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Is this
possible Forgive and Forget
The
sectarian violence in Punjab continues unabated. Though the
reasons behind the violence that has now spread beyond
Punjab are not entirely clear, the man at the centre of the
controversy is Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh, the leader of a
Sikh sect known as Dera Sacha Sauda.
There were violent clashes between the Dera followers and
Sikhs after an advertisement reportedly featured Gurmeet
Singh dressed as Guru Gobind Singh,
tenth Sikh Guru, Gobind Singh
and imitated the guru's style of baptising the Sikhs while
he created 'Khalsa Panth' on the Baisakhi day of 1699. It
was said that mimicking the Sikh guru, the Dera Chief made
seven of his followers act as ''seven piaras'' instead of
the guru's five ones.
The controversy has been given a political twist with the
Akali Dal government accusing Congress of being in cahoots
with the Dera and of fomenting violence. In the Election
dera support the Congress party. Akali dal also go to the
dera for support in the elections, there are many photos of
Badal and mini Badal for asking election support and
grievance.The Punjab government is also to blame for its
sluggish response to the sectarian conflict. Every one
knows that this is happening on the eve of Badal. It is,
however, heartening that Akal Takht jathedar, Giani
Joginder Singh Vedanti, has issued a call for peace.
That is the way it should be. Sikhism is one of the great
religions of the world, and there is no reason for the
majority of Sikhs to get worked up over the actions of a
marginal cult. It is an accepted fact that all world
religions have a multiplicity of sects. In India, which is
home to all the great religions, this diversity often
assumes dizzying proportions.
This is the case with Sikhism, too, with groups like
Nirankaris differing on certain principles. Such dissent is
natural and cannot be stamped out, even if it is
antithetical to the original beliefs of a religion. If this
disagreement becomes contentious, as in Punjab, differences
must be sorted out by dialogue and not violence.

Gurmeet
Ram
Rahim, has been falsely implicated in several criminal
cases, including criminally assaulting a woman, by some
politicians and liquor mafia who want to protect their own
interests.
Dera Saccha Sauda spokesperson Dr Aditya said due to the
increasing popularity of the group and its crusade against
liquor,
some politicians and mafias were making desperate attempts
to spoil its image. But this only a vague, in the area
where the dera is activated there is choice of liquor is
very less. So the dera only tell that leave the liquor not
other drugs. Dera grow all the drugs in his own field and
marketed with the help of mafia. In the mean baba is head
of drug mafia of border of Rajasthan, Haryana and
Punjab(malwa) region.
What is happening in the past days in
Punjab. Is this is preplanned of Indian Government towards
Sikhs.
In the backdrop of sectarian clashes in
Punjab, Sikh militancy, which arose from a similar type of
Sikh-Nirankari feud in the 1970s, has again come to the
fore forcing the Sikh clergy to adopt a stringent posture
against the Dera Sacha Sauda.
On the other hand, the Dera too has became adamant and has
refused to close the sub-deras.
The raging passions in Punjab have sent an alarm bell for
BJP, an ally of Akalis in the State government. And, BJP
has dissociated itself from the Akalis in their bid to
teach a lesson to the Dera Sacha Sauda.
The situation may be controlled as per the political
requirements of both ruling Akalis and BJP, but the Punjab
cauldrun will continue to boil as the extremist Sikhs too
are out to settle their personal scores with the Badal
Akali Dal whom they have been accusing of decimating the
separate identity of Sikhs by aligning with the BJP.
In fact, there was nothing new that took place at the
gathering of Dera Sacha Sauda Chief at Salabatpur village
in Bathinda District of Punjab on May 13, 2007 which
provoked such a fierce reaction among the Sikhs.
It was old routine way of preparing a sweetened concoction
by Chief Gurmeet Singh and thereafter distributing to his
followers.
And, along with distributing 'pahul', the Dera Chief also
dispensed 'NAAM' to them, utterance of a few lines in the
praise of Almighty.
The Dera organisers gave the event publicity and they
inserted an advertisement in popular Punjabi daily, AJIT,
showing the Chief wearing a special robe and performing the
ceremony. And, talk went around that the Dera Chief had
posed himself as tenth Sikh Guru, Gobind Singh and imitated
the guru's style of baptising the Sikhs while he created
'Khalsa Panth' on the Baisakhi day of 1699. It was said
that mimicking the Sikh guru, the Dera Chief made seven of
his followers act as ''seven piaras'' instead of the guru's
five ones.
The next day, on May 14, 2007, the employees of Shiromani
Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC), Amritsar, an apex
gurudwara management body, at presently controlled by
ruling Akali Dal(Badal) were directed to gather in SGPC's
Hazi Rattan gurdwara in Bathinda.
And some other Akali workers also joined them after making
an announcement that they would burn the effigy of Dera
Chief for his blasmephic act of'' ridiculing the Sikh
practice of baptising".
