| 1914 |
Baba Gurdit Singh
of Sarhali village charter a ship, Kamagata Maru, to satisfy the condition
of the Canadian Privy Council Order No. 920. There were 376 passengers
in it including 346 Sikhs. It sarted its journey for Canada reaching
there on the 23rd May 1914, but the ship was not allowed to entry
and was compelled to leave Canadian waters on 23rd July 1914.
==> KOMA GATA MARU: Punjabis traveling to foreign land in search
of better jobs were being discriminated against at the begining
of 20th century. The Canadian government had issued prohibition
against their entry and the British ships had refused to accept
any Punjabi travelers. The Canadian law stated, for the purpose
of preventing immigration from india and other countries, that only
those passengers could land in Canada who travelled on a through
ticket without any break in journey from their land of birth. However,
no company provided such a service between the Indian and Canadian
ports. As a result, many Punjabis were stranded for months in Hong
Kong, unable to get tickets for their final destination, Canada.
Baba Gurdit Singh of Sarhali village, a well established businesses
in Calcutta, Malaya, etc., heard of the stranded Punjabis in Hong
Kong and decided to challenge this prevalent situation. He rented
"Koma Gata Maru", a Japanese ship and named it "Guru
Nanak Jahaj". Sri Guru Granth Sahib accompanied the passengers
along with Kesri Nishan Sahib.
On April 4, 1914, this ship sailed out of Hongkong and reached
the Vancouver port on May 23, 1919, with 167 passengers. However,
these passengers were not allowed to land at Vancouver and were
forcibly returned to Calcutta in the same ship, after a long and
painful struggle. Upon return, the ship was fired upon by the British
at BajBaj Ghat in Calcutta. The returning passengers were either
arrested or killed. Only a few managed to escape. Baba Gurdit Singh
jee escaped the death and lived in disguise for almost 8-9 years.
What started as a simple individual business venture turned into
a major political event. The returning passengers were no longer
considered as better job opportunity seekers but were prosecuted
as freedom fighters.
-Ref. Hindustan Gadar Party: A Short History by Sohan Singh Josh,
People's Publishing House, New Delhi, 1977
KOMAGATA MARU INCIDENT - A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
Komagata Maru was a merchant ship leased by S. Gurdit Singh to
move Indians to Vancouver, Canada. The Canadian govt. was anti-Indian
and did not favor their entry to Canada. This adventure was neither
directly connected to the Ghadar Party nor was it an outcome of
any freedom figting organization. However, it gave a unique twist
to the Indian history and freedom struggle in India. The Ghadar
journal helped to give it a direction of prevalent discontent and
moulded it into a radical movement. And there was a very good reason
for it.
The Canadian govt, in order to check further influx of Indians,
adopted tought measures. Most notorious of them was "Canadians
Privy Council Order No. 920," popularly known as "Continuous
Journey Clause." This made the lives of Indo-Canadians very
difficult. They could not visit their families and they could not
visit them because there was no direct ship service from India to
Canada. The Indians, specially Sikhs, used all means to persuade
the Canadian govt to withdraw the order, but they won't listen.
A deputation of Bhai Balwant Singh, Narain Singh, Bhai Jawala Singh,
and Bhai Nand Singh even went to London in April 1913, and later
visited India to present their case to the British and British-Indian
govt, respectively. It all failed.
Baba Gurdit Singh, a wealthy businessman from Singapore, in order
to satisfy the continuous journey clause, chartered his own ship
from a Japanese company that would take passengers directly to Canada.
The ship sailed on April 4, 1914 from Hong Kong with 165 passengers
on board. More passengers joined in Shanghai, Moje and Yokohama
and the number rose to 376. 346 were Sikhs and remaining were Punjabi
muslims and Hindus. (Some people put the total at 372.) Before leaving,
he consulted a leading Britsh solicitors at Hong Kong who assured
him that there was no bar to the Indian admission to Canada. He
agreed to pay $60,000 as the charter fee.
The ship arrived on the shores of Vancouver on May 23, 1914. The
passengers were not allowed to land and the ship was cardoned off
by the police. The "Times" (London) of that day carried
a categorical statement of the Prime Minister of British Columbia
that they would not admit these orientals. Leading Indians (mostly
Sikhs) in Vancouver formed a 'Shore Committee.' It paid $22,000
as installment of the charter money for the ship, and filed a test
case in the Supreme Court in the name of one passenger Munshi Singh
in the hope that they would get more favourable verdict. On July
7, the full bench of Supreme Court gave its unanimous decision that
they cannot overrule the Immigration Department's dicision.
Food had run out in the ship. Some local Sikhs managed to deliver
potatoes and other things on one occasion during the night on a
hired boat. The passengers were very angry and they took control
of the ship from the Japanese Captain. The Canadian govt retaliated
by ordering a harbour tug "Sea Lion" (sort of tow truck
for ships) to push the ship out of the shore. The angry passengers
mounted an attack on the police by throwing lumps of coal and bricks.
The army regiments had taken positions and it was like a war zone.
The Sikhs of Vanocuver were so angry that and decided to burn the
city of Vancouver if their countrymen were fired upon by the police,
army and the militia who had sourrounded the ship. Somehow a decision
was made and the ship sailed back into the sea towards India. Before
the ship reached Yokohama, the war broke out. The British govt ordered
that no passengers were allowed to land from where they had boarded
the ship. At Yokohama, Bhai Sohan Singh Bhakna had delivered 200
pistols and a several hundred cartridges when the ship docked there
for a short period. In addition, Ghadar Party literature was also
loaded into the ship in flour bags. Many Ghadarites had also boarded
the ship from Shanghai.
