Village Sahna ساہنا is a village in Tehsil Mandi Bahauddin. It is 14 KM from Mandi Bahauddin towards West. The name of the village was given after the person Sahana who settled this village. They were two brothers and one Sister. The names of brothers were Sahana und Khanana and name of Sister was Cheemoo. Now there are three villages (Sahana, Khanana and Cheemoo) at the distance of 1 Kilometer from one and other The Population is nearly 15.000. The village is situated on main Road called Sahana-Mandi bahauddin road.
The Literacy rate of the village is average. It has a Govt. high School for Boys Sahna and one Government High School for girls Sahna. There are also two Madrasa, Dars-ul-Quran for boys and for girls.
There is one Telephone Exchange in the Village. There is one basic health center (Bunyaadi Markaz-i-Sahat) and one Animal Hospital (Veterinary Hospital) in the village. Sahana is Cultivated Area.The most Population of village is Agriculturist. Some are working in the Government Services, and a number of People are working abroad.
Highly Qualified Personalities:
Col. Doctor Zafar Iqbal Gondal (CMH Kharian)
Ch Muhammad Hayat Zaildar (Ex. MPA)
Muhammad Riaz Gondal (Cane Manager Phalia Sugar Mills)
Haji Nazeer Gondal (Tehsildar)
Ghulam Abbas Gondal (EDO)
Sajid Gondal (Civil judge)
Muhammad Nazir bhati (Session judge)
Tariq Wallait (DPO)
Ammar aslam Gondal (Captain)
Sohial (activist/Columnist)
Awais Turab Gondal
Ch Ahmed Bukhsh Zaildar
Some Prominent Persons
1.Muhammad Yousaf Tahir Janjua
He was renowned Social Activist who worked with with the following Organizations.
Strengthening Participatory Organization/SPO, Pakistan for Rural Development.
Aurat Foundation: Pakistan for woman empowerment and their political activities.
Awaz Forum: he worked as District Coordinator with Awaz District Forum foe social and political awareness specially for woman empowerment.
FAFEN Free and Fair Election Network as Trainer of Observers and initially also worked as Coordinator and observer as well.
He worked with the above said Organizations for more than two decades.
2. Tasawer Iqbal Janjua
He is also from Village Sahna and joined the legal profession in the year 2005 and started law practice as an Advocate in the year 2006. He is right now Serving as Special Prosecutor National Accountability Bureau, Lahore.
3. Asif Gondal
He is practicing law at Malakwal Tehsil Courts and Served the Bar and remained Secretary General of the Bar.
4. Asif Aziz Janjua
He is also from Sahna. He did his MBBS from Allama Iqbal Medical College, Lahore and right now he is in USA for Specialization.
5. Ahmad Sheraz Gondal
He is also from Sahna and Serving as Legal Advisor of Competitive Commission of Pakistan.
Sohawa dilowana is a very famous village of Distt. mandi bahuddin and near the distt. mandi bahudin & Distt. complex .
The people of this village is very hard working & hospitable More people out of the country UK, UAE, Greece, Italy, France, Spain, K.S.A etc.
This village which is house 600 more & live in people 10000 all house very beautiful & well lighted .
Sohawa Dilowana union council no 20 of distt. mandi bahuudin and this union in which 7 village 2 village is biggest (Jhulana) and (sohawa dilowana) union council is situated on sargodha road sohawa dilowana and other 5 small village
The battle notorious in early Victorian Britain and India for the conduct of Brigadier Pope’s brigade of light cavalry.
Battle: Chillianwallah.
War: Second Sikh War.
Date: 13th January 1849.
Place: In the Punjab in the North West of India.
The Battle of Chillianwallah seen from behind the British line. The foothills of the Himalayan Mountains are in the background.
Combatants: British troops and Indian troops of the Bengal Presidency against Sikhs of the Khalsa, the army of the Punjab.
Generals: General Sir Hugh Gough against the Sikh general, Shere Singh.
Size of the armies: 12,000 British and Bengalis with 66 guns against 35,000 Sikhs with 65 guns.
Uniforms, arms and equipment (this section is identical for each of the battles in the Sikh Wars): The two wars fought between 1845 and 1849 between the British and the Sikhs led to the annexation of the Punjab by the British East India Company and one of the most successful military co-operations between two races, stretching into a century of strife on the North West Frontier of British India, the Indian Mutiny, Egypt and finally the First and Second World Wars.
The British contingent comprised four light cavalry regiments (3rd, 9th, 14th and 16th Light Dragoons- the 9th and 16th being lancers) and twelve regiments of foot (9th, 10th, 24th, 29th, 31st, 32nd, 50th, 53rd, 60th, 61st, 62nd and 80th regiments).
The bulk of General Gough’s “Army of the Sutlej� in the First Sikh War and “Army of the Punjab� in the Second comprised regiments from the Bengal Presidency’s army: 9 regular cavalry regiments (the Governor-General’s Bodyguard and 1st, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th and 11th Bengal Light Cavalry), 13 regiments of irregular cavalry (2nd, 3rd, 4th, 7th to 9th and 11th to the 17th Bengal Irregular Cavalry), 48 regiments of foot (1st to 4th, 7th, 8th, 12th to 16th, 18th, 20th, 22nd, 24th to 27th, 29th to 33rd, 36th, 37th, 41st to 54th, 56th, 59th, 63rd and 68th to 73rd Bengal Native Infantry), horse artillery, field artillery, heavy artillery and sappers and miners.
Bengal Native Infantry blessing their regimental colours in a Hindu ceremony
The Bombay presidency contributed a force that marched in from Scinde in the West and gave considerable assistance at the Siege of Multan; the 19th Bombay Native Infantry gaining the title of the Multan Regiment for its services in the siege, a label still held by its Indian Army successor. A Bombay brigade under Brigadier Dundas joined General Gough’s army for the final battle of the Second Sikh War at Goojerat, where the two regiments of Scinde Horse, Bombay Irregular Cavalry, particularly distinguished themselves. The brigade comprised: 2 regiments of Scinde Horse, 3rd and 19th Bombay Native Infantry and Bombay horse artillery and field artillery.
