British and the colonial masters minced no words in praising him.
“On the first news of the out break of the
Mutiny the Raja, with his younger brother Kunwar Bikrama Singh, marched into
Jullundur at the head of his men and helped to hold the Doab, almost denuded of
troops, until the fall of Delhi. The political effect of this active loyalty on
the part of the leading Sikh chief north of the Sutlej was of the utmost value;
and the Raja’s able assistance was promptly acknowledged by the bestowal upon
him of the title of Raja-i-Rajgan, and by a reduction of Rs. 25,000 annually in
the amount of his tribute payment. In 1858, the Punjab continuing quiet Raja
Randhir Singh was permitted to lead a contingent of his soldiers to Oudh and
take part in the pacification of the disturbed districts.”15
For
these great services,
“the
Raja was rewarded with a grant of the two confiscated estates of Bundi and
Bithauli, in the Bharaich and Bara Banki districts in Oudh…The Raja of
Kapurthala stood fifth in order of precedence among the chiefs of the Punjab.
He was entitled to a salute of eleven guns, and to receive a return visit from
the Viceroy.”16
Wazir
Singh, the ruler of Faridkot State was not only an unwavering ally of the
British during the 2nd Anglo-Sikh War but also remained a firm
supporter in 1857. According to the contemporary British official documents,
“In the Mutiny he placed himself under the
orders of the Deputy Commissioner of Ferozpore and assisted in guarding the
Sutlej ferries against the passage of the rebel troops. He also sent a
detachment to Sirsa, and with a body of horse and two guns he personally
attacked a notorious rebel, Sham Das, and destroyed his stronghold. The Raja’s
reward took the form of an increase in his salute, and he was exempted from the
service of ten sowars [cavalrymen], hitherto provided in lieu of an annual-tribute payment in cash.”17
Then there were smaller Sikh rulers like Sobha
Singh and his son Lehna Singh of Kalsia State who rendered “good service in
1857, supplying a contingent of one hundred men, who were sent to Oudh… Kalsia
ranks sixteenth among the Native States the Punjab and the Chief is entitled to
be received
by His Excellency
the
Viceroy”18 and landlords like Deva Singh
of Mansurwal of Ferozpur District (conferred the title of Star of the Order of British
India),19 Shamsher Singh of Amritsar (made Magistrate in his own jagir),20 Punjab Singh of Amritsar “rewarded with the Orders of Merit and of British India; and
he received a grant of land in the Kheri District of Oudh, which now yields
about Rs. 4,000 per annum”21 for their invaluable services to the British in 1857.
The letters of Major Hodson (W. S. R. Hodson who
played a very prominent role in capturing Delhi) from the British camp from
Delhi in 1857, are testimonials of the fact how the British relied on the
support of these Sikh rulers for capturing Delhi. In a letter dated May 15,
1857, he wrote: “Fortunately the Maharaja of Puttiala [Patiala] is stanch, and
so are other Sikh chiefs hereabouts.”21A Another letter (June 7, 1857) gleefully underlined
the fact that out of ‘Jheend [Jind] Rajah’s troops,’ “I am empowered to
demand as many as I want, and whenever I want them. I have twenty-five men on
constant duty with me, and to-day have asked for double that number for extra duty…”22 Hodson’s letter dated June 10, 1857
while reporting a battle
with the mutineers in which he was almost killed, was all praise for the ruler
of Jind State and his ‘Jheend men’ who,
fought
[with him] like excellent soldiers. The good General [Raja of Jind] came up
when it was over, and shook hands with me, and then with the men nearest. Their
Rajah has given the native officer a pair of gold bangles, and doubled his pay.
This is the way to encourage soldiers, European as well as native: reward
them, if
but with
thanks, on the spot.”23
Hodson,
in mid-August 1857, led an attack on Rohtak which had turned into a rebel
strong hold and how he acknowledged the support of the Jind ruler would be
clear from the following letter [August 19,
1857]:
“This
morning I was joined by a party of Jheend horse, whom my good friend the Rajah
sent as soon as he heard I was coming Rohtuck-wards, so I have now 400
horsemen, more or less, fresh ammunition having come in this morning, and am quite independent.”24
There
has been a concerted attempt to show as if the three Mughal Princes, Mirza
Moghul, the King’s nephew whom the British believed to be the kingpin of
rebellion in Delhi, Mirza Khizar Sultan, another Prince who was also regarded
as a principal rebel leader and Abu Bakht, the commander-in-chief and heir
apparent to the throne were killed on September 22, 1857, near Delhi Gate (now
known as Khooni Darwaza opposite to Ferozshah Kotla) in order to assuage the
hurt religious feelings of the Sikhs who were part of the British army and
their bodies were taken to the spot [Kotwali] where Guru Tegh Bahadur was
tortured and killed by the Mughal Emperor, Aurangzeb, two hundred years back.
Such a
narrative gets legitimacy from a foot-note of George Hodson (real brother of
Captain Hodson, who compiled and edited Major Hodson’s letters in a book form
in 1859) which he added to the letter of his brother in which he described how
the princes were murdered. In fact, Hodson’s letter made no such claim as the
perusal of the letter would show. According to Hodson’s version he went to
Humayun’s Tomb on September 22, to capture the ‘villain’ princes who played
prominent role in the uprising
at Delhi with the express orders from the
General that “don’t
let me
be bothered
with them”24A which
only meant
that they should be killed. According to Hodson’s version:
“I went to look for my prisoners, who with
their guard, had moved on towards Delhi. I came up just in time, as a large mob
had collected, and were turning on the guard. I rode in among them at a gallop,
and in a few words I appealed to the crowd, saying that these were the butchers
who had murdered and brutally used helpless women and children, and that the Government had now sent their
punishment: seizing a carbine from one of my men, I deliberately shot them one
after another. I then ordered the bodies to be taken into the city, and thrown
out on the ‘Chiboutra’ [platform] in front of the Kotwalie where the blood of
the innocent victims still could be distinctly traced. The bodies remained
before until this morning [September 24], when for sanitary reasons, they were
removed. In twenty-four hours, therefore, I disposed of the principal members
of the house of Timur the Tatar. I am not cruel, but I confess I did rejoice at
the opportunity of ridding the earth of these wretches. I intended to have had
them hung, but when it came to a question of ‘they’ or ‘us’ I had no time for deliberation.”25
According to Lt. MacDowell who accompanied
Hodson on this killing trip, the latter before shooting ordered the Shahzadas [Mughal
Princes] to quit the cart in which they had been placed and strip themselves to
their under- vestments.26
The
above letter written by Hodson made no such claim that Hodson by killing the
princes intended to lease Sikhs or it was done to avenge the cruel killing of a
Sikh Guru. He was very clear about his motive behind dastardly killing of the
Mughal princes as he wrote in the above mentioned letter that within
twenty-four hours of capturing Delhi “I disposed of the principal members of
the house of Timur the Tatar. I am not cruel, but I confess I did rejoice at
the opportunity of ridding the earth of these wretches.”
