Baba Singh (other)
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Baba Singh (other)
Baba Singh may refer to: * Baba Bujha Singh (died 1970), Indian revolutionary leader * Baba Darbara Singh (1644–1734), second Jathedar of Khalsa Panth Budha Dal (1716–1734) * Baba Deep Singh (1682–1757), martyr in Sikhism * Baba Dyal Singh (1783–1855) * Baba Gurdit Singh (1860–1954), central figure in the Komagata Maru incident of 1914 * Baba Gurmukh Singh (1888–1977), Ghadr revolutionary and a Sikh leader * Baba Harbhajan Singh (1946–1968), Indian army soldier * Baba Hardev Singh, also known as Nirankari Baba (1954–2016), Indian spiritual teacher * Baba Kashmira Singh, head of the Sidhant Sant Samaj/Gurbani (Gurmati) Sidhant Pracharak Sant Samaj, a pro-Gurmat organization in Jalandhar, India * Baba Kharak Singh (1867–1963), Sikh political leader * Baba Sewa Singh, Indian social worker and environmentalist * Baba Sucha Singh, Indian politician * Baba Umad Singh Baba Umad Singh was a spiritual leader who lived in Rajasthan, India in the early 19th century ...
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Baba Bujha Singh
Baba Bujha Singh ( pa, ਬਾਬਾ ਬੂਝਾ ਸਿੰਘ) (died July 28, 1970) was an Indian revolutionary leader. He was an activist of the Ghadar Party and later became a key leader of the Lal Communist Party. Singh later became a symbol of the Naxalite movement in Punjab. He was one of the leading organizers of the Ghadar Party in Argentina. Baba Bujha Singh returned to India via Moscow.''Liberation''. Revolutionary Armed Peasant Struggle Forges ahead in Punjab'. September–December 1970 Baba Bujha Singh would later join the Communist Party of India. Within the Communist Party, he was a prominent figure in the dissident faction that eventually formed the Lal Communist Party in 1948. After the Lal Communist Party was dissolved and largely amalgamated back into the Communist Party of India, Baba Bujha Singh became passive and did not involve himself in party politics. Baba Bujha Singh deplored the positions adopted by the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of the Sov ...
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Baba Darbara Singh
Baba Darbara Singh (1644–1734) was second Jathedar of Khalsa Panth Dal Khalsa. He should not be confused with other Darbara Singh of Sirhind who fought in Battle of Anandpur. Darbara Singh was born in the village of Dal as the son of Bhai Nanu Singh from Dilwali of Delhi and had a brother name Gharbara singh , they belonged to the family of Guru Hargobind. He served Guru Gobind Singh for 16 years. He died at age of 90 and succeeded by Nawab Kapur Singh Nawab Kapur Singh Virk (1697–1753) is considered one of the major figures in Sikh history, under whose leadership the Sikh community traversed one of the darkest periods of its history. He was the organizer of the Sikh Confederacy and the ....''Jathedar Baba Darbara Singh Ji'':Official website oBudha Dal/ref> References Nihang 1643 births 1733 deaths Punjabi people Jathedars of Akal Takht {{Sikh-stub ...
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Baba Deep Singh
Baba Deep Singh (26 January 1682 – 13 November 1757) is revered among Sikhs as one of the most hallowed martyrs in Sikhism. He is remembered for his sacrifice and devotion to the teachings of the Sikh Gurus. Baba Deep Singh was the first head of Misl Shaheedan Tarna Dal – an order of the Khalsa military established by Nawab Kapur Singh, the then head of Sharomani Panth Akali Buddha Dal. The Damdami Taksal also state that he was the first head of their order.Damdami Taksal opens shop to provide religious literature
Daily Excelsior.com


Early life

Baba Deep Singh Ji was born on 26 January 1682 to his father Bhagta, and his mother Jioni. He lived in the village of Pahuwind in

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Baba Dyal Singh
Baba Dayal (1783-1855) born in Peshwar was a Sahajdhari Sikh whose main mission was to bring Sikhs back to the Adi Granth and Simran Simran (Gurmukhi: ਸਿਮਰਨ; hi, सिमरण, सिमरन ; from Sanskrit: , ''smaraṇa'', 'to remember, reminisce, recollect'), in spirituality, is a Sanskrit word referring to the continuous remembrance of the finest aspect of .... Sahib Hara Singh's younger son,Dr. Man Singh Nirankari (1912- 2010) who retired as the principal of the Amritsar medical College, has continued popularizing the teachings of Baba Dayal Das. He is known throughout Punjab because of his newspaper columns, and because of the many books that he has written, including a few on Baba Dayal and the Nirankaris. He was instrumental in setting up the Nirnarki Gurudwara in Chandigarh, after partition. He brought with him from Pakistan a large number of Sikh manuscripts. He donated these to thein order to encourage scholarly research. After his death, his grandso ...
