SIKHS and HINDUS rebuild Mosques in East Punjab

I came across this very heart warming article about East Punjab. It would be great if more people would think and act like this even though the world seems against Islam at the moment!

Shades Of The Old*Punjab
June 26, 2010

This is a great, heart-warming piece from Outlook India which says that “Across rural Punjab, Sikhs and Hindus are helping restore mosques destroyed during Partition”
Chander Suta Dogra

Brothers In Arms

•	Around 200 mosques across Punjab have been repaired, rebuilt or built from scratch with the help of Sikhs and Hindus in the last 10 years
•	Many destroyed during Partition riots are now being restored by village communities
•	In some cases, the Jamaat-e-Islami is involved, but most are unorganised village-level efforts
•	It’s a reassertion, after decades, of Punjab’s unique religious and cultural synthesis

The Ghuman family of Sarwarpur, near Ludhiana, cannot understand what the fuss is about. Ever since Sajjan Singh Ghuman, an NRI Sikh living in England, rebuilt a mosque in his native village that was damaged during Partition, the shrine, as well as his family back home, have attracted the curiosity of* outsiders. “We never imagined we would be on a Punjabi TV channel just because my elder brother rebuilt this small mosque for the poor Muslim families of our village. For him, it was just a gesture towards restoring the collective heritage of our village,” says Sajjan’s brother, Joga Singh, who manages the family’s lands in Sarwarpur. Sure. But what Joga and his family, or even* the TV channel, do not know is that the sentiment that inspired his brother’s act is being manifested in scores of villages across Punjab, with Sikhs and Hindus joining hands to either rebuild old and damaged mosques or build new ones. Odd? Perhaps. But Punjab, as admirers of its unique religious synthesis say, has always defied stereotypes to do its own thing.

That spirit comes through clearly in the actions of a group of school and college boys from 600-year-old Ajitwal village near Moga. During Partition, when Muslims fled Ajitwal, just as they fled in waves from other parts of Punjab, an ancient village mosque was vandalised. As years passed, someone encroached on its grounds and the place became a village dumping ground. A neem tree on its compound became a hang-out for the village youth. One day, a bunch of boys decided to clear the muck. Within days, the entire village—now made up of Hindus and Sikhs—joined them. Says 20-year-old Laddi: “We were never short of money or material. Anyone who passed this way would contribute in cash or kind. Someone brought five bags of cement, another donated bricks and so on….” This, when there were no permanent Muslim families left in the village. But, once repaired, the mosque began to be used. A few Muslim migrants from Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, labourers and petty tradespeople, began praying here. A maulvi from a neighbouring village now comes to conduct Friday namaaz. To the delight of 80-year-old Nachattar Kaur, who was born and brought up here, the sound of the azaan (call to prayer) is being heard again, after decades. “We have always believed in this shrine,” she says. “It is a house of God. God bless these boys for restoring the oldest relic of our village.”

Muezzin’s call: Worshippers at the Dhuri mosque

In Malerkotla, the headquarters of the state unit of Jamaat-e-Islami (Hind), publisher and Jamaat member Ramzan Sayeed, who has also translated the Quran into Punjabi, observes, “It is only in Punjab that Sikhs and Hindus are helping to build masjids with tractors, labour and money.” That this should happen at a time when Islamists are being reviled and resisted across the world makes it remarkable; and that it should be happening in a land where the soil is soaked with the blood of Partition, and stories of murder, rape and looting have been passed down the generations, renders it especially significant.

In the months after Partition, some 50,000 mosques across present-day Punjab, Haryana and Himachal Pradesh were destroyed, burnt or converted into temples and gurudwaras—homes, even. Today, Muslims comprise just 1.5 per cent of Punjab’s population, mostly migrant labour from UP and Bihar and some Gujjar families from Jammu and Kashmir who have settled here, in addition to small pockets of Muslims, such as those belonging to Malerkotla, who did not go to Pakistan in 1947.

However, in the last decade or so, the Jamaat has managed, with extraordinary village-level support, including money and materials, to free and revive about 120 mosques. Scores of others, like the one at Ajitwal, have been revived or rebuilt purely by villagers themselves. Jamaat president Arshad Ali told Outlook, “We consciously involve Sikhs and Hindus whenever we help build a new mosque or repair an old one; and every time, the community’s response is overwhelming.” He reels off the names of scores of villages where this has happened. One of them, Diwa Gandwan in Fatehgarh Sahib, has only 17 Muslim families, most of them poor labourers. Mohammed Jameel, a farm labourer who lives in the village, told Outlook, “We never imagined we could have a masjid of our own, but we do now. It would not have been possible without the help of the Sikh landlords here, who filled up the low-lying area by bringing us earth in their tractor trollies.” The first brick of the mosque was laid by a Sikh priest from Fatehgarh Sahib, who also donated money.

