|
Bhai Baldeep
Singh
Sardar Dyal Singh Majithia
A Tribute: From the Tribune, September 9, 1998
|
|
A
broad-minded liberal
By Madan Gopal
SARDAR
Dyal Singh Majithia was the son of a family that had played a very
important part in the history of the Sikh state founded by Maharaja
Ranjit Singh. For three generations the family had provided generals
to the Maharaja’s forces, and Dyal Singh’s father was the head of the
kingdom’s ordnance. His uncle, Gujar Singh, who had been deputed by
Maharaja Ranjit to go to Calcutta on a diplomatic mission, was
accompanied by 200 armed men specially chosen by the Maharaja. And
when Dyal Singh’s father, Lehna Singh, left Lahore for a pilgrimage,
his adversaries at the darbar at Lahore said that he too had gone with
an escort of 200 people and taken gold worth a crore of rupees. Lehna
Singh went to different pilgrimage centres and finally bought an
estate in Kashi (Benaras).
One yardstick of the
importance in society of the family in the British times was the
placement in the list of protocol. And so eminent was Dyal Singh’s
family that when the Viceregal darbar was held in Lahore in 1864, of
the 603 people invited, Dyal Singh, then aged 16, was allotted the
55th seat, his uncle Ranjodh Singh being 103rd.
While some members of the
erstwhile ruling class lived a life of ease and indulgence, hankered
after titles and jagirs, some others took up such jobs as that of
tehsildar or extra-assistant commissioner, Dyal Singh decided to carve
out a career for himself. Tall, well-built and handsome with refined
tastes and aristocratic bearing, he became a shrewd business man
dealing in real estate and precious stones and jewellery.
The areas outside the
walled city of Lahore had barracks for the British soldiers. Once the
British decided that a cantonment should be built in Mian Mir, the
barracks were to be pulled down and the plots auctioned. Dyal Singh’s
agents bid for the plots whereupon he constructed buildings to be
rented out to high British civilians. When he died in 1898 he owned 26
prestigious properties, including Dyal Singh Mansion of 54 residential
units on The Mall, scores of lawyers’ chambers on Fane Road, the
exchange building which was later sold to Ganga Ram Hospital, and a
property in Karachi which was sold after his death and the earning
invested in the purchase of land on the road to Mian Mir, where today
stands the new campus of Panjab University. Most of the buildings,
plots of land and villages in Lahore, Amritsar and Gurdaspur districts
were bequeathed to the trusts that set up Dyal Singh College and Dyal
Singh Library.
His other business
activity concerned the purchase and resale of precious jewellery. With
his deep knowledge of the history of the Sikh kingdom and the riches
of the once important and wealthy families now in dire straits, he
sent agents to buy these out for him. He was a connoisseur of precious
stones and told his friends how lucrative this business was.
From the real estate
created by him and the trade in precious stones he earned a huge
fortune. The assets created by him and bequeathed in a will drawn up
in 1895 were worth Rs 30 lakh — Rs 7 lakh more than the assets
bequeathed in 1893 by Sir Dorabji Tata to the House of Tatas.
A great advocate of
Western education, he was largely responsible for the setting up of
Panjab University. He made a handsome donation to Sir Syed Ahmed’s
Anjuman-i-Islamia, and set up a Union Academy at Lahore, the nucleus
of Dyal Singh School and College.
Dyal Singh was a great
philanthropist. He gave much in charity. It is significant that he
decided on the amount to be given away to charities in advance,
depending upon the earnings in the previous month. And this amount,
once fixed, was not to be exceeded. Also if he promised to give a
certain amount in the following month this was as good as given, there
seldom being any delay in disbursement. He was so meticulous that once
when he detected a mistake of a few pies in the total he told the
person sending it about the carelessness and warned if a mistake was
made again, he would stop all donations so long as the latter was in
position.
Dyal Singh lived like a
prince. He had the hobbies and failings of the class that he belonged
to. His luncheon was a prolonged affair, sometimes continuing for more
than a couple of hours. As per the practice, while he and the guests
ate, there was some show of entertainment or music or tricks by a
madari, or some other activity of this kind. He was a patron of
wrestling and a keen kite-flyer. Chess was also his favourite game. He
was a great player, and, with plenty of money to spend, he would
invite well-known chess players even from Delhi and paid hefty fees.
Dyal Singh was fond of
classical music and himself played sitar. A man of great refinement,
he was also a poet and wrote in Urdu under the pseudonym "Mashriq".
Three of his "Sihafis" are kept in the British Library in London. He
wrote flowery prose too and was proud of it. In his ancestral house in
Amritsar, he built special rooms for guests.
Dyal Singh was an
unorthodox person. He had Muslim and Christian cooks. At his dining
table sat Sikhs, Hindus, Christians and Parsis. The wine dealers’ bill
for himself and guests was substantial.
A scion of the family that
had held charge of the affairs of the Golden Temple for decades, Dyal
Singh returned from Kashi to Majitha. Instructed by a British
governess and then educated at the Christian Mission School at
Amritsar, he had an inquisitive mind. He knew more about Christ and
Christianity than even the pastors. With a religious bent of mind, he
studied the Gita with the help of a Sanskrit teacher from Ferozepur,
and studied the Quran too. At this time, there was an exchange of
letters between a Sunni Muslim converted to Christianity and a Muslim
divine in Lucknow. These letters related to the basic theological
issues. Dyal Singh edited the letters and brought out a 115-page
booklet, "Naghma-a-Tamboori". His house was the venue of serious
discussion and debates on such issues, and for these he would forego
even his evening outings. Cool and composed, he seldom lost his temper
even with the large retinue of domestic servants at Lahore and
Amritsar.