Each of the three presidencies in addition to their native regiments possessed European infantry, of which the 1st Bengal (European) Infantry, 2nd Bengal (European) Light Infantry and 1st Bombay (European) Fusiliers took part in the Sikh Wars.
Map of the Battle of Chillianwallah
Other corps fought under the British flag, such as the Shekawati cavalry and infantry and the first two Gurkha regiments: the Nasiri Battalion (later 1st Gurkhas) and the Sirmoor Battalion (later 2nd Gurkhas).
General Gough commanded the British/Indian army at 6 of the 7 major battles (not Aliwal). An Irishman, Gough was immensely popular with his soldiers for whose welfare he was constantly solicitous. The troops admired Gough’s bravery, in action wearing a conspicuous white coat, which he called his “Battle Coat�, so that he might draw fire away from his soldiers.
Gough’s tactics were heavily criticised, even in the Indian press in letters written by his own officers. At the Battles of Moodkee, Sobraon and Chilllianwalah Gough launched headlong attacks considered to be ill-thought out by many of his contemporaries. Casualties were high and excited concern in Britain and India. His final battle, Goojerat, decisively won the war, cost few of his soldiers their lives and was considered a model of care and planning.
Every battle saw vigorous cavalry actions with HM 3rd King’s Own Light Dragoons and HM 16th Queen’s Royal Lancers particularly distinguishing themselves. The British light cavalry wore embroidered dark blue jackets and dark blue overall trousers, except the 16th who bore the sobriquet “the Scarlet Lancers� for their red jackets. The headgear of the two regiments of light dragoons was a shako with a white cover; the headgear of the lancers the traditional Polish tschapka.
HM regiments of foot wore red coats and blue trousers with shakos and white covers.
The Bengal and Bombay light cavalry regiments wore pale blue uniforms. The infantry of the presidency armies wore red coats and peakless black shakos.
The weapons for the cavalry were the lance for the lancer regiments and sword and carbine for all; the infantry were armed with the Brown Bess musket and bayonet.
Commands in the field were given by the cavalry trumpet and the infantry drum and bugle. In the initial battles the Sikh artillery outgunned Gough’s batteries. Even in these battles and in the later ones the Bengal and Bombay horse and field artillery were handled with great resource and were a major cause of Gough’s success.
Many of the more senior British officers had cut their military teeth in the Peninsular War and at the Battle of Waterloo: Gough, Hardinge, Havelock of the 14th Light Dragoons, Cureton and others. Many of the younger men would go on to fight in the Crimea and the Indian Mutiny.
The Sikhs of the Punjab looked to the sequence of Gurus for their spiritual inspiration and had established their independence fiercely resisting the Moghul Kings in Delhi and the Muslims of Afghanistan. The Sikhs were required by their religion to wear the five “Ks�, not to cut their hair or beard and to wear the highly characteristic turban, a length of cloth in which the hair is wrapped around the head.
The Maharajah of the Punjab, Ranjit Singh, whose death in 1839 ended the Sikh embargo on war with the British, established and built up the powerful Sikh Army, the “Khalsa�, over the twenty years of his reign. The core of the “Khalsa� was its body of infantry regiments, equipped and trained as European troops, wearing red jackets and blue trousers. The Sikh artillery was held in high esteem by both sides. The weakness in the Sikh army was its horse. The regular cavalry regiments never reached a standard comparable to the Sikh foot, while the main element of the mounted arm comprised clouds of irregular and ill-disciplined “Gorcharras�.
The traditional weapon of the Sikh warrior is the “Kirpan�, a curved sword kept razor sharp and one of the five “Ks� a baptised Sikh must wear. In battle, at the first opportunity, many of the Sikh foot abandoned their muskets and, joining their mounted comrades, engaged in hand to hand combat with sword and shield. Horrific cutting wounds, severing limbs and heads, were a frightful feature of the Sikh Wars in which neither side gave quarter to the enemy.
It had taken the towering personality of Ranjit Singh to control the turbulent “Khalsa� he had established. His descendants found the task beyond them and did much to provoke the outbreak of the First Sikh War in the hope that the Khalsa would be cut down to size by the armies of the British East India Company. The commanders of the Sikh armies in the field rarely took the initiative in battle, preferring to occupy a fortified position and wait for the British and Bengalis to attack. In the opening stages of the war there was correspondence between Lal Singh and the British officer, Major Nicholson, suggesting that the Sikhs were being betrayed by their commander.
Bengal Native Infantry
Pay in the Khalsa was good, twice the rate for sepoys in the Bengal Army, but it was haphazard, particularly after the death of Ranjit Singh. Khalsa administration was conducted by clerks writing in the Persian language. In one notorious mutiny over pay Sikh soldiers ran riot looking for anyone who could, or looked as if they could, speak Persian and putting them to the sword.
The seven battles of the war and the siege of the city of Multan were hard fought. Several of the battle fields were wide flat spaces broken by jungly scrub, from which the movement of large bodies of troops in scorching heat raised choking clouds of dust. As the fighting began the dust clouds intermingled with dense volumes of musket and cannon smoke. With the thunder of gunfire and horse hooves, the battle yells and cries of the injured, the battles of the Sikh Wars were indeed infernos.
Winner: Gough’s Army of the Punjab withdrew to its camp at Chilllianwalah, while the Sikhs fell back no further than the hills around Rasul. The battle was not won by either side, although it is said that the Sikh missed an opportunity to defeat the British outright.
British and Indian Regiments: British Regiments: HM 3rd King’s Own Light Dragoons, now the Queen’s Royal Hussars. * HM 9th Queen’s Royal Light Dragoons (Lancers), now the 9th/12th Royal Lancers. * HM 14th the King’s Light Dragoons, now the King’s Royal Hussars.* HM 24th Foot, later the South Wales Borderers and now the Royal Welsh Regiment.* HM 29th Foot, later the Worcestershire Regiment and now the Worcestershire and Sherwood Foresters Regiment. * HM 61st Foot, later the Wiltshire Regiment and now the Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Regiment. *
Cavalry: All the Bengal cavalry regiments that fought at Chillianwallah ceased to exist in 1857.
