Society

A Letter to Gandhi Ji

On October 03, 2024, and all the newspapers, TV media, in India and around the world carried news of your birthday celebrations from yesterday. You, being the father of the Indian nation, it was a national holiday there where your lasting legacy of “Ahimsa” meaning nonviolence was recalled. In fact, now your birthday is celebrated as International Day of Non-Violence. Even The Wall Street Journal, out of New York carried a picture of your birthday celebration in India on the front page. In the picture a child was attired like you, in a gesture of refreshing your core message of “Ahimsa.”

Suddenly, my thoughts flashed to forty years ago. It was the last day of the month of your birth in the year 1984, and by evening in the capital of India the air was filled with smoke billowing all around. There were targeted killings, burning of properties and vehicles, looting, raping, burning by pouring kerosine and petrol. The police had suddenly disappeared from the scenes of crime, and if they happened to be there, they either turned a blind eye or rooted for the perpetuators. What was being unleashed was unbelievable, and even the media coverage of such incidents was totally blacked out. Your message of “Ahimsa” was being replaced with violence “Hinsa” in the capital and other major cities of the nation. The trains, airports, roads were not safe for venturing out. The houses, shops and businesses owned by Sikhs were being selectively burned and looted. The mobs had voters list where the faith of residents was available. With that information the houses of Sikhs were identified and marked with ‘X’ for loot and plunder. Any attempts to stop the attackers was not just futile but dangerous, as it made the person vulnerable to mob attack. The Sikhs, lauded as warriors, and protectors of the nation, had been reduced to despised second class citizens, only to be eliminated. Your promise of February 21, 1931, to the Sikh community at Gurdwara Sis Ganj in Delhi had been conveniently forgotten after August 15, 1947, but today they had become pariah in the month of your birth. You had assured Sikhs that their rights would be respected, and their aspirations would find fulfillment in an independent India, but on that day and days that followed over 3000 Sikhs lost their lives. It was an open Sikh genocide with slogans filling the air “Khoon Ka Badla Khoon.” Where you are the father of the nation, the violence, killing, raping, looting, pillaging was being sanctioned, and officially abetted. The pride of Sikh, the turban had become their gauntlet. The widows, who lost their husbands, kids who were orphaned during this carnage, are still languishing and paying the price. Till date these sufferers have not been able to rebuild their lives.

Forty years after the tragic event, there is no official apology, or an attempt to get to the bottom of it, or punishment of the perpetuators has not been initiated. Even the complicity of the police in the atrocities which is a serious issue has also not received adequate investigation. How the Sikhs in the police forces were sent home has not been dealt with. Many enquiry commissions have been appointed not catch the perpetuators, but to wash and gloss over their acts of omission. The call for a reconciliation has fallen on deaf ears. The state machinery was unleashed not against an enemy in times of war, but against the citizens, duly abetted by elected officials.   

Gandhi Ji! the father of the nation; tell me how this could take place in your nation? You are the revered figure of the nation, where hardly any city exists without any street or road named after you with your statue on a pedestal greeting the visitors on the street. Your legacy has inspired others as Martin Luther King Jr., Nelson Madela, Lech Walesa and many others, but in that country is your legacy for lip service and show alone? There are numerous museums in India and even outside of India that promote your legacy, and after 105 years of your birth anniversary, what we saw was an unbelievable trauma being unleashed, together with collective consciousness amnesia.

I am writing this letter to you Gandhi Ji, to plead with you that we need a museum to showcase and share the tragic stories of these unfortunate victims. So that in future a carnage, a genocide of this nature and scale will not be perpetuated. In fact, this should be the place where we share how when the mockery of the lofty principles is made through their use for solely political gains, the results will be mass killings. This museum will become an essential extension to share the results of perpetuating “Hinsa” in the name of “Ahimsa”. Let us create a legacy that these don’t get repeated.    

06-Oct-2024

More by :  Bhupinder Singh


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Views: 328      Comments: 3



Comment well expressed.

Harbans Lal
15-Oct-2024 10:31 AM

Comment Bhupinder jee
The letter is very convincing and emotional. I am sure Ghandhi jee would have agreed to your plea and suggestions. Having said that we don't need Ghandhi jee to implement your suggestions. SGPC should jump on this recommendation and implement.

Harpal
10-Oct-2024 17:38 PM

Comment It is a sad state of affairs of corrupt political system in India. Those in power are only interested in getting votes to stay in power. No one cares for what is good for the country. After the Sikh holocaust, it was a golden opportunity for India to apologize and help victims rehabilitated with a commitment to ensure such incidents do not repeat in a civilized society.

Karamjit Singh
09-Oct-2024 10:56 AM




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