- Pratap Singh Giani
Pratap Singh Giani (also Partap Singh Gyani, 1855-1920) was a
Sikh academician, scholar andcalligraphist .He was born in 1855, the son of
Bhai Bhag Singh Giani ofLahore . As a young boy, Partap Singh learnt Punjabi,Urdu andSanskrit and studiedSikh scriptures . In 1884, he accompaniedThakur Singh Sandhanvalia toEngland to read theGuru Granth Sahib to the deposed Sikh ruler of the Punjab,Maharaja Duleep Singh and to re-convert him to Sikhism. Partap Singh remained inEngland for six months. On return toIndia , he worked as a "granthi" (scripture-reader) atGurdwara Kaulsar inAmritsar . When Maharaja Duleep Singh was due to come back to India, Partap Singh accompanied Thakur Singh and his sons toDelhi with the intention of going toBombay to receive the Maharajah. On hearing the news of Duleep Singh's detention atAden , Partap Singh returned to Amritsar while Thakur Singh proceeded toPondicherry . At Amritsar, Partap Singh worked secretly for Thakur Singh distributing his pro-Duleep Singh letters among his confidants and friends. Towards the close of 1887, he was arrested at Amritsar and sent toLahore jail. He escaped fromprison and, turning a sadhu, travelled to different parts of the country in the company of holy men. During one such journey he happened to meetMax Arthur Macauliffe , then engaged in translating the Sikh scripture into English.Macauliffe was impressed by his learning and wished that he would assist him in his work. Partap Singh, who had introduced himself under the assumed name of "Bava Ishar Das", revealed thereupon his identity to him. Macauliffe interceded with the government on his behalf and had the warrants of his arrest withdrawn in January 1889.
Partap Singh settled down in a house in
Kaulsar nearBaba Atal , in Amritsar, and for several years performed katha expounding the Holy Writ in front of the Akal Bung.A fine
calligraphist , Partap Singh transcribed volumes of the Guru Granth Sahib, the most famous of them being the one still preserved in theHarimandir Sahib . This copy, completed in 1908, is written in very boldGurmukhi characters on large-sized 25" by 28" sheets ofKashmiri paper and is installed on the first floor of the Harimandir Sahib where it is used for the recital ofakhand paths or unbroken readings of the Guru Granth Sahib. The entire volume, 1527 leaves, that is, 8054 pages, with double borders in red, blue and yellow, is written in Giani Pratap Singh's hand and is known as Vadde Baba Ji (largesized Holy Volume). The name of the scribe is mentioned at the end of the text, on a separate sheet. Volumes of the Holy Books transcribed by Giani Partap Singh are also preserved at Baba Atal andTakht Sri Hazur Sahib , Nanded.In 1902, Partap Singh joined
Aitchison College , also known as Chiefs College, Lahore, as granthi and instructor. According to the records of the college, he was employed initially at a salary of Rupees 5 per month, which was later increased to Rupees 50 per month from 1904. He taught in this college as a Sikh religious teacher till his death in 1920.According to
Panjaba Phain , August 1916 issue, he was the first secretary of theSanatan Singh Sabha (also referred to as Amritsar Singh Sabha). He was also editor of the earliest published Sikhnewspaper Akal Prakash , which made its first appearance in 1876. He is also said to have translated into Punjabi MajorEvans Bell 's book,The Annexation of the Punjab and Maharaja Duleep Singh . Pratap Singh died at Lahore on20 July 1920 .
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