Daya Singh
Arif (Gharoo)(1894 – 1946) was popular writer of devotional and didactic
verses. He belonged to a backard rural family of farm labourers called Mazhabi
Sikhs. Having been thrased by his poor father, Santa Singh, because of his
pursuit of learning, left home and started living as a recluse; learnt Punjabi,
Hindi, Sanskrit, Urdu, Persian and Arabic: and studied scriptures of the Sikhs,
Hindus and Muslims from their traditional teachers at their respective places
of worship and instruction. He began writing poetry while in teens and
published his maiden book, Fanah da Makan (Abode of Mortality), in 1914:
followed by his most popular work, Zindagi Bilas (Discourse on Life), in 1915.
These were produced in several editions and in various
scripts, bringing him not only fame but also his life-companion in 1918 and
invitation in 1928 from his admirers in Malaya. On return, he organised a
‘dhadijatha’ (choir) and began composing and singing historical ballads, called
‘parsang’, in praise of Sikh Gurus, warriors and martyrs, most of which are
lying unpublished with his son. Another of his popular books, Saputtar Bilas,
was published in 1921 and addressed to Sardar Kultar Singh. These preachings
and publications also earned him some disciples, one of whom, Sardar Dhanna
Singh Gulshan, flourished as Union Minister of State for Education and Social
Welfare.
Punjab Government held a memorial function in his honour at
his birth- place in 1967. Daya Singh followed verse-traditions of media eval
Indian poetry and used traditional norms, popular forms and favourite metres
for exhorting people to contemplation of God and self-purification; reminding
them of the object of life and its ultimate end; and warning them against
involvement in the world whose glory is evanescent and our stay in which is
transitory. Being religious by nature, an underlying note of mysticism and the
reflections is ever present in his devotional and admonitory verses.
by-:Bhajan singh Gharoo
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