McDowell’s
letter throws light on the religious identity of the British troops who
accompanied the two officers; Hodson and McDowell, to capture the
Princes. They
were
all natives;
both Muslims and
Sikhs.27 But
editor of Hodson's letters, George Hodson, by adding the following foot-note
did try to make it Muslim versus Sikh issue. According to this foot-note, the
‘Chiboutra’ where he dead bodies of the Mughal princes were thrown was the same
“spot
that the head of Gooroo Teg Bahadoor [sic] had been exposed by the order
of Aurungzebe [sic], the Great Mogul, nearly two hundred years before
the Sikhs considered that in attacking Delhi they were ‘paying off an old
score.’ A prophecy had long been current among them, that by the help of the
white man they should re-conquer Delhi. After this they looked on Captain
Hodson as the ‘avenger of their martyred Gooroo,’ and were even more ready than
before to follow him
anywhere.”28
It was
an astonishing claim that the British were the defenders of the Sikh faith. It
was not even a decade back that they had subjugated whole of the Punjab by
waging the first Anglo-Sikh War (1845-1846) and then second Anglo-Sikh War
(1848-1849) destroying not only a united Sikh Kingdom of Punjab but also many
independent Sikh princely states in the region.
However,
the myth that Sikhs as a community betrayed the 1857 War of Independence and
were mainly responsible for the British victory over Indians remains a
favourite belief, not only with lay persons but also intellectuals. In this
myth is also woven another myth that it was due to the betrayal of Sikhs; the
Punjab remained completely unaffected by the great upheaval.
This
paper tries to examine the above myth solely in the light of the contemporary
documents like the British official records, gazetteers and narratives (both
British and Indian) which include personal diaries, letters and memoirs of those
who played significant role either in suppressing or supporting this rebellion.
Some of these sources being accessed for the first time bring forth startling
facts which completely demolish the myth of culpability of Sikhs, as a
community, in helping the colonial masters in suppressing the great rebellion
which started in May 1857.
The
methodology adopted in this paper to find out truth is that the whole gamut of
the above referred contemporary narratives has been thoroughly scanned to find
out the answer to the following three fundamental questions:
(1) Did
the Sikh princes/landlords who sided with the British represent Sikh community?
(2) Were
there Muslim and Hindu ruling clans from Punjab who also joined the British
bandwagon in 1857?
(3) Were
there Sikhs and Punjabis who actively joined the great rebellion and fought
against the British in 1857?
The
startling facts which come out of this search, not only show the hollowness of
the anti-Sikh myth concerning 1857 rebellion but also throw light on the fact
that how myths continue to survive as researchers and historiographers instead
of digging into historical documents rely on stereotypes. The propagation of
this kind of stereotypes tends to accomplish another nasty aim, that is, to
belittle the crimes of the British rulers in suppressing the great revolt, and
instead, hold Sikh community responsible for the excesses and savagery
committed by them.
DID THE
SIKH PRINCES/LANDLORDS WHO SIDED WITH THE BRITISH REPRESENT SIKH COMMUNITY?
It would
be nothing but travesty of facts to present the active support of few Sikh
ruling families of Punjab to the British cause in 1857 as siding of the whole
Sikh community with the British. In fact, the Sikh princely states under
discussion even themselves did not claim that they represented Sikhs or Sikh
interests. Even today the personal websites of these rulers proudly display the
titles which they secured from the Mughal Kings and the British rulers. A
simple perusal of the contemporary documents as presented below would show on
whose side these rulers stood on the eve of outbreak of 1857 rebellion.
The
Patiala Sikh ruling family was a trusted ally of both the Mughal rulers as well
as the British. The contemporary documents corroborate the fact that the
“title of Maharaja was conferred on the Patiala
chief [Raja Sahib Singh] in 1810 by the Emperor Akbar II on the recommendation
of General Ochterlony…After the First Sikh War, the Maharaja Narendra Singh’s
assistance was acknowledged by the gift of a portion of the confiscated Nabha territory.”29
The
Kapurthala Sikh rulers were old loyalists to the British Empire building
project in India. The family solidly stood with the British in the Second Sikh
War of
1848-1849.30 The Sikh
rulers of
Jind,
too,
were historically close allies of the British
in both the wars against Sikh Kingdom in Punjab. The contemporary British
official documents gratefully acknowledged the fact that
“Raja Sarup Singh’s behaviour during the first
Sikh War was satisfactory…When the second Sikh War broke out in 1849, Raja
Sarup Singh offered to lead his troops in person to join the British
army at
Lahore.”31
The
rulers of Nabha State were also old dependable allies of the British rulers in
Punjab. Raja Jaswant Singh of Nabha
“was
formally taken under the protection of the British in May 1809 with the other
Cis-Sutlej [group of small states in the Punjab region between River Sutlej on
the north, Hiamalyas on the east, River Jamuna on the south and Sirsa district
on the west] chiefs…The Raja always proved a faithful ally of the British, and
aided us without stint
when his
assistance was required. He furnished supplies for Ochterlony’s Gurkha campaign
in the Simla Hills and also helped in the Bikaner affair of 1818. At the time
of Kabul campaign of 1838 he offered services of his troops to the
Governor-General and advanced six lakhs of rupees towards the expenses
of the
campaign.”32
Raja Wazir Singh of Faridkot State’s choice of
siding with the British in 1857 was part of this ruling family’s long tradition
of standing with the foreign rulers. His father, Pahar Singh fought with the
British during the first Anglo-Sikh War against Sikhs. Wazir Singh remained also
loyal during the second Sikh War [1848-49] to the British before supporting
them in ‘Mutiny’.33
Thus the
contemporary documents make it, doubtlessly, clear that, there were princely
states ruling by families professing Sikhism which actively supported the
British in suppressing the ‘Mutiny’, but that did not mean that they
represented the Sikh community as such or all Sikhs agreed with their
perception and activities. These rulers were mainly led by their personal and
political interest as most of the ruling clans do. They had nothing to do with
any project related to Sikhism or Sikh Kingdom.
WERE
THERE MUSLIM AND HINDU RULING CLANS FROM PUNJAB WHO ALSO JOINED THE BRITISH
BANDWAGON IN 1857?
