Afghan Sikh Relations: The Graveyard of Empires with a Twist
Afghan Sikh Relations: The Graveyard of Empires with a Twist
Afghan Sikh Relations: The Graveyard of Empires with a Twist On Monday 16th August as the Taliban had taken over Kabul, last in the line of cities to fall, the USA president addressed the word citing Afghanistan as the graveyard of Empires. There is no consensus on who coined the phrase but the title alludes to the country due to failed campaigns by Russia, the British and other powers. See my article discussing Afghan Sikh relations during the Misl and Sikh Empire period.
On Monday 16th August as the Taliban had taken over Kabul, last in the line of cities to fall, the USA president addressed the word citing Afghanistan as the graveyard of Empires. There is no consensus on who coined the phrase but the title alludes to the country due to failed campaigns by Russia, the British and other powers.
(Maharaja Ranjit Singh's Empire at its Peak 1839)The Sikhs in history
would be on the defensive and the offensive against the Afghans, but there has
been a myth that the Sikhs took over Afghanistan. This is an erroneous view
based on our overzealous take on bulking up Sikh history. Fact is conquering
the Afghanistan was something that was never going to happen. In fact there
never appears to be anything which suggests the Sikhs even wanted to try. Did
the Sikhs choose wisely? It appears so. The Sikh Confederacies known as the
Misls during the eighteenth century held outposts in present day Pakistan which
they sometimes held and then lost. Due to the vast terrain, between these
locations, the Sikhs did not have the personnel to be fighting on two fronts,
and that is why the Misls were split between fighting the Afghans on one hand
and the Mughals/Mahrattas/Rohillas around Delhi. The Misl period is rarely
discussed because people just don’t have a clue as to what happened but the
Bhangi and Sukerchakia Misl held onto many places until Maharajah Ranjit Singh
(1780–1839) added to his Misl’s territory and others. Jassa Singh Ahluwalia
(1718 – 1783) as the head of the Sikh forces maintained this duality with
difficulty but when the tributes came to each Misl, they all paid their
stipends to Amritsar. This allowed for a central treasury to pay for raging
wars against the invader.
Ahmad Shah Abdali (c. 1722–1772),
known as the father of Afghanistan was the invader who overran the Mughal
Empire and who mercilessly killed thousands of Indians with the Mahrattas
taking a battering in the battle of Panipat in 1761. Indeed it was the period
which nearly saw the Sikhs nearly wiped of the face of the earth especially
during the massacre known as the Vadhha Ghallughara (bigger
holocaust), where around 30,000 Sikhs were killed within a period of days.
Fighting the invader was the order of the day until Maharajah Ranjit Singh
known as the ‘Lion of Punjab’ created the Sikh Empire from 1799 onwards,
improving the army and creating stability in what we know as Punjab. Fighting
on two fronts could have been maintained but again at a cost. However by
signing the Treaty of Amritsar in 1809 with the British. He had limited control
below the Sutlej River so he pushed towards Kashmir, Peshawar, as well as
Multan. Fighting on one front is easy but two fronts was painful, but still it
was an epic task.
During the Sikh Empire, Ranjit Singh
gave Ahmad Shah Abdali’s grandson Zaman Shah Durrani (1767 – 1844) safe haven
in the Punjab and the also his son Shah Shuja Durrani (after wrestling the
Koh-i-Noor from him). This all showed that Ranjit Singh was not beyond mercy.
There was continued dialogue and wars between the Afghans and the Sikh Empire.
The battles faced by the great generals Hari Singh Nalwa (1791–1837) and Akali
Phula Singh (1761-1823) led to great gains but they became Shaheed or
martyrs fighting against the Afghans at Peshawar and Pir Sabak respectively. It
was always a struggle keeping the Afghans at bay but it was eventually achieved
but with major loss of life.
As i am finishing my chapters on the roles of Akali Phula Singh and Hari Singh
Nalwa for my next book: The Rise of the Sikh Soldier (Helion
and Company), it brings the present situation closer to home. We don’t know
what will happen next but the Sikhs have been both been at the brunt and in
governance of the Afghan people with mixed results. We hope for a better future
for all concerned.
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