Infantry: 2nd Bengal (European) Light Infantry from 1861 102nd Light Infantry, from 1880 the Munster Fusiliers, disbanded in 1922.* 31st Bengal Native Infantry in1861 became the 2nd Bengal Light Infantry, in 1903 2nd (Queen’s Own) Rajput Light Infantry, in 1922 1st (Queen Victoria’s Own) Light Infantry Bn. 7th Rajput Regiment and in 1947 became 4th Bn. the Brigade of the Guards of the Indian Army.* 70th Bengal Native Infantry from 1861 11th Bengal Native Infantry, from 1903 11th Rajputs, from 1922 5th Battalion 7th Rajput Regiment and from 1947 5th Battalion, the Rajput Regiment of the Indian Army.* The remaining Bengal infantry regiments that fought at Chilllianwalah ceased to exist in 1857. * These regiments have or had Chillianwallah as a battle honour.
Order of Battle of the Army of the Punjab at the Battle of Chillianwallah: Commander-in-chief: Major General Sir Hugh Gough. Cavalry Division: Major General Sir Joseph Thackwell. 1st Brigade: Brigadier White; HM 3rd LD, 5th and 8th BLC. 2nd Brigade: Brigadier Pope; HM 9th Lancers, HM 14th LD, 1st and 6th BLC.
1st Infantry Division: General Gilbert. 1st Brigade: Brigadier Mountain; HM 29th Foot, 30th and 56th BNI. 2nd Brigade: Brigadier Godby; 2nd European LI, 31st and 70th BNI.
2nd Infantry Division: Brigadier Colin Campbell. 1st Brigade: Brigadier Pennycuick; HM 24th Foot, 25th and 45th BNI. 2nd Brigade: Brigadier Hoggan; HM 61st Foot, 6th, 36th and 46thBNI. 3rd Brigade: Brigadier Penny; 15th, 20th and 69th BNI.
6 horse batteries: Major General Brooke. 1st Brigade: Grant; Lane, Christie, Huish, 2nd Brigade: Brind; Warner, Duncan and Fordyce. 3 field batteries: Mowatt, Robertson and Dawes. 2 heavy batteries: Major Horsford, Captains Shakespeare and Ludlow.
Account: The Battle of Ramnagar and General Thackwell’s inconclusive expedition across the Chenab River had the effect of driving Shere Singh’s Sikh army north from the Chenab to take up a position against the River Jhelum. On 10th January 1849 the news came in to the British commander, Major General Gough, that Chattar Singh had finally captured the fortress of Attock in the extreme north west corner of the Punjab. It was now a matter of time before Chattar Singh’s force with its Afghan allies joined Shere Singh on the Jhelum to create an overwhelming Sikh army.
Maharajah Shere Singh, the Sikh commander at the Battle of Chillianwallah
The Governor General, Lord Dalhousie, urged General Gough to advance with the British and Bengal “Army of the Punjab� and attack Shere Singh before he could be reinforced.
The fall of the city of Multan to its British and Bombay Presidency besiegers released General Whish’s division to rejoin the Army of the Punjab, but Dalhousie and Gough took the view that they could not wait for its arrival.
On 13th January 1849 Gough marched up to within 8 miles of the Sikh army in its position along the Jhelum River, entrenched in a row of rural hamlets. The Army of the Punjab halted at the village of Chillianwallah and prepared to pitch camp while Gough carried out a reconnaissance.
The Sikh left flank lay on the village of Rasul in a line of small hills running nearly parallel with the Chenab River; their right lay against a thick jungle wall. Along the front of the Sikh line was a deep area of scrubby jungle.
The Sikh army comprised 25 infantry battalions, of which 10 had been raised since the end of the First Sikh War, 5,000 Gorcharra irregular cavalry and 65 guns, mostly of a light calibre. It was a feature of the Second Sikh War that the Sikhs had lost the predominance in size and numbers of guns they had possessed in the First War.
Sikh guns captured by the Anglo-Indian army at the Battle of Chillianwallah.
The pitching of camp by the Army of the Punjab was interrupted when a battery of Sikh artillery advanced and opened fire on the British and Bengalis, until they were forced to retire by the fire of Gough’s heavy artillery. The whole of the Sikh artillery into action and it became clear that the Sikhs had advanced well forward from their fortified position and that battle was imminent.
Canceling the order to pitch camp Gough formed up his regiments and prepared for battle, while his guns returned the Sikh fire. It is reported that Gough was particularly enraged when several cannon rounds came the way of his staff. The criticism is made that it would have been better to have acted with restraint and stuck to his plan to give battle the next day.
Gough drew up his infantry in 2 divisions of 2 brigades each: from the left; Campbell’s division of Hoggan’s and Pennycuick’s brigades, then Gilbert’s division of Mountain’s and Godby’s brigades. Penny’s brigade provided the infantry reserve. White’s cavalry brigade was posted on the left flank with Pope’s cavalry brigade on the right.
The dense scrub made movement and observation equally difficult and, as always in battles in the Indian plains, the marching of troops and horses and the firing of artillery and infantry weapons created heavy clouds of dust and powder smoke which added to the confusion. Horsford’s heavy guns fired upon the centre of the Sikh position aided by the field batteries positioned on the flanks of the army. After an hour of bombardment the infantry were ordered forward to attack.
In Campbell’s division on the left, Hoggan’s brigade pushed into the Sikh infantry line and drove it back. Pennycuick’s brigade drifted away to the right, struggling to keep order in the dense scrub. HM 24th Foot, an inexperienced regiment full of young soldiers, outstripped its two flanking BNI battalions and reached the Sikh lines, attacking and overrunning the Sikh positions, taking many guns. The Sikhs stormed back into the captured trenches in overwhelming numbers, and drove the disordered 24th Foot out in full retreat and with heavy casualties. The two BNI battalions attempted to hold the attack but were forced back, the whole brigade retreating in confusion to its start point. In the melee, Brigadier Pennycuick, his son, Lieutenant Colonel Brookes, the commanding officer of the 24th, and the two other field officers of the regiment were killed. The 25th and 45th BNI lost all but one of the five colours these two regiments carried. HM 24th Foot lost one colour while the other was rescued by a private soldier. Penny’s brigade advanced into the gap left by the retreat of Pennycuick’s and managed to hold the Sikh pursuit.