In this
whole discourse one important aspect which is generally overlooked is whether
there were Muslim and Hindu ruling clans and landlords who, too, actively
helped the British in suppressing the ‘Mutiny’. The fact is that there were a
large number of families from Punjab, belonging to both these religions, which
greatly helped the colonial masters in crushing the rebellion.
The two
volumes; Chiefs and Families of Note in
Punjab, volume I (1909) and volume II (1910) present startling data about
the number of acknowledged British stooges in Punjab which is of great help in critically
evaluating the myth of Sikh culpability in right perspective. According to this
exhaustive work on Punjab, the notable ruling princes or land lord families
which openly helped the British military campaign against rebels of 1857, if
divided on religious basis were as follows: Muslims 48, Sikhs 47 and Hindus 21.
This data clearly shows that these were not only sections of Sikh princes and
landed aristocracy which sided with the British in 1857, but there were also
Muslims and Hindus of the same categories which sided with the British. The
contributions made to the British cause by these Muslim and Hindu ruling families
and rewards bestowed on them by the foreign rulers, well-documented, are worth
knowing.
MUSLIMS
Nawab
Muhammad Ali Khan who headed a renowned landlord family of Karnal immediately
after hearing the news of the outbreak of ‘Mutiny’ at Meerut,
“placed the whole of his horse and footmen at
the disposal of Government. They were stationed at Thanesar, and assisted in
preserving order and in supporting the executive authority.”34
The
services rendered by another Muslim feudal lord from the same area, Nawab Ahmad
Ali Khan were acknowledged in a letter from Lord Canning in the following words:
"His
Lordship is of opinion that the liberality of Government in the acknowledgment
of the Nawab's services [in 1857] should be as unstinted as his support and
assistance have been unhesitating. The Nawab's services have been most
valuable, as testified by all officers, both Civil and Military, who have had
an opportunity of forming a judgment on the subject."35
The
services of a prominent Muslim landlord of Panipat, Amanullah Khan, are
mentioned in the following words:
“He was forward on all occasions in offers of
assistance to the District authorities, and during the Mutiny he was actively
loyal, helping to the best of his ability in preserving order in his native
town and in furnishing supplies for the troops
before Delhi.”36
Hamid-ullah Khan of Kangra District during the
‘Mutiny’ “furnished levies [sepoys] who were employed in Hoshiarpur, Kulu,
Kangra and Dharmsala” and in recognition of these services Hamid-ullah Khan was
conferred the title of Raja
Bahadur.37
Maulvi Sayed Rajab Ali of Jagraon (Ludhiana
Dist) was an old loyalist of the British rulers. He was a close confident of
Sir Henry Lawrence. In the wake of 1857 uprising he was one of those three
spies and conspirators (other two being Mirza Ilahi Baksh and Munshi Jeewan
Lal) who managed to stay back in Delhi as part of the city’s elite circles
during the siege by the British and played prominent role as Fifth Columnists in securing Delhi to
the British.38 When Hodson
went to
arrest
the Mughal King and hunt for the Mughal
Princes to be shot later by him, Rajab Ali was in tow and Hodson used to
lovingly call him ‘my one- eyed Moulvie Rujub
Ali [sic]’.39 The Maulvi was bestowed with the title of
Khan Bahadur in 1846 and that of Arastu
Jah (the Aristotle of the age) in
1853.40
Sarfaraz
Khan of Kharal tribe in Montgomery District was another British stooge who
tipped off the British about mass rebellion of his tribe in September 1857. The
British were grateful to him that
“when a large portion of his tribe, under Ahmed
Khan, rebelled, Sarfaraz Khan remained loyal…he received the title of Khan
Bahadur, a khilat of Rs. 500, and a jagir of Rs. 525 for life.”41
The
great services which Ali Raza Khan Qazil Bash of Lahore rendered to the British
in this period were numerous. He came forward to recruit for the British
“A troop of horse [regiment of cavalry] for
service before Delhi…at his own expense…Forming part of the celebrated
‘Hodson's Horse’ the troop raise by Ali Raza Khan served throughout the
campaign.”42
After
the campaign he received the First-class Order of Merit, the title of Sardar
Bahadur and also received a grant of a talukdars of one hundred and forty-seven
villages in Baraich, Oudh, worth Rs. 15,000 per annum. He also received the
title of Khan Bahadur…He was created a hereditary Nawab in 1864, two
years before
his death.43
The book Chiefs
and Families of Note in Punjab recorded in details the crucial
contributions of many other Muslim feudal lords which were made to support the
British military campaign to crush ‘Mutiny’. The Lahore based Sadozai family’s
head; Khan Bahadur Shahzada Sultan Ibrahim Jan served during the Mutiny as
Adjutant of a corps of Afridi Jezailchis [a group of Pashtun tribesmen],
whereas another son of this family, Shahzada Faridan, obtained a commission
as Jemadar
of the
2nd Punjab
Infantry in 1857.44 Khan Bahadur Shiekh Nashruddin of Lahore raised, under the orders
of the Government, two battalions of cavalry
for service at Delhi.45 Kamal-ud-
din Khan of Kasur raised one hundred horsemen, and with his nephews proceeded to Hissar
under General Van-Cortland.46
The
great deeds which Muhammad Shah of Lahore performed for the British military
campaign in 1857 were recorded in the following words:
“On the
frontier he was known as a first-rate officer both for bravery and
intelligence. As senior native officer of his squadron he served throughout the
siege and capture of Delhi, the relief and capture of Lucknow, the capture of
Bareilly, and the actions of Bulandshahar, Fatehgarh, Agra and Aligarh. He received the
Order of British India…”47
The
well-known Muslim feudal family of Kadian [Qadian] which was headed by Ghulam
Murtaza proved to be a steadfast ally of the British in 1857 as is clear from
the following statement:
“The family did excellent service during the
Mutiny of 1857. Ghulam Murtaza enlisted many men, and his son Ghulam Kadir was
serving in the force of General Nicholson when that officer destroyed the
mutineers of the 46th Native Infantry, who had fled from Sialkot, at Trimu Ghat.
General Nicholson gave Ghulam Kadir a certificate, stating that in 1857 the
Kadian family showed greater loyalty than any other
in the district.”48
Another
large Muslim feudal clan, known as Tiwana family of Shahpur District, led by
Malik Fateh Sher Khan
“was one
of the first of the great chiefs who answered to the call made upon them by
John Lawrence at the outbreak of the Mutiny in 1857. He at once raised a
regiment of irregular cavalry and joined the Hariana [sic] Field Force
under General Van Cortlandt. He and his men were engaged in several actions,
notably at Hissar, Bangali and Jamalpur, and were on every occasion
distinguished for their dash and gallantry…For his fidelity and courage he was
rewarded with the title of Khan Bahadur…”49
From the
same district another big landlord, Malik Sher M. Khan,
“raised
a body of three hundred horse, which was employed first in keeping order in the
Cis-Sutlej and Delhi Divisions and in 1858 was on active service under the
Commander-in- Chief in Oudh, where it took part in several actions with distinction”50 and for his loyal
services was conferred the title of
Khan Bahadur.
