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Was a major figure in the Sikh renaissance and in the movement for
the revival and renewal of Punjabi literary tradition His identification
with all the important concerns of modern Sikhism was so complete
that he came to be canonized as Bhai, the Brother of the Sikh Order,
very early in his career. For his pioneering work in its several different
genres, he is acknowledged as the creator of modern Punjabi literature.
Born on 5 December 1,872, in Amritsar, Bhai Vir Singh was the eldest
of Dr Charan Singh's three sons. The family traces its ancestry
back to Diwan Kaura Mall (d. 1752), who rose to the position of
vice-governor of Multan, under Nawab Mir Win ul-Mulk, with the title
of Maharaja Bahadur. Baba Kahn Singh (1788-1878) was perhaps the
first in the family to be regularly sworn a Sikh. He turned a recluse
when he was still in his early teens and spent his entire youth
in monasteries at Haridvar and Amritsar acquiring training in traditional
Sikh learning. His mother's affection ultimately reclaimed him to
the life of a householder at the age of 40, when he got married.
Adept in versification in Sanskrit and Braj as well as in the oriental
system of medicine, Baba Kahn Singh passed on his interests to his
only son, Dr Charan Singh. Apart from his sustained involvement
in literary and scholarly pursuits, mainly as a Braj poet, Punjabi
prose-writer, musicologist, prosodist and lexicographer, Dr Charan
Singh took active interest in the affairs of the Sikh community,
then experiencing a new urge for restoration as well as for change.
To this patrimony of Bhai Vir Singh was added from his mother's
side a living kinship with another rich tradition of scholarship
in exegesis of the Giani school, going back to the times of Guru
Gobind Singh. His maternal grandfather Giani Hazara Singh compiled
a lexicon of Guru Granth Sahib, and wrote a commentary on Bhai Gurdas'
Varan. As a schoolboy, Bhai Vir Singh used to spend a great deal
of his time in the company of Giani Hazara Singh under whose guidance
he not only learnt the classical and neo-classical languages, Sanskrit,
Persian and Braj, but also received grounding, both theoretical
and practical, in the science of Sikh exegesis.
Bhai Vir Singh was the child of an age in ferment. The extinction
of Sikh sovereignty in the Punjab, the decline in the fortunes of
Sikh aristocracy, the gradual emergence of urban middle classes,
the dissipation of the "national intellectual life" of
the Punjab owing to the neglect and decay of indigenous education
of the local people from their political destiny aroused among the
Sikhs concern for survival and for redefining the boundaries of
their faith. Further challenges arose in the shape of modernization,
of Christian, Muslim and Hindu movements of proselytization and
the agnostic cults such as Brahmo Samaj. Parallel to the developments
foreboding gradual appropriation of Sikhism by the Hindu social
order emerged a powerful trend towards Braj classicism in the Sikh
literary and scholarly tradition. Mythologization of the persons
of Sikh Gurus, mixing of fiction with historical fact and interweaving
of Vedantic and Vaisnavite motifs into the essential Sikh teaching
were its typical features. In response arose in Sikhism several
movements-Nirankari (puritanism), Namdhari (militant protestantism),
Singh Sabha (revivalism and renaissance) and Panch Khalsa Diwan
(aggressive fundamentalism).
Bhai Vir Singh had the benefit of both the traditional indigenous
learning as well as of modern English education. He learnt Persian
and Urdu from a Muslim Maulawi in a mosque and was apprenticed to
Giani Harbhajan Singh, a leading classical scholar, for Sanskrit
and Sikh literature. He then joined the Church Mission School, Amritsar,
and took his matriculation examination in 1891. At school, the conversion
of some of the students proved a crucial experience which strengthened
his own religious conviction. From the Christian missionaries' emphasis
on literary resources, he learnt how efficacious the written word
could be as a means of informing and influencing a person's innermost
being. Through his English courses, he acquired familiarity with
modern literary forms, especially short lyric. While still at school,
Bhai Vir Singh was married at the age of 17 to Chatar Kaur, daughter
of Sardar Narain Singh of Amritsar.
