MAI
BHAGO
(BIBI BHAG KAUR)
Mai Bhag Kaur, popularly
known as Mai
Bhago, was born in village
Jhabal, near Amritsar. She was the grand-daughter
of Bhai Paro Shah, brother of Bhai Langaha,
who served Guru Arjan Dev and Guru Hargobind
Ji.
As a young girl, she heard
the sakhis of the martyrdom of Guru Arjan
Dev and of army attacks on Guru Har Gobind.
State terrorism against the Gurus and
the Sikhs was often talked about in the
family. Her two generations were closely
involved with it because they had personally
experienced it while serving the Gurus.
A regular hearing of the sakhis of injustices
and army made a deep effect on her tender
heart.
Mai Bhago was still a
child when she heard sakhis of Guru Tegh
Bahadur and three Sikhs, Bhai Dayala,
Bhai Mati Das and Bhai Sati das who were
tortured and murdered at Delhi in 1675.
The sad news touched here heart and she
decided in her mind to do her duty to
stop such state violence against the Sikhs.
This thought grew stronger and stronger
in her mind as she grew into her teens.
She went to Anandpur Sahib
along with here father in 1699 when Guru
Gobind Singh founded the Khalsa Panth.
She took Amrit and wanted to stay there
to learn the art of fighting and self
defense. But, her father brought her to
their village because she was a woman
and not a man to go to the fighting lines.
In her mind, however, she continued to
nurse the idea of joining the Khalsa forces.
After returning to her
village, she started learning martial
art, particularly the use of the spear.
She would go to a nearby forest reserve
and practice piercing trees with her spear.
She soon became an expert in the art of
using this handy weapon in battle.
Government forces surrounded
Anandpur in 1704 but they could not defeat
the Guru or make him to vacate the city.
Finally to save their face with the emperor,
they under a written oath, requested the
Guru to leave Anandpur without being harmed
by them. They agreed not only to let the
Guru move out of Anandpur to anywhere
he liked to go, but also to let him come
and stay at Anandpur again after some
time. They wrote to the Guru that their
only aim was to make the Guru to leave
Anandpur at that time and that they had
no intention of harming the Guru.
The generals, however,
broke their oath and attacked the Guru
when he came out of the fort. He was forced
to fight the battles while crossing the
river Sirsa and at a nearby village Chamkaur
where many of his Sikhs and his two elder
sons became martyrs. They, however, could
not harm the person of the Guru.
The news that the Guru
had left Anandpur and was coming to Malwa
made Mai Bhago to do what she was thinking
since long. She went from village to village
to inform the Sikhs and organize them
to challenge the army following the Guru.
While addressing people in a village she
would tell them, “Our Guru had sacrificed
all his family for our freedom. Why can’t
we ourselves stand up and protect our
own civil and human rights ?” Her sharp
words awakened the souls of many men.
They would wonder at the bravery of a
woman going around courageously and making
people to get together for claiming their
rights and fighting for justice.
Mai Bhag Kaur and Hundreds
of men with her were planning their strategy
when the news came that the Guru was proceeding
towards a lake, Khidrana Di Dhab, now
called Mukatsar and the Mughal Army was
following him. They decided to check the
army from reaching the lake, the only
source of water for many miles around.
The Guru with some Sikhs occupied to top
of the mound on the bank of the lake.
Mai Bhag Kaur and the Sikhs with here
organized themselves around the lake.
When the army arrived
at the lake and attacked the Sikhs, they
were ready to beat them back. A bloody
battle took place. Mai showed here bravery
by fighting with the soldiers in the front
lines. She would use her ready to attack
her, he was down on earth with his chest
pierced by her spear. The mercenary soldiers
could not face the devoted Sikhs. The
Guru from the mound provided the necessary
support with his snake like arrows. The
army generals soon found that unless they
retreated quickly all of them would find
their grave yard in the battle field and
none would return alive. Historians say
that they left even their wounded soldiers
unattended and returned as fast as they
could. This was the last battle Mughal
army could dare to fight with the Guru.
After the battle was won,
the Guru came down from the mound and
took care of the wounded and the dead.
Mai Bhag Kaur was lying badly injured.
She was treated carefully and she soon
became healthy. When the Guru asked her
to go back to her village along with other
Sikhs, she told the Guru her long cherished
desire to become an active Saint-soldier
in the army of the Guru. Her wishes were
granted and the Guru agreed to let here
stay with him as a member of his body-guard.
Along with the Guru, she
went to Nanded in the south of India and
lived there for the rest of her life.
There is a Gurdwara where she lived at
Nanded, near the Gurdwara Sachkand, built
in memory of the Guru. It reminds the
visitors of her devotion and services
to the Guru.
Like
Sikh men, Sikh women are equally good
saint-soldiers. They can organize men
and lead them to fight and win battles
for the freedom of people and their human
rights.
|