Malik
Sahib Khan, Malik Jahan Khan Tiwana and Malik Jahan Khan of Shahpur raised
troops in large numbers for the British army which helped “in preserving order
around Cawnpore and then accompanied General Napier in his Central India
campaign. For Mutiny services Maliks were awarded the titles of Khan Bahadur…”51
another
significant aspect of the support of Muslim leading families of Punjab to the
British cause was that many mutawallis [custodians/chiefs]
of the leading Muslim shrines too joined the British camp. Mukhdum Shah Mahmud,
custodian of the Baha-ud-din shrine at Multan, rendered great help to the
British Government during ‘Mutiny’.
“He offered the Commissioner information of
every important occurrence that came to his knowledge; provided twenty men and
horses for Ghulam Mustafa Khan’s Risala [platoon], and several for the now
police force. He also supplied men for
the police and infantry levies. With twenty-five horsemen he accompanied
Colonel Hamilton against the insurgents, took upon himself a portion of the
camp duties, and protected the baggage on the line of march…In 1860 the
Makhdum, on the occasion of the Viceroy’s visit to Lahore, received, a personal
grant of a garden, worth Rs. 150 per annum, known as the Bhangiwala Bagh.”52
Likewise both the in chiefs of Ghauspur shrine
at Multan, Muhammad Hayat and Murad Shah, rendered assistance in 1857 and
received suitable rewards in return.53 Murad Shah one of the custodians
of Gardezi shrine of Multan
also joined the British bandwagon and according to the British records, “he
received a sanad and khilat of the
value of Rs. 200 for good service during mutiny.”54
Sir
Charles U. Aitchinson who was Lt. Governor of Punjab during 1882- 1887,
admitted the fact that
“Sir John Lawrence had dexterously drawn to his
service the marauders of the border. Adventures from many tribes- Afridis and
Mohmands Daudzais and Yusafzais, even robbers from Boner and zealots from
Swat-had answered his call, and marched, regiment after regiment, to fight our
battles on the Ridge at Delhi and on the plains of Hindustan.”54
Aitchinson
who had access to all the official papers of the military strategists in Punjab
who organized campaign to crush the ‘Mutiny’, highlighted a very significant
aspect of the support which the British drew from Punjab, when he wrote:
“It is
remarkable that the Muhammadans [sic], especially the Border Pathans,
Edwardes’ old men, were the first to flock to our standard. They were rigid
Mussalmans, ‘who never missed a prayer and many of whom rode with the Koran at
their saddle-bow.’ Sikhs enlisted, but not in great numbers. They held back
until Delhi had fallen, and then recruits came in thousands from the
Manjha.”55
It only
shows that the British army which went out to crush the ‘Mutiny’ was not
recruited from a single community or one region of Punjab. It did not differentiate
between Muslims and Sikhs. And in fact it had large participation of Hindus,
too, as we will see in the following.
HINDUS
The
leading Hindu families of Punjab also did not lag behind in rendering
assistance and great help to the Firangis
is again well- documented. The book Chiefs
and Families of Note in Punjab described how strongly many of the Hindu
princes, landlords and notable families were committed to the British cause.
The perusal of the description available in this book of some of these families
is quite informative and startling.
Diwan
Hari Chand and Nihal Chand of Gujranwala were senior commanders of the forces
of Jammu Raja (Maharaja Gulab Singh), the former being the chief commander.
When the ‘Mutiny’ broke out, according to the British records, Hari Chand
“was
sent to Delhi in charge of the Jammu contingent of one cavalry and four
infantry regiments and a battery of Artillery. He died there of cholera in
1857. Diwan Nihal Chand…hastened to Delhi in 1857 on hearing of his brother’s
death, and took over command of the troops, rendering useful service later on
it connection with the trial of the Nawab of Jhajjar
for participation
in the
rebellion.”56
Gulab Singh of Kangra District [now in Himachal
Pradesh] was also part of this Jammu
army and “commanded one of the regiments of the Jammu Contingent, which marched
to Delhi and did excellent service in the
Mutiny.”56A Later the title
of Raja was conferred
upon
him.
Pirthi Singh, son of Raja Jodhbir Chand, again
from Kangra District
“fought
during the Mutiny in Central India, winning the Order of Merit and receiving a
khilat of Rs. 500. For his good services generally, the Raja was made a Knight
Commander of the Star of India in 1868, and was granted a salute of seven guns as a personal distinction…”57
Tek
Chand of Indaura family of Kangra, too,
“rendered good service during the rebellion of
1848-49, and again in the Mutiny, when he assisted in the capture of rebels,
and furnished a number, of men for patrol duty” and his family was also conferred
the title
of Rai
Sahib.”58
Wazir
Gosaun of Bir of Mandi Kangra was another ruling family which actively came
forward to join the British campaign against the rebels.
“During the Mutiny of 1857, as Regent of Mandi,
he placed the resources of the State at the disposal of Government [British]…He
had also made arrangements for furnishing an additional batch of five hundred
men if any call had arisen for their services.”59
Rai
Ratan Chand of Babhaur (Hoshiarpur Dist) came forward with
“loyal assistance on the occasion of the
Mutiny, proceeding to Delhi with a number of his kinsmen and doing excellent
service side by side with the British Troops throughout the rebellion.”60
Pran
Nath of Lahore belonging to a family of tehsildars played prominent role in
killing the rebel sepoys at Lahore. His cruel deeds are thus recorded in the
above referred book.
“He was at Ajnala in 1857, and on the 31st of
July about 500 the disarmed sepoys of the 26th Native Infantry which had
mutinied at Lahore…arrived on the left bank of the Ravi near Balghat and
prepared to cross the river. Pran Nath collected the villagers and the police,
and attacked the mutineers with vigour,
and killed
some 150
of them.”61
Both the
volumes of Chiefs and Families of Note in
Punjab also recorded the loyalist deeds of the following Hindu families and
prominent individuals.
