BABA GURDIT SINGH
Name: BABA GURDIT SINGH
Date of Birth: 1860 to 24 July, 1954
Place of Birth: Sarhali, Amritsar District
Description:-
Baba Gurdit Singh was born in 1860 at Sarhali, Amritsar District of the state of Punjab in India. His grandfather, Rattan Singh was a high-ranking military officer in the Khalsa Army and had fought against the British during the Anglo-Sikh wars and he declined the British offer of a jagir after the annexation of the Punjab. Later on, his father Hukam Singh went to Malaya where he settled down as a contractor.
Gurdit Singh visited Malaya in about 1885 and conducted business in Singapore and Malaya as a contractor. He returned from there in 1909. In 1911 he raised his voice against forced labour. He wrote to the Government complaining against officials who forced poor villagers to work for them without remuneration, and when he received no response, he exhorted the people of his village to refuse to be subjected to beggar .
He chartered a Japanese ship, the Kamagata Maru, in 1914 to go to Canada where the government had put restrictions on the entry of Indians. The ship, renamed as Guru Nanak Jahaj, had a total of 372 passengers out of whom 351 were Sikhs and 21 Punjabi Muslims. The ship sailed from Hong Kong to Vancouver on April 3, 1914. The obstructions put up by the alien authorities and the hardships faced by its passengers turned them into staunch nationalists.The ship reached Vancouver on May 22, 1914 and it was not allowed to anchor and was attacked by the police at night. The attack was repulsed by the passengers and it created a great stir among the Indians in Canada.
An agreement was reached and the ship sailed back to India. It reached Calcutta on September 29, 1914. However, the passengers were not allowed to enter Calcutta; they were rather ordered to board a Punjab-bound train especially arranged for the purpose. They refused to do and many of the passengers were killed, a great many escaped. Baba Gurdit Singh escaped and remained underground for may years until in 1920 on the advice of Mahatma Gandhi he made a voluntary surrender at Nankana Sahib and was imprisoned for five years. After his release he settled down at Calcutta where he died on 24 July, 1954.
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