Dyal Singh’s first wife
died in 1876 or so. His plans to marry a Bengali Brahmo woman did not
bear fruit, and he was persuaded to marry Rani Bhagwan Kaur. This did
not prove to be a happy union. She observed pardah, and was not
normally seen. In fact, Dyal Singh maintained three establishments,
one each in Lahore, Amritsar and Karachi. As the work that he had
chosen for himself required him to stay in Lahore, he was in Amritsar
only for brief periods. He had no issue. He was the most important
Brahmo leader of Punjab and the principal financier of the Brahmo
Samaj. He was made a trustee of the Brahmo Samaj Mandir in Calcutta.
He was accessible to all
those who were seekers after truth. He rendered financial assistance
to the needy, irrespective of their religious beliefs.
The only other important
Punjabi Brahmo leader was Shiv Narayan Agnihotri, who later left the
ranks and set up a rival organisation called the Dev Samaj. Once he
approached Dyal Singh for help to build a temple. Dyal Singh obliged
him by supplying bricks to the founder of a movement that was
antagonistic in nature compared to the one to which he belonged. This
gesture was unusual but, then, Dyal Singh himself was, in some ways,
an unusually generous, broad-minded and liberal person.
|
A
genius
with foresight
By B. K. Nehru
SARDAR
Dyal Singh Majithia was undoubtedly one of the most remarkable
pioneers who led India out of the darkness of ignorance to the
enlightenment of modernity. He did for North India what Raja Rammohun
Roy had done for Bengal three quarters of a century earlier. It is
unfortunate that we know so little about his contribution to liberal
education, a factor which was instrumental in India’s freedom.
Sardar Dyal Singh had come
to the conclusion well before 1880 that India’s salvation lay in the
education of the masses. He insisted on spreading English education,
and established a college of the most modern kind. He made available
the latest books to the Indian people. This the Sardar did through the
establishment of a public library well endowed with books.
The establishment of The
Tribune was another noteworthy contribution by him. The aim of the
newspaper was to spread the doctrine of Indian nationalism and to
bring about unity in a society that was afflicted by differences on
questions of religion, caste, language and region. His nationalism was
also reflected in his strong support for the foundation of the Indian
National Congress.
A man who could analyse so
clearly, a century and a half ago, the reasons for the downfall of the
people of our country from the very top of the civilised world to its
very bottom and then establish the institutions which would generate
the forces to restore it to its old position, can only be regarded as
a genius with great foresight and courage. He died on September 9,
1898. |
A visionary
with a difference
By V. N. Datta
THE
19th century Punjab was at the bottom optimistic and melioristic and
believed that something radical could be done about all sorts of
arrangements in society that would promote material well-being and
intellectual advancement. Each age leaves its mark on its generation.
Sardar Dyal Singh Majithia had a different cast of mind from those of
his forefathers. This was so because he belonged to an era of vital
social and economic changes as contrasted with the period which was
marked by military adventurism and political chicanery.
Dyal Singh Majithia had a
lively and questioning mind. He had influential social connections
which gave him entree into every political and intellectual
sphere partaking fully in the life around him. The whole story of
Sardar Majithia cannot be reconstructed without recourse to conjecture
and imagination as the documentary evidence helpful for some parts of
his life is almost wholly lacking for others.
He belonged to the family
of the distinguished ruling chiefs of Punjab, who had held high
positions in the times of Maharaja Ranjit Singh and his successors.
His grandfather, Sardar Desa Singh, was Ranjit Singh’s trusted
military general who was later appointed the Governor of the hill
states of Mandi and Saket. He also acted as the civil administrator of
Harmander Sahib in Amritsar, a responsibility he discharged with
fervour. Because of his meritorious services Ranjit Singh conferred on
him the title of "Kisrul-Iktdar". Sir Lepel Griffin estimated Desa
Singh’s income from various jagirs and other sources at
£1,24,250 per annum. Desa Singh died in 1832, leaving behind three
sons: Lehna Singh, Gujar Singh and Ranjodh Singh.
Dyal’s father, Lehna
Singh, was an extraordinary man and, in many ways, an innovator. He
was highly respected for his integrity of character, mild manners and
amiable disposition. He inherited a major portion of his father’s
estates. He acted also as the Governor of the hill states and was the
chief administrator of Harmandar Sahib. Deeply interested in science,
he set up his own laboratory for conducting experiments. Through his
contacts with the British he acquainted himself with scientific
knowledge in England and procured some literature on the subject for
his own studies. An engineer, he improved the Punjab foundries and
invented the clock which showed the day, the month and the changes in
the moon. Though deeply interested in astronomy he was not converted
to the Copernican system and still continued to believe in the earth’s
immobility.
Ranjit Singh was greatly
impressed by Lehna Singh’s diplomatic finesse and, therefore, sent him
on several diplomatic missions to negotiate with the British on
important political matters. In this connection he met Lord William
Bentinck, Lord Auckland, Lord Ellenborough and Alexander Burnes. He
was conferred the title of Hasham-ud-Daula (Lord of the State). During
Chand Rani’s brief regime of violence and disorder it was proposed to
appoint him as Prime Minister, but he was considered too mild a person
for such a challenging task which needed ruthlessness and twisting of
politics. When he witnessed how Punjab was breaking up due to the
sinister designs and high-handedness of a few self-aggrandising and
self-destructive individuals overpowered by overweening ambition
during Mesar Julla’s regime, he left Punjab to settle in Benaras where
Dyal Singh was born in 1849.