Hoggan’s brigade, under General Campbell’s leadership, pushed through the strip of jungle behind the Sikh lines, supported by the fire of horse and field batteries, coming out on the far side in the presence of a strong force of Sikh infantry, cavalry and guns. HM 61st Foot charged the body of cavalry and drove them away, while the Sikh infantry repulsed the 36th BNI on their right. HM 61st wheeled and attacked the Sikh infantry and two guns they had brought up. On the left of the brigade 46th BNI repulsed a Sikh cavalry charge. The whole brigade formed to its right and advanced down the Sikh line, rolling it up and capturing 13 guns until they joined up with Gilbert’s brigade. On the left flank White’s cavalry brigade found itself confronted by a large force of Sikh Gorcharra irregular horsemen. Captain Unett of the 3rd King’s Own Light Dragoons led his squadron into the charge, galloping as best they could through the broken jungle. General Thackwell, the commander of the cavalry division, ordered the 5th BLC up in support, but the regiment failed to follow Unett’s squadron into the dense mass of Gorcharras. Unett’s light dragoons cut their way through the Sikhs and turning charged back, dispersing the threat to the left flank. All the officers of the squadron were wounded.
Captain Unett leads the Grey Squadron of HM 3rd King’s Own Light Dragoons in the charge against the Sikh line at the Battle of Chillianwallah.
On the right flank Pope directed his brigade to advance in line of regiments; 2 squadrons of HM 9th Lancers on the right (the remaining 2 squadrons had been sent away towards the hills), 3 squadrons of 1st and 6th BLC in the centre and HM 14th King’s Light Dragoons to their left, with 10 guns of Huish’s and Christie’s troops of Bengal Horse Artillery on the extreme left of the brigade, retaining no unit as a supporting line. Pope led his brigade at the trot through the broken scrub without the precaution of skirmishers in advance. At the sight of a body of Sikh cavalry, the BLC squadrons in the centre of the line halted, forcing the British regiments on the flanks to stop in conformity. The Sikhs charged the BLC squadrons which turned about and made off. The two British regiments did the same, all attempts by the officers to halt their soldiers being to no avail.
The precipitous withdrawal of the cavalry regiments left the brigade horse artillery battery unprotected and in the confusion of limbering up, the battery was overrun by the Sikh cavalry who captured two guns. Eventually two other guns came into action and were sufficient to drive the Sikh cavalry back.
The 9th Queen’s Royal Lancers, one of the regiments of Pope’s Brigade at the Battle of Chillianwallah
The retreating cavalrymen from Pope’s brigade found their way back to the camp at Chillianwallah, where they were rounded up by officers of the non-combatant services, including a padre.
The disappearance of the cavalry left Godby’s infantry brigade exposed. The 70th BNI pulled back its right wing to provide cover and after some hard fighting the division was able to resume its advance, Mountain’s brigade taking a Sikh battery.
The battle ended with darkness. The Sikh army left the field, withdrawing into the hills around Rasul between their position and the Jhelum River. Gough’s army withdrew to the village of Chilllianwalah, leaving a number of guns on the field, but ensuring they were spiked. Heavy rain set in the next day preventing any further manoeuvre by either side.
Casualties: From Pennycuick’s brigade; HM 24th Foot suffered 518 casualties (14 officers and 241 men killed and 10 officers and 266 men wounded), probably out of 1,000 effectives, 25th BNI suffered 211 casualties and 45th BNI suffered 79 casualties. From Unett’s squadron of HM 3rd King’s Own Light Dragoons of 106 men, only 48 were in the saddle at the end of the battle. Brigadier Pope was mortally wounded in the battle. The 14th King’s Light Dragoons had one officer killed, a son of Brigadier Cureton, himself killed at the Battle of Ramnagar.
One of the casualties was the Subadar-Major of the 8th Bengal Light Cavalry, a man aged 78 with over 60 years service in the Bengal Army.
Follow-up: General Gough, with perhaps uncharacteristic restraint, resisted all urgings to attack the army of Shere Singh in his new position, waiting until shortage of supplies forced the Sikh army to move into more fertile and open country. Reinforcements reached Shere Singh from Attock, but so did reinforcements for the Army of the Punjab from Multan and in time for the finale of the war at the Battle of Goojerat.
Regimental anecdotes and traditions: • The British press and public were horrified by the losses and the apparent incompetence of the leadership at the Battle of Chillianwallah. The Government decided that Gough was to be replaced as commander-in-chief by the elderly veteran Lord Napier, but the war ended with the successful Battle of Gujerat before Napier reached India. • The cause of the collapse of Pope’s cavalry brigade was attributed to Pope’s age and inexperience. He was elderly and so ill that he had to be helped to mount and had never commanded more than a squadron in the field. • Chilllianwalah was an iconic battle for the British cavalry for widely differing reasons. Unett’s charge with his squadron of the 3rd King’s Own Light Dragoons on the left flank was held up as a paragon. The conduct of Pope’s brigade on the right flank became notorious. It is said the slur cast on the competence and courage of the British light cavalry continued to reverberate into the Crimean War and may have contributed to the disastrous Charge of the Light Brigade. Captain Nolan, who played such a key part in committing the Light Brigade at the Battle of Balaclava, was serving in India with the 15th Hussars during the Sikh Wars and was appalled by the incompetent handling of Pope’s cavalry brigade at Chilllianwalah. • An extraordinary incident took place in 1850 when Sir Charles Napier reviewed the 3rd and 14th Light Dragoons and congratulated them on their performance in the Sikh Wars. A trumpeter of the 14th rode forward and announced to Napier “Our colonel is a coward,� referring to the commanding officer, Lieutenant Colonel King. Soon afterwards King shot himself. At the point during the Battle of Chilllianwalah when Pope’s cavalry brigade began to disintegrate King was attempting to persuade Pope to charge the Sikh cavalry. • Captain Unett led the “Greys� squadron of HM 3rd King’s Own Light Dragoons at the Battle of Chilliawallah. On the regiment’s return to England, Captain Unett and Lieutenant Stisted, both wounded in the battle, were presented to Queen Victoria to be congratulated on their conduct. • HM 3rd King’s Own Light Dragoons: It is hard not to rhapsodise over the conduct of the “Galloping 3rd� in the Sikh Wars. The regiment charged several times at each of the Battles of Moodkee, Ferozeshah, Sobraon, Ramnagar, Chilllianwalah and Goojerat. In many instances the charges were delivered when regiments of Bengal Light Cavalry baulked at clashing with the feared Sikhs, leaving the 3rd to attack unsupported and against overwhelming odds, the officers and soldiers knowing the Sikhs gave no quarter and inflicted appalling wounds with their razor sharp kirpans. • Gough on hearing of the conduct of the padre in halting and calming the retreating cavalrymen wanted to promote him bishop, but was told that he did not have the authority to make promotions in the church.
