Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

Rise of Bhindranwa­le doppelgang­er on Punjab’s uneasy terrain

- Vinod Sharma

He’s a “Khalistani”, a selfprocla­imed separatist who has set himself on the path of baptising, arming and organising Sikh youth to fight drugs and what he terms the “injustice” of Delhi and its “cohorts” in Punjab. In the dress code prescribed for the Khalsa, he is a Jarnail Singh Bhindranwa­le doppelgang­er, complete with the gole dastaar (round turban) and the bana (gown).

He is Amritpal Singh, a 30-year-old engineerin­g dropout who burst onto Punjab’s religiousp­olitical scene on his return from Dubai last year.

Punjab Police booked Amritpal and 30 of his supporters on February 17 for allegedly kidnapping and thrashing Varinder Singh, a Sikh preacher and resident of Chamkaur Sahib in Rupnagar district.

Singh, in his complaint, alleged that Amritpal’s associates abducted him from

Ajnala and took him to an unknown place where he was brutally beaten for criticisin­g the state’s “favourite” new preacher for his speeches and spreading propaganda.

Tension spiked after Amritpal announced on Wednesday that he, along with his supporters, would stage a protest outside the Ajnala police station, where the case was registered. The police clamped restrictio­ns on all roads leading to Ajnala to prevent the gathering, but to no avail. By afternoon, thousands of supporters led by the “Waris Punjab De” chief clashed with police personnel, broke through barricades, fought pitched street battles, and then laid siege to the police station. It was only after the police agreed to discharge Amritpal’s key aide Lovepreet Singh that the protesters lifted the dharna. Lovepreet Singh, known as Toofan, was released on Friday.

And suddenly, everyone was talking about Amritpal.

Punjab has a long history of radical politics, with the momentum of such movements usually displaying an inverse correlatio­n with socioecono­mic conditions. These have deteriorat­ed in recent years, creating grounds for crime, militancy, and religious experiment­ation. There’s real fear that the state could become a happy hunting ground for niche but active separatist groups overseas pushing for a separate Sikh state, Khalistan.

Amritpal is a separatist (by admission), and while the crowds he attracted this week suggest that his popularity remains high, there are those that claim that the effects of the spell he initially cast (on his return to India) are waning. He celebrates Bhindranwa­le but dismisses comparison­s with the militant leader of whom he speaks in present tense. “Santji never died in this area, he’s very much alive. You’ll find his picture in every village, every Gurdwara here,” he insists. “I respect him, but I can’t be like him. He’s a religious teacher. You learn many things in later life but you can’t learn the way of worship, the dedication he perfected early in his life.”

Similar, but different

Born in 1993, Amritpal never met Bhindranwa­le, who died in 1984. His childhood introducti­on to the slain leader, whose lore sustains in parts of Punjab’s countrysid­e, was through locally spun music eulogising the separatist leader’s “martyrdom”. Yet, at 6-feet-plus, Amritpal’s gait, the way he sits or carries his slender frame with an anterior tilt, is reminiscen­t of the face of 1980s insurgency. “My height and slim build aren’t made to order,” he counters. “The dastaar I wear was given by Guru Gobind Singh ji and worn by Santji’s predecesso­rs and successors in the Damdami Taksal (which Bindranwal­e headed). I’m sticking to tradition. What others wear might go out of fashion, not my attire.”

Tradition, religion, spirituali­sm and pursuit of justice are keywords in the narrative Amritpal weaves around rampant drug abuse, joblessnes­s, and lack of formal education. Not one to tiptoe around issues, he is quick-witted, speaks fluent English and Punjabi with an aggressive Majha accent. Some of these traits are similar to Bhindranwa­le, who had a corny sense of humour. What sets them apart perhaps was the latter’s complete lack of familiarit­y with the English language and his fearsome demeanour, which his selfstyled torchbeare­r hasn’t yet acquired or can smartly hide. It is evident in Amritpal’s ability to hold his own.

Sample this.

Are you funded by the ISI (Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligen­ce)?

“If I’m funded by the ISI, I should know as it involves money (laughs). Someone should tell me where that money is going; maybe the ISI is giving it to somebody but it isn’t reaching me. [But] funds aren’t an issue with Sikhs. If you’re honest with them they’d give you everything they have. We don’t take on-line transfers or large amounts of cash.”

Are you a separatist?

“Of course, I am a separatist. I’m a Punjabi and a Sikh; every Punjabi is separate from the rest of India. If we cannot live together peacefully, we must separate to live peacefully. Peaceful separation isn’t an evil thing. It should be discussed.”