The Komagata Maru (Guru Nanak Jahaj) reached Calcutta at Budge
Budge harbour on July 23, 1914 after a two-month long struggle.
Note:
The Canadian govt had employed agents to commit murders of the
Indian community leaders. One such agent was Bela Singh and his
band who worked for the Canadian immigration and Mr. William Hopkinson
(a high official on the govt) who was a great enemy of the Indian
community. Their main job to strike terror in the heart of the Indian
(Sikh) community. On September 5, 1914, Bela Singh fired at the
Sikh congregation which had gathered to mourn the death of one Ram
Singh by Ram Singh. Bela Singh went on firing with two pistols and
killed two people and seriously wounded several others. A case was
filed agaisnt him. Bhai Mewa Singh shot dead Mr. Hopkinson in the
court who was there as a defense witness. Bela Singh was later acquitted.
This infuriated the Indian immigrants in Canada. Bhai Mewa Singh
was later sentenced to death. Mewa Singh, in his confessional statement
said, "This is what led me to take Hopkinson's life and sacrifice
my own life to in order to lay bare the opposition exercised upon
my innocent people through his influence in the eyes of the whole
world. And I, performing the duty of a true Sikh and remembering
the name of God, will proceed towards the scaffold with the same
amount of pleasure as the hungry baby does towards its mother. I
shall gladly have the rope around my neck thinking it to be a rosary
of God's name ."
Bhai Mewa Singh's martyrdom day used to be celebrated in Vanvouver
Gurdwara every year (maybe it still is). (I have added this note
only to emphasise that govt agents are always active in our own
community.)
In the diwans held at Gurdwaras of Shanghai and Hong Kong, Komagata
Maru formed a central issue and Indians were asked to return to
India to avenge the insult. It was no coincidence that the first
jatha of Ghadarites came from Shanghai and reached Calcutta alomost
on the heels of Komagata Maru. All those who arrived on subsequent
ships at Calcutta were rigorously inspected, and those suspected
to be dangerous were either arrested or forbidden to reside elsewhere
other than their native villages. Many Ghadarites reached Punjab
using various routes and methods.
Komagata Maru Reached Budge Budge Harbour (ghaat)
Komagata Maru arrived at Calcutta on September 29, 1914. The passengers
pretty much knew what was in store for them in India. Therefore,
they threw all the objectionable things in the sea. When they arrived
in Calcutta, they were searched thoroughly three times. No arms
were found.
At Calcutta, the police wanted the passengers to board the train
bound for Punjab immediately, but the passengers insisted that they
have to deposit the Holy Guru Grnath Sahib (which was on baord)
in one of the local Gurdwaras. Some boarded the train while the
other defied the police and started to march towards Calcutta in
the form of a procession. The police informed the 2nd Battaion of
Royal Fusileers. Thirty English policemen barred the processions'
entry into the city. A brawl followed and police opened fire, killing
18 processionists and wounding at least 25. The police chief was
shot dead by Bhai Munsha Singh who was one of the passengers. Two
other officials were killed and and eleven got injured. Two Punjab
policemen were also dead. The officials were cared for and got medical
treatment, but no one cared for the wounded passengers. Many passengers
were tortured. Sixty passengers escaped from the police seige and
crossed river Houghley during night. Seventeen of them were later
arrested.
Komagata Maru incident created a sharp reaction against the injustice
to the passengers all over the world, but the premier organization
of India, Indian National Congress, which was supporting the British
Imperialist Goverenment's war efforts in the World War I with money
amd men, did not utter single word of condemnation against the foreign
rulers.
The saga of Komagata Maru is the story of callous attitude of the
Imperial Government and the racist policy of the Canadian government
at that time. While every action of the passengers cannot be justified,
it was a reaction to the treatment that was meted out to them. Komagata
Maru became a by-word for British oppression among the Punjabis.
A passenger told an enquiring British officer, "This ship belongs
to the whole of India. This is the symbol of the honour of India
and if this was detained, there would be mutiny in the armies."
Soon after this incident, Ailane-e-Jang (Proclamation of War) was
prepared by the Ghadar Pary which was circulated to a very large
number of people. An important meeting was held in Sacramento, (California)
and Indian were asked to go back home and wage a war against the
Britors who were fighting the World War I. A large number of Punjabis
did go back to India and started their revolutionary activities.
Shahid Kartar Singh Sarabha, Raghubor Dyal Gupta and many others
did not even wait for the meeting and left for India. Little bit
later 60-70 Indians left by S. S. Korea which included some prominent
leaders on the West Coast of USA. Some of them were sent to other
countries to persuade the Indians of other countries such as Burma,
Phillipines, China, and Hong Kong to go back to India and start
the revolution.
Baba Gurdit Singh, who escaped the police bullets, remained underground
until 1920. On the advice of Mahatma Gandhi, he made a volunatary
surrender at Nankana Sahib and was imprisoned for five years. (Mahatma
Gandhi did not help him in any other way!) He died on July 24, 1954.
Such was the story of Komagatu Maru.
Sources:
- Sailani
Desh Bhagat by Harnam Singh Tundilaat, a well-known "Ghadarite"
(ghost written by Lal Singh Kamla Akali)
- The Punjabi
heroic Tradition by Dr. Satya M. Rai, Professor, Department of
Political Science, Hindu College, Delhi Uni.
- Ghadar
Movement by Harish K. Puri, professor, Political Science, Guru
Nanak Dev Uni. This book is published by Guru Nanak Dev University.
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