
Bhai Randheer Singh, whose original name before baptism  and initiation into the Khalsa fold was Basant Singh, was born in the  village of Narangwal in the Ludhiana District of Punjab on July 7, 1878,  to a family of a very noble and devout heritage. His father, S. Natha  Singh, was a learned scholar of Punjabi, Urdu, Persian and English, who  initially worked as a District Inspector of Schools but later rose to  the rank of a Judge in the High Court of the State of Nabha. As a Judge,  he became well known for combining justice with mercy, compassion and  humanity. His mother, Sardarni Punjab Kaur, was a direct  seventh-generation descendant of a very devout, eminent, and saintly  Gursikh, Bhai Bhagtu, a very distinguished disciple of Sahib Sri Guru  Arjan Dev Ji and Sri Guru Hargobind Sahib. Thus, Bhai Randheer Singh  inherited scholarship and strength of mmd from his paternal side and  qualities of piety and devotion from his maternal side.
He had most of his early schooling in Nabha and his higher education  at the prestigious Government and Foreman Christian Colleges at Lahore  (in 1896-1900 A.D.), which was, at that time, the capital of the  undivided Punjab State. He was not only an intelligent and diligent  student with respect to his scholastic pursuits, but was also a good  sportsman, having once served as a Captain for the College hockey team.  He had a prodigious memory, a fact clearly revealed from the way he has  reproduced details of the happenings during his prison life. In his  autobiographical letters from prison, he has narrated his long  conversations with the jail authorities minutely and distinctly  narrated. In his various books on Sikh theology he quotes very  appropriate verses from the Gurbani freely and with apparent ease. He  had a deep insight and scholarly expertise in Punjabi, Brij Bhasha of  Sri Dasam Granth, Persian, Urdu and English. He even distinguished  himself as an Urdu and Punjabi poet during his college days. 
Even a cursory look at his life, as revealed from his  autobiographical letters and related by his close prison and post-prison  comrades, clearly shows that he was one of the very few Gursikhs of the  century who had full and unfalterable conviction of his faith in the  teachings of the Satguru, so much so that he staked his personal career,  the safety and welfare of his wife and young children, his ancestral  property and even his life in following the true path of Gurmat. He was  one of the very few outstanding Sikhs of his time who, as one of the  Panj Pyaras, blessed the so-called lowest caste people with the holy  Amrit (Baptism of the Double Edged Sword). It may be recalled that those  were the times when the Gurmat way of life had been almost completely  overshadowed by Hindu orthodoxy or Brahminism. The Brahminic principle  of untouchability regarding the low caste Hindus and Muslims had become  ingrained in the minds of Sikhs to such an extent that the Sikhs would  not even consider taking part in the Amrit ceremony in their company.  Bhai Randheer Singh was one of the first few Sikhs of the 2Oth century  who had the courage to be baptized along with a muslim, a well-known  family of Maulvi Karim Bahhsh1, whose Amrit Ceremony was arranged on a  large Panthic scale on June 14, 1903. As a result, he was treated almost  as an outcast by the Sikhs of his own village and even by some of his  relatives; the priest of Sri Akal Takhat Sahib did not even let him  offer Karrah Prasad and do Kirtan there. However, he remained steadfast  in practicing whatever was ordained at the Baptismal ceremony, as well  as what he understood from the Holy Sikh Scriptures and authentic Sikh  traditions. In fact, the practice and preaching of the Sikh Code of  Conduct strictly in accordance with the true Gurmat became his passion  in life.
 Though he belonged to an aristocratic family, his simple way of  life, his devotion to Gurmat, and his determination to live strictly in  accordance with the Commandments of the Satguru, have very few  parallels in the contemporary Sikh society. Throughout his life, he  stuck steadfastly to the Code of Conduct enunciated by the Tenth Guru,  even at the risk of losing his health and life. 
He had the firm belief that initiation into the Khalsa fold was not  merely a ritual but meant a new birth into the Spirit of the Guru,  provided that the ceremony is conducted strictly in accordance with the  rules and procedures laid down by Guru Sahib. At the time of his own  baptismal ceremony, a disturbing intrusion by an outsider caused  confusion in his mind regarding the true Gurmantra. He felt that there  was a Mystic Word prescribed as Gurumantra for the Sikhs which also  formed the central theme of the Gurbani - a particular NAAM - and it was  possible to repeat it with every breath. He firmly believed that only  through constant repetition of, and meditation on, this Mystic Word  could complete self realization and oneness with God be attained. 