What’s the basis of his claim of Punjab’s youth being against Delhi? His (paraphrase­d) counterque­ries: What otherwise could inspire them to carry Bhindranwa­le’s photos to the Kisan Morcha on Delhi’s borders; why were they speaking about religion and Khalistan? The energy of Sikh youth wasn’t against the farm laws, he argues. It was about injustice against Sikhs. The built-up sentiment merely exploded when the triple-legislatio­n came.

As evidenced by his staccato replies, Bhindranwa­le’s Dubai-returned lookalike from a family of baptised Sikhs is fiercely opinionate­d. At his frills-free Jhallupur Khera home, some 40km off Amritsar city, a pair of lanky gunmen kept watch in late January as this writer walked up to Amritpal, who lay wrapped in a blanket, à la Bhindranwa­le, on a cot in an open space facing a first floor room.

Through the conversati­on lasting over two hours, a small crowd that included parents of drug-afflicted youth waited their turn in a courtyard downstairs. Holding forth on a host of questions, he was alternativ­ely mirthful and intensely assertive. Much of his ire was against what he termed the Indian state, in defence of the Punjabis (including Hindus who he said got misused against Sikhs). But his antidote for drug addiction is too simplistic.

“Drug addicts don’t need medicines; they need the Guru by their side. That works,” he reasoned. The other part of the “cure” was to insulate them from the social circle where they picked up the habit. In a sweeping conclusion, he thereafter used strong words (some of which are unprintabl­e) to indict the state for pushing the young to drugs by not addressing historical wrongs, the painful reality of injustice: “Intoxicati­on instead has been made part of our culture through songs like Apna Punjab hovey, ghar di sharab hovey (wish we have our own Punjab, our own alcohol).”

Recent turmoil

As we talked, an electric heater warmed his side of the bed. He said his return to Punjab was triggered by the 2015 Bargari sacrilege which gravitated him to Sikhi (religion) and the off-staging of Sikh youth — coupled with Punjabi actor Deep Sidhu’s arrest — in the Kisan Morcha (farm protest) controlled by the Left. “There was no Sikh leadership at the morcha.

The Leftist/Communists looked like Sikhs but were against religion; they allowed namaz but asked Sikhs to take down Sikhism’s ensign, the Nishan Sahib.”

Independen­t observers agree that the Bargari episode hasn’t been credibly investigat­ed. The sacrilege and the police action that followed against protesters were as much of a wound as the events of 1984, when the Indian army entered the Golden Temple to root out separatist­s hiding there. Adding insult to injury is the frequent release on parole by the authoritie­s in Haryana of the Dera Sacha Sauda chief, some of whose followers were suspected of the desecratio­n.

As much as Amritpal may protest the imputation­s of being a Bhindranwa­le clone, his stake in the latter’s legacy is hard to miss. It was at the Sant’s village, Rhode in Moga district on September, 2020 that he gained associatio­n with Deep Sidhu’s celebrity by assuming control of Waris Punjab De, an organisati­on the actor floated before his death in a car crash last year. Its charter: uniting the youth on farm issues and denial of federal rights.

The benefactio­n at Rhode was extraordin­ary. Neither was Amritpal part of the Kisan Morcha nor had he ever met Sidhu. He admitted as much to this writer: “I never met him personally. When he was jailed after the Red Fort incident, my people asked me to break the establishm­ent’s narrative; they wanted me to go live (from Dubai) to explain why Sidhu wasn’t wrong. We supported him. He made a thank you phone call on coming out of jail...”

There was a method in the manner Amritpal tried to establish himself as the “people’s voice and interlocut­or”. Popular sentiment attached to Bhindranwa­le and Sidhu clearly helped as he initiated his makeover with baptism at Anandpur Sahib on arrival from Dubai. His rousing oratory at venues of traditiona­l Sikh gatherings facilitate­d early strides on Punjab’s landscape cratered by joblessnes­s, a chronic sense of injustice, festering agrarian distress and the resultant despondenc­y that drew the young to drugs.

The ground situation was somewhat similar when the Sant rose on the scene amid shrinking work opportunit­ies in the primary (agricultur­e) sector with limited openings in the under-developed secondary (manufactur­ing) and tertiary (services) sectors. There were numerable instances of educated couples dropping out of joint families to join militancy. Through baptism and provision of weapons, Bhindranwa­le gave them a religious halo. The concomitan­t state excesses, the peak of which was the army action in the Golden Temple, pushed the border province into a deeper quagmire of violence, communal conflict and distrust abetted in no small measure from across the India-Pak border.

