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Shaheed Udham Singh

Date of Birth : Dec 26, 1899
Date of Death : July 31, 1940
Place of Birth : Sunam

 Freedom Fighters
  Dr. Rajendra Prasad
  Purushottam Das Tandon
  Motilal Nehru
  Jawaharlal Nehru
  Lal Bahadur Shastri
  Indira Gandhi
  Jayaprakash Narayan
  Hakim Ajmal Khan
  Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya
  Feroze Gandhi
  Liaquat Ali Khan
  Maulana Mohammad Ali
  Maulana Shaukat Ali
  Govind Ballabh Pant
  Dr.Shanker Dayal Sharma
  Mahavir Tyagi
  Mukhtar Ahmed Ansari
  Ram Manohar Lohia
  Chandrasekhar Azad
  Dr. B.R. Ambedkar
  Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi
  Dadabhai Naoroji
  Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel
  Bal Gangadhar Tilak
  Ravi Shankar Vyas
  Narhari Parikh
  Jivatram Kripalani
  Mahadev Desai
  Mohanlal Pandya
  Abbas Tyabji
  Gopal Krishna Gokhale
  Narahar Vishnu Gadgil
  Vithalbhai Patel
  Vinoba Bhave
  Ganesh Vasudev Mavlankar
  Vinayak Damodar Savarkar
  Muhammad Ali Jinnah
  Kulapati K.M. Munshi
  Senapati Bapat
  Mahadeo Govind Ranade
  Subhas Chandra Bose
  Bipin Chandra Pal
  Chittaranjan Das
  Maulana Abul Kalam Azad
  Rabindranath Tagore
  Surya Sen
  Gopinath Bordoloi
  Benoy Basu
  Badal Gupta
  Dinesh Gupta
  Khudiram Bose
  Bagha Jatin
  Barindra Kumar Ghosh
  Aravinda Ackroyd Ghosh
  Surendranath Banerjea
  Ambika Chakrobarty
  C. Rajagopalachari
  Krishna Menon
  Bhogaraju Pattabhi Sitaramayya
  Srinivasa Iyengar
  Muhammad Iqbal
  Lala Lajpat Rai
  Sardul Singh Caveeshar
  Sheikh Abdullah
  Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan
  Bhagat Singh
  Shivaram Rajguru
  Sukhdev
  Tej Bahadur Sapru
  Sikander Hyat Khan
  Madan Lal Dhingra

Udham Singh was one of the great patriots of India, born as Sher Singh on 26 December 1899, at Sunam, in the then princely state of Patiala. His father, Tahal Singh, was at that time working as a watchman on a railway crossing in the neighbouring village of Upall. Sher Singh lost his parents before he was seven years and was admitted along with his brother Mukta Singh to the Central Khalsa Orphanage at Amritsar on 24 October 1907. As both brothers were administered the Sikh initiatory rites at the Orphanage, they received new names, Sher Singh becoming Udham Singh and Mukta Singh Sadhu Singh. In 1917, Udham Singh's brother also died, leaving him alone in the world.


Udham Singh left the Orphanage after passing the matriculation examination in 1918. He was present in the Jallianvala Bag on the fateful Baisakhi day, 13 April 1919, when a peaceful assembly of people was fired upon by General Reginald Edward Harry Dyer, killing over one thousand people. The event which Udham Singh used to recall with anger and sorrow, turned him to the path of revolution. Soon after, he left India and went to the United States of America. He felt thrilled to learn about the militant activities of the Babar Akalis in the early 1920's, and returned home. He had secretly brought with him some revolvers and was arrested by the police in Amritsar, and sentenced to four years imprisonment under the Arms Act. On release in 1931, he returned to his native Sunam, but harassed by the local police, he once again returned to Amritsar and opened a shop as a signboard painter, assuming the name of Ram Muhammad Singh Azad. This name, which he was to use later in England, was adopted to emphasize the unity of all the religious communities in India in their struggle for political freedom.

Udham Singh was deeply influenced by the activities of Bhagat Singh and his revolutionary group. In 1935, when he was on a visit to Kashmlr, he was found carrying Bhagat Singh's portrait. He invariably referred to him as his guru. He loved to sing political songs, and was very fond of Ram Prasad Bismal, who was the leading poet of the revolutionaries. After staying for some months in Kashmir, Udham Singh left India. He wandered about the continent for some time, and reached England by the mid-thirties. He was on the lookout for an opportunity to avenge the Jalliavala Bagh tragedy. The long-waited moment at last came on 13 March 1940. On that day, at 4.30 p.m. in the Caxton Hall, London, where a meeting of the East India Association was being held in conjunction with the Royal Central Asian Society, Udham Singh fired five to six shots from his pistol at Sir Michael O'Dwyer, who was governor of the Punjab when the Amritsar massacre had taken place. O'Dwyer was hit twice and fell to the ground dead and Lord Zetland, the Secretary of State for India, who was presiding over the meeting was injured. Udham Singh was overpowered with a smoking revolver. He in fact made no attempt to escape and continued saying that he had done his duty by his country. On 1 April 1940, Udham Singh was formally charged with the murder of Sir Michael O'Dwyer. On 4 June 1940, he was committed to trial, at the Central Criminal Court, Old Bailey, before Justice Atkinson, who sentenced him to death. An appeal was filed on his behalf which was dismissed on 15 July 1940. On 31 July 1940, Udham Singh was hanged in Pentonville Prison in London. Udham Singh was essentially a man of action and save his statement before the judge at his trial, there was no writing from his pen available to historians. Recently, letters written by him to Shiv Singh Jauhal during his days in prison after the shooting of Sir Michael O'Dwyer have been discovered and published. These letters show him as a man of great courage, with a sense of humour. He called himself a guest of His Majesty King George, and he looked upon death as a bride he was going to wed. By remaining cheerful to the last and going joyfully to the gallows, he followed the example of Bhagat Singh who had been his beau ideal. During the trial, Udham Singh had made a request that his ashes be sent back to his country, but this was not allowed. In 1975, however, the Government of India, at the instance of the Punjab Government, finally succeeded in bringing his ashes home. Lakhs of people gathered on the occasion to pay homage to his memory.








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