Henry Lawrence, the
British Resident, who had much sympathy for the Punjab Chiefs,
persuaded Lehna Singh to return to Punjab and appointed him a member
of the Council of Regency in August, 1847. Henry Lawrence had high
opinion of him and thought him the "most sensible Sardar in the
Punjab", but also noted his timidity in recourse to action when it was
needed. Lehna Singh avoided controversies and loathed pettyfogging and
intrigues. He foresaw the rolling clouds of disaster for Punjab and,
therefore, left for Benaras again on January 14, 1848, and never to
return. Lehna Singh died in 1854 leaving his five-year-old son, Dyal
Singh, under the tutelage of Sardar Teja Singh, formerly the
Commander-in-Chief and a member of the Council of the Regency. Dyal
Singh inherited a large patrimony from his father. The most
significant feature of the history of Punjab in the 19th century was
its remarkable process of modernisation, and in this transformation
certain aspects of urbanisation gained prominence — the various
channels producing the changes were education, the Press, the means of
transport and communications, the bureaucratic set-up and land
settlement. It is not often realised that in the transformation of
Punjab the Punjabi elite played a vital role to which Kenneth Jones in
his studies has drawn our attention.
Dyal Singh kept himself
substantially in touch with some of the influential members of the
Bengali elite in Lahore. He had great admiration for the Brahmo Samaj
which had initiated social and educational reform in Bengal. It was
Surendranath Banerjea who had suggested to Dyal Singh the idea of
setting up an independent paper for creating an enlightened public
opinion in Punjab. In his memoirs, Surendranath Banerjea wrote about
Dyal Singh: "He was one of the truest and noblest men I have come
across. It was perhaps difficult to know him and to get the better of
his heart for there was a certain reserve about him which hid from
public view pure gold that formed the stuff of his nature."
Seetalchandra Mookerjee
served as the first Editor of The Tribune who was followed by
Seetalakanta Chatterjee and B.C. Pal. During the 1919 disturbances
Kalinath Ray was the Editor who was tried and arrested. Gandhiji had
to intervene on his behalf and send a petition to the Viceroy about
his release.
The Tribune became a
success within a short time so much so that when Dennis Fitzpatrick
was the Lieutenant-Governor of Punjab a civilian wrote to The Pioneer
of Lucknow that Punjab was ruled by the Lieutenant-Governor and The
Tribune. It remained Dyal Singh’s cardinal principle not to interfere
in the working and management of the paper, and he left complete
freedom to the Editor to use his discretion in running the paper. He
emphasised in his Will that the paper should remain entirely free from
any taint of communalism which was vitiating the atmosphere in Punjab.
Aristocratic in bearing,
Dyal Singh was a reserved and taciturn person. He was a man of few
words. Not a profound thinker, ideologue or scholar of the library, he
possessed immense Punjabi commonsense of seeing the reality of things.
He disdained controversies. This does not mean that he kept himself
aloof when important issues of national interest were involved.
Dr G.W. Leitner, Principal
of the newly created Government College, founded the
Anjuman-i-Punjab with the objective of reviving oriental learning,
particularly the study of Sanskrit and Arabic. His objective was like
that of orientalist H.H. Wilson to promote Western learning through
the medium of classical languages and vernaculars. The old Macaulay-orientalist
controversy was being revived in Punjab. Dyal Singh differed from
Leitner’s views. He regarded the English language as the "key to all
improvements". He firmly believed that Western knowledge could only be
imparted in India through the medium of English. That he thought was
the only way to regenerate Indian society as had been previously shown
by the experiment in Bengal.
The very first issue of
The Tribune on February 2, 1881, stood for the promotion of modern
knowledge through the English language. About 25 articles supported by
strongly-worded editorials in The Tribune knocked down Leitner’s
argument and created a strong public opinion in favour of Dyal Singh’s
stand on higher education. Ultimately, the government had to yield!
Though separate arrangements for imparting oriental learning were
made, instruction in higher education began to be given through the
medium of English.
Dyal Singh Majithia, a
public spirited liberal imbued with lofty ideals, left a rich legacy
of a creative force calculated to produce far-reaching consequences
for generations to come. His institutions continue to function in
Punjab and elsewhere and act as a stimulus to the lives of so many
people. Unfortunately, political developments took a different turn
from what he had envisioned. He was out-and-out a liberal person, but
his liberalism got swamped by the rising tide of communalism which led
to the Partition of India. The value system he had projected with his
insightful intellect has much relevance for us. He had the vision of a
secular, prosperous Punjab, free from conflicts, and bustling with
ideas and verve.
|
An
educationist
par excellence
By Justice Dalip K.
Kapur
SHAKESPEARE,
perhaps better than anybody else, gave expression to the fundamental
emotions and desires of humanity. Heroes or villains, lovers or
warriors, kings or politicians, valiant heroines, ghosts, murderers,
and, above all, patriots; he had them all. Splendidly displayed in
evocative iambic pentameter. Fate and Destiny were two ideas he often
referred to. Yet scholars doubt that he wrote the poems and the plays
he did. But who wrote them? That is a question that has puzzled
scholars over the years.
Our own Kalidas was said
to be an idiot, but he was suddenly blessed with overwhelming poetic
brilliance. His poetry was filled with brilliant imagery. How did he
get his powers?
One of the ideas that
obsessed Shakespeare was Immortality. How does one live after death?
It is a universal idea. Does one go to heaven or hell or fade into
oblivion? Is one reborn? Shakespeare’s ideal was to live through his
work. He expressed himself best on this point in his sonnets. This is
what he said in Sonnet LV Lines 1-4:
Not marble nor the
gilded monuments
Of princes shall
outlive this powerful rhyme;
But you shall shine
more bright in these contents
Than unswept stone
besmear’d with sluttish time.
Sardar Dyal Singh Majithia
lives even today. So we remember him on his 100th death anniversary.
We also remember him on occasions. Some persons live in history books,
some by writings, some by their preaching of ideas, some are poets or
philosophers, writers, religious leaders and so on. Sardar Dyal Singh
lives through the institutions he created. Few mortals have managed to
do this. How did he do what he did? He was an unlikely person to
create enduring institutions. He did, however, achieve immortality.