Karam
Chand of Gujranwala was at Lahore in command of joined General Van Cortlandt
and was him “at all the actions fought by the General
between Ferozepore and Rohtak.”62 Rana Bishan
Chand of
Koti assisted in guarding the station
against the approach of the Nasiri Battalion of Gurkhas whose behaviour at
Jutog, when ordered to proceed to the plains, brought them under the suspicion
of disloyalty; and he afterwards gave shelter
to many
Europeans who had left Simla.63
Kishan Singh of Baghal State provided,
“a contingent of footmen to assist in watching
the roads leading from Jullundur whence an attack upon Simla by the mutineers
of the 3rd, 33rd and 35th Bengal Regiments was expected…was rewarded for his
loyalty by receiving the title of Raja…”64
A through perusal of the contemporary archival
material would make it clear that these were not only notable Sikh families
which stood on the side of the British but also Muslim as well as Hindu
families of the same class. In fact, in most of the cases they worked jointly
and that too with full vigour. For instance the ‘Montgomery Sahib ka Risala,’
which became the nucleus of the famous ‘Hodson’s Horse’ and was the first
British contingent to reach Delhi immediately after ‘Mutiny’ originally
consisted of three regiments of cavalry, “one raised by Nawab Imam-ud-din Khan,
one by Raja Tej Singh, and the third by…Man Singh…”65
The
British chief commander Wilson while describing the ethnic character of the
British armed forces which besieged Delhi in 1857 admitted that “such a
‘heterogeneous force’ consisting of Beloochees [sic], Afghans, Sikhs,
Pathans, Dograhs [sic]” was never collected under the British
command in history.66
Kaye who
witnessed ‘Mutiny’ was forthright in his conclusion that these were native
stooges of all creeds who helped the British in recapturing India after 1857
revolt. According to him
“It was one of the most curious characteristics
of the mutiny- war, that although the English were supposed to be fighting
against the native races, they were in reality sustained and supported by the Natives
of the country, and could not have held their own for a day without the aid of
those whom we hated as our
national enemies.”67
Thus the contemporary narratives and documents
make it abundantly clear that the British army which invaded Delhi, apart from
Sikh troops, also included large numbers of Muslim, Hindu sepoys (often
referred to as Punjabees) who were recruited (or sent by Muslim-Hindu rulers
and landlords) from Punjab and as far away as Afghanistan. Kaye’s account even
confirms the fact that “Balochee [sic] regiment was the first to arrive. They
were steadfast
in their
loyalty and fought well.”68
Those
who single out Sikhs as the main culprit for the defeat of Indians in the 1857
rebellion overlook another crucial fact that is the participation of thousands
of Gurkha troops sent by the Nepal rulers to augment the depleted British army
in the aftermath of ‘Mutiny’. The British commanders relied on Gurkhas (who
were all Hindus) immensely for invading Delhi. According to Kaye’s narration,
Major Charles Reid who was assigned the task of capturing Kishengunje and
Subzimandi, the most difficult parts of Delhi, had great
“reliance
on Goorkhas [sic]. Their indomitable spirit was something beautiful to
behold…Reid’s heart was gladdened that he was taking with him two hundred of
the sturdy Goorkhas who had clung to him so nobly from the first.”69
At Lucknow front the Nepal ruler, Jung Bahadur
personally came leading a large Gurkha
force on March 10, 185870 which played crucial role
in capturing the city for the British.
WERE
THERE SIKHS AND PUNJABIS WHO ACTIVELY JOINED THE GREAT REBELLION AND FOUGHT
AGAINST THE BRITISH IN 1857?
The
perusal of contemporary narratives and documents doubtlessly proves that Sikhs
and Punjabis participated in the rebellion in large numbers not only in Punjab
but also outside Punjab. In this study we are only focusing on Sikhs and
Punjabis and not on the rebellion of native troops of the British army often
referred as ‘Poorabeah’ troops who revolted in thousands in almost all
cantonments of Punjab and were ruthlessly punished and killed.
The
India Office Library in London retains important contemporary material on 1857
which no other library or archives in the world has. Amongst its collection of
‘Montgomery Papers’ is a section ‘Delhee News’ containing original letters of
the spies which were sent from within the besieged city of Delhi to the British
army commanders during June-September, 1857. In this collection we find two
British spies, Jawahar Singh and Mamraj, informing the British on July 2 that
“35 Sikhs had reached from Benares, and were encamped at the Kootub [Qutab]. They
were brought
into Dehlee
[sic].”70A
Another letter from spy, ‘Ramjee Dass of
Alleepoor’ informed the British masters on July 19, that in deference of the
Hindu and Sikh rebel sepoys in Delhi the King, Bahadur Shah Zafar decreed that
‘anyone guilty of Cow-killing will be
blown away
from a
gun’70B
References
to Sikhs in these letters only confirm the fact that patriotic forces which
gathered to defend Delhi against the British siege had substantial
participation of rebel Sikhs.
Munshi
Jeewan Lal was Mir Munshi or head
clerk attached to the British Governor General’s Agent at Delhi on the eve of
‘Mutiny’. When rebels at Delhi declared their independence on May 11, 1857,
Jeewan Lal on the instructions of his British masters stayed back in Delhi to
work as their spy as he himself admitted
“I was moved by the thoughts that for many
years I had eaten the salt of the English Government and wished it well, and
now was an opportunity to do all that was possible with heart and soul
for those
I had
served.”71
Throughout
his stay in Delhi he maintained a diary which was translated and published by
Charles Theophilus Metcalfe, a senior British official and a benefactor of
Jeewan Lal in 1885. Jeewan Lal’s diary basically contained material and lots of information to be passed to the
British who had besieged the city, had the following entries about the
participation of Sikhs and Punjabis in the rebellion, specially defence of
Delhi, which a well-wisher of the British would never have reported if were
without substance. Here are some of the entries in chronological order from his
diary highlighting the participation of Sikhs and Punjabis in the 1857
Uprising.
