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"The Palace of the Lord God is
so beautiful. Within it, there are gems, rubies, pearls and flawless diamonds. A
fortress of gold surrounds this Source of Nectar. How can I climb up to the
Fortress without a ladder? By meditating on the Lord, through the Guru,
Guru
Gobind Singh Sahib
These developments alarmed the casteridden
Rajput chiefs of the Sivalik hills. They rallied under the leadership of
the Raja of Bilaspur, in whose territory lay Anandpur, to forcibly evict
Guru Gobind Singh from his hilly citadel. Their repeated expeditions
during 1700-04 however proved abortive . They at last petitioned Emperor
Aurangzeb for help. In concert with contingents sent under imperial orders
by the governor of Lahore and those of the faujdar of Sirhind, they
marched upon Anandpur and laid a siege to the fort in Jeth 1762 sk/May
1705. Over the months, the Guru and his Sikhs firmly withstood their
successive assaults despite dire scarcity of food resulting from the
prolonged blockade. While the besieged were reduced to desperate straits,
the besiegers too were chagrined at the tenacity with which the Sikhs held
out. At this stagy the besiegers offered, on solemn oaths of Quran, safe
exit to the Sikhs if they quit Anandpur. At last, the town was evacuated
during the night of Poh suds 1, 1762 sk/5-6 December 1705. But soon, as
the Guru and his Sikhs came out, the hill monarchs and their Mughal allies
set upon them in full fury. In the ensuing confusion many Sikhs were
killed and all of the Guru's baggage, including most of the precious
manuscripts, was lost. The Guru himself was able to make his way to
Chamkaur, 40 km southwest of Anandpur, with barely 40 Sikhs and his two
elder sons. There the imperial army, following closely on his heels,
caught up with him. His two sons, Ajit Singh (b. 1687) and Jujhar Singh
(b. 1691) and all but five of the Sikhs fell in the action that took place
on 7 December 1705. The five surviving Sikhs bade the Guru to save himself
in order to reconsolidate the Khalsa. Guru Gobind Singh with three of his
Sikhs escaped into the wilderness of the Malva, two of his Muslim
devotees, Gani Khan and Nabi Khan, helping him at great personal risk.
Guru Gobind Singh's two younger sons, Zorawar Singh (b. 1696) and Fateh
Singh (b.1699), and his mother, Mata Gujari, were after the evacuation of
Anandpur betrayed by their old servant and escort, Gangu, to the faujdar
of Sirhind, who had the young children executed on 13 December 1705. Their
grandmother died the same day. Befriended by another Muslim admirer, Rai
Kalha of Raikot, Guru Gobind Singh reached Dina in the heart of the Malva.
There he enlisted a few hundred warriors of the Brar clan, and also
composed his famous letter, Zafarnamah or the Epistle of Victory, in
Persian verse, addressed to Emperor Aurangzeb. The letter was a severe
indictment of the Emperor and his commanders who had perjured their oath
and treacherously attacked him once he was outside the safety of his
fortification at Anandpur. It emphatically reiterated the sovereignty of
morality in the affairs of State as much as in the conduct of human beings
and held the means as important as the end. Two of the Sikhs, Daya Singh
and Daram Singh, were despatched with the Zafarnamah to Ahmadnagar in the
South to deliver it to Aurangzeb, then in camp in that town.
From Dina, Guru Gobind Singh continued his westward march until, finding
the host close upon his heels, he took position astride the water pool of
Khidrana to make a last-ditch stand. The fighting on 29 December 1705 was
hard and desperate. In spite of their overwhelming numbers, the Mughal
troops failed to capture the Guru and had to retire in defeat. The most
valorous part in this battle was played by a group of 40 Sikhs who had
deserted the Guru at Anandpur during the long siege, but who, chided by
their womenfolk at home, had come back under the leadership of a brave and
devoted woman, Mai Bhago, to redeem themselves. They had fallen fighting
desperately to check the enemy's advance towards the Guru's position. The
Guru blessed the 40 dead as 40 mukte, i.e. the 40 Saved Ones. The site is
now marked by a sacred shrine and tank and the town which has grown around
them is called Muktsar, the Pool of liberations.
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