Medals and decorations: British and Indian soldiers who took part in the Second Sikh War received the silver medal entitled “Punjab Campaign, 1848-9�. Clasps were issued for the battles (or in the case of Mooltan the siege) which were described as: “Mooltan�, “Chilllianwalah�, and “Goojerat�. Description of the medal: Obverse.-Crowned head of Queen Victoria. Legend: “Victoria Regina.� Reverse.-The Sikh army laying down its arms before Sir W.R. Gilbert and his troops near Rawal Pindi. Inscription “To the Army of the Punjab.� In exergue “MDCCCXLIX.� Mounting.-Silver scroll bar and swivel. Ribbon.-Dark blue with two thin yellow stripes, 1 ¼ inch wide.
References: • History of the British Army by Fortescue. • History of British Cavalry by the Marquis of Angelsey.
Chillanwallah, Chillanwallah! Where our brothers fought and bled, O thy name is natural music And a dirge above the dead! Though we have not been defeated, Though we can’t be overcome, Still, whene’er thou art repeated, I would fain that grief were dumb.
Chillianwallah, Chillianwallah! ‘Tis a name so sad and strange, Like a breeze through midnight harpstrings Ringing many a mournful change; But the wildness and the sorrow Have a meaning of their own – Oh, whereof no glad to-morrow Can relieve the dismal tone!
Chillianwallah, Chillianwallah! ‘Tis a village dark and low, By the bloody Jhelum river Bridged by the foreboding foe; And across the wintry water He is ready to retreat, When the carnage and the slaughter Shall have paid for his defeat.
Chillianwallah, Chillianwallah! ‘Tis a wild and dreary plain, Strewn with plots of thickest jungle, Matted with the gory stain. There the murder-mouthed artillery, In the deadly ambuscade, Wrought the thunder of its treachery On the skeleton brigade.
Chillianwallah, Chillianwallah! When the night set in with rain, Came the savage plundering devils To their work among the slain; And the wounded and the dying In cold blood did share the doom Of their comrades round them lying, Stiff in the dead skyless gloom.
Chillianwallah, Chillianwallah! Thou wilt be a doleful chord, And a mystic note of mourning That will need no chiming word; And that heart will leap with anguish Who may understand thee best; But the hopes of all will languish Till thy memory is at rest.
Mandi Bahauddin is the leading town of district. The sacred shrine of Jagat Guru Nanak Ji is in village Jai Sukh Wala which is located on the main road going from Mandi-Bahauddin to Marala. The Jai Sukh wala is within the jurisdiction of P.S. & Tehsil Mandi-Bahauddin.eJagat Guru Ji arrived in this village from Dinga at a time when an annoyed mystic wanted to punish the villagers with his curse. Guru Ji prevailed upon him to abandon it and taught him that the right to punish lies in the domain of God. Bhai Bhag, the grandson of this mystic, led a simple and fair life. His grave is displaying its beauty in the cool shade of a tree on the other side of the tank of Gurdwara.
During the reign of Sher-e-Punjab Maharaja Ranjit Singh a beautiful 3-storeyed building of Gurdwara Sahib was constructed. Two elegant tanks were built on its left hand side. One of the tanks was for women. There is a very big inn to provide accommodation to sangats. About 100 housings are settled in it. Some people have divided the building among themselves. A police official is occupying the Prakashasthan (Recitation Room), who does not let any one to visit.
Maharaja Ranjit Singh had bestowed an estate with an annual income of 5 thousand and 40 squares of agricultural land. Fairs used to be held on Visakhi, Chaiter and Bhadun.
Gurudwara Bhai Bannu at Mangat, Distt Mandi Bahauddin
Mangat is a town of Tehsil Phalia (district Mandi Bahauddin). This shrine is located on the Mandi Bahauddin-Gujrat road at a distance of 12 kilometers from Mandi Bahauddin railway station. The residence of Bhai Bannu Ji, a devotee of Sat Gur Arjun Dev Ji, was at this place. “Bhai Bannu wall beerr (volume) of Granth Sahib” was kept here in the book form. (see Guru Granth Sahib).
At the side of the tank, a beautiful Gurdwara was built during Sikh rule by the royal command of Maharaja Ranjit Singh. A large endowment of land was made but the priests got it transferred in their names. This is a splendid darbar. The tank is getting filled with dust. There is now a vegetable market outside the Gurdwara. The floral frescoes have been painted on the walls
Historical, Cultural, Agricultural and Education Background
Early history
District Mandi Bahauddin takes its name from the town headquarters. In 1506 A. D. a Gondal Jat Chief Bahauddin established a settlement namely Pindi Bahauddin, after his migration from Pindi Shah Jahanian to this area.