May 27
[1857]:
“Two
regiments of the Punjabis demanded an audience of the King to complain that the
Sahibs [the British] at Ferozepur [sic] had shot several men of the regiments
to which they belonged, and requested that the King should take care that they
should not be treated like their brethren at Ferozpur. They demanded guarantees
from the King that he would protect them, otherwise they asked for permission
to disband themselves. The King assured them that he was able and willing to
protect them.”72
May 28
[1857]:
“About
200 men arrived from Lahore and Ferozepur to join the mutineers.”73
June 1
[1857]:
“NEWS came from Patiala that the two native
regiments sent to assist the English had joined the mutineers, and, had had a
fight with the English. It was reported that the whole of the Patiala force was
hostile to the English. The soldiers openly remonstrated with the Maharajah for
sympathizing with the English, when the natives were fighting in defence of
their religion. They reminded him that he had gained nothing by his behaviour
during the Punjab war…”74
June 21 [1857]:
“A sowar [cavalryman] came to announce the
arrival of three regiments of foot and cavalry from Jullundur, who offered
their services to the King; they
were ordered
to encamp
outside the city.”75
July 8
[1857]
“A dispatch received from the Peshawur [sic]
forces intimating that 20,000 men were
willing to join the King and would shortly arrive.”76
July 15 [1857]:
Two companies of the Grenadier Regiment from
Umballa came in, and reported that the Rajah of Patiala had shot down a
thousand Sepoys who were marching through his territory towards Delhi.”77
July 27 [1857]:
“To-day two Sikhs came on behalf of the chiefs
of Lahore to say that 200,000 cartridges had been safely delivered to the
troops in the Nimuch camp. Orders were issued that these were not to be wasted,
as the supply in the Magazine was running
short.”78
July 29 [1857]:
“Several
Sikhs, retainers of the Rajah Narunder Sing [ruler of Patiala State], deserted
from the English camp and appeared at the Durbar, and they reported that the
English were' badly off for artillery horses, but
had plenty
of guns.”79
August 5
[1857]:
“Certain
Sikhs presented a petition complaining that they were in the habit of attacking
the English entrenchments, but had to return, as the Purbeahs would give them
no assistance and would not co-operate; they prayed the King to form a regiment
of Sikhs from amongst the regiments of Delhi, and to entrust them with two
field guns, that they might attack the
English
with some chance of success. They were encouraged, and told not to
despair of victory.”80
August 6 [1857]:
“The
Punjabis living on Saadut Ali Khan's Canal promised to pay to the King
41,000 rupees.” 81
August 26 [1857]:
“Ghosh Mahommed, the General commanding the
Nimuch force…asked for reinforcements. One regiment of Sikhs and four of
cavalry were placed under his
command.”82
September
2 [1857]:
“Five cavalry soldiers from
Lahore came in without arms.”83
There is
another personal diary available of the days of siege of Delhi by the British,
titled 1857 ka Tareekhi Roznamcha penned
by Abdul Latif. It is the Urdu translation of a diary which was originally
written in Persian. He was a resident of Delhi, belonging to a family of the elites,
having direct access to the court of Bahadur Shah Zafar. Latif hated rebels,
however, his diary has an entry dated July 27, 1857 which reads:
“Few
Sikhs after traveling all the way from Lahore appeared in the court of the King
[Zafar] and made a representation that in Lahore it is rumoured that the King
had decreed the beheading of Sikhs and announced a reward of ten rupees for
every head brought The King responded by saying that he practiced only kindness
and nothing else, he treats people of all creeds and religions with equal love
and whoever has spread this rumour is a liar.”84
This
entry in the diary only underlines the fact that there were Sikhs in Lahore who
felt attached to the Mughal King who had declared his independence from the
British hegemony. Most likely it was a rumour spread by the British and their
henchmen in Punjab to keep Sikhs away from joining the rebel forces at Delhi
and these anti-British Sikhs came to Delhi [a dangerous and real heroic deed in
those days when even a bird could not fly in or out of Delhi due to the British
siege] to clarify matters and get assurance.
Latif’s
diary also mentions the fact that on August 17, 1875,
“200 Sikhs sepoys belonging to the army of
Jammu Raja came to join the rebel forces. They also reported that the rulers of
Patiala, Nabha and Jind have provided a large force to the British for
capturing Delhi.”84A
These
are not the diaries of Jeewan Lal and Abdul Latif only which disclose the fact
that Sikhs and Punjabis joined hands with rebels in large numbers. J.
Cave-Brown, who as a Christian priest accompanied the British forces which
moved from Peshawar to Delhi, corroborated the fact that Sikhs too joined the
1857 rebellion. He, in his memoirs, while describing the punishment meted out
to mutinous troops at Ropar admitted the fact that there were Sikhs among
rebels. According to his description,
“five
men concerned in the riot at Roopar [Ropar] were identified, and tried by a
civil commission, and, with the Sirdar Mohur Singh,
were sentenced
to death.”85
The British Gazetteer of Ludhiana district
acknowledged the fact that
“Of the two men of the regiment [of the native
British troops at Ludhina] who met their death, one was a Jhelum Mussulman,
caught as a spy; another who attempted Lieutenant Yorke’s life, and
was shot
by him
was a
young Manjha
Sikh.”86
M. R.
Gubbins was Revenue Commissioner and a member of the British Commission which
governed Oudh after its annexation for fourteen months just before the 1857
rebellion. After the uprising, he became one of the chief advisors of Sir Henry
Lawrence (Commissioner of Oudh), managed the Intelligence Department and stayed
with the British forces till they were forced to vacate Lucknow in November
1857. His diary published under the title The
Mutinies in Oudh (1858, London) has following details about the Sikh rebels
in Oudh.
On May
31, 1857, Gubbins led British sepoys were able to capture a group of rebel
sepoys in a village outside Lucknow. It was found by Gubbins that “three of
the men
belonged to the 48th Native Infantry
and three to the 13th Native Infantry,
and one
man was
a Seikh
[Sikh].”87
It is
true that British relied heavily on the Sikh troops mainly supplied by the Sikh
princes of Punjab but a crucial fact should also not be overlooked that there
were large number of Sikhs who joined the ranks of rebels also. While describing
the attitude of Sikh troops during the siege of Lucknow by the rebel forces,
Gubbins admitted that
“Many of these men [Sikhs] deserted us during
the siege; and the rest were, during the whole time, a constant source of alarm
and anxiety. They were in constant correspondence with the enemy, through their
deserters, who used to come up under
the walls of the squares and converse with their brethren inside…The object of
these visits of the Siekh [Sikh] deserters was…to induce their brethren to
desert also.”88
This
largely did not happen because there were British loyalist Sikhs who worked as
spies to thwart any such possibility. Gubbins underscoring the role of such
stooges wrote:
“We had
a party of four of them, more trusty it must be admitted than the rest, under
the Risaldar Sheyre Singh, in my garrison. They at night occupied a post on the
roof of the outhouses on the south face. Sheyre Singh one night informed us,
that, if we chose, we might overhear a conversation which was invited by a
deserter outside with the men of his post. Captain Hawes accordingly went down
and concealed himself behind the rampart. The deserter [Sikh] approached, and for some time used every endeavour
to induce
his Seikh brethren to desert. He assured them that our defences could not long
keep the enemy off: that no succour could possibly arrive; and that, if the
place was taken, they would share our slaughter. On the other hand they were
assured of receiving high pay and consideration from the mutineers. After
sometime passed in converse of this nature, Sheyre Singh informed them that a
‘sahib’ was listening, when the emissary
at once
took to
flight.”89
Gubbins’
narration of Oudh rebellion mentioned the fact that by the end of July 1857
there prevailed ‘great despondency’ among the British troops.