His first creation was
The Tribune. The only other worthwhile Indian-owned newspaper of
those times was The Hindu of Madras. It is quite remarkable
that Dyal Singh could achieve the impossible, create a newspaper in a
foreign language, only a few years after Punjab was annexed. And what
a newspaper!
How did it come about that
a person like Sardar Dyal Singh Majithia conceived the idea of a
newspaper? One must remember that he was a land owner; he was educated
up to the school-level. There were no university degrees given in
Punjab at that time. He was financially very rich; he bought jewels;
he bought property. He constructed several buildings in Lahore,
Amritsar and Karachi. He was honoured by the British as the head of
the Shergil clan. He was rich but unsatisfied. He was part of the
Indian revival. He had many Bengali, Christian or Brahmo Samaji
friends. He was convinced that he had to do something more than live a
life of luxury, which a Punjab chief might ordinarily have lived. He
had ideas, which were broadened by visits to Europe. He brought those
ideas to life.
The newspaper started as a
weekly, but expanded into a nationalist daily of tremendous power and
prestige. It was bold and fearless, which refused to be cowed down by
the British. It was given to investigative journalism at a time when
that expression had not even been invented. Its leading articles shook
the Empire and brilliantly evoked the idea of the poor Indian
oppressed by the greedy Englishman. Every misdoing, every misdemeanour,
every act of misgovernment was fully exposed to the public. It is not
possible to reproduce the substance of the editorial writings, which
were outstanding, in this short article. It is sufficient to say that
one can be proud of what was said, particularly, at the time it was
said, when Indian self-esteem was at its lowest ebb.
The newspaper grew from
strength to strength during the life-time of the founder. Now it was
time to do something different. Sardar Dyal Singh launched Punjab
National Bank, the first Punjabi bank. He was the principal
shareholder and Chairman. Lala Harkishan Lal, a kindred spirit, was
the secretary. This bank soon gained strength and popularity. It
became major bank in Lahore. It had a huge building on Mall Road, next
to the General Post Office.
Sardar Dyal Singh had vast
property in Lahore, Amritsar and Majitha. He made a will creating
three trusts. These were the Tribune Trust, the Dyal Singh College
Trust and the Dyal Singh Public Library Trust. He appointed three
eminent lawyer-friends to be the trustees of The Tribune, but included
some educationists, and among them was Dewan (later Raja) Narendra
Nath in the College Trust. In the Library Trust, he included some
well-known persons. The college and library took shape quite a long
time after the Sardar’s death, as the will was challenged by the widow
and another lady, Mrs Catherine Gill, who claimed to be Dyal Singh’s
wife. The case was fought up to the Privy Council. The judgements
upheld the Trust and give a good picture of Sardar Dyal Singh’s
philanthropy and reputation.
The college was very
successful. Though not the leading college in Lahore, it came to be
known as one of the better colleges in Punjab. The library was housed
in a lovely building and was the second public library in Lahore, the
first being Punjab Public Library. They both had collections of about
30,000 to 40,000 books. Undoubtedly Punjab Public Library was bigger,
but Dyal Singh Library was catching up, though it was established
about 40 or 50 years later.
Then came Partition. All
the three Trusts were wrecked, as they were located in Lahore, and had
nowhere to go in East Punjab. Now was the time for action by the
trustees. The Tribune was financially well off, so it opened a
new office in Ambala, bought a new press and started anew. Naturally,
the fact that most of its readers were left in Pakistan meant that its
operations were smaller, but at least it became a national paper.
Unfortunately, its pre-eminent position as the leading national paper
of India was lost, as it was located in a small town.
The College Trust was
well-endowed with property in Majitha and Amritsar, so it was able to
start functioning again at Karnal and in New Delhi. Dewan Anand Kumar,
Vice-Chancellor of Punjab University, who was the main Trustee, was
responsible for opening the college at both places. The Karnal college
had a small beginning but went on improving. The New Delhi college was
very well housed. It had a beautiful building, and was doing well, but
the government put some restrictions which forced the trustees to give
up the college. It was the hardest decision to make. Huge amounts of
money, the college building and all its assets were given to Delhi
University. This was one of the blackest deeds of the national
government. It was forced because the trust could not run the college
under the University Grants Commission. It had no way to meet the
deficit, all the income was taken by the commission and the trust was
required to meet the deficit from "other sources", which was
impossible as there were no "other sources". When the college was set
up in New Delhi, the Central Government had done its best to
rehabilitate the refugee college through the Rehabilitation Ministry,
but later the government evolved an unworkable scheme, which led to
the trust giving up its assets to save the college from closure. The
college is still called Dyal Singh College, New Delhi, but no longer
under the trust.
The Karnal college, on the
other hand, has gone from strength to strength. The 10+2 policy, and
the creation of the university at Kurukshetra, had led to the college
having only a two-year B.A. course. That is not enough. The trustees
with immense vigour and enterprise have set up Dyal Singh School,
which is one of the leading schools of the area providing education up
to the secondary level. A huge new building is under construction. The
efforts regarding the college and the school principally of Dewan
Anand Kumar and now Dewan Gajendra Kumar, have resulted in the
creation of an institution of which the Sardar would be proud. There
is now a move for some post-graduate courses. Some have already been
started.
