Hindustan Times (Delhi)

20mn views and counting: Moosewala’s posthumous song becomes a rage online

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Parteek Singh Mahal

FARIDKOT : Punjabi singer Sidhu Moosewala’s posthumous­ly released song SYL garnered nearly 20 million views and 2.5 million likes on his Youtube page within hours apart from being widely shared on Instagram and other social media platforms.

Over 1.2 million user comments were posted on the Youtube page alone as fans paid emotional tributes to the slain musician whose latest work sparked intense conversati­ons over the politicall­y charged nature of the song. The title SYL refers to the Sutlej Yamuna Link Canal and the lyrics warn that Punjab will not share its river waters if the injustices meted out to it are not stopped, bringing up years of militancy in state that led to widespread fear and social tumult. The song, leaked on social media a day earlier, was officially uploaded at 6pm Thursday on Youtube and its teaser on Instagram received more than 8 million views; the musician’s account has 10.6 million followers on Instagram, over 3 million of those added after his murder on May 29.

Shubhdeep Singh Sidhu, who went by the stage name Sidhu Moosewala, sings about the politicall­y complex four-decade-old issue of the constructi­on of the SYL canal. Visuals accompanyi­ng the song showcase events Punjab has witnessed since 1947. Apart from the SYL dispute with neighbouri­ng Haryana, the song talks about the post-independen­ce undivided Punjab, issue of states’ sovereignt­y under a federal system, the 1984 riots, the incident of the Sikh flag being hoisted at the Red Fort during the farmers’ agitation, and calls for release of Sikhs taken political prisoners. It ends with the message: “Each one of you is the last hope for protecting Punjab’s river waters to prevent state from turning into a desert.”

Moosewala, no stranger to controvers­y in his lifetime, opens SYL on a controvers­ial note with a statement by Aam Adami Party (AAP) Rajya Sabha member Sushil Gupta after his party formed the government in Punjab: “Now we have a government in Punjab. In 2024, the AAP will form the government in Haryana, too. In 2025, water will reach every farm in Haryana. This is not our promise but our guarantee.”

The song features excerpts from a statement by Meghalaya governor Satya Pal Malik on the farm laws: “Indira Gandhi knew that she would be killed and she was. They killed former army chief General AS Vaidya in Pune and Dwyer (Sir Michael O’dwyer, the Lieutenant Governor of Punjab in whose tenure the Jallianwal­a Bagh massacre happened) in London. I have said that don’t test the patience of the Sikhs.”

The song appears to glorify Sikh militant Balwinder Singh Jattana, who killed two officials at the SYL head office at Chandigarh in 1990. The visuals also feature images of militant leader Jarnail Singh Bhindranwa­le and army movement during Operation Bluestar. Jattana, who was associated with prokhalist­an outfit Babbar Khalsa, along with three accomplice­s killed the officials preparing plans for the constructi­on of the canal. Their action halted the constructi­on of the canal and it has still not resumed. Moosewala demands that Chandigarh, Himachal Pradesh and Haryana be merged with Punjab. Haryana and the Union territory of Chandigarh were carved out of Punjab in 1966 and most of the hilly areas included in Himachal Pradesh.

Earlier, Moosewala’s family appealed to music producers not to share or release any of the singer’s unfinished tracks with anyone except his father Balkaur Singh. Earlier this month, Balkaur Singh said he would keep the musician alive through his songs for six-seven years. Moosewala was shot dead on May 29 at Jawahar Ke village in Punjab’s Mansa a day after the state curtailed his security cover.

Jailed gangster Lawrence Bishnoi has been named as the prime suspect in the murder case, in which 13 accused have been arrested so far.

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Sidhu Moosewala

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