During British era in Sub-Continent
In the British rule in 1916 Pindi bahauddin Railway station was setup. It was a time when the British were Establishing and introducing modern and essential public use Equipments in their best Interest. Above mentioned Railway System was introduced and laid down to defend their Empire from the North. So it was called North Western Railway (NWR). After the first world war the British gave and introduced new settlements in Sub-continent. This Region called “Gondal Bar” some of its land lying Barren was reconstructed and a great Irrigation plan was surveyed and dug out by manual work. Main route of the canal Lower Jhelum was dug. Water was released in 1902 in its main route. Chak Bandi was made by Sir Malcum Heley and approximately 51 Chaks were settled and notified. In these 51 Chaks , the land was awarded to the people who worked for British Empire. The town grew up in early 20th century near the ancient village [Chak No. 51], where Sikh, Hindu and Muslim businessmen and land owners came to settle. The twon was named Mandi Bahauddin after establishment of grain market in the area. Chak 51 became the center of this newly established town. The map of this Chak was made by John Alam. A famous grain market was setup in this Chak. After this the Chak No. 51 was called Mandi-Bahauddin. In 1920 this name was notified. In 1924 Pindi-Bahauddin Railway station was notified the above mentioned name. In 1937 when Mandi-Bahauddin was town, it was given the status of a town committee. In 1941 it was given the status of a Muncipal Committee. In the Master plan of reconstructing this town, in 1923 all the streets and roads were laid straight and wide. In 1946 nine gates and the wall surrounding this town was completed due to reites.
After independence
After the partition when the Sikhs and the Hindus have migrated to India, bulk of muslim population migrated and settled here. In 1960 this city was given the status of Sub-Division. In 1963, the Rasul Barrage and Rasul-Qadirabad link canal project under Indus Basin irrigation project started. The Project was managed by WAPDA, and a large colony for government employees and foreign contractors was constructed a few kilometers from Mandi Bahauddin. This projected was completed in 1968 by Engineer Riazur Rahman Shariff as the Project Director. This project brought lime light to Mandi Bahauddin and helped the city grow commercially. In 1993 by its own name Mian Manzoor Ahmed Vato Chief minister Punjab announced and notified this city as a District. H.Q.
The district forms central portion of the Chaj Doab lying between Jhelum and Chenab rivers. Jatts consisting of sub-castes Gondal, Warraich, Tarar, Ranjha and Sahi dominate Mandi Bahauddin, consisting of three tehsils Mandi Bahauddin, Phalia and Malikwal. However, Gujjars and Mohajirs are also prominent in local politics. Agriculture is the major profession in the district. Formerly a tehsil of Gujrat district, Mandi Bahauddin district consists of two national and five provincial assembly seats The total area of Mandi Bahauddin is 2,673 sq kilometres. The total number of male voters in Mandi Bahauddin is 370,528 and female voters 278,521. The annual population growth rate of the district is 1.87 per cent and the urban ratio is 15.2 per cent. Around 99.1 per cent of the total population of Mandi Bahauddin are Muslims, 0.6 per cent Christians and 0.2 per cent Ahmadis. The main languages of the district are: Punjabi 97 per cent; Urdu 2.5 per cent; Pushto 0.5 per cent; Seraiki 0.5 per cen. Main occupations of the district include agriculture workers 40.7 per cent; elementary occupations 40 per cent; service workers 6.5 per cent, crafts and related trade 4.2 per cent; professionals 3.1 per cent and machine operators 2.4 per cent.
Historical Importance
More than 150 lakh populated city has its own great importance. In the Western side of Mandi-Bahauddin at the place of Khiwa , the famous and historical war “Battle of the Hydaspes River” between Raja Porus and Alexander The great , a Greece Invader have been fought.
A painting by Charles Le Brun depicting Alexander and Porus during the Battle of the Hydaspes
Alexander’s crossing of the Hydaspes river, courtesy of The Department of History, United States Military Academy
At the first day of this war, Harry Roy the son of Raja Porus was killed at 11 o-clock. At the same day, the horse (Bucephalus) of Alexander, The great, was dead. After the death of his son, Raja Porus (initially stationed at Nazampur) came with Elephants and fought against Alexander the great. This war was on the Southern Bank of the River Jhelum. As a result of this battle, Alexander founded two cities, Nicaea (Victory) at the site of modern day Jalapur and Bucephala at the site (possibly) of Bhera in Pakistan.Bucephalus was the name of the horse that Alexander rode on, having died either during battle or right afterwards of weariness and old age.Wazir Abad Cuttlery industry has its own pride to sharpen and prepare the swords of this great Invader.
At a few distance from here, second Sikh war in 1849 in the reigeon of Lord Guff, the British and the Khalsa Sikh Army fought at the place of Chillianwala.
A grave yard at Rakh Minar near Chillianwala has its own Ancient Mamorandom where many British Army soldiers and officers have been buried and lie there.
Tehsil headquarters towns of Phalia and Malikwal are at the distance of 22.5 and 28.5 kilometers from Mandi Bahauddin, respectively. The shape of the district is like a parallelogram. It is bounded on the north by river Jhelum (which separates it from Jehlam district); on the west by Sargodha district; on the south by river Chenab (which separates it from the Gujranwala and Hafizabad districts); and on the east by Gujrat district. Total area of the district is 2,673 square kilometers. The district comprises of three tehsils, namely, Mandi Bahauddin, Phalia and Malikwal.