He, therefore, yearned ardently for getting the Gurmantra directly  from Sri Guru Granth Sahib and was also confident that he would be  blessed with it. He believed Sri Guru Granth Sahib to be the real  embodiment of the Ten Gurus and, therefore, prayed only to Guru Sahib  for the Bliss of the Holy Naam. With this objective in view, he made a  prayerful vow to accept that holy word as the True Gurmantra that was  indicated in the first hymn he read or heard in the Gurudwara on one  particular morning. If there was any indication of the popularly known  Divine Name of Waheguru through such words as Wah or Guru, he would  accept Waheguru as the True Naam prescribed for the Sikhs as Gurmantra.  How his prayer was accepted, in what a glorious way Guru Sahib blessed  him with the Gurmantra, and the technique of its constant repetition, is  very beautifully narrated in his autobiographical letters: 
As soon as I entered the Gurdwara and bowed before Guru Granth Sahib,
these words were being recited:
Ve-muhtaja Ve-parvah
Nanak Daas Kaho Gurvah. (Asa M. 5:376)
Carefree and unconcerned is the Lord,
Sayeth Nanak Speak GUR VAH.
The words Kaho Gurvah had such a magnetic effect on my mind that  immediately my every nerve and pore in the body became imbued with the  thrilled music of the Mystic Word Waheguru... To my great surprise I saw  some unseen hand wave the chowri over Guru Granth Sahib and in between  the canopy and the Guru Granth Sahib, there flashed forth a wave of  light forming itself into the divine word Waheguru and moving in space  throughout the inside of the temple without any visible support.
After attaining the true Gurmat Naam from Sri Guru Granth Sahib, he  became determined and anxious to attain the Named One, the Lord God  Himself. His desire turned into a poignant thirst, and he took to  repeating the Naam continuously without any feeling of fatigue or  wavering of mind. After attaining the stage of self-realization during  which he saw his own soul to be quite distinct from his body, his thirst  for seeing the Light of God Himself increased manifold. On the  auspicious day of Sahib Sri Guru Nanak Dcv ji's Prakash Utsav, in the  year 1905, God revealed himself in all His Perfect Resplendence to him  in the silence of the midnight meditation which he describes in one of  his autobiographical letters as follows: 
God was now resplendently revealed within me... Ah! Blessed was my  search today. I could see a sea of Divine Light flooding within me and  outside me in shimmering resplendence... The more I was absorbed in it,  the more wonderful and sublimely dazzling spiritual phenomena were seen  by my inner eyes which cannot be expressed in the language of our  physical and earthly world... I could see right through the roof and  walls of the room in which I was sitting. Right through the sky I could  see space beyond space, all crystal clear and bathed in purity. The  whole of the universe was filled with incomprehensible light which was  penetrating me and enfolding me. The music of His Divine Presence filled  my heart with Blissful joy. I could see all this clearly and visibly in  a wide awake condition...
After these highly spiritual, mystical, and blissful experiences he  resigned his Government job but did not become a hermit. He continued to  tread the path of true Gumat which enjoins upon the Sikhs to continue  to live in this world without being engrossed in it. He continued to  perform his duties to his family and society. He took the initiative in  clearing the malpractices in the various historical Gurdwaras. As a  reformer, he was not deterred by the strength of the vested interests  involved in their management. Once, at Gurdwara Fateh Garh Sahib on a  holy occasion, he did not allow the recitation of Gurbani by an unholy  and apostate Ragi Jatha, without caring for danger to his life. Again at  Anandpur Sahib Gurdwara, on the occasion of Hola Mohalla Celebration,  he did not tolerate the malpractices and immoral activities of the  powerful management. Risking his own life, he successfully fought  against the administration. It was for such deeds of Gurdwara reform  that he has been referred to as the pioneer of the Gurdwara Reform  Movement. A reference to his services in this respect was also made in  the Hukam Namah bestowed upon him from Takht Sri Kesh Garh Sahib in 1905  (Appendix A). 