“We
daily lost men, sometimes six or seven in a day; and they had begun to think
that relief was impossible. Many desertions had taken place, and several of the
Seikhs [Sikhs], including sixteen men of the 13th Native Infantry had been of the
number.”90
Gubbins
while describing the events of the month of August (1857) wrote that Sikh
troops continued giving
“much anxiety. Many of them had deserted; and
we were not sure that the rest who were known to maintain clandestine
communication with the enemy, might not any time follow the example of their
brethren.”91
Gubbins’
memoirs even contain details of an abortive plot which allegedly was hatched by
the Sikh army men against the British officers.
“Their
plan was stated to be the following: the Seikhs [Sikhs] were to enter my
enclosure by twos and threes, on pretence of speaking to me about obtaining an
issue of pay. My native artillerymen were then, at a given signal, to turn the
guns of my post on the European, when a rising of the native was to take place
everywhere, while an attack from the outside was to be made by the enemy.” Gubbins wrote that
as a measure of precaution Sikh troopers were prohibited from entering his
[Gubbins’] enclosure and “nothing eventually came of the supposed plot.”92
Chiefs and Families of Note in Punjab (volume
I) contains details of large scale rebellion of Sikh troops of the British army
stationed at Benares, their massacre and how it was sabotaged by a British
stooge, Surat Singh.
“On the
4th June 1857 the 37th Native Infantry was disbanded at Benares, and some
suspicious movement being observed in a corps of Ludhiana Sikhs present on the
ground, the guns, which were being served against the 37th, were turned against
the Sikhs. The whole affair seems to have been a miserable mistake; and there
is no reason to believe that the corps was anything but loyal. But it was not
prepared for so severe a test of its loyalty, and accordingly charged the guns;
but was repulsed with great loss and driven from the field.
“It
happened that the Benares treasury, which contained several lakhs of rupees and
the jewels of the Maharani-Jindan, valued
at twenty lakh, was guarded by a detachment of the Sikh regiment which had been
cut up. Hard by the treasury was the Collector's Court, a strong masonry
building, on the roof of which some
twelve Civilians had taken their stand to defend the treasure and their own
lives in the event of an outbreak. When the Sikh guard hears of the fate of
their comrades, their agitation and rage was extreme, and they would certainly
have mutinied, seized the treasure, and attacked the Europeans, had not Sardar
Surat Singh gone in among them and, by his personal influence and
expostulations, kept them to a sense of their duty. Through that long June
night, the Sardar, ably seconded by Pandit Gokal Chand, argued and entreated
till, towards morning, the little party were escorted to the mint by a European force. At
Janupur
another detachment of the Ludhiana Regiment was stationed. When these men heard
of the destruction of their regiment, they rose in fury, shot their Commanding
Officer murdered the Joint Magistrate, and marched to Lucknow with the
treasure. But for the gallantry and loyalty of Surat Singh, the same
tragedy might have taken place
at Benares.”93
So, as
the contemporary documents show, these were not only Sikh ruling families in
Punjab who supported the British but also well-known rich families amongst
Hindus and Muslims who joined the British campaign against the 1857 rebellion.
This reality was no different from the rest of India, where rulers of Gwalior,
Hyderabad, Jaipur, Jodhpur, Kota, Bhopal, Dhar and many more native states
joined hands with the British in crushing the great War of Independence.
It is a matter of serious discussion, and
concern that why the support of the rulers of princely states like Patiala,
Nabha, Jind or Kapurthala (which in no way represented the Sikh community) to
the British is only singled out to be identified in terms of the religion
professed by its rulers. This terrible confusion could be found even in one of
the last letters of Nana Saheb of Bithoor which he addressed to his countrymen.
In this
letter dated
7th Sudi of
Kartik, Samvat
1915 (1858) he wrote:
“This
was the defeat of the entire country not mine [of the revolutionaries]. It was because of
Gorkhas, Sikhs and
the princely
order.”94
Despite the fact that Gorkhas happened to be Hindus and ‘princely
order’ which supported the British also belonged to Hindu and Islamic faiths,
he singled out Sikhs as pro-British community. He can be excused as he did not
have all the information but it is really unfortunate that researchers in post
Independent India did not bother to verify facts but continued to believe in a
myth based on sheer falsehood. The matter does not end here. The whole
discourse on 1857 easily forgets to take note of the Sikh revolutionaries who
fought and sacrificed for the liberation of India in 1857.
This
stereotype also saves the British from the shame and disrepute which would have
naturally been accrued on them for the savagery and unparalleled repression in
suppressing the rebellion. These were Sikhs who did all the savage acts and
British were not responsible, this is the bottom-line
of this
kind of
logic. Every anniversary of this great
liberation war is an opportune
moment to take note of the true facts and undo the injustice which has
continuously been done to the Sikhs as a community in relation to the 1857 War
of Independence.
Shamsul Islam,
Link for some of S. Islam's writings in
English, Hindi, Urdu, Marathi, Malayalam, Kannada, Bengali, Punjabi, Gujarati
and video interviews/debates:
http://du-in.academia.edu/ShamsulIslam
Facebook: https://facebook.com/shamsul.islam.332
Twitter: @shamsforjustice
http://shamsforpeace.blogspot.com/
Email: notoinjustice@gmail.com
LINK FOR BOOKS BY SHAMSUL ISLAM
CURRENTLY AVAILABLE (Updated January 2021)
https://www.academia.edu/40952491/ALL_BOOKS_OF_SHAMSUL_ISLAM_WITH_BUYING_LINKS
REFERENCES:
1 George H. Hodson (ed.), Twelve Years of a Soldier’s Life in India: Being Extracts from the Letters of Major W. S. R. Hodson, John W. Parker &
Son, London, 1859, p. 246.
2 Thomas Lowe, Central India: During the rebellion of 1857 and 1858: A Narrative of
Operations of the British Forces From the Suppression of Mutiny in Aurangabad
to the capture of Gwalior Under
Major General Sir Hugh Rose, GCB, and Brigadier Sir C. Stuart, KCB,
Longman, London, 1860, p. 324.
3 Majumdar, R. C. (ed.), British Paramountcy and Indian Renaissance, Part I, Bhartiya Vidya Bhawan, Mumbai, 2002, p. 618.
4 William Howard Russell, My Indian Mutiny Diary, [Edited by Miachel Edwardes with an essay
on the Mutiny and its consequences], Cassell & Company, London, 1957.pp.
150-151. 5 Russell, 84.
6
Ibid, p. 96.