Originally Mandi Bahauddin was a village called as Chak number 51. It started expanding after the completion of Rasul Hydroelectric Power Station on Upper Jhelum Canal in 1901. Today, Mandi Bahauddin is an over crowded market town famous for its agricultural markets (Grain Market, Vegetable Market and Livestock Market) and local industry of making colourful bed legs. The name Mandi Bahauddin originates from two sources: Mandi (market) was prefixed because it was a flourishing grain market and Bahauddin was borrowed from nearby old village Pindi Bahauddin, which has now become part of the town. After the partition, thousands of refugees from India rehabilitated on the evacuee property of Sikh and Hindu landlords. Lately, after the construction of Rasul Barrage, people from the belt along southern edge of Salt Range up to Pind Dadan Khan and other areas across the River Jhelum came settling in the town. Due to migrations and increase in business activities, the town has expanded in all directions. The result is that more than half of the population is living outside municipal limits without any civic amenities. More unplanned localities and kachi abadies are coming up everyday. The tendency to move from rural areas to urban centres is on the increase. People from adjoining villages come to exchange their agricultural products like grain, chickens and Ghee with matchboxes and other commodity items and see the ‘bright lights’ in this dusty town. Donkey carts to heavy vehicles are plying indiscriminately on any road they feel like. The town roads have bumps, wobbles and unauthorized speed breakers (sleeping policemen). The right of way has been shrunk due to encroachments and fast growing traffic. Most cross-junctions like Hospital Chowk, Gurha Chowk, Sut Sire Chowk, College Chowk and two railway crossings are always busy and there are no traffic signals. The sugar mills constructed ‘farm to mill’ road that can be used as a bypass for the traffic not concerned with the city. But it is not being utilized because there are no arrangements to divert the heavy traffic on to the 20 feet wide metallic road. Mixture of slow and fast moving traffic, lack of footpaths, parking facilities, presence of bus and wagon terminals and many tonga stands has aggravated the situation in this agricultural market town. It is located away from Grand Trunk road but well linked with Pind Dadan Khan, Jhelum, Kharian, Lalamusa, Gujrat, Gujranwala and Sargodha with railways and good road network. The small town having gridiron pattern (all roads and streets meeting at right angle) has developed haphazardly into an overcrowded city. Rehries and temporary shops have intruded all the main bazaars. The rehriwallas have a strong union. They thwart any effort by municipal authorities or district administration to remove the encroachments. The result is that what to talk of vehicles even the pedestrians cannot pass through the bazaars. Dual carriage way was introduced from Sadar Darwaza – gateway built in 1930 – to municipal committee office but the encroachers have also occupied this bifurcation. The right of way on roads going out of the town has also been reduced due to unchecked encroachments and linear development along the roads. Number of shopping centres has come up in the residential areas. Beside sugar mills, local shaped industrial concerns are spread in and brick kilns around the town. Bed legs and colourful furniture are famous products of the town. Commercial and industrial activities in the residential areas have put a great pressure on the demand of already deficient houses. Grain Market is located in the centre of the town. Goods’ Forwarding Agencies and lack of amenities have made miserable the lives of merchants and customers of the Market. Large number of goods’ trucks is always standing in the 4.3 acres of market area, which adversely affect the business. The surrounding area of town’s landmark and highest building, majestic Jamia Mosque built by the corner of Grain Market is also noisy and bustling with commercial activities of ‘Lohar’ bazaar. Even worst is the condition of Vegetable Market. There was time when much of what is today Sabzi Mandi was tranquil and pollution free market consisting of few shops. People could go to the market and buy some of the freshest fruit, vegetables and some of the choicest of spices, nuts, meat and chicken. But now it is very difficult to move in and out of this largest perishable’s market in the area because there is no regular sweeping or lifting of garbage and all the free space has been occupied by vendors who buy any one item in the morning and sit on ground to sell inside and around Sabzi Mandi. Well chalking is another problem of the town. Political, religious, commercial slogans and different advertisements can be seen all over the town. Political slogans respecting one candidate who contested last elections, every time from a different platform can still be found written on the walls of the town. Besides going to nearby Rasul Barrage for eating fish Kabab, there are no recreational or cultural facilities and no healthy activities Mandi Bahauddin that was made district headquarters in 1993. This has far eaching effects on the youth of the town. They are seen playing cards on roadsides or snooker in corners of every street. Large numbers of video shops have come up and are doing good business. Video shops rent TV, VCR and as much as five films at a time even in the period when multi channel satellite has become a household item. There are two old cinema houses with 803 seating capacity. Degree colleges (one for boys and one for girls) are doing good jobs but given the resources of the municipal educational institutions, they are not enough for the youth of the area. A Lalamusa-Sargodha-Khanewal railway is a profitable rout. At present only one Peshawar-Karachi train – Chenab Express – runs on this route. It could be useful to introduce at least one more Peshawar-Karachi express train for passengers, agricultural products produced in the area and a few of the minerals from Salt Range. This track is linked with Khewara Salt mines as well. Moreover, this track is strategically important in case of any threat to Peshawar-Lahore-Karachi main railway track. In that case, Lalamusa-Sargodha-Khanewal rail route could take all the rail traffic. The “Mandi Bahauddin Development Plan 1986-2012″ has not even come on the tables of people responsible for is execution. But a possible nice start for the town may be to declare at least two bazaars (Sadar Bazaar and Committee Bazaar) totally pedestrian, vehicular traffic and animal transport contained out. Any body listening please!
PhD Corporate Social Responsibility and Trade Unions
Middlesex University Business School, UK
Sep. 2007 – Sep. 2011
MA Corporate Social Responsibility
Business School, The University of Nottingham, UK
Sep. 2004 – Sep. 2005
¨MScEconomics
Quaid-e-Azam University, Islamabad, Pakistan.Jan. 1988 to Mar. 1990
¨BAEconomics, IslamicStudies and Persian
The University of Punjab, Lahore, PakistanSep. 1985 to Sep. 1987
Work Experience
Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI), Islamabad, Pakistan
¨ConsultantApril 2006 to Aug. 2007
¨Quaid-e-Azam University, Islamabad
VisitingLecturerFrom Jun. 2006 June 2007
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Geneva, Switzerland
¨ConsultantNov. 2005 to Mar. 2006
Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI), Islamabad, Pakistan
¨Coordinator AdvocacyMay 2003 to Aug. 2004
Children’s Resources International (CRI), Karachi
¨ Program ManagerSep. 2002 to Sep 2003
Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI), Islamabad, Pakistan.
¨Head Survey Research UnitMarch 2001 to Aug. 2002
Research AssociateMar. 1998 to Feb. 2001
Research Assistant Feb. 1996 to Feb. 1998
Visiting Fellow at the Institute of DevelopmentStudies (IDS) at the University of Sussex, Brighton, UKMay 26 to Aug. 2, 2000
¨Fauji Foundation College, Rawalpindi
Lecturer in EconomicsAug. 1991 to Feb. 1996
Honorary Assignment
¨LeadAuthor, International Assessment of Agricultural Science and Technology forDevelopment (IAASTD) on Chapter 3 of Central and West Asia and North Africa (CWANA) Sub Global AssessmentApril 2006 to Jan. 2008
Projects conductedduringmystay at SDPI
M & E Related
I. “Appraisal of evaluation of the World Bank fundedRuralWaterSupply & Sanitation Programme”, forThe World Bank, Washington D.C.
II. “Benchmark and annualparticipatorymonitoring and evaluation Project Pakistan” for Human DevelopmentFoundation of North America (HDFNA).