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Baba Gurdit Singh
Baba Gurdit Singh (25 August 1860 – 24 July 1954) was the central figure in the Komagata Maru incident of 1914, one of several incidents in the history of early 20th century involving exclusion laws in both Canada and the United States designed to keep out immigrants of only Asian origin. Singh was born in 1860 at Sarhali, in the Amritsar District of the Punjab province in British India. In 1914 he chartered a Japanese ship, the ''Komagata Maru'', to go to Canada, reaching Vancouver on 23 May 1914. The government did not allow the ship to anchor and the ship was attacked by the police at night. The attack was repulsed by the passengers and it created a great stir among Indians in Canada. Early years His grandfather, Sardar Rattan Singh was a high-ranking military officer in the Sikh Khalsa Army and had fought against the British during the First and Second Anglo-Sikh Wars. He declined the British offer of a jagir after the annexation of the Punjab. Later on, his father Sard ...
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Baba Gurmukh Singh
Baba Gurmukh Singh (1888 – 13 March 1977) was a Ghadr revolutionary and a Sikh leader. Biography Singh was born in Lalton Khurd, in the Ludhiana district. He studied up to matriculation at a church Mission School of Ludhiana and was a school-mate of Kartar Singh Sarabha. He attempted to join the army, but he could not be enlisted due to medical reasons. ''Komagata Maru'' In 1914, he boarded the ship ''Komagata Maru'' after being hired by a Japanese firm to go to Canada. At Hong Kong, he learned about the new restrictions imposed by the Canadian Government. Upon reaching Canada, the passengers were not allowed to disembark, and had to return to India. The ship landed at the Budge Budge Ghat in Calcutta, a clash occurred between the passengers and the local police. Gurmukh Singh escaped and was captured three days later and imprisoned in the Alipur jail. Three months later, he was brought to the Punjab. Ghadr movement While placed under orders of internment, under the influen ...
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Baba Harbhajan Singh
Sepoy/Honorary Captain Baba Harbhajan Singh (1946-1968) was an Indian Army soldier who served from 30 June 1965 to 4 October 1968. He is said to serve the Indian Army even after his death by coming in dreams of soldiers and telling them the plans of their enemies. There is a temple dedicated to him in East Sikkim. Life and military career Harbhajan Singh was born into a Sikh family on 30 August 1946 in the village of Sadrana (now in Pakistan). He completed his preliminary education at a village school, and then matriculated from DAV High School in Patti, Punjab, in March 1965. He enlisted as a soldier in Amritsar and joined the Punjab Regiment (India). Death, legacy and associated legend Singh was martyred in 1968 near the Nathu La (pass) in eastern Sikkim, India. A board besides his shrine describes that he was martyred after falling into a '' nullah'' while escorting a mule column from Tuku La to Dongchui La. Harbhajan Singh's early death at the age of 22 is the subjec ...