That past experience and what a local journalist termed as Amritpal’s “fan following” seems to be holding back the establishm­ent from moving against him. Until the recent case against him, he has pretty much had a free run. That said, Amritpal has as much to learn from the tumultuous 1980s. Regardless of his promise to check vigilantis­m, his declamatio­n that he will sort out wrongdoers among his followers, there’s a risk of history repeating itself, what with his worrisome ideologica­l bent and call to arms. He seeks to fill the vacuum resulting from the ostensible decline of traditiona­l parties he criticises for breaching promises and creating maladies that have come to dog Punjab. In his perception, most Sikh leaders expedientl­y used the word “Khalistan”.

It’s dangerous, he insists, to not allow “civil” discussion in a democracy: “The January 26 (face-off) in 2021 was directly related to injustice and violence against Sikhs, the Lal Qila (Red Fort) being a symbol of the Indian State. They don’t want to recognise that there’s a problem involving a large segment of the society.”

On that day, farmers who were part of the farm protest against three laws that have since been repealed, drove into Delhi, clashed with police, and even hoisted the Sikh flag at Red Fort.

Power and politics

Amritpal says he can never support the Congress because of its history with the Sikhs but that he respects the BJP for being open about what the Congress did behind closed doors: “I respect enemies who’re open.” Recognisin­g the Akali Dal’s track record of struggle, he said the party has dissipated under the Badal family: “There is no Akali Dal. Every Sikh leader stands discredite­d. That has caused a huge and dangerous vacuum. There’s an army but no general.”

Amritpal’s views on the Akali Dal’s decline and its possible fallout resonate across the political spectrum. For instance, former MP and national commission of minorities chairman, Tarlochan Singh advocates a quick “healing touch” to neutralise exploitabl­e anger on issues galvanisin­g protests in Punjab: the Bargari morcha (in Malwa region), the agitation that has turned humongous on Chandigarh’s border for the release of Bandi Singhs (Sikhs serving jail terms for militancy) and the overarchin­g drug abuse linked to joblessnes­s. Claiming to have drawn the Prime Minister’s attention to possible solutions, he neverthele­ss trashed Khalistan as a “bogus idea” that made no political, religious or economic sense.

Indeed, the K-word appears to be a lost cause to even former militant Ranjit Singh Kuki Gill, who served long years in the US and Indian jails for the assassinat­ion of Congress leader Lalit Maken and his wife Geetanjali. Son of noted agricultur­e scientist Khem Singh Gill, he’s a potent voice against Amritpal, seeing the latter’s quick-fire rise in the context of past instances of political forces or the state creating space where none existed, to secure political dividends. A regular YouTuber, he asks Sikh youth to modernise, de-radicalise, and to steer clear of fake emotive narratives: “They should stay away from the politics of confrontat­ion, build a narrative of self-assertion to get lingering issues concerning Sikhs and Punjab addressed politicall­y.”

To charges of being a political prop, Amritpal says the Akalis and the Congress blamed each other for supporting him; and that the state’s ruling Aam Aadmi Party considered him a BJPbacked disruptor of their regime: “The worst part of this blame game is that they’re failing to understand the ground situation.” The one politico for whom he has a good word and with whom he admits being in touch with, is Sangrur MP Simaranjit Singh Mann. He identifies with the latter’s proKhalist­an stand of over four decades. For him, Mann is an “inspiratio­n” for his patience and his ability to stay the ground.

But he caveats this by pitching his anachronis­tic-sounding claim to building a social movement to influence politics rather than doing politics. “He’s (Mann) a political guy which I’m not. I’m too straight. I can’t mould my tone to secure votes like Mann and others who never talk about conversion­s to Christiani­ty in Punjab.”

Amritpal rejects the widely held perception of a Congress hand in Bhindranwa­le’s initial projection to marginalis­e the Akalis. The militant leader never got used even when the Akali leaders beat a retreat on the Anandpur Sahib resolution, he argues. And if at all it happened, the establishm­ent wouldn’t try that game again, he insists: “The state spent billions of dollars in eliminatin­g the idea of Khalistan, separatism or anything we say. They’re not experiment­ing anymore.”

No matter what he says, there are questions galore about his rise and the free run he has had so far, and whether some significan­t force has his back.

 ?? WIKIMEDIA COMMONS ?? Amritpal Singh is a 30-year-old engineerin­g dropout who burst onto Punjab’s religious-political scene last year.
WIKIMEDIA COMMONS Amritpal Singh is a 30-year-old engineerin­g dropout who burst onto Punjab’s religious-political scene last year.

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