Unlike the educated young men of his time, Bhai Vir Singh was not
tempted by prospects of a career in government service. He chose
for himself the calling of a writer and created material conditions
for a singleminded pursuit of it. An year after his passing the
matriculation examination, he set up a lithograph press in collaboration
with Bhai Wazir Singh, a friend of his father's. As his first essays
in the literary field, Bhai Vir Singh composed some Geography textbooks
for schools.
Bhai Vir Singh began taking active interest in the affairs of Singh
Sabha movement. To promote its aims and objects, he launched in
1894 the Khalsa Tract Society. In November 1899, he started a Punjabi
weekly, the Khalsa Samachar. He was among the principal promoters
of several of the Sikh institutions, such as Chief Khalsa Diwan
(1902), Sikh Educational Society (1908) and the Punjab and Sind
Bank (1908). Interest in corporate activity directed towards community
development remained Bhai Vir Singh's constant concern, simultaneously
with his creative and scholarly pursuits. In this engagement and,
at the same time, in his eschewal of political activity, the Christian
missionary example was apparently his model.
In determining the basic parameters of the modern phase of Sikhism,
Bhai Vir Singh stressed the autonomy of Sikh faith nourished and
sustained by an awakening amongst the Sikhs of the awareness of
their distinct theological and cultural identity. Secondly, he aimed
at reorienting the Sikhs' understanding of their faith in such a
manner as to help them assimilate the different modernizing influences
to their historical memory and cultural heritage. Education of the
masses was the first requirement for the fulfilment of these objectives.
In the meanwhile, the old educational system which had till then
served as a channel for communication of the traditional knowledge
to the youth of the race had broken down with the withdrawal, under
British dispensation, of state patronage from the indigenous institutions.
As if to fill the vacuum as well as to build new channels of intra-community
communication, Bhai Vr Singh through his single-minded cultivation
of Punjabi language as the medium of his theological, scholarly
and creative work, resolved the cultural dilemma which the Sikhs
faced at the turn of the century. On the one hand was the Sikh literary
tradition in Braj language which had collected unmatched riches
in multiple directions during the course of its three-centuries-long
elitist career, on the other were the compulsions for mobilizing
the common Sikhs through their own language. By drawing upon the
Sikh tradition of Braj literature for his basic inspiration and
cultural motivation and upon the Punjabi literary tradition for
its linguistic component, Bhai Vir Singh initiated a new literary
idiom distinctly different from both. The tracts produced by the
Khalsa Tract Society introduced a down-to-earth literary Punjabi
remarkable for lightness of touch as well as for freshness of expression.
In this writing lay the beginnings of modern Punjabi prose.
The Khalsa Tract Society periodically made available under the
title Nirguniara lowcost publications on Sikh theology, history
and philosophy and on social and religious reform. Through this
journal Bhai Vir Singh established a living contact with an everexpanding
circle of readers. He used the Nirguniara as a vehicle for his own
selfexpression and some of his major creative works such as the
epic Rana Surat Singh, the novel Baba Naudh Singh, and the lives
of the Gurus Sri Guru Nanak Chamatkar and Sri Guru Kalgidhar Chamatkar
were originally serialized in its columns.
In literature, Bhai Vir Singh started as a writer of romances which
proved to be the forerunners of the Punjabi novel. His writings
in this genre- Sundari (1898), Bijay Singh (1899), Satvant Kaur
(published in two parts, I in 1900 and II, in 1927)- were aimed
at recreating the heroic period (eighteenth century) of Sikh history.
Through these novels he made available to his readers typical models
of courage, fortitude and human dignity.
