213 Darshan Singh Pheruman
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Darshan Singh Pheruman (1
August 1885 – 27 October 1969) was an Indian
freedom fighter, Sikh activist and politician.
Early life[edit]
Darshan Singh was born on 1
August 1885 at Pheruman, Amritsar, India in a
Sikh family. In 1912, he joined Indian Army as a
sepoy. In 1914, he left the Army and started his
own construction business in Hissar.[1]
Pre-Independence
activism[edit]
Later, Pheruman gave up his
business and joined the Gurdwara Reform
Movement. In 1921, he was arrested and jailed
for one year during an agitation launched to
recover the keys of the Golden Temple treasury
from the British deputy commissioner of
Amritsar. In December 1924, as a part of the
Gurdwara Reform Movement, he led a group of
Sikhs referred to as Shahidi jatha (14th of
total 16 groups) into the Jaito agitation. He
was arrested and jailed for ten months. The
agitation ended with the enactment of the Sikh
Gurdwaras Act, 1925.[2] In 1926, he took part in
the Non-cooperation movement launched by the
Indian National Congress and went to jail for 14
months. In 1926, he visited Malaya and was
arrested because of his past record in India. In
jail, he was not allowed to wearKacchera, one
the five articles of Sikh faith, which a Sikh
must wear all the time. As a protest, he went on
hunger strike for over three weeks. Upon his
return from Malaya, he joined the civil
disobedience movement and went to jail three
times. He favored the Akali Dal participation in
Quit India Movement and himself took part in
it.[1][3][4]
Post-Independence[edit]
After the Indian
independence, Pheruman became a member of Rajya
Sabha until 1964. In 1959, he left the Indian
National Congress and joined the newly formed
Swatantra Party.[1][3]
Fast unto death[edit]
After the creation of
Punjab, India on linguistic lines in 1966, Akali
Dal demanded that Chandigarh and certain other
Punjabi speaking areas which were not part of
Punjab should be transferred to Punjab. On 17
December 1966, Akali Dal leader Sant Fateh Singh
went into a fast and threatened to self-immolate
himself 10 days later on 27 December
1966.[5][6]However, Indian Prime Minister Indira
Gandhi promised to arbitrate the dispute and
Fateh Singh ended his fast on 27 December 1966.
However, no action was taken. In August 1969,
Pheruman accused Fatesh Singh of lowering the
dignity of Sikhism by breaking his ardas
(pledge). He announced he would fast until death
for the disputed areas and to uphold to dignity
of ardas. He was arrested on 12 August in
Amritsar and on 15 August started a fast inside
the jail. On 27 August he was admitted into
hospital but refused all forms of feeding.[7][8]
He died on 27 October 1969, the 74th day of his
hunger strike.[1][3][9] After his death, his
supporters floated a new Akali Dal named after
him.[10]
Legacy
Shaheed Darshan Singh
Pheruman Memorial College for Women and Shaheed
Darshan Singh Pheruman Public School were
established in 1974 and 1981 respectively in his
memory by the Shaheed Darshan Singh Pheruman
Memorial Trust.[11][12] A Sikh Gurdwara in
Dholewal is also named after him.[13]