7 Ibid, p. 80. In fact, any body and specially a
foreigner that had seen the native recruits in the then British army would have
had this kind of confusion. The natives recruited from Punjab generally put on
a headgear (pugree or turban) as part of their uniform. For instance the uniform of ‘Hodson’s Horse’ was a dust
coloured tunic, with a scarlet sash worn over the shoulder, and ‘scarlet
turban’. Thus every soldier would probably look like a Sikh. See Hodson, p. 260.
8 Ibid, p.
192.
9 Russell: page no. 192-194.
10
Kaye,
John William Kaye, A History of the Sepoy
War in India 1857-1858, Vol. III, London, 1870 (Indian reprint as A History of the Great Revolt 1988, p. 570.)
11
Imperial Gazetteers of India, Vol XX,
Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1908, pp 37-38.
12 W. L. Conarn
& H. D. Craik, Chiefs and Families of
Note in Punjab, Vol. II, Punjab Government, Lahore, 1910, p. 395, 398.
The
British Lt. Governor of Punjab, Sir Robert Montgomery (1859-1865) wished to
produce a volume documenting facts about the rulers and big landlord clans in
the Province who supported the East India Company’s military campaign to crush
the 1857 ‘Mutiny’. The task was assigned to a senior official Lepel H. Griffin
who produced a volume titled Punjab
Chiefs in 1865; it was revised in 1890 by Charles Francis Massy. Since it
was not comprehensive enough W. L. Conarn and H. D. Craik revised and corrected
titled Chiefs and Families of Note in
Punjab, Volume I & II in 1909 and 1910 respectively.
13
Chiefs and Families, Vol.
II, p. 408.
14
Chiefs and Families, Vol.
II, pp. 413-414.
15
Chiefs and Families, Vol. II, pp. 420-421.
16
Ibid, p. 424.
17 Ibid, p. 464.
18 Chiefs and Families, Vol. II, pp. 472-473.
19 Chiefs and Families , Vol, I, p. 221.
20 Ibid, p. 414.
21 Ibid, p. 475.
21A Hodson.
p. 183.
22 Hodson.
pp. 197-198.
23
Hodson,
p. 201.
24
Hodson, p.
269.
24A Hodson,
p. 300
25 Hodson,
pp. 301-302.
26
Cited in
Hodson, p. 313.
27
Lt.
MacDowell cited in Hodson, p. 313.
28
Hodson,
p. 302. It seems Sikh factor was
brought in by the editor of Major Hodson’s leters (George H. Hodson, who also
happened to be elder brother of Major Hodson) in order to ward off the outcry against his brother’s
savage treatment of the Mughal Princes before and after killing them. According to George H. Hodson’s argument,
Major Hodson was not that inhuman but indulged in that kind of savagery for
Sikhs.
29
Chiefs and Families, Vol.
II, p. 395
30
Ibid, pp. 420-421.
31 Ibid, pp. 407-408
32
Ibid, p. 412
33
Chiefs and Families, Vol.
II, p. 464.
34
Chiefs
and Families, Vol.
1, p.20.
35
Ibid, p.32.
36
Cited in
Chiefs and Families, Vol. 1, p. 46.
37
Ibid, p. 98-99.
38 Ibid, pp. 201-202
39
Hodson,
p. 301.
40
Chiefs and Families, Vol.
1, pp. 202-203.
41
Chiefs and Families, Vol.
1, p. 231.
42 Ibid, p. 256-257.
43 Ibid, p. 257.
44 Chiefs and Families, Vol. 1, p. 291.
45 Ibid, p. 322.
46 Ibid, pp. 332-333.
47 Ibid, p. 396.
48 Chiefs and Families, Vol. II, p. 41.
49 Ibid, p. 179.
50 Ibid, pp. 180-181.
51 Chiefs and Families, Vol. II, pp. 181-182,
189.
52 Ibid, pp. 306-307.
53 Ibid, p. 308.
54
Charles
Aitchison, Rulers of India: Lord Lawrence,
Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1892, p. 72. 5
55
Ibid, p. 81.
56
Chiefs and Families, Vol.
II, p. 132. 56A Ibid, Vol I,
p. 76.
57
Chiefs and Families, Vol I, p. 79.
58
Ibid, p. 108.
59 Ibid, p. 118.
60 Ibid, p. 143.
61 Chiefs and Families, Vol I,
pp. 265-266.
62 Ibid, Vol. II, p.
136.
63
Ibid,
Vol. II, p. 457.
64
Chiefs and Families, Vol.
II, p. 483-484. 65 Ibid, p. 99.
66
Letter
dated September 23, 1857 cited in Kaye, vol. iii, p. 656.
67
Kaye,
Vol II, p. 603.
68 Ibid, p. 611.
69
Kaye,
vol. iii, pp. 605-606.
70
Russell,
p. 89.
70A British Library, London, India Office Records, Private Papers of Sir Robert Montgomery, Mss Eur D1019/3,
[Volume III: The Mutiny, including reports by spies made during the siege of
Delhi in 1857].
70B Letter No. 4, Ibid.
71
Charles
Theophilus Metcalfe (Tr.), Two Narratives
of the Mutiny in Delhi, Delhi, [Indian
Edition] 1974, p. 77.
72 Ibid, p. 103.
73 Ibid, p. 105.
74 Ibid, p. 110.
75 Ibid, p. 125.
76 Ibid, p. 143.
77 Ibid, p. 152.
78 Ibid, p. 168.
79 Ibid, pp. 171-172.
80 Ibid, p. 183.
81 Ibid, p. 184.
82 Ibid, p. 208.
83 Ibid, p. 217.
84
Abdul
Latif (Tr. & ed. Khaleeque Ahmed Nizami), 1857 ka Tareekhee Roznamcha, Nadwatul Mussanefeen, Delhi, 1958, p. 152.
84A Ibid, 162.
85
J.
Cave-Browne, The Punjab & Delhi in
1857, Vol I, Govt. of Punjab,
Amritsar, 1970 (First edition 1861), vol. 1, p. 225.
86
Ludhiana District Gazetteer, Govt.
of Punjab, Lahore, 1914, p. 88.
87
M. R.
Gubbins, The Mutinies in Oudh, MR
Bentley, London, 1858, p. 109. 88 Ibid, pp. 211-212.
89 Ibid, p. 212.
90 Ibid, pp. 228-229.
91 Ibid, p. 274.
92
Ibid,
pp. 276.
93
Chiefs and Families, Vol I, pp. 428-429.
94
Cited in
Chaturvedi, D. N. (Tr.), Remember Us Once
in a While, Govt. of India, 1998, p. 15.
[END OF
THE REFERENCES]
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