This is Photoshop's version of Lorem Ipsum. Proin gravida nibh vel velit auctor aliquet. Aenean sollicitudin, lorem quis bibendum auctor, nisi elit consequat.
This is Photoshop's version of Lorem Ipsum. Proin gravida nibh vel velit auctor aliquet. Aenean sollicitudin, lorem quis bibendum auctor, nisi elit consequat.
This is Photoshop's version of Lorem Ipsum. Proin gravida nibh vel velit auctor aliquet. Aenean sollicitudin, lorem quis bibendum auctor, nisi elit consequat.
This is Photoshop's version of Lorem Ipsum. Proin gravida nibh vel velit auctor aliquet. Aenean sollicitudin, lorem quis bibendum auctor, nisi elit consequat.
While we weep for the innocence of Fateh Singh (aged 6) and Zorawar Singh (aged 9) who were bricked alive by the Mughal governor Wazir Khan, or the battlefield martyrdoms of Ajit (18) and Jujhar (14), we often miss the direct line connecting their blood to the thunderbolt that struck the Mughal Empire just a year later.
But they often miss the emotional fuel.
Madho Das was a Bairagi (Hindu recluse) known for his tantric powers. He was not a warrior. He was not a Sikh. He was, by all accounts, a magician who lived in a hut near Nanded. The meeting between Guru Gobind Singh and Madho Das is the pivot point of this story. Legend has it that Madho Das tried to use his occult powers to move a mountain to crush the Guru. The Guru, with a touch of divine grace, froze the ascetic in his tracks. chaar sahibzaade the rise of banda singh bahadur