Arshad Ali contrasts this attitude with the one that prevailed when he began working for the Jamaat in Punjab some 30 years ago: “We used to face opposition whenever we tried to assert ourselves. But all that has changed now. Our effort to construct masjids is helping foster religious brotherhood in Punjab.” Hassan Mohammed, the imam of the Jama Masjid at Mandi Gobindgarh, recalls that last year, when he tried to mobilise Muslims of Jhampur village to rebuild their village mosque, they were afraid of even the suggestion. He then approached the sarpanch, a Jat Sikh, who immediately got a few boys to clear the overgrown area. Other villagers chipped in with contributions in cash and kind and, soon, what was once a crumbling ruin became a vibrant place of worship. Such stories abound in rural Punjab today.

There are no clear-cut answers for why this is happening. It helps, clearly, that Muslims are only a tiny, largely poor, community here, no threat to anyone, and that sympathy for the underdog is a distinctive Punjabi—especially Jat Sikh—trait. But that’s only a partial explanation, as is the other obvious one—that this is a manifestation of collective guilt over the atrocities committed by Sikhs and Hindus against Muslims during Partition.

Guilt could be a factor, acknowledges Sikh historian and writer Prof Gurdarshan Singh Dhillon, “There is no doubt,” he says, “that the atrocities of Partition are a blot on the history of the Sikhs. We, as a martial race, are not supposed to attack the weak and unarmed, but it happened, and ever since then, there has been remorse.” He recalls how a few years before his death, Gurcharan Singh Tohra, long-time president of the Shiromani Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee (SGPC), confessed that he too had killed a Muslim during the Partition riots and felt haunted by his act. Possibly to atone for the act, Tohra constructed a mosque in his native village and laid its first brick with his own hands.

On the other hand, much of the present effort to revive mosques is coming from a generation that does not have the blood of Partition on its hands; one that has witnessed and endured, rather, the violent Sikh separatism during the ’80s. That’s why Pramod Kumar, director of the Chandigarh-based Institute of Development and Communications, feels this is “the collective reassertion of Punjab’s unique cultural synthesis” and “an attempt to build a secular Punjabi identity, as opposed to a communal identity or religious one”.
But predictably, radical Sikh scholar, Prof Gurtej Singh, takes a different line: “This is an instinctive manifestation of the Sikh’s disillusionment with a Hindu-dominated Indian state that has done all it can to obliterate Sikh identity. During Partition, we were made to believe that Muslims were our enemies and we massacred them in large numbers. We have now realised that not Muslims, but Hindu-dominated parties like the BJP are the real threat to our identity.” Pointing out that Sikhs and Muslims have gradually come to value each other, he relates an anecdote about Shia Muslims recently discovering how Sikhs protected one of their shrines in Samana in Punjab, and how they are returning the gesture by helping Sikhs build gurudwaras in the Gulf. He also lauds Pakistan for enacting a Sikh Marriage Act which he helped draft, whereas India is yet to do so. “These things,” he says, “accumulate in the popular psyche, and manifest themselves in various ways”.

But try telling 67-year-old Kesar Singh or 24-year-old Kamal Vohra that this is only a story of Sikh-Muslim bhaichara. Kesar, a Jat Sikh farmer from Ratia, some 15 km from Dhuri, a Hindu-dominated town in Sangrur district, and Kamal, a Hindu whose family migrated from Sialkot in Pakistan, have slogged shoulder to shoulder for days to rebuild Dhuri’s lone mosque. Kesar admits to a special bond with the mosque, which he visits every week, along with 20 other Sikhs of Ratia, for Friday namaaz. “The old imam has been my friend for the last 50 years and I enjoy his liberal interpretation of the Quran,” says he. But when the old mosque was demolished to make a bigger structure, it wasn’t just Sikhs but the entire Hindu mohalla that helped dig the foundations. Hindus and Sikhs from nearby villages, too, contributed with hefty donations. As always, Punjab never fails to surprise.

