Ramesh Inder Singh’s book ‘Dukhant Punjab Da’ released

Published Date: 03-01-2024 | 9:05 pm

Amritsar, January 3: Punjab former Chief Secretary Ramesh Inder Singh’s Punjabi book ‘Dukhant Punjab Da’, was released on Wednesday. The book which is an eye-opening account of before and after Blue Star throws serious light on the past and present history of Punjab.

Ramesh Inder Singh was the Deputy Commissioner of Amritsar during Operation Blue Star and he has described the situation as he saw it with his own eyes in this book. Ramesh Inder Singh was later promoted and retired from the post of Chief Secretary.

Ramesh Inder Singh said, “Starting from the year 1978, Punjab went through a volcanic period in which there was endless violence. These few years were to determine the direction of our history. After the country’s independence, perhaps no other domestic crisis would have had such a deep impact,”

“But 40 years after the Blue Star incident, we still hear conflicting stories about what happened and how. This book ‘Dukhant Punjab Da’ is an eye-witness account of this historical accident and those years. The book gives a detailed description of the past events which shows the situation of insurgency from its beginning to its end,”

He further said that even in the best of times, people’s perception of an event or situation varies. Particularly devastating events blur neutrality, divide people, and often ignore the facts.

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“Operation Blue Star and the events that followed were disastrous events of this nature, which led India to go to war among itself. The country lost a Prime Minister, a Chief Minister, a former Army Chief, thousands of innocent civilians and some innocent people. However, nearly four decades later, we still hear different stories about what happened, why it happened, and how it happened. Facts are eternal, but whose facts are they? It’s one person’s truth versus another person’s, your interpretation versus their interpretation,” Ramesh Inder Singh maintained.

Ramesh Inder Singh explains that in June 1984, the Indian Army marched towards Amritsar – Operation Blue Star was underway. Some saw it as an attack on the holy site of Sri Harmandir Sahib, while others saw it as a military operation to liberate the holy site from gun-toting terrorists.

“A few months later, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was assassinated. Street massacres took place in Delhi and elsewhere, in which more than 3,000 innocent Sikhs were killed. It was genocide while others consider it a spontaneous reaction to the assassination of their beloved leader. For some, Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale was a martyr, as the Jathedar of Sri Akal Takht Sahib publicly stated in 2003. However, others hold him responsible for more than two decades of turmoil, suffering and destruction in Punjab,”

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According to Ramesh Inder Singh I was an eyewitness, and sometimes a role player, although this is inconsequential at this moment in history. What I saw or did—or what I failed to do—needs to be told. My conscience, more than anything else, prompts me to state my interpretation of the facts and events during the decade and a half surrounding Operation Blue Star.

It would not be fair to history to leave things unsaid. Therefore, I feel the need for an objective and factual description of events and incidents. I try to do just that in the pages of this book.

Terrorism has been decisively eliminated in Punjab. However, the deep, underlying ethno-socio-religious fault lines that have caused turmoil in the state still persist. History has a strange habit of repeating itself and we must be careful, only those civilizations move forward that learn from their history.

This is the first time to publish the present work under the RTI system after my retirement as Chief Secretary of Punjab and later as Chief Information Commissioner of Punjab, having held government roles, he said. I do not regret this long gap as the passage of years has helped clarify the issues and cool down the anger.

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Much has been said and written about Operation Blue Star and the turmoil in Punjab in these twenty-nine years. Several history books and documentaries and some eyewitness accounts—mostly hearsay—have been published. However, given the sensitivity of the topic and security requirements, not everything has been said and may not be said for some time.

However, to the best of my knowledge, I have said and written it honestly. I hope, as the frenzy subsides over time, people inside and outside the government will be more receptive to this work. My words may seem bad to some people; however, the intention is not to hurt anyone’s sentiments or instigate divisiveness

But starting a dialogue, opening the way for introspection and most importantly moving towards healing and ending a painful past can be achieved with reconciliation, justice and transparency, asserted Ramesh Inder Singh.

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