In 1914, when the British rulers razed the wall of the historical  Gurdwara Rakab Ganj Sahib in New Delhi to beautify the surroundings of  the then newly built Parliament House, it was Bhai Sahib Randheer Singh  who not only was the first to protest publicly against this desecration  of the Holy Shrine, but also to announce his specific plans to spearhead  the agitation until the razed wall was restored. He was also  instrumental in organizing two large Panthic Conferences in this  connection, at Patti in District Amritsar, and at Lahore, to pass the  Resolutions condemning the British action, and demanding the restoration  of the razed wall. These conferences were the first of their kind after  the British occupation of Punjab. It may be mentioned here that the  Chief Khalsa Diwan, the only major Panthic Organization at that time,  had expressed its willingness to side with the British Government.

Although his mind was never in politics, as a true Gursikh who cannot  accept slavery and repression, he, along with the Ghadarite emigrants  from USA and Canada, became an active participant in the armed revolt  against the British Government for the country's freedom. In fact, he  was the only outstanding leader from Punjab who, along with his  companions, was a participant in this revolt. It is worth noting here  that the top Hindu leader of the Indian National Congress, M. K. Gandhi,  opposed this revolt and declared his support to the British Government  in their First World War efforts, saying, "Was it not the duty of the  slave, seeking to be free, to make the master's need his  opportunity?...it was our duty to win their help by standing them in  their need."5 Earlier the so-called Punjab Kesri, Lala Iajpat Rai,  called these Ghadarite emigrants fanatics and dangerous to the national  cause.
The revolt failed due to leakage of plans by traitors from within,  and he and his companions were arrested on May 9, 1915 and tried in what  is commonly known as the Second Lahore Conspiracy case. However, his  love for the country's freedom arose solely from the ideals of the Sikh  Dharma, and whatever he did for the country he did primarily as a true  Gursikh and not merely as a political freedom fighter. He was sentenced  to life imprisonment in 1916 and his property confiscated. He was only  38 years old with a wife and three young children. The eldest ten year  old daughter could not bear this separation from her dear father and  died within a month of his imprisonment. His son Balbir Singh was only  six years old, and his daughter Daler Kaur was just two.
During his prison term of over 15 years, he faced unprecedented  sufferings. This was not for any political or personal reasons, but only  for his determination to live strictly in accordance with the Khalsa  Code of Conduct made known to him at the time of initiation into the  Khalsa fold. In Multan jail, one of the hottest places in India (now in  W. Pakistan) with temperatures going up to 122°F in May and June, he  remained without food and water continuously for 40 days. This was  because he was not allowed to prepare his food himself according to the  Gurmat principles and he would not take food prepared by  non-Amritdharis.
 He was chained to iron gates in the open for many days  to face the scorching heat of the sun and bear the brunt of hot winds.  At night he was put into a 6' x 4' cell without ventilation. This is  only one instance of the many tortures inflicted upon him. He had to  bear such terrible sufferings in prison that twice he was given up for  dead even by members of his own family. Even after suffering such  inhuman tortures, he remained steadfast in his beliefs and never once  wavered from following strictly the Khalsa Code of Conduct. When the  Khalsa Panth came to know of his tortuous sufferings, the whole Panth  observed February 1, 1923 as a special day of prayer for him in  particular and for other suffering Sikh prisoners in general. 
Prior to his release from prison in Lahore, the well-known Shaheed  Bhagat Singh, who was waiting execution in the same prison, expressed a  desire to have Bhai Sahib's darshan before his death. On being  approached, Bhai Sahib refused to see him saying "...he has violated the  basic tenets of Sikhism by shaving off his hair and hence I do not want  to see him." Bhagat Singh was quick to express his repentance and also  confessed that he, in fact, was an atheist at heart. He further told  Bhai Sahib that even then, perhaps, he would have kept the Sikh  appearance, but if he had done that he would have lost the friendship  and sympathy of his Hindu comrades and would not have received so much  publicity in the press. After a two hour meeting with Bhai Sahib, he  became a true Sikh at heart and later went to the gallows as a true  believer in Sikhism. 
