MATA
KISHAN KAUR KAONKE
This
is the sakhi of a brave woman who lived
in this century and whose life was devoted
to the Sikh Panth. She was born in 1856
and was the daughter of Sardar Suba Singh
of village Lohgarh in Ludhiana district.
While living in her village, she learned
Gurbani and Sikh history from the granthi
ji of the Gurdwara there. She was
married to Sardar Harnam Singh of Village
Kaonke. He later on joined the army and
died in 1902 while serving in Burma. Her
two sons had also died when they were
still young. She was thus left a widow
and without any offspring. Rather than
bearing the curses of Hindu society of
being a widow or feeling lonely, she decided
to spend the rest of her life in the service
of the Khalsa Panth.
In
1903, Mata Kishan Kaur went to Gurdwara
Sach Khand, Nanded in the south of India.
The Gurdwara was built in the memory of
Guru Gobind Singh who left for Sach-Khand
from there. She stayed at Nanded for some
time, took Amrit to become a saint-soldier
of the Khalsa Panth and started tying
a turban on her head. She devoted herself
to organizing people to preach and practiced
the equality of men and women and the
so-called low castes and high castes of
the Hindu society.
After
the death of her husband, his brother
did not let her take over the possession
of her share of land. When other methods
failed, she went to the fields and personally
told the brother of her husband to leave
the fields for her. Finding her along
and helpless in the fields. She was courageous
and a brave person. She raised her strong
arm and fixed a hard slap on his face.
The man, feeling guilty of his misbehavior
and being hit hard by an upright woman
ran away to avoid a second slap from her.
Mata Kaonke took over the possession of
the land which belonged to her. She was
respected by the whole village as a great
lady of good behavior, with great courage.
When
the Khalsa Panth started the Gurdwara
Freedom Movement in the beginning of this
century, she joined the movement as an
active worker. In 1920, the Mahants refused
offerings of some Sikhs who were recent
converts from the so-called low-castes.
She was with the Sikhs who went to the
Golden Temple to protest against this
anti-Sikh behavior of the Mahants. She
was there to physically set the Mahants
straight if they did not listen to their
arguments. Observing the mood of the sikhs,
the Mahants fled from the Gurdwara leaving
it vacant for the Sikhs to occupy and
take over its control.
In
September 1922, during Guru Ka Bagh Morcha,
Sikhs were beaten by police and even run
over by the mounted police, breaking the
bones of Sikhs under the hooves of their
horses. Mata Ji and her associates undertook
the sews of caring for the injured Sikhs,
taking them to the hospitals, and nursing
them there. Every day she would go with
the jatha to the Guru Ka Bagh.
The policemen would beat the Sikhs with
lathis to stop them from going to the
Bagh. The police would let the attending
Sikhs carry the injured members of the
protesting jatha. It is then that
Mai Kishan Kaur took over the duty of
administering first aid to them and taking
them to the hospital.
One
day, a very large number of Sikhs suffered
very severe injuries. The police chief
taunted her by telling her that there
was much sewa for her to do. Mata Ji was
already feeling very much hurt to see
the Sikhs being tortured and beaten like
that. After hearing the taunting words
of the police chief, she could no longer
restrain herself. In response to his comments,
she took a few firm daring steps towards
the police chief, and looking at him with
ferocious eyes, she raised her arm and
like a lightning bolt, hit him in the
face.
The
strong unexpected slap shook the police
chief and turned his face over his shoulder.
Without giving the brave woman a second
look, he ran towards his tent save his
face from the second slap. This was a
great insult not only for all of the police
force, but for the whole British government.
Hearing
of the tortures committed on the innocent
Sikhs and the bearing of atrocities by
them, gave Father C.F. Andrews, a Christina
missionary, the courage to come to Guru
Ka Bagh. After seeing the anti-human behavior
of the British police officers, he cried,
“I see hundreds of Christs being crucified
every day by the Christians themselves.”
This changed the direction of the Morcha
and finally the government yielded to
permit the Sikhs their legal rights by
owning the Guru Ka Bagh lands.
Mata
Kaonke again performed a daring deed during
Jaito Morcha. Sikhs wanted to continue
the Akhand Path disrupted by the police
by arresting all the Sikhs there. A Jatha
of 500 Sikhs marched from the Akal Takhat
in Amritsar to Gurdwara Jaito. People
knew the jatha would be handled
brutally by the police. To know the truth
and details of the brutalities Mata Kaonke
dressed herself as a Jain woman and moved
into the police camp. The government forces
rained bullets on the jatha. The
police secretly disposed of the dead bodies
and removed the injured to the hospitals.
They issued totally misleading reports
and did not give the correct information
about the Sikhs killed and injured. Mata
Kaonke had seen all the actions with her
own eyes and she made the facts public.
When the details revealed by her were
found to be true, the government was very
much embarrassed, and was also very much
surprised. After some time the secret
police traced her and charged her with
espionage. She was sentenced to four years
in jail.
In
1925, the government accepted their defeat
in the struggle against the Sikhs. They
agreed to the formation of a Sikh body
which would take over the management of
the Gurdwaras from the Mahants who were
under the control of the government. With
this agreement, all the persons arrested
in connection with the Gurdwara movement
were released. Mata Kaonke, however, had
to remain in jail until 1928 to undergo
her full sentence.
When
released from jail, she went straight
to the Akal Takhat to express her thanks
to the Guru for giving her a chance to
serve the Khalsa Panth. She suffered for
the cause of the Sikhs and freedom of
the Gurdwaras from the government control.
The Khalsa Panth honored her at the Akal
Takhat and gave her the title of Mata.
Since then she became popular as Mata
Kishan Kaur.
During
the rest of her life, she stayed at her
village built a Gurdwara there and preached
the Sikh faith to the people in the region.
She died at the age of 96 in 1952.
The
life spent in the service of society is
fruitful Sikh women can accomplish this
by overcoming their personal and family
limitations.
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