Ghallughara June 1984

The same thinking was used by the tyrannical Indian government as a conspiracy to destroy the nation by attacking the Golden Temple in June 1984.  The attack on Darbar Sahib Sri Harmandir Sahib, Amritsar in June 1984 was an attack on all humanity.
The attack on Darbar Sahib was a deliberate conspiracy.  The planning of which was done by the then Prime Minister of India Indira Gandhi, Parkash Singh Badal, Lt. Govt.  It was done jointly by K Advani, England, Russia and others.  Thousands of people were killed during the attack on the Golden Temple.  The aim of all these was to eliminate Sant Jarnail Singh Ji Khalsa Bhindranwale and to teach a lesson to the Sikhs.

Picture of attack on Akal takhat shaib


When the entire Darbar Sahib complex was occupied by the Indian Army, the Sikh Reference Library was destroyed by fire.  The government said the fire was started by militants.  But this argument carries no weight.  When the army took over the whole area, it was the duty of the government to protect everything of the least historical significance.  But this was not done.  If the library was on fire then why all the remaining documents, manuscripts and books were lost?
The building of the Akal Takht and the museum inside the central shrine was badly damaged and 132 valuable paintings inside were destroyed by bullets.  Rare prescriptions The roads were reduced to ashes, and not a single dome, tower or fence remained inside the Darbar Sahib without bullets.  Precious buildings including all the rooms of the procession, langar hall, Akal Guest House, Guru Ramdas Saran, Guru Nanak Niwas and Teja Singh Samundri Hall were gutted by fire, electric fans melted into leaves, wooden doors, windows, enamelled frames.  The shelves became charcoal.  Damage during the attack could be compensated for, except for the precious Sikh lives and the Sikh Reference Library, which is packed with the precious assets of the Sikh community.  Even after 30 years, where did the valuable assets inside this library go, why was it not returned or how and why was the existence of this library wiped out?  Many big questions remain.
The military attack on the Golden Temple took place on June 1.  Dr. Davinder Singh Duggal, Hardeep Singh Ghungrali, Sikh Clerk and Balvir Singh Librarian were present at the Sikh Reference Library at that time.  The shelling started at around 1.30 pm and continued intermittently till evening, killing eight people, including one child.  The late Davinder Singh Duggal said that while working inside the library, some army bullets were piercing several cupboards and passing around them.  He said that till June 6, the library was safe except for minor damage.  After the end of the attack, the army repeatedly claimed that the Sikh Reference Library had been burnt down during the military operation, but after the military attack, the same army in the library was taken away in several armored vehicles and Davinder Singh was killed in the incident.  Duggal somehow managed to escape on the evening of June 6 and reach the house of S. Bhan Singh, then secretary of the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee, and by then the Sikh Reference Library was completely safe.  Library in-charge Mr.  Davinder Singh Duggal was picked up by the Army from the house of S. Bhan Singh on June 9, 1984 and asked to sign the recovery papers of the library but he replied that he could only write so much.  ‘Not the library, but the ashes.’  Significant facts came to light when the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee repeatedly asked the Indian government for military-occupied literature and finally, in May 2000, Indian Defense Minister George Fernandez admitted that it had been seized by the Indian Army during the invasion.  The document was gone.  B.  I.  The concerned department of the Center should be contacted in this regard.

After all, where was the valuable investment of the Sikh Reference Library?  There was a time when many efforts were made.  B.  I.  Ranjit Singh Nanda, a Punjab police officer working for the company, admitted that he had personally checked the library of Sikh history library in 165 sacks by the Indian Army and was surprised to see one by one the documents.  There were bullet marks in the sacred form of Guru Granth Sahib Ji.  It was Nanda who later returned some books and other items to the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee, from which it can be clearly inferred that all the equipment of the Sikh Reference Library was taken away by the army and later set on fire.  Gone.  What Nanda returned to the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee still bears military-language numbers, proving that the Sikh Reference Library is owned by the army.
The claims of the sudden burning of the library can be further refuted by the evidence that one of the employees inside the library, Hardeep Singh Ghungrali Sikhs (now retired manager of the Shiromani Committee) was arrested on June 7, 1984 before June 6, 1984.  Everything was perfectly safe and everything was declared OK by the army, so it is not reasonable to claim that the library was later destroyed, looted and burnt.  One wonders how the librarian’s office adjacent to the library was safe if it burned down.  According to some scholars, the entire night of June 6, the Indian Army kept removing the items from the library and on June 7, it was set on fire.  Destroying wooden cabinets, racks, sanchis, handkerchiefs, old newspapers and other items, an attempt was made to show that the ashes of the burnt items belonged to the library during the attack.  Now the question arises that if the library was set on fire during the attack, then Ranjit Singh Nanda, c.  B.  I.  How did you get these books?  And that was all.  B.  I.  How did the pass come about?
The Golden Temple was attacked by the military during the Indira Gandhi-led Congress government at the Center.  After the death of Indira Gandhi on October 31, 1984, the Rajiv Gandhi government could not be expected to return the library or the stolen goods, but sadly, no matter how many non-Congress governments have had a Prime Minister at the center, including  Also.  P.  Singh, Chandra Sekhar, Inder Kumar Gujral or Atal Bihari Vajpayee did not try to take concrete action or find a suitable solution to the repeated appeals of the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC) regarding the Sikh Reference Library.  That the library has been destroyed.  Even the country’s former president, APJ.  Abdul Kalam himself came to Amritsar and listened to the whole thing but could not make any concrete effort in this regard.  This was the peak of apathy towards the Sikh community.  B.  I.  Defense Minister George Fernandez told the press in Jalandhar on August 17, 2000 that Sikh hearts were deeply hurt when 117 documents picked up by the Army at the Sikh Reference Library were found to be anti-national as per court orders.  Went
Serious facts and evidence have proved that the Indian Army in the clash of race and religion not only targeted its central shrine but also destroyed the library by targeting the literature and culture of Sikhism as history and documents, present  And there are constant conversations between the past, on which the flow of religion runs.

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