Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
India

How Maharaja Ranjit Singh’s Wife Jind Kaur Escaped British Prison And Led Two Wars Against Them

IANS, 02 Aug, 2018 12:43 PM
    Over 155 years after her death on August 1, 1863, Maharani Jindan Kaur, the widow of Maharaja Ranjit Singh, the last Sikh ruler of Punjab, is once again enjoying a revival in popular imagination, thanks partly to a movie and a book.
     
     
    Today many young Punjabi women are fired by the bare-knuckled courage of the woman, who was forcibly separated from her son, Duleep Singh, and imprisoned by the British. She not just escaped but also led two wars against the British and refused to bow to their decree until the end of her rebellious life.
     
     
    Though American filmmaker Michael Singh wrote and directed the award-winning ‘Rebel Queen, 37 minutes’, in 2010, it attracted international attention only when it was screened in the United Kingdom in February this year. A writer and director, Singh is currently editing ‘Riding the Tiger: The Sikh Massacres of 1984’, which he witnessed as a young man.
     
     
    But the credit for the film goes to Bicky Singh, an IIT Delhi graduate, who runs an IT company in southern California, and is known for his collection of over 500 turbans. Fascinated by the maharani’s story, Singh funded the production of the film with over $25,000 in 2010.
     
     
     
     
    Speaking to Guardian, Michael Singh said he thought the tragic story of Jindan also carried a strong message of self-esteem for women. The film, which was screened outside the United States at the Bradford Literature Festival this year, is an interplay of history and the present-day reality through interviews.
     
     
    Prof Indu Banga, a historian, attributes the renewed interest in Jindan to the present phase in Punjab history when historians no longer take the British account of the maharani at face value. “The British did not paint Jindan in a kind light and tried to demonise her by accusing her of treachery. But now new evidence has emerged to the contrary. If you read British history between the lines, you find that they tried to keep her away from Duleep Singh because they were afraid of the influence she might wield on him.”
     
     
    Dwelling on the fight put up by Jindan against the British, Banga says she was in touch with Bhai Maharaj Singh, who tried to rebel against the British after the annexation of the Sikh empire. “With many historians counting the Anglo-Sikh battles as the first war of independence, Jindan has now become a heroic figure.”
     
     
     
     
    Jindan also finds a mention in the book, ‘Kohinoor: The Story of the World’s Most Infamous Diamond’, published by William Dalrymple and Anita Anand in 2016. Describing her dramatic prison break on April 19, 1849, from Chunnar Fort, the book says “dressed in beggars’ rags, she fled under cover of darkness, taunting her British captors as she went.”
     
     
    “Scattering money on the floor of her cell, Jindan scrawled a note for the guards to find: You put me in a cage and locked me up. For all your locks and your sentries, I got out by magic... I had told you plainly not to push me too hard – but don’t think I ran away. Understand well, that I escape by myself unaided... don’t imagine I got out like a thief.’’
     
     
    Christy Campbell, author of ‘The Maharajah’s Box,’ a book about the Maharani’s son, Duleep, says Jindan was “one of the most remarkable characters of 19th-century history, let alone Indian or Sikh history”.
     
     
    The youngest wife of Maharaja Ranjit Singh passed away on August 1, 1863, two years after she walked into the Kensington Gardens in 1861. She died in her sleep and was buried in west London as cremation was illegal in Britain during those days. In 1997, a marble headstone with her name was uncovered during restoration at the Dissenters’ Chapel in Kensal Green, and a memorial to the Maharani was installed at the site in 2009.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Woman Flies From UK To India On Husband’s Passport, Emirates Apologises

    Woman Flies From UK To India On Husband’s Passport, Emirates Apologises
    Geeta Modha, who runs Alankar boutique in Rusholme area of Manchester, left for the airport with husband Dilip's passport by mistake for a business trip on April 23.

    Woman Flies From UK To India On Husband’s Passport, Emirates Apologises

    Indian-American Owned IT Company Fined For H-1B Visa Violations

    Indian-American Owned IT Company Fined For H-1B Visa Violations
    Investigators found that the company paid impacted employees well below the wage levels required under the H-1B program based on job skill level, and also made illegal deductions from workers' salaries.

    Indian-American Owned IT Company Fined For H-1B Visa Violations

    'Strict Action Against Those Who Changed Delhi’s Dyal Singh College Name': Prakash Javadekar

    'Strict Action Against Those Who Changed Delhi’s Dyal Singh College Name': Prakash Javadekar
    Reacting to the change in the name of Dyal Singh College here, Human Resource Development Minister Prakash Javadekar on Wednesday warned of strict action against the management people who "dared" to change the name.

    'Strict Action Against Those Who Changed Delhi’s Dyal Singh College Name': Prakash Javadekar

    CBI Court Issues Notice To Dera Chief’s Ex-Driver Khatta Singh

    CBI Court Issues Notice To Dera Chief’s Ex-Driver Khatta Singh
    The special CBI court in Panchkula on Wednesday issued notice to Dera Sacha Sauda chief Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh’s former driver Khatta Singh, to record his statement on May 5.

    CBI Court Issues Notice To Dera Chief’s Ex-Driver Khatta Singh

    Japanese Man Found Dead In South Delhi Apartment

    Japanese Man Found Dead In South Delhi Apartment
    The police were informed by the locals in the morning that Yoichi Nishimura, a Japanese national, was not opening the door to his room.

    Japanese Man Found Dead In South Delhi Apartment

    Lalu Yadav Got Inhuman Treatment In Delhi: Shatrughan Sinha

    Sending an ailing Lalu Yadav from Delhi in a train that took 14 hours to reach Ranchi earlier this week was in bad taste and smacked of vindictive politics, Mr Sinha said in a series of tweets.

    Lalu Yadav Got Inhuman Treatment In Delhi: Shatrughan Sinha