16. Baba Ram Singh Ji
Baba Ram Singh was born at village Bhaini Raiyan, district Ludhiana on the
3rd February, 1816 A.D. His father Bhai Jassa Singh, was a carpenter. His
brother-in-law, Sardar Kabul singh was a gunner in the artillery of Maharaja
Ranjit Singh. In 1837 A.D., He took Baba Ram Singh with him to Lahore and
got him recruited in the regiment of Kanwar Naunihal Singh. On the 18th
December, 1845 A.D. the Sikh army suffered a defeat in the battle of Mudki
due to mean settlement of some Dogra Generals of Sikh army with British.
Baba Ram Singh could not bear the defeat of the Sikh army in this manner. He
left the service of the army at Mudki and came straight to his village
Bhaini. On arrival at his village, Baba Ram Singh started preaching, "Worship of
eternal Being, giving up worship of the dead, keeping off the intoxicants,
giving up meat, minimum expenditure on marriages and widow remarriage etc."
He used to say, "I am only a messenger or a reporter and not a guru." His
followers starting calling themselves 'Namdharis'. Baba Ram Singh was a
supporter of reform of the 'Mahants' and priests of the gurudwaras as a
result of which they were against him. Every year, on the occasion of Diwali
or Baisakhi fairs he used to go to Amritsar and put his views before the
congregation. The number of his audience used to touch twenty thousand. He
started a movement in 1848 A.D., to force the British to leave India. He
called upon his followers to boycott foreign goods and Government
departments due to which people stopped buying imported cloth, gave up
taking their disputes to courts and started deciding these in villages. The boycott movement of Baba Ram Singh had great effect on the work of the
Government. In 1863 A.D., the Government setup a police post at his village
Bhaini. Cow Slaughter was banned in Amritsar during Sikh rule. In 1870
somebody spread a false rumor in Amritsar that the Government was about to
give permission to the butchers to slaughter cows in the holy city of the
Guru. On the 14th June, 1870 A.D., a group of Namdharis beheaded four
butchers at Amritsar. Four Namdharis were hanged and two were imprisoned for
life for that crime. On the 15th July, 1872 A.D., some Namdharis had quarrel
with the butchers of Malaud and Malerkotla over cow-slaughter in which ten
people were killed and seventeen were injured. The deputy commissioner of
Ludhiana, Mr. Crown pronounced death sentence on sixty-eight Namdharis. Forty-nine of them were blown by cannon fire and nineteen were hanged. Baba
Ram singh was exiled to Burma. He went to his heavenly abode on the 29th
November, 1885 A.D., in jail of Margee Island. Although the Government
crushed the Namdhari movement, yet they could not extinguish the light of
freedom lit by Baba Ram Singh.