3. Marshal of Khalsa
How the vast Afghani Empire on Punjabi soil disappeared in Kasur, Multan,
Kashmir and Peshawar is a subject closely associated with the campaigns of
Sardar Hari Singh Nalua, the Marshal of the Khalsa and terror for the
Afghans. Being the 'Murat of the Khalsa' as he was appropriately called by
Sir Henry Griffin, the famous British dignitary and a prominent writer of
significant treatise on the Sikhs, his name figures among those patriots who
participated bravely rather passionately in almost all battles fought
constantly against the Afghans during the Sikh rule under Maharaja Ranjit
Singh for a period of three decades from A.D. 1807 to A.D. 1837. Sardar Hari Singh Nalua, the typical product of his age was born at
Gujranwala now in the West Pakistan in A.D. 1791 in Uppal family in the
house of Sardar Gurdial Singh to Dharam Kaur. He was the only son of his
parents. The ancestors of Nalua Sardars were originally from Majitha town
situated in the vicinity of Amritsar. His grandfather Sardar Hardas Singh
engaged in the service of Sukarchakia Misl was killed in an expedition
undertaken by the Misl in A.D. 1762. Gurdial Singh, the father of Sardar
Hari Singh Nalua followed the profession of his father and took part in
various campaigns of Sukarchakia Sardars - Charat Singh and Mahan Singh in
the capacity of Deradar.