Subhag ji da Sudhar Hathin Baba Naudh Singh, popularly known as
Baba Naudh Singh (serialized in Nirguniara from 1907 onwards and
published in book form in 1921) shares with Rana Surat Singh ( which
he had started serializing two years earlier), Bhai Vir Singh's
fascination with the theme of widow's desperate urge for a re-union
with her dead husband. But in Baba Naudh Singh this search is situated
in a more mundane setting. This makes all the difference. The narrative
here is more realistic in tone, and almost contemporary in its appeal.
Bhai Vir Singh weaves into the narrative numerous motifs of social
reform, moral teaching and religious preaching and depicts several
situations of intercommunal and urban-rural confrontation.
In 1905, Bhai Vir Singh started serializing through tracts Rana
Surat Singh, the first Punjabi epic, written in blank verse of Sirkhandi
variety. This long narrative of over 14,000 lines is a striking
imaginative evocation of the situation of the Sikhs through a symbolic
tale of a widowed queen in quest of her lost paradise. The spiritual
voyage of Rani Raj Kaur, the main protagonist of the poem, from
external factuality to internal essence has been described by Bhai
Vir Singh in the form of a fantasy of spiritual ascension. Apart
from living out her earthly destiny of suffering and pain, she symbolized
the total ethos of the Sikh people at that historical moment when
they were emerging out of their sense of defeat and despair into
an era of a fresh beginning.
Bhai Vir Singh's quest for new forms of expression continued. Soon
after the publication of Rana Surat Singh in book form in 1919,
he turned to shorter poems and lyrics. In quick succession came
Dil Tarang (1920), Tarel Tupke (1921), Lahiran de Har (1921), Matak
Hulare (1922), and Bijlian de Har (1927). Following at some distance
was Mere Saian Jio (1953). In this poetry, Bhai Vir Singh's concerns
were more aesthetic than didactic, metaphysical or mystical. He
refined the old verse forms and created new ones. The metrical patterns
Kabit, Soratha, Baint, etc., which he inherited from classical Punjabi
literature, were transformed into light, nimble measures. Bhai Vir
Singh also naturalized in Punjabi the Rubai which he borrowed from
Urdu. By grafting Soratha and Sirkhandi forms on English blank verse,
he paved the way for the emergence of Punjabi poem. As it happened,
the first play written in Punjabi, Raja Lakhdata Singh (1910), also
came from the pen of Bhai Vir Singh. Tentative in form, the play
did reveal the author's powers of constructing crisp and witty dialogues.
Change-over from Braj Bhasa to Punjabi as the main medium of Sikh
literary and scholarly expression created the need for new materials
such as glossaries, lexicons, encyclopaedias and exegetical works.
Bhai Vir Singh himself provided several of the tools. He revised
and enlarged Giani Hazara Singh's dictionary, Sri Guru Granth Kosh,
originally published in 1898. The revised version, published in
1927, gave evidence of Bhai Vir Singh's command of the science of
etymology and of the classical and modern languages. He published
critical editions of some of the old Sikh texts such as Sikhan di
Bhagat Mala (1912), Prachin Panth Prakash (1914), Puratan Janam
Sakhi (1926) and Sakhi Pothi (1950). Monumental in size and scholarship
was his annotation of Bhai Santokh Singh's, Sri Gur Pratap Suraj
Granth, published from 1927 to 1935 in fourteen volumes covering
6668 pages.
No sooner was the Sri Gur Pratap Suraj Granth completed than Bhai
Vir Singh launched on an even more arduous task. This was a detailed
commentary on the Guru Granth Sahib. In a way, exegesis had been
his lifelong occupation. Early in his career he had annotated selections
from the Holy Book published in 1906 under the title Panj Granthi
Satik, and, as he himself declared, all of his writing was an exposition
of the Sikh Scripture. He devoted himself unsparingly to the commentary,
but it remained unfinished. A lifetime of unrelieved hard work and
the weight of advancing years at last began to tell. In, early 1957
signs of fatigue and weakness appeared. He was taken ill with a
fever and died in his home in Amritsar on 10 june 1957. The portion
of the commentary- nearly one half of the Holy Book- he had completed
was published posthumously in seven large volumes.
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