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Baba Hardev Singh
Hardev Singh (23 February 1954 – 13 May 2016), also known as Nirankari Baba, was an Indian spiritual guru and chief leader of the Sant Nirankari Mission from 1980 until his death. Early life and education Hardev Singh was born on 23 February 1954 to Gurbachan Singh and Kulwant Kaur in Delhi. He completed his elementary education from Yadvindra public school, Patiala, Punjab and later schooling from Rosary public school, Sant Nirankari Colony, Delhi. He graduated from Delhi University. In 1975, he married Sawinder Kaur during an annual Nirankari Sant Samagam in Delhi. Spiritual Teacher Hardev Singh became a member of the Nirankari Seva Dal in 1971. After the assassination of his father Gurbachan Singh, who headed the Sant Nirankari Mission in 1980, he succeeded as the chief leader (''satguru'') of the organization. In 2005, he established the Nirankari Museum in Sant Nirankari Sarovar complex in New Delhi. Sant Nirankari Mission was established in 1929, by Buta Singh who p ...
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Baba Kashmira Singh
Baba Kashmira Singh is head of the ''Sidhant Sant Samaj'' or ''Gurbani (Gurmati) Sidhant Pracharak Sant Samaj'', a pro-Gurmat organization in Jalandhar, India.Akali feud results in Sant Samaj split
Indian Express. (30 January 1999). Accessed 26 September 2007.
Formed in January, 1999, the organization rose to demand the removal of the controversial from the Sant Samaj. Prior to Baba Kashmira Singh's emergence as a religious figure, he served as a police official. His behavior as a religious leader, such as the pro ...
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Baba Kharak Singh
Baba Kharak Singh (6 June 1867 — 6 October 1963) was an Indian playwright born at Sialkot in British India. He was involved in the Indian independence movement and was president of the Central Sikh League. He was a Sikh political leader and virtually the first president of the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee. He was among the first batch of students who graduated (1889) from Punjab University, Lahore. His father, Rai Bahadur Sardar Hari Singh, was a wealthy contractor and industrialist. Today, a prominent road, which is a radial road of Connaught Place, New Delhi towards Gurdwara Bangla Sahib, is named Baba Kharak Singh Marg, after him. Early life Kharak Singh, having passed his matriculation examination from Mission High School and intermediate from Murray College, both at Sialkot, after graduating from University of the Punjab, (Lahore) he joined the Law College at Allahabad, but the death of his father and elder brother in quick succession, interrupted his studies as ...
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Baba Sewa Singh
Baba Sewa Singh is an Indian social worker and environmentalist, involved in the restoration and maintenance of the historic Gurudwaras at Khadoor Sahib. Baba Sewa Singh is a recipient of the Guru Gobind Singh Guru Gobind Singh (; 22 December 1666 – 7 October 1708), born Gobind Das or Gobind Rai the tenth Sikh Guru, a spiritual master, warrior, poet and philosopher. When his father, Guru Tegh Bahadur, was executed by Aurangzeb, Guru Gobind Sing ... Foundation Sewa Award in 2004. The Government of India honored him in 2010, with the fourth highest civilian award of Padma Shri. As a Head of Kaar Sewa Khadur Sahib Being Head of Kaar Sewa Khadur Sahib, Baba Sewa Singh is supervising construction and renovation of historical Sikh Gurdwaras in various parts of India. As an Environmentalist * Campaign for tree plantation was started by him in 1999. So far more than 6.5 lac trees have been planted along the road sides as well as in the educational institutions, hospita ...
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Baba Sucha Singh
Baba Sucha Singh is an Indian politician belonging to Shiromani Akali Dal (Amritsar). He was elected to the Lok Sabha, lower house of the Parliament of India from Bathinda in Punjab Punjab (; Punjabi: پنجاب ; ਪੰਜਾਬ ; ; also romanised as ''Panjāb'' or ''Panj-Āb'') is a geopolitical, cultural, and historical region in South Asia, specifically in the northern part of the Indian subcontinent, comprising .... His son, Beant Singh was the assassin of Indian Prime Minister, Indira Gandhi. References External linksOfficial Biographical Sketch in Lok Sabha Website Lok Sabha members from Punjab, India India MPs 1989–1991 Shiromani Akali Dal politicians Year of birth missing Possibly living people {{PunjabIN-SAD-politician-stub ...
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