The library has had the
worst deal in Partition. All its assets were buildings in Lahore. Even
after Partition, Dyal Singh Library, Lahore, is functioning, but now
it is run by the Pakistan Government. All that the trustees, who all
came to India, had brought was a small liquid deposit. With severe
constraints, the trustees put up a building in the Rouse Avenue area,
New Delhi (now Deen Dayal Upadhyay Marg). There were no funds, no
books, only efforts and more efforts. The building had to be let out
to various other institutions, the meagre funds available had to be
husbanded and the income carefully used to increase the assets. A
reading room was opened at Connaught Place. It was open and free to
the public. A reading room with a small collection was also opened in
the main building. Gradually, an improvement took place. A writ in the
High Court, which is still pending, led the Government of Delhi paying
increased rent. Later the building was vacated and greater rent
received. So after a 50-year struggle, the library has become
functional. Now it has big plans. A multi-purpose library is proposed,
with a media section, using all the latest techniques. Internet
connections, film shows, lectures, demonstrations, CD-Roms,
audio-video-visual media will be there. Great hopes and aspirations
are there.
The Sardar founded these
trusts with great care. His trustees were well-chosen, and they have
tried to keep his inspiring philosophy alive. Even Partition has not
killed the trusts. They are alive. Sardar Dyal Singh lives on. He
still inspires.
|
How
The Tribune
was launched
SEVERAL
people have claimed the credit for giving Dyal Singh the idea of
starting a newspaper in English from Lahore. The foremost among them
was Surendranath Banerjea, who wrote that he persuaded Dyal Singh to
start the paper. Rai Bahadur Mul Raj wrote that he and Jogendra
Chandra Bose requested Dyal Singh to start a newspaper to carry on the
crusade for education in Punjab on Western lines through the medium of
English. This, he says, was in 1877 or 1878.
Bipin Chandra Pal, a
member of the famous Lal-Bal-Pal trio, who was on the staff of Dyal
Singh’s paper for a few months, says that the Sardar started the paper
at the suggestion of his Bengali friends in Lahore. One issue of The
Tribune said that the idea was the Sardar’s own. This could well be
so.
During his sojourn abroad
for two years, Dyal Singh had seen the importance of the role played
by an independent Press. Within months of his return from Europe, he
came into contact with Surendranath Banerjea and discussed his ideas
in regard to starting an English language newspaper from Lahore. Soon
he was involved in the controversy over the Vernacular Press Act.
The Indian Association’s
meeting in the Town Hall in Calcutta had nominated him to be a member
of the steering committee set up to oversee the implementation of the
Press Act. This was in 1878. Surendranath Banerjea was certainly the
person who encouraged him. So also were his close Brahmo Bengali
friends in Lahore, particularly P.C. Chatterjee, a senior member of
the Lahore Bar, who later rose to be a Judge of the Chief Court; and
Jogendra Chandra Bose, another member of the Lahore Bar.
The launching of a
newspaper in Punjab was not an easy task at that time. Printing
machinery had to be procured and the staff had to be recruited. Dyal
Singh solicited the help of Surendranath Banerjea. The latter promised
all help. Banerjea arranged the printing Press. He also recommended
the name of Sitalakanta Chatterjee for appointment on the editorial
staff. Being young, he was appointed Sub-Editor, because the newspaper
must have some maturer person for the Editor’s job. Thanks to Dyal
Singh’s Brahmo Bengali friends’ help, he was able to get the services
of Seetalchandra Mookerjee of Bhowanipore in Calcutta, who lived in
Upper India and was editing his own paper, The Indian People, from
Allahabad. He promised to edit the proposed Lahore paper from
Allahabad itself.
Trained journalists being
scarce in those days, Dyal Singh agreed to the arrangement.
Seetalchandra Mookerjee sent the editorials and special articles from
Allahabad, Sitalakanta Chatterjee looking after the work at Lahore.
Dyal Singh himself made the other appointments. He recruited
P.K.Chatterjee who had done some scissoring and pasting job at The
Pioneer’s sister publication in Lahore, The Civil and Military
Gazette. For the job of the printer he fixed up with R. Williams, who
had worked for The Indian Chronicle.
The first issue of The
Tribune, which came out on February 2, 1881, took up the cause of
modern education in Punjab through the medium of English. Week after
week it carried as many as 25 articles in addition to editorials
demolishing the arguments of the "orientalists" — Dr Leitner and his
supporters. The other members of the Panjab University College Senate
asked how Dyal Singh could continue to be a member of the Senate when
his paper was opposing the policies of Panjab University College,
which supported Dr Leitner. Dyal Singh resigned his membership of the
Senate, and The Tribune continued its crusade. As the President of the
Lahore branch of the Indian Association, he involved the headquarters
of the organisation in Calcutta to take up the issue with the
Secretary of State for India in London. The crusade was crowned with
success when the British government agreed in 1882 to the
establishment of Panjab University on the lines of the universities in
Calcutta, Bombay and Madras. The battle was won.
Dyal Singh’s Bengali
Brahmo friends played an important role in making The Tribune more
than a mere provincial paper. Modelled on The Bengalee, it was a paper
which claimed to represent the whole of Upper India. It took up not
only all-India issues but also international issues, such as they were
in the last century. The number of the copies of The Tribune sold
outside Punjab was more than the number of the copies sold inside the
province.
Significantly, the first
issue championed the cause of The Statesman Defence Fund, being raised
to fight for The Statesman’s pro-India Editor, Robert Knight, who had
been sued by a Hyderabad nobleman at the instance of diehard British
bureaucrats in India, who had been upset at the exposure by The
Statesman (through its London edition) of the working of British
bureaucrats here. Dyal Singh himself was a member of The Statesman
Defence Committee. The Tribune took up all the public causes, and its
voice was taken note of. It is said that one Lieut-Governor of Punjab
advised a delegation meeting him to ventilate their grievances through
the columns of The Tribune. British civilians of Punjab felt so
unhappy as to tell their compatriots that the province was being ruled
by the Lieut-Governor and The Tribune, and the civil servants were
nowhere.
