31.
Bibi Baghel Kaur
A
newlywed Hindu girl was returning along with her groom and the marriage
party to the village of her in- laws when some Mughal soldiers abducted her
and looted her dowry.Her groom and the members of the marriage party who
were unarmed were beaten and made to flee.
They
complained to the Muslim chief of the area, but he did not care and said,
“What does it matter if our soldiers enjoy her for a few days? I shall see
that she is returned to you as soon as I find a clue of her.” Her husband
was disappointed and turned to the forest to meet the Sikhs and appeal to
them. In those days, Ahmad Shah Abdali invaded India again and again and the
Mughal Empire at Delhi and the governor of Lahore had become very weak.
Abdali
looted Indian cities, forcibly took beautiful Hindu ladies with him, but the
Sikhs attacked his army when he was going back to Afghanistan. They
recovered the property he was taking with him, and got the ladies, that he
was forcibly taking, released. They fought a guerrilla war and slipped back
into the forest before they could be caught. The groom met some Sikhs in the
forest. They
consoled him and baptized him. Now he was named Teja Singh. One night, a
party of Sikhs along with Teja Singh, attacked the same party of plunderers
and taught them a lesson. Teja Singh’s wife, who was in a miserable
condition, was also rescued from them. She wanted to commit suicide, but was
dissuaded from doing so. She was encouraged to live and was baptized. Now
she was named Baghel Kaur, who wore a turban and not a scarf on her head.
She always had a long sword with her. Many ladies like her lived in the
wilderness near the pond of Kahnuwan in the company of the Sikhs.
In
the wilderness, Baghel Kaur and her party met a few more Sikhs known to Teja
Singh. They planned to attack a patrolling party of the Muslim soldiers and
snatch their horses and arms for the newcomers. When they reached the
village, they found that the soldiers were armed, but asleep.
Baghel
Kaur and her companions took some guns and two horses from the soldiers and
left the village before the soldiers were awake. They killed only those
soldiers who resisted them. Baghel Kaur and the party reached back safely
and met their companions who were anxiously awaiting them. All left the pool
of Kahnuwan (District Gurdaspur).
They
had to cross a dense forest and thorny bushes grown on the bank of the river
Bias. In fact, these dense, thorny bushes served them as a fort as the
Mughal soldiers were afraid of crossing them. Inside this dense forest, the
Sikhs had cleared some area and lived in tents there. They lived on the
ration they could bring from outside, meat of the animals they hunted, and
whatever edible they could find in the forest. After a long journey, they
met their companions who were there with their leader Nawab Kapur Singh. He
exhorted the gathering to be ready to fight against aggression for the sake
of justice. Mir
Mannu was the governor of Lahore. His minister Kaura Mal was sympathetic
towards the Sikhs, but after the death of Kaura Mal, Mir Mannu turned his
attention to finish the Sikhs. He was a tyrant and bent upon converting
Sikhs to Islam. He used every possible punishment to subordinate the Sikhs,
who had left villages and started living in thick forests.
In
those days, Sikhs used to say, “Mir Mannu is our sickle and we are his grass
blades. As he cuts, more than two hundred times we grow.” Abdali consulted
Mir Mannu and sent a challenge to the Sikhs to come out of the forest and
fight face to face. Nawab Kapur Singh accepted the challenge. Th next day,
four thousand Sikhs with a few hundred Sikh ladies, including Baghel Kaur,
divided themselves in two parties and, riding on their horses, entered the
field, fully armed, with sword and spears.
They
were opposed by 10,000 Pathan forces. At the end of the day, 500 Sikhs
became martyrs, but the Pathans suffered a heavy loss. Second day, Baghel
Kaur with a few other ladies fought so bravely and courageously that it
would be remembered for ever. In the evening the Pathan army had to retreat,
but in the confusion that prevailed Baghel Kaur and four other ladies were
separated from the Sikh forces.
These
ladies reached a small village, cooked their food and slept on the ground.
Turn by turn, one of them remained awake to look after the horses and the
arms. They got up before daybreak, performed their morning prayer and
started. Soon they found fifty enemy soldiers of a patrolling party coming
towards them. Five of them proceeded towards Baghel Kaur and her party. They
did not realize that they were going to face a tough enemy.
They
planned to capture them and marry them. All of a sudden, Baghel Kaur came
forward and cut the sword of the first soldier with her sword. In the
meantime, a companion of her injured him with her sword when he was
returning to save himself from the second attack. Another soldier attacked
Baghel Kaur with his spear, but her friend checked his attack with her sword
and injured him. Now the injured soldiers started returning to their party
to seek help. In
the mean time Baghel Kaur and her companions rode away to the thick forest
to meet their companions. All the Pathan soldiers started chasing Baghel
Kaur and her friends. A Sikh watchman informed the other Sikhs in the forest
about the coming Pathans. At once, the Sikhs came out and killed the Pathans
in a few minutes. Three Sikhs were also killed in this fight. Sikhs
persuaded Baghel Kaur and her companions to stay in the village but the
brave ladies refused, wanted to stay with them, and die fighting.