Soon after his release in 1930, Bhai Sahib was honored by Sri Akal  Taldit Sahib with a Hukumnamah and a robe of honor, recognizing his  steadfastness in faith and selfless sacrifices (Appendix A). He is the  second person to have been honored by Sri Akal Takht Sahib during this  century, the other person being Baba Kharak Singh, the renowned Panthic  leader of the late twenties. Afterwards, the other three Takhts also  honored him in the same way, thus making him the only single person to  have been honored from all the original four Takhts in the last hundred  years of Sikh history. (Damdama Sahib was declared the fifth Takhat  later). Robes of honor and a gold medallion were also sent to him by the  Sikhs of U.S.A. and Canada.
 He was selected as one of the Panj Pyaras  to inaugurate the Kar Seva of the sarover of Gurdwara Tarn Taran Sahib,  and to lay the foundation stones of the new buildings of the Gurdwaras  at Panja Sahib and Shahidganj Nankana Sahib, besides those of the Bungas  at Patna Sahib and Kavi Darbar Asthan at Paonta Sahib. 
After his release from prison, he lived for over thirty years during  which time he travelled throughout the country and propagated the true  Gursikh way of life through Gurbani Kirtan and Paath. A large number of  ardent seekers of the true path of Sikhism were drawn to him  magnetically, and he directed them to and brought them in direct touch  with the infinite wealth of Gurbani. In this way, the Akhand Kirtani  Jatha came to be formed. According to him, the principles of life  pointed out in Gurbani and prescribed in the Khalsa Code of Conduct are  not merely ideals but downright practical. He himself conformed to and  lived in accordance with these principles in letter and spirit, even in  the midst of the most unfavorable and tortuous circumstances of jail  life. It is now a fact of history that his bold stand and endurance of  untold sufferings for retaining the Sikh symbols in jail resulted in the  amendment of the Jail Manual, which permits all the Sikh prisoners to  wear Turban, Kachhehra and Karra in jail. Prior to that time, they were  forced to wear caps and Longoties and were deprived of the Karra. 
He wrote about two dozen books on Sikh theology, philosophy and the  true Sikh way of life (Appendix B). Of these, the most well-known is his  AUTOBIOGRAPHY, a collection of his letters written from prison during  his sixteen years of imprisonment. This book reveals his personal  spiritual experiences of the highest state of divine illumination.  According to Bhai Sahib Vir Singh, these experiences "...will give  convincing testimony of the fact that our faith, the contemplation and  remembrance of the divine Name has now been tested by an experiment in  the crucible of his own self by a scholar educated and trained in  Western lore."8 It also reveals that his whole life has been a saga of  suffering in which he never for a moment left his deep faith and  devotion to God and His Word. 
With regard to his other books, it may safely be said that during the  current century, he is perhaps the only writer on Sikh theology who has  written comprehensively, and with the confidence arising out of  first-hand personal experiences of the highest state of Divine  illumination, on such subjects as Anhad Shabad (Unstruck Limitless  Music), Gurmat Karam Philosophy (Law of Karma), Sach Khand Darshan  (Vision of the Realm of the Truth), Jyot-Vigas (The Revelation of  Light), Andithi Dunya (The Unseen World), etc. Dr. Tarlochan Singh  rightly says that "...In his writings we find the glow of his mystic  experiences, his intellectual certainty and the metaphysical clarity of  his theology." 
The steadfastness of his character, conviction of his faith, and  firmness in his allegiance to the high Sikh traditions are revealed from  another remarkable incident in his life. Before his imprisonment, he  was an intimate friend of Babu Teja Singh of Bhasaur and was also  instrumental in establishing Panch Khalsa Diwan at Bhasaur in  association with him. Babu Teja Singh was then quite a dynamic  personality amongst the Sikhs and was a leading figure in the Singh  Sabha resurgence. The Panthic Conference, where Bhai Sahib had taken  Amrit along with Maulvi Karim Baksh and his family, was also organized  by Babu Teja Singh. Hence both of them had become close friends.  However, as Babu Teja Singh became a British Government loyalist, Bhai  Sahib stopped working in association with him. During the period of Bhai  Sahib's internment, Babu Teja Singh had been excommunicated from the  Panth. 