The exposure of public
wrongs once led to a famous defamation case, filed in 1890, by a
Superintendent of Police against Dyal Singh and the Editor of The
Tribune. One of the factors mentioned by the Superintendent of Police
was that Dyal Singh was a nationalist and had allowed the compound of
his baronial mansion in Amritsar to be used for a lecture by a
Congress agitator named Allah Ram.
— M.G.
|
Spreading
the light of learning
By Brig Yash Beotra (retd)
"PROPAGATION of
sound liberal education and dissemination of knowledge to inculcate
pure morality", was one of the cherished obsessions with Sardar Dyal
Singh Majithia, a many splendoured personality. And to achieve this
lifetime wish of his, he bequeathed assets worth over Rs 30 lakh way
back in 1895, through a will — the last will and testament of his, to
establish three premium institutions in Lahore (now in Pakistan):
(1) The Tribune — to
spread knowledge through the print medium.
(2) Dyal Singh College —
to disseminate knowledge through formal education.
(3) Dyal Singh Public
Library — to spread knowledge through books.
The library was closer to
his heart, as Sardar Majithia was himself a voracious reader, with a
personal collection of more than 1000 volumes on various subjects. He
dedicated his palatial building in the elite area of Lahore for
establishing a premier public library.
This selfless action
distinguishes him as a rare philanthropist of the country in the 19th
century. It is a fact, though unfortunate, that in these days of greed
and selfishness very few have the predilection to launch ventures for
the benefit of humanity suffering for want of the bare necessities of
life. Though numerous saints and sages have delivered sermons to
humanity to renounce wealth for the good of mankind, little tangible
has been achieved. Deepening greed has prevented people from
undertaking munificent projects. In our own lifetime, Vinoba Bhave
tried his utmost to inspire people to philanthropy but, alas, the
exercise was short-lived. Seen in the light of all this, the movement
of philanthropy spearheaded by the late Sardar should be a great
source of inspiration and set an example for other Indians to follow.
It may be worth mentioning here that bequeathing assets for the
purpose of spreading knowledge was uncommon even in western countries
then.
Sardar Majithia had the
foresight to visualise that the charity of "Vidya Dhan" — wealth of
knowledge — was the highest deed one could do. He was of the firm view
that instead of spending his wealth, which he had earned so
assiduously, on building temples and dharamshalas, he should use it
for the dissemination of knowledge and the spread of liberal education
— the best use one can think of. This was the dire need of Punjab
then, as it was plagued by superstition and useless customs.
But what made his mission
a great success was his commendable foresight. He was able to find
people having a high sense of commitment, dedication and, above all,
unquestionable integrity for maintaining the three trusts as conceived
by him. The trustees functioned in an exemplary manner, making the
trusts premier institutions. The Partition of the country in 1947
forced their temporary closure in Lahore. But this did not dampen the
spirits of the dedicated trustees, who managed to get the three
institutions revived in India — the tireless efforts put in by the
late Dewan Anand Kumar for re-establishing the college and the library
trusts need special mention. Today, Dyal Singh Public Library is the
only institution of its kind which is functioning as per the wishes of
the late Sardar both in Pakistan (Lahore) and India (New Delhi).
Dyal Singh Trust Library,
Lahore, was established in 1928, in pursuance of the will of Sardar
Majithia. It enjoyed great popularity before Partition. In 1947, it
suffered a considerable loss due to riots in Lahore, and a good number
of its books and furniture were damaged. It remained closed for 12
years due to the migration of its non-Muslim trustees. It started
functioning in 1964 when its control was taken over by the Evacuee
Trust Property Board, Government of Pakistan, Lahore. Today, it is
managed by the Education Department, Government of Punjab, Pakistan,
through a board of trustees, under the chairmanship of the
Commissioner, Lahore Division. The library has a collection of over
1,40,000 volumes, both in English and oriental languages. It has a
research cell which has so far brought out 26 publications, both in
Urdu and English, apart from publishing a quarterly journal, Minhaj.
After Partition, through
the efforts of Dewan Anand Kumar, the first Vice-Chancellor of Panjab
University, and other trustees, the Dyal Singh Library Trust Society
was established afresh in India, on August 2, 1948. The purpose of the
society was to establish a library for the use of the general public
subject to such rules and regulations as the trustees might frame,
provided no charge would be levied for the perusal of books and
newspapers and magazines in the library during its hours of business.
The library was set up in
the institutional area of Bahadurshah Zafar Marg, New Delhi, not far
from the ITO, the busiest crossing overlooking Deen Dayal Upadhyay
Marg, by undertaking the construction of a sprawling building during
1954-55, on a 1.3 acre plot of land, leased out by the government for
the purpose. Since it is located at a very central place, well
connected by road and rail networks, users find it convenient to visit
the library.
Though, initially, the
library functioned at a low key due to the paucity of funds, since
1993 the Trust Society under the chairmanship of Mr B.K. Nehru
launched itself on a massive programme with much improved financial
health, achieved as a result of sound planning and assistance from
government agencies as allowed under the rules. This action to enlarge
the scope of its activities has enabled it to take a few steps on the
path to becoming a premier library in Delhi in particular and the
country in general.
The library has over
35,000 volumes — some of these being rare — mainly in English, Hindi,
Urdu and Punjabi. It subscribes to 91 magazines/journals, including 12
foreign journals and 23 daily newspapers. With the availability of
such a large number of books, newspapers and magazines free of charge,
the membership of the library has shown a steady growth over the past
few years. Today it has over 4,600 members, including over 1500
lending members — a category which has deposited Rs 300 per head as a
refundable security amount and which allows such a person to borrow at
a time two books and two old magazines for study at his/her residence.
Over 150 members visit the library daily.
