Chaar Sahibzaade: Rise Of Banda Singh Bahadur !!better!! ✦ Instant & Direct

Banda Singh traveled north. He was not a general; he knew nothing of cavalry formations or artillery. But he had something more potent: the Guru’s hukam (order) and the silent rage of a subjugated people. He started with a few hundred outlaws, outcasts, and orphans who had lost everything to the Mughal tax collectors. He trained them in the hills of the Shivalik, teaching them guerilla warfare. He did not wear a king’s robes. He wore a simple blue tunic and a seli (woolen cord), the mark of a mendicant.

His first target was not Sirhind. It was the smaller, corrupt chieftains who fed the Mughal beast. Village after village rose. The peasants who had bent their backs for centuries began to straighten them. They whispered his name: Banda Singh Bahadur . The hermit who fought like a lion. chaar sahibzaade: rise of banda singh bahadur

When Banda Singh entered Sirhind, he did not go to the palace. He went to the cold, dark well where Mata Gujri had breathed her last, and to the spot where the wall had been sealed over the Sahibzaade . He stood there for a long time, his head bowed. Banda Singh traveled north