Excitement and anger among the Singhs during the attack on Delhi and the Red Fort

Excitement and anger among the Singhs during the attack on Delhi and the Red Fort

 Sixty thousand Sikhs under the command of Sardar Baghel Singh lost their patience when they saw their blood thirsty Delhi. The blood boiled and the waves began to fall. First of all, they destroyed everything around Delhi and looted 20,000 rupees.  Sent to Punjab under the care of Sikhs. Tens of thousands of Sikhs laid siege to Delhi. The remaining 30,000 defeated Mirza Shikoh on 8 March 1783 at Malka Ganj and Sabzi Mand.  The next day, on March 9, 1783, the Nishan Sahib was erected at the Ajmeri Gate. The rich Wazir who used to celebrate the Holi of Sikh blood by making plans to kill the Sikhs yesterday, destroy Nesto  They hid inside the Red Fort.
                                     An angry drunkard, Sardar Baghel Singh, with thirty thousand of his companions, went to the place where the Thirty Thousand Delhi High Court is erected in his memory.  He was captured and presented to Sardar Baghel Singh. He marked a place in the wall of the Red Fort where only the wall stood and there was no solid mud support inside.  The Sikhs smashed the wall of the Red Fort with huge wooden sticks and the lightning struck with thirty thousand Sikh army generals. Today the place is called Mori Gate where the Inter State Bus Terminal is now.  For those who had taken refuge in the Red Fort for fear of the Amirzada Sikhs, Moses' escape became a matter of death before death.  He now hid with King Shah Alam in the secret compartments of the Red Fort.
                                       Upon entering the Red Fort, the Sikhs found such a commotion that even the soul of the devil trembled.  The Mughal warriors who yesterday laughed heartily at the blood of the Sikhs on their swords hid to hide.  The cannons of the fort were turned upside down.  Four of them were taken away by Sardar Jassa Singh Ramgarhia.  Has been entered.
                                          Today was not only a question of looting Delhi on March 11, 1783, but also an opportunity to reckon with the unspeakable and unbearable atrocities perpetrated on the Sikhs from 1606 to today 1783.  In the face of fire, pleas for mercy and pardons, the Sikhs became deaf. The anger of the Khalsa had reached its limits. In the great panic, swords, whistling horses and deaf were heard.  There was an echo of Nihal's shouts. Today the whole fire of hell had fallen on the Red Fort, not the Sikhs. Delhi had never even dreamed of such strength of the Khalsa. It had seen the lightning but the lightning that fell on the Red Fort today.  He did not even remember anyone.

Post a Comment

0 Comments