This was a twoyearprojectwhereweworkedwiththecommunities, didbenchmarking and based on theseestimates, developedperformanceindicators, conducted formal surveys, and impactevaluation of health, education, and creditprogramme of HDF
Genderrelated
III. “Outsourcing of manufacturing to households: SubcontractedHome-BasedWorkbywomen and children” forUNICEF and Innocenti research Centre, Florence, Italy.
IV. “Qualitative Assessment of Poverty: Genderbasednon-economicdimensions of poverty”, forThe World Bank, Washington D.C.
XI. Socio-economicimpactassessment of Afghanrefugeeswith a specialfocus to women, on therefugeehostingareas”, forThe United Nations High Commission forrefugees.
General
XI. Qualitative assessment of Regional TechnicalAssistance (RETA) of theForestrySector Project of TheAsianDevelopment Bank (ADB).
II. “Trade and Environmental Impacts of Textiles and LeatherManufacturing in Pakistan”, for IDRC, Canada.
III. “A comparativeinstitutionalanalysis of Govt., NGO and Private Schools in Pakistan” forTheAsiaFoundation.
IV. “Politicaleconomy of thegovernmentschoolingsystem in rural Pakistan” forThe London School of Economics (LSE).
VI. “Global standards and localupgradation: A casestudy of surgicalinstrument and soccer ball manufacturers of Sialkot”,forThe Institute of DevelopmentStudies, (IDS), The University of Sussex, The United Kingdom.
VII. 7-Up Project: a comparativestudy of thecompetitionpolicy and legislation in sevendevelopingcountries ofthecommonwealth, forThe Department for International Development (DFID), The UK.
VIII. Representation in DecentralizedGovernance: Countrystudy of Pakistan, UNDP Governance Programme.
ConsultancyWork
Providedconsultancyservices to various international organizationsincludingThe World Bank, UNICEF, WFP, UNEP, ILO and did PRA and developedvillage NRM Plans forConcern World Wide Afghanistan and German Agro Action in TakharProvince Afghanistan.
Publications
♦Khan, S. R. and Kazmi, S. (2008). “Valuechains in the informal sector: incomeshares of home-basedsub-contractedworkers in Pakistan”, International Review of Applied Economics, Vo. 2, No. 1, forthcoming
♦Khan, S. R., Kazmi, S. and Rifaqat, Z. (2007). “Harnessing social capital for rural development”, Palgrave MacMillan, New York
♦Khan, S. R., Khattak, S. G. and Kazmi, S. (2005). “Hazardous home based sub-contracted work: a study of multiple tiered exploitation”, Oxford University Press, Karachi, Pakistan.
¨Khan S. R., Kazmi, S. and Latif, Z. (2005). “A comparative institutional analysis of government, NGO and private rural primary schooling in Pakistan”, The European Journal of Development Research, Vol. 17, No. 2, pp. 199-223
♦Kazmi, S. (2005) “Corporate Social Responsibility in Pakistan: The case of Pakistan”, Trade Insight, Vol. 1, No. 1, pp. 9-10
♦Khan S. R., Kazmi, S and Ahmad, Z. (2002). “Structural adjustment and food security in Pakistan: an aggregate analysis,” Eds. Shiva, V. and Gitanjali Bedi, Sustainable Agriculture and Food Security: The Impact of Globalisation, SAGE Publisher, New Delhi.
♦Khan S. R. et al. (2002). “Environmental impacts and mitigation costs: the case of Pakistan’s cloth and leather exports, ed. Khan, S. R., Trade and Environment: Difficult Policy Choices at the Interface, ZED Publishers, London
♦Khan S. R. and Kazmi, S. (1998). “Structural adjustment and health in Pakistan,” The Lahore Journal of Economics, Vol. 3, No. 2, Lahore
♦Khan S. R. et. al. (1998). “Latent demand and social mobilization as determinants of rural water supply scheme sustainability: a comparative analysis,” SDPI Monograph Series # 3, SDPI, Islamabad, Pakistan
Important Conferences/Seminars attended
¨Attended Southern Seminar on the WTO Millennium Round Oct. 18 – 22, 1999, Arusha, Tanzania organized by MS Danish Association for Development, HIVOS The Netherlands, KEPPA, Finland and CUTS, India.
¨The launch meeting of the Global Development Network “Bridging the Gap between Knowledge and Policy” at Bonn, Germany from Dec. 5 – 8, 1999.
¨Task Team Meetings of Advocacy and Statistical Indicators of Poverty at The World Bank Headquarter, Washington D.C., from May 21-23, 2001.
¨The second Prep-Com for the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) at the United Nations Headquarters, New York from Jan. 27 to Feb 8, 2002.
¨5th Ministerial Meeting of the World Trade Organization (WTO) at Cancun, Quintana Roo, Mexico from Sep. 10-14, 2003
¨UNCTAD XI held at Sao Paulo, Brazil, from June 11 – 19, 2004
TRAININGS
¨Attended a Course on “Economic Growth and Poverty Reduction: Theory, Evidence and Implications for South Asia” at Katmandu, Nepal from Sep. 20 – Oct. 1, 1999, organized by the World Bank Institute, SAARC and Nepal Planning Commission.
¨Attended a training course on “Environmental and Natural Resource Economics” at BRAC Centre, Dhaka, Bangladesh from April 29 – May 16, 2002, jointly organized by the World Bank Institute, South Asian Network for Development and Environmental Economics (SANDEE) and Bangladesh Environment, Economics and Poverty Programme (BEEPP).
COMPUTER SKILLS
Programming:COBOL
Operating Systems:MS DOS, Windows 3.1, 95 and 98, 2000
Word Processing:Word Perfect, MS Office including MSWord
¨Farmers Rights and Advocacy Network (FRANK) for South Asia
¨International Network of Civil Society Organizations on Competition (INCSOC)
¨Member of the Advocacy & Statistical indicators of Poverty Task team of the OECD-PARIS21
¨President Staff/Student Consultative Committee of ICCSR, at the University of Nottingham Business School from Sep. 2004-2005
Interests: Traveling, Reading Books
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