This article has been put up in our local mosque for all to read.

Re: SIKHS and HINDUS rebuild Mosques in East Punjab

Can you post a link please?

If true - it's an awesome development..specially in a place like Indian Punjab where a lot of people are still bitter about the partition riots.

I will control my urge to take a shot at the buddhist and hindu places destroyed in Pak and Afghan.. because I'm sure when those regions become stable and the jihadis are not in control.. that stuff wouldn't happen.

Link: Shades Of The Old Punjab | Lahore Nama

It would be great if West Punjab did the same. Although Sikhs do get a very good deal in Pakistan. Pakistan is the only country that has passed the Sikh Marriage Act, India still is yet to! In India, Sikhs are married under Hindu law…where as any Sikh from around the world can come to Pakistan to get marryed under Sikh Law!

It is sad that over 150 people have viewed and read this article but there has been no comment even just to say: 'Well done' or 'Great gesture". But if it had been a story of 200 mosques been destroyed, this thread would have been filled with venom!

I just visited the thread, so I would say credit to those who are restoring mosques.

And had there been any attack on a Hindu Temple you think no thread would've been flooded?

Re: SIKHS and HINDUS rebuild Mosques in East Punjab

Well Done, Great gesture!

Re: SIKHS and HINDUS rebuild Mosques in East Punjab

Wow, I think this should be publicised as much as babri masjid incident was.

MED911...ooooh ur soooo funny!!! Typical in the box mentality! We should be happy for the happiness of our small Muslim communities that are being allowed to pray in the mosques in East Punjab. Next time when ur being sarky just try to remember the stories of the massacres of the partition where not everyone was able to escape the atrocities and had to stay in East Punjab where its taken over 50 years for Muslims to pray in mosques. I hope ur family didnt lose anyone in partition where as mine did.

Calm down. Perhaps I just dont feel like commenting, despite feeling all moist and gushy with feeling inside. They rebuilt their mosques, great job considering they were the ones to knock them down in the first place.

Must we comment on everything that happens on India! I generally try to avoid commenting on India because it has nothing to do with me. So long as no one is speaking ill of Pakistan from across the border, I could care less.

I can narrate all kinds of tragedies, occurring across the world, including in my own family. But that's life, move on.

^ you say that you try not to comment on India as it has nothing to do with you...why comment at all. India will always be part of Pakistan's future like it or not. India has a lot to do with millions of people who have families on both sides of the border.

As for narrating tragedies from around the world, I couldn't careless. What happened in 1947 is still a wound that has not healed completely and has not been experience by many on such a large scale. Its very easy to say 'Thats life, Move on'. You need to pick up a few books with the harrowing stories of rape and murder just because of your belief. 'The Other side of Silence' by Urvashi Butalia have a read and may be you'll care more.

1947 was our Holocaust instigated by the British, and never forget that.

This is a nice story and makes me proud especially as a Sikh Punjabi (born and raised in the U.K.) although it doesn't at all come as a surprise. It reminds me about a story during the Kosovo crisis when Khalsa Aid raised money from the local community and sent a truck load of supplies to the crisis hit region. Local Muslim shopkeepers in Slough were pleasantly surprsised when seeing the work of the Sikh charity and no doubt donated generously.
This sort of thing goes a long way in building relationships especially when sometimes we forget our religions teach compassion for all humanity.

indeed sikhs should have their own country.

Hi Sharabee,

Would you say people in Indian Punjab are anymore bitter than the people of Pakistan?

Probably not. Shameless crimes were committed by both sides during Partition.

Re: SIKHS and HINDUS rebuild Mosques in East Punjab

A good thing but this harmony wasnt there when it was needed. Hundreds of thousands were murdered in east Punjab, including some of my family members.

true.now they are afraid of Pakistan's influence in Muslim world thats why they are doing this publicity stunt.

Re: SIKHS and HINDUS rebuild Mosques in East Punjab

not what you expect in this world of intolerance where TV channels air news of mosques, shrines, schools etc being attacked in the name of religion. truly incredible and heart warming indeed. theres still hope people!

Publicity stunt!@?? where do you get that from???? If something good is happening across the border....'It must be a publicity stunt". If it happened in West Punjab..then I suppose it would be OK! Some people are just a JOKE!

Re: SIKHS and HINDUS rebuild Mosques in East Punjab

Great, when will they build Babri Masjid?