Mir
Mannu was a notorious bigot. He massacred Sikhs and proclaimed a reward of
twenty-five rupees per Sikh head. He killed no less than thirty thousand
Sikhs. He ordered that any Sikh lady found anywhere should be caught and
forced to embrace Islam. Baghel Kaur wanted to save a few ladies who were
still in the village and could not leave because two of them had small
children. One night Baghel Kaur disguised herself and went back to her
village to save the three Sikh ladies who were hiding in the house of a
Muslim girl friend. She contacted them at midnight, encouraged them to
accompany her early in the morning and leave for the thick forest on the
other side of the river Beas.
After
a short nap of two hours, she along with three Sikh ladies and two children
left the village at 4am. Four soldiers who were sleeping outside the village
saw them and followed them to the rive bank. Baghel Kaur asked the two
ladies to cross the river along with their children and herself along with
the third lady faced the soldiers. She thrust her spear in the chest of the
first two soldiers who came forward before they could attack her. One of her
companions tried to attack the third soldier, but his spear injured her arm
before she could attack.
Baghel
Kaur gave her horse to her injured friend and asked her to cross the river
at once. Baghel Kaur took the horse of the injured soldier and fought
against the remaining two soldiers bravely and fearlessly. The soldiers as
well as Baghel Kaur were injured and bleeding. She took courage and in the
twinkling of an eye crossed the river on her horse. Now all the four ladies
with two children started on their horses and soon they were out of sight of
the soldiers who were chasing them. After covering a long distance the party
reached the destination and met a party of the Sikhs.
Plight
of the Sikh ladies detained in the camps of Mir Mannu was miserable. They
were tortured and kept thirsty and hungry as they refused to be converted to
Islam. Every one of them was allotted a small millstone to grind a fixed
quantity of wheat. It was ordered that the children of these ladies be
snatched. One soldier threw a child up in the air and the other killed him
with his spear before he could touch the ground. The dead bodies of these
children were cut into pieces and the ladies were garlanded with those
pieces. Pieces
of flesh of the children were thrust into the mouth of their mothers. In
spite of all that, none of the ladies cried or yielded to embrace Islam Once
this horrible scene stunned Mir Mannu. When he reached the palace after
visiting the camp, he did not talk to anybody. It seemed he repented. He
left for hunting with only four soldiers. While he was hunting, his horse
was scared, ran very fast and jumped so high that Mir Mannu could not
control it. He fell down, and his feet got entangled in stirrip. Mir Mannu’s
cries further scared the horse and it ran faster. It was dragging Mir Mannu
and none could stop it. Mir Mannu was badly injured and died in the forest.
Mir
Mannu’s tragic and sudden death had emboldened the Sikhs and they were
settling in their villages. A group of Sikhs, under the command of Baghel
Kaur, attacked the Lahore camp at midnight, killed 25 Muslim soldiers who
were unprepared, and got the captive ladies released and escorted them to a
safer place. After Mir Mannu’s death, his queen invited Ahmad Shah to help
her and capture the Sikhs.
At
this time, Baghel Kaur was living in her village along with her four-year
old son and her husband. She wanted to save the ladies who were forcibly
being taken to the camp. She asked her husband to take the child and leave
for the forest. She herself started to rescue the ladies being taken
forcibly by the Muslim soldiers. She saw one such lady who was being taken
to the camp, but Baghel Kaur did not slip away. All of a sudden, she injured
with her spear the two soldiers who were taking the lady, but she was caught
by their companions. Now she herself was a captive with the other ladies in
the camp. Every
lady in the camp was given a piece of bread. Some injured and hungry ladies
were lying half-dead on the ground and their children were crying for food.
Baghel Kaur gave her own piece of bread to the crying children and she
remained hungry. The ladies in the camp were whipped, insulted, and taunted
by the soldiers so that they might embrace Islam to get rid of this hell.
Baghel Kaur protested against ill treatment, but she was ordered to grind
wheat for the whole night without rest.
At
midnight, the camp-in-charge sent for Baghel Kaur, but she refused to move
out. The drunken soldier caught her by the wrist and dragged her. She took
courage and slapped the soldier. She took his sword, which was tied to his
belt, and injured him. The other ladies came to her help and the soldier had
to run away. In
the morning, all the ladies were assembled at one place, and the
camp-in-charge told them that anyone who agreed to marry a soldier of her
choice would be set free and allowed to lead a happy and prosperous life.
Baghel Kaur stood up and said that none would agree to be converted as their
own religion was dear to them and they would die rather than lead an immoral
life of a coward. Her bold and frank talk made the camp commander
speechless. She
was taken to a pillar so that her hands should be tied and then whipped to
death.On her way to the pillar, she took courage, pushed the soldier who was
taking her to the pillar and snatched his sword. Now the whole camp was
surrounded by the other soldiers and many ladies were murdered. Baghel Kaur
fought bravely, but was killed by armed soldiers who were surrounding her.
Next day,about 8000 Sikhs attacked the camp at midnight, killed the camp
commander and freed the captive ladies.