A relatively small group of Sikh youths and SGPC employees
armed with kirpans and other traditional weapons marched
towards the Bathinda district courts where already Dera
followers carrying lathis and iron rods had gathered in a
large number. The Dera followers were too in aggressive
mood to check the opponents from burning the effigy of the
Dera Chief, whom, many of them, consider as incarnation of
God. Despite prior information, the district administration
could not stop the clash between the two groups. That was
the beginning of frenzy, almost on the pattern of communal
riots, which engulfed Punjab and also sparked riotous
reactions in Jammu and Kashmir, Haryana, Delhi and other
parts of the country.
It looks like, the Bathinda district administration might
have been instructed by the ruling Akali leaders to go slow
and allow clashes to take place. Because, without Akalis'
consent, no gathering could be held in the SGPC controlled
Gurdwara and neither SGPC employees could take leading role
in that clash.
The basic cause behind the trouble is sheer politics.
Akalis have been nursing a bitter grouse against the Dera
Sacha Sauda. And they, in fact, are waiting in wings to
settle scores with the Dera Chief and the Salabatpura
village event seemed to have come handy for them. Only two
odd months ago, in the recent Punjab assembly elections the
Dera Sacha Sauda openly sided with Akalis' arch political
enemy, Congress which cost them heavily. In the Akalis'
known hinterland of Malwa belt of Punjab, Congress won 37
of the 65 seats. Many Akali stalwarts from the area, licked
the dust in the polls. The Malwa belt raised the tally of
Congress almost equal to the Shiromani Akali Dal of Chief
Minister Parkash Singh Badal. And, Badal could form the
government only with the help of its ally BJP winning 19
seats in 117 member Vidhan Sabha.
Even otherwise, there has been a long history of simmering
feeling of hatred, illwill and mistrust between the
managers of Sikh religious affairs and the Dera followers
known as 'Premies'. The Dera with its headquater in Sirsa,
in Haryana, is said to be continuously nibbling at Sikh
principles and practices. It also draws its followers from
rural areas who include dalits, lower castes among Sikhs
and small Sikh peasantry -a traditional constituency of the
Akalis in Punjab, Hayrana and adjoining districts of
Rajasthan.
In fact, Dera Chief Gurmeet Singh born in a Sikh peasant
family in Gurusar Modia village in Rajasthan's Sri
Ganganagar district. He is the third head of the Dera Sacha
Sauda who has been attempted to market himself to faithfuls
of all major religions and added 'Ram Rahim' to his name
later after becoming the chief in 1990 since 50 per cent of
his followers are 'Hindus' (mainly lower castes). Of the
2.5 crore Dera followers, 7-8 per cent are said to be
muslims and 40 per cent are Sikhs-- mostly farm labourers
known as Majibi Sikhs.
How has the present Dera Chief expanded his flock of
followers? He holds daily 'parvacnan' to the congregation
which even now swells to many lakhs at the Sirsa Dera at
certain occasions. The Dera Chief liberally borrows
commonly understood religious principles from Sikhism,
Hindu Mythology, Christianity and Islam. And the thus
prepared religious cocktail served in commonman's language
by Baba Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh assuming a lofty
embellished platform--a spectacle that inspires feelings of
awe, grandeur and piety among the mismerised followers
gathered there for solace from mental agony and social
discord they are usually suffering from.
The Dera Chief scrupulously avoids the tickish issue of
prompting religious conversion. His followers are allowed
to retain their religious demeanours. Dera oganisers claim
that the Chief had initiated a social reformist movement-
making the people shun vices- like forsaking intoxicants of
all type. The Dera has a vast organisational network with
45 branches in 16 states plus another 450 smaller branches.
Besides undertaking de-addiction on a large scale, the Dera
arranges mass marriages at negligible cost. And infuses
sense of brotherhood among its followers who help one
another in distress and also renders free services to the
several venture and industrial projects of the Dera
establishment.
The Akalis also are losing their base to the Dera because
the Gurdwaras have all along been controlled by politicised
landlords and moneyed people virtually restraining visit of
the downtrodden people there for solace and spiritual
consolation. On the other hand, the Dera Chief's diktats
run down to his followers even in matter of voting for
certain candidates in the elections.
In a bid to limit the increasing influence of the Dera
Chief, Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal went to the
extent that nothing short of 'apology' from the Dera could
bring peace in Punjab. And, perhaps for the first time, Mr
Badal controlled Sikh clergy, the Akal Takht gave call for
the Punjab Bandh on May 22 and gave an ultimatum for
shutting down the sub-Deras in the State.
After this many times Sikhs and fool Dera
followers clash happen. Many Sikhs come back and join his
life in Sikhism, baba hypnotise many Sikhs and ask them
serve me only, I am the GOD , I am every thing, there is no
upper than me. In the Malwa region mainly and some parts of
Panjab, the sikh are of very lower level in the money cadre
and illiterate. So the baba convince and show them the
dreams of heaven and other thing. So the fool persons
follow Sauda Baba.
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