DYAL SINGH MAJITHIA

DYAL SINGH MAJITHIA

DYAL SINGH MAJITHIA, (1849-98), Sikh aristocrat and philanthropist, was the son of Lahina Singh Majithia and grandson of Desa Singh Majithia, both of whom had served Maharaja Ranjit Singh with distinction in the first half of the nineteenth century. He was born in 1849 at Banaras. His extensive education came from a dual source from the family`s keen interest in science and religion as well as from English tutors appointed by the court of wards which became responsible for Dyal Singh`s upbringing after Lahina Singh`s death in Banaras in 1854.

Dyal Singh was among the first Sikhs exposed to the Western systems of thought. Thereafter he lived in two worlds not one Eastern and the other Western, as one might assume but rather one of solitary experience, searching after ideas through reading, and the other a whirl of Punjabi culture not without its Westernized elements, which spun round Dyal Singh daily as a prominent r.ais, an urban entrepreneur, a patron of social reform and sponsor of political causes. Nevertheless, as Punjabi Sikhs faced the task of reconstructing self respect and identity following the British occupation of the Punjab, Dyal Singh *s youth caught the full force of exposure to Westernization which included study of the Bible, and a journey to England.

All these were reflected in his education. Yet intellectual interests and alterations in lifestyle did not end in conversion to any new creed or in desertion of Sikhism. Rather it was orthodoxy of all kinds and devotion to any single dogma that Dyal Singh had left behind. Comparative theology became his passion. He knew the elements of Sikhism well, had a great reverence in his heart for the Sikh Gurus, read with a Firozpur pandit the Bhagavadgita, discussed (then rejected) the tenets of the Arya Samaj with its founder Swami Dayanand, and refused to side with any faction of the Brahmo Samaj.

He became and remained in essence his own man. Dyal Singh cannot be termed a typical nineteenth century rais, aristocrat, of the Punjab, yet he did not seek to avoid the various traditional roles consequent upon such influence and wealth as were his. Rather, he intensified those roles and gave them modern currency. The brief biographical notes left behind reporting his daily life indicate a mercantile sagacity, a particular attention to detail, an accumulation of urban property during a successful career as financer. During his younger years even more `typical` activities occupied Dyal Singh, the nobleman.

He demonstrated a “… keen interest in sports, [became] an expert at kite flying, spent large sums of money holding wrestling contests, liberally patronized musicians, offered magnificent hospitality and arranged poetical symposiums …” Dyal Singh Majithia is remembered, however, as anything but a typical nobleman of his day. Rather, his name is linked with reform, institutions of higher education, the founding of the Punjab branch of the Indian National Congress and perhaps above all with the Hindu reformist society, the Brahmo Samaj. He often had been claimed by Brahmos as a Brahmo and certainly he became their saviour through patronage.

In other words, Dyal Singh became a grand patron of many causes. When issues or ideas of importance impressed him he gave supportmoney, to aid the fervent (but often penniless) students, journalists, reformers, teachers Punjabis as well as Bengalis. He supported men of words and ideas who had set about trying to alter, establish and build institutions, belief systems and sociopolitical reforms in a Punjab struggling to express itself to find its identity, while the law was dominated by the British whose rule was despotic though inclined to be benevolent. It would be a mistake to consider him as confined to a single creed, society or dogma.

Dyal Singh patronized a half century of causes and institutions. He served as a member of the managing committee of the Darbar Sahib (Golden Temple), Amritsar, and he accepted to be president of the standing committee of the Indian National Congress. He sponsored a number of prominent social roles, but occupied the stations of an honoured patron and not an activist. His short book. Nationalism (1895) is filled with moderate admiration and protestations of loyalty to the order and progress which British rule brought to the Punjab not with slogans for ending imperialism. This would be a job for the activists of the next century.

But such a man could take exception and he did take exception to what he regarded as the excesses and omissions of British authority. On 27 December 1893, the Indian National Congress met in Lahore for its ninth annual convention. As reception committee chairman, Dyal Singh was to speak first. He could not, however, speak for he was racked with pain. Nevertheless, he appeared on the platform and sat stiffly as another read his carefully chosen words. While the Sardar spoke of the literary influence of England, it would be premature in those times to voice the demand for sharing political power.

His was the role of a man born to multiple privileges, taking up the task of reform and to initiate action in the educational and cultural spheres. In his address he said: We happily live under a constitution whose watchword is freedom, and whose main pillar is toleration. We look back complacently on our past history, and glory in it. Can we then in the midst of this national upheaval remain quiescent and indifferent? He was a pioneer in those nation building activities, like the spread of Western Education (viz. his founding of the Dyal Singh College and Dyal Singh Library) and the establishment, in 1881, of a daily paper in English, The Tribune, that built up the nationalist cause in the Punjab, as a matter of fact in northwestern India as a whole. In this respect, his is a significant role as one of the builders of modern Punjab. Dyal Singh Majithia died on 9 September 1898.

References :

1. Griffin, Lepel, and C.F. Massy, Chiefs and Families of Note in the Punjab. Lahore, 1909
2. Nair, Lajpat Rai, and Prem Nath Kirpal, Dyal Singh Majithia. Lahore, 1935 3 Besant, Annie, How India Wrought Freedom ? Bombay, 1915

Categories