After Bhai Sahib's release, Babu Teja Singh tried to meet his old  friend after twenty years and came to his house to resurrect their old  friendship. Bhai Sahib was not there at that moment. When he came to  know later of Babu Ji's visit, Bhai Sahib wrote him a letter politely  declining to meet him. The contents of the letter are very moving and  reveal the true personality of Bhai Sahib and his unshakable and abiding  faith in the Sikh tenets, values and traditions. It is therefore  considered worthwhile to reproduce the English translation of the same  below: 
"Babu Teja Singh ji, Waheguru ji ki Fateh. You, dear Sir, have come  to see this humble servant of the Panth after one fifth of a century,  i.e., 20 years. I was no less eager to have the chance of meeting with  you and talking together. But I was deeply pained when I learnt that you  have been excommunicated from the Panth by a congregation at Sri Akal  Takht. What is even more distressing, you continue to disregard the  authority of the Panth. It is now my request that you should be obedient  to the Command of the Guru Panth and return to its shelter. Then we  shall meet like brothers. It is my hope that you will accede to my  request and thereby please the hearts of all of us. I am confident that  you will not defy the Guru Panth and will abide by the tradition coming  down through generations. Your sincere well wisher (s) Randheer Singh"
Thus, no personal relationship would deflect Bhai Sahib from obeying in  letter and spirit the edicts of the Guru Panth issued from Sri Akal  Takht Sahib. 
This very brief sketch of his life given above brings out clearly  that he lived the life of the highest concept of man evolved in about  two and a half centuries by Sahib Sri Guru Nanak Dcv Ji in his ten  manifestations. In spite of all these high spiritual achievements, he  always remained humble and full of humility. He made stupendous  sacrifices but never publicized them. He never felt hatred against even  his adversaries who inflicted on him all types of tortures as he took  all this as the Will of the Guru. He had a sizable group of associates  attending and performing Kirtan at the Akhand Kirtan Samagams, but he  did not organize them into a separate sect nor establish a separate Dera  or Ashram as done by many other saints. He even refused to nominate  anyone to head the Jatha as his successor and instructed that all the  matters of importance and urgency be decided by the Panj Pyaras selected  by the Sangat for that purpose. 
He never even requested the Government of the Independent India to  release his land, which had been confiscated by the British Government  at the time of his arrest, and held in possesion by the Indian  Government until 1950. No pension or benefit as a freedom fighter was  given to him or his family. This was because he would not personally  seek any favour from anyone, not even the Government of free India, as a  reward for his sacrifices in the freedom struggle. 
Right from 1900 A.D., Bhai Sahib Randheer Singh had been a very  well-known personality among the luminaries of the Sikh Panth. During  the days of Baba Kharak Singh's leadership, he was always at the center  of all religious and political activities of the Sikhs. However, after  1947, Akali Dal leaders started sidetracking him as well as Baba Kharak  Singh, treating both as un-persons. This was mainly because, in their  company, the Akali and other leaders could not afford to fulfill their  own selfish ends. Bhal Sahib, noting decadence in the Panthic  leadership, had himself remarked a few years before his death: 
"...This is the beginning of the end of all these decadent parties  and religious organizations. New blood and newly inspired political  organizations alone will deliver goods in the future..."
His life story thus explicitly brings out that, as Dr. Tarlochan Singh puts it: 
"...He was a God-intoxicated man, consumed with  religious enthusiasm in the literal sense of the word and 'holding God  within' as one would say; yet he was a practical leader capable of  dedicated service to humanity and his country. His faith and virtues  were near allied and mutually indispensable...With astounding faith and  stoicism he suffered all his life for the ideals which form the  cornerstone of Sikhism such as Freedom, Justice, Equality and Truth."
Throughout his life, everything he did reveals his integrity of character and faith, absolute lack of ego, and extremely disciplined and spiritually enlightened life based on the Code of Conduct enunciated by the Satguru.
Throughout his life, everything he did reveals his integrity of character and faith, absolute lack of ego, and extremely disciplined and spiritually enlightened life based on the Code of Conduct enunciated by the Satguru.
 
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