The management has
undertaken a number of plans to modernise the library. The process of
its automation was launched some time back. Today, the English section
is fully automated. This has enabled it to become a member of the
Delhi Library Network — Delnet — which provides Dyal Singh Public
Library the added advantage of resource sharing among the
member-libraries in Delhi. In addition, through a well-planned and
organised "Perspective Plan of Action", covering the visualised
expansion of the library over the next 15-20 years, a state-of-art
auditorium, seminar/committee rooms and a cafeteria are proposed to be
provided soon. The Internet facility is also there for use by the
members as well as the library staff who can now effectively carry out
bibliographical search.
|
A
pioneer
in banking sector too
By Prakash Tandon
Soon
after the new British regime settled down to governance, the Punjabi
elite were looking for creating a modern educational, industrial,
banking base to activate the Punjabi enterprise with the needed
wherewithal to develop. The man who made a unique contribution to this
process was a scion of an elite Jagirdar Punjab family, Dyal Singh
Majithia, a new born liberal. He realised the importance of creating a
wide base of institutions to develop the new Punjab.
Lehna Singh, his father,
was quite remarkable in his time for his fondness of mechanics. He
paid much attention to his battery of guns in which he brought about
great improvements, and made some very efficient pieces of ordnance
which were captured by the British in the Battle of Aliwal. He is also
said to have invented a clock which showed the hour, the day of the
month, and the changes in the month. He was an expert linguist and
took keen interest in mathematics and astronomy. At the request of
Ranjit Singh he reformed the calendar, for which he won a name among
Hindu astronomers.
After Lehna Singh’s death
in 1854 at Benaras, his family moved back to their substantial jagir
at Majitha. Competent tutors were appointed for Dyal Singh in a
government Court of Wards before he went to a Mission School, and was
placed under an English governess. In his early years he displayed
considerable charm, intelligence and eagerness for knowledge. He was
tall, graceful in figure, with sharp well-cut features, and fond of
both sports and learning. Dyal Singh was installed with proper
ceremonies as the head of the Shergil clan, which through the next
century produced ministers, administrators and an early remarkable
modern painter, Amrita Shergil, born of a Hungarian mother.
Dyal Singh made, what was
at that time, a startling decision, to go abroad to complete his
education and to learn about the West, especially Britain, their mode
of living and their institutions which fascinated him. The
conservatives in the community regarded it an unholy act that the son
of the great Lehna Singh should cross the seas and eat, live and drink
with the Kiranis (Christians) in their distant land. Like
Maharaja Dalip Singh, the first Sikh to go abroad, he would surely
embrace Christianity, they feared. He spent two years in England,
visiting Europe, where he experienced the new wave of nationalism and
forces of thought of the period following the Franco-Prussian War. His
lineage, name and noble figure made him popular in the Victorian
society among persons of both ranks and scholarship.
Upon his return from
England, he decided to move from Majitha to Lahore, where he could
take active interest in the new movements that were sweeping the city.
He combined the life of a Sikh nobleman with patronage of sports,
mushairas and music, sumptuous hospitality, and new ideas. He came
under the influence of the Brahmo Samaj, a movement founded in Bengal
in 1828 by Raja Rammohun Roy.
In 1877, when Swami
Dayanand visited Punjab, he met the Sardar and they discussed the
question of the infallibility of the Vedas, but Dyal Singh was not
convinced. He had already studied the Bhagavad-Gita with a Ferozepur
pundit and the Bible, evincing great interest in the crucifixion of
Christ.
In the early 1880s, the
Indian Association was organised at Lahore and as its first President,
he began to guide and influence the new youth movement. He also took
active interest in the new Indian National Congress and was made
Chairman of the Reception Committee on the occasion of the first
Congress session at Lahore in 1893. He believed and stated that
political rights must be deserved by his countrymen by liberalising
their social customs, shedding their shackles, and spreading liberal
education.
His greatest contribution
perhaps was in the area of institution building. The rugged
individualism of the Punjabis made them averse to forming and working
together in voluntary associations. Dyal Singh, on the other hand, was
an admirer of British institutions and their parliamentary system,
though he did not like the bureaucracy and never cultivated its
executive officers. He saw the need to build institutions in Punjab
and in less than two decades founded a number of them; the Dyal Singh
High School, College and Library. He helped all institutions with
which he was associated with wisdom and guidance.
In his inaugural address
as the Chairman of the Reception Committee of the Indian National
Congress in Lahore in 1893, he made a moving appeal to Indians and the
British alike, perhaps the first of its kind at a time when their
relationship was already beginning to show strain. He said: "What the
Congress contends is not that the country should be transferred from
English to Indian hands; no, not change of hands, for it would be
entirely suicidal, but that the people should be governed on the broad
principles which have been held by the eminent British statesmen and
administrators themselves to be the most conducive to the interests of
both rulers and the subjects".
Punjab National Bank
emerged in the late nineteenth century, inheriting the traditions of
ancient trade and banking and influenced by the impact of modern
British banks, depicting the resurgence of the new Punjab. One of the
ideals of the new elite was to start their own modern bank,
professionally run with Indian capital and management, wide public
participation and no personal control or ownership. Lajpat Rai, the
great political leader, wrote: "Rai Mul Raj of Arya Samaj specially
had long cherished the idea that Indians should have a National Bank
of their own." He was keenly concerned with the fact that though
Indian capital was being used to run English banks and companies, the
profits went entirely to the British, while Indians had to contend
themselves with a small interest on their capital.
Mul Raj described the idea
of Punjab National Bank, as it took shape in his mind (Beginning of
Punjabi Nationalism: autobiography of R.B. Mul Raj thus: "In the
year 1891, when I was the Judge of the small Causes Court at Amritsar,
I was living in a house in Mohalla Khatikan. I had set apart one room
as my study for reading books on Dharma-Shastras. There I conceived
the idea of organizing a National Bank in the Punjab. It struck me
that it was necessary to have a national bank for the development of
industries in the country, and that we should have the custody and
final say in the investment of our money.
