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Bhai Bota Singh; Bhai Garja Singh; Bhai Mehtab Singh; Bhai Sukha Singh; Mata Sahib Kaur; Bhai Gurbaksh Singh; Jathedar Binod Singh; Jathedar Darbara Singh; Pandit Ran Singh Pada; Sultan-Al-Quam Nawab Kapur Singh; Khushal Singh; Budh Singh; Bhuma Singh Dhillon; Hari Singh Dhillon; Gulab Singh Khatri; Sahib Singh; Sultan-Al-Quam Jassa Singh ...
Two residents of Amritsar, Tej Ram, a Hindu, and Bulaka Singh, took this news to a band of Khalsa in the deserts of Bikaner under the leadership of Sardar Sham Singh. Tej Ram and Bulaka Singh narrated their stories to the congregation of Sikhs. After listening, Sardar Mehtab Singh Bhangu volunteered to bring Massa Ranghar's head back to Bikaner ...
Sukha Singh and Mehtab Singh return with severed head of Massa Ranghar. The news of this sacrilegious use of the gurdwara spread to the remote areas. Two Sikhs, Sukha Singh and Mehtab Singh, decided to kill Massa Ranghar. [1] [2] They disguised themselves as lambardars, entered the gurdwara and beheaded Massa Ranghar while he was enjoying the ...
Bhai Sukha Singh and Mehtab Singh brought the head of Massa Rangarh came to northern Rajasthan, that time this was jungle area. At the site of Buddha Johad they hung the head of Massa Ranghar on a tree. After many years a large Gurudwara was established here and became worship place of sikhs.
His father Hazur Singh died when Mehtab Singh was four years old. He had his early education at village school and passed the Entrance examination for Central Model School , Lahore , in 1895. He was related to Sardar Sujan Singh, Sardar Ujjal Singh and Sir Sobha Singh as they were cousins, he was the one who introduced Ujjal Singh to Sikh ...
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The Gurus' word, called shabad, is taken as the mystic experience of the Guru. In the words of Bhai Gurdas, a great scholar of the Guru's time, "In the word is the Guru, and the Guru is in the word (shabad). In other words, the human body was not the Guru, but the light of the word (shabad) within the heart was their real personality." When the ...
A beri tree can be found at Siloani in Ludhiana which Guru Gobind Singh is believed to have tied his horse to whilst traveling in the Malwa region in the aftermath of the Battle of Chamkaur. [5] At the location of the beri, Guru Gobind Singh, whilst disguised in Islamic garbs, met with Rai Kalha, the chief of Raikot, who then escorted the Guru ...