To keep this idea foremost
in my mind, I wrote ‘National Bank’ on a piece of paper and fixed it
on the wall. I used to talk on the subject daily with my friends and
acquaintances. It was not easy to convince my friends that it was
practicable to have a bank managed and controlled by Punjabis.
Gradually I succeeded in making some of them take interest in the
subject. One of these gentlemen was Lala Bulaki Ram Shastri,
Bar-at-Law, who was practising at Amritsar those days. He designed the
cheque which is still being used by Punjab National Bank Ltd. The five
wavy lines represent the five rivers of the Punjab, the three peaks of
mountains represent Tirathkoti, while Devi Shir represent Lakshmi -
the Goddess of wealth and prosperity, and the monogram PNB for Punjab
National Bank Ltd. Many other friends came round to my views. I met
Sardar Dyal Singh Majithia, who agreed to become the Chairman of the
Board of Directors of the Bank."
On May 23, 1894, the
founders, Mr E C Jessawala, Babu Kali Prasono Roy, Bakshi Jaishi Ram,
Lala Harkishan Lal, Lala Bulaki Ram and Lala Lal Chand, met at the
Lahore residence of Sardar Dyal Singh Majithia and resolved to go
ahead with the scheme. The new Bank had then the most remarkable
feature of being held by public shareholders and run by professional
board of directors, consisting of a banker, three lawyers, a barrister
and a businessman, chaired by Dyal Singh. They met on alternate
Sundays. It had a staff of eight : an accountant, a treasurer, a
clerk, a daftari, two chaprasis and two chowkidars on a total monthly
wage bill of Rs.170.
It was open to the public
from 10.00 a.m. to 3.30 p.m. The Bank’s success was immediate and in
two years its paid up capital rose from Rs.41,500 to Rs.1,09,495;
deposits from Rs.1,65,337 to Rs.7,27,447; net profit from Rs.1,555 to
Rs.15,536 and dividend from 4% to 5%.
Thus was born the first
Indian public bank, which today is over a century old and the largest
Indian bank in its operations within India.
Sardar Dyal Singh Majithia
left us a hundred years ago, during which his bank’s contribution to
Punjab has been remarkable to its farmers: small, medium and large
industrialists; the middle class savers and investors. The question
today is how we take the past into the future, the next century and
soon the next millennium.
|
His role in
the
birth of Panjab University
SARDAR
Dyal Singh Majithia was largely responsible for the setting up of
Panjab University, Lahore, in 1882. Punjab was annexed in 1849. The
Education Department was set up in 1854. Students travelled to
Calcutta for examinations. Panjab University College, as it was
called, was affiliated to Calcutta University, but it gave only
diplomas, not degrees.
Punjab was among the last
to be annexed to the British empire. It was to be the gateway to the
Central Asian region which the British wished to advance to. For the
administration of Punjab, the British had brought along with them
civilians, lawyers and teachers from Bengal. And Bengal had seen the
advance of education, enlightenment and national awakening. British
officials did not want Punjab to be affected. And one way to ensure
this was to impart education not through the medium of English but
through Indian classical languages. In effect, it meant the imposition
of a pattern different from that of the Calcutta, Bombay and Madras
Universities. Dr W.G. Lietner, a Central European Jew, who had
mastered Arabic and Islamic theology, was sent out to India to take
charge of educational advancement in Punjab. An important person
already there was Col W.R.M. Holroyd, Director of Instruction, who had
made Lahore take the place of Lucknow and Delhi as the principal
centre of Urdu learning. That is why he had invited Hali and Muhammed
Hussain Azad to emigrate to Lahore.
Leitner and Holroyd and
their British friends were strongly opposed to the adoption of English
as the medium of instruction. Their move was opposed by the younger
generation which wanted education to be given on the lines of that in
London, Madras, Calcutta and Bombay. The debate was on when Dyal Singh
returned from a two-year sojourn to the United Kingdom and elsewhere
in Europe. His closest friends in Punjab were not the Sikh nobility
but Bengalee Brahmos. Dyal Singh, who played host to all the Brahmo
leaders visiting Punjab, enlisted their help and support in starting
The Tribune, which was to espouse the cause of education on Western
lines. The Tribune launched a campaign for the setting up of Panjab
University modelled on the universities at Calcutta, Bombay, Madras or
London, the medium of instruction being English. Editorially, week
after week it rebutted the arguments of the orientalists. Some 20
articles appeared.
Now Dyal Singh was a
nominated member of the Senate of Panjab University College as it was
then called. The Senate consisted of the Sikh aristocracy, most of
them without much education. The other members of the Senate, under
the influence of the orientalists, drew the attention to the fact that
one of the members was opposing their policy. Dyal Singh resigned his
membership of the Senate, and continued with the campaign. His stand
was supported by the Indian Association, whose Lahore branch he
headed. While the Indian Association’s President and Secretary and
others sent petitions to the Secretary of State for India in London,
Dyal Singh and his friends continued the pressure on the Lieut-Governor
and the Viceroy.
It was a hard battle.
Ultimately, however, Dyal Singh’s side won, and the British decided in
1882 that the medium of instruction and the pattern of teaching at
Panjab University will be the same as that in the three presidencies
in Eastern, Western and Southern India. As Jogendra Bose, an important
member of the Lahore Bar Association, wrote later, "Dr Leitner backed
by immense influence tried his best to orientalise education in the
Punjab, but Sardar Dyal Singh proved instrumental in saving the
situation. A battle was won."
—M.G.
|
BACK TO APNA WEB PAGE
|
|