Mohkam Singh

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Bhai

Mohkam Singh

Ji
ਮੋਹਕਮ ਸਿੰਘ
Mohkam Singh (Panj Pyare).png
Mohkam Singh, one of the inaugural/original Panj Pyare, depicted in an old Sikh fresco from inside an abandoned Sikh samadhi located in Kot Fateh Khan, Attock, Punjab, Pakistan
Panj Pyare
In office
1699–1708
Personal
Born
Mohkam Chand Chhimba

1663
Dwarka (present-day Gujarat, India)
Died7 December 1704 or 1705 (aged 43 or 44)
Chamkaur, Punjab, India
Cause of deathKilled in action
ReligionSikhism
Parents
  • Tirath Chand (father)
  • Devi Bai (mother)
Known forMember of the original, inaugural Panj Pyare; was the second or fourth to answer the call by the Guru for a head
OccupationTailor, printer of cloth
InstituteKhalsa

Mohkam Singh (Punjabi: ਮੋਹਕਮ ਸਿੰਘ (Gurmukhi); 6 June 1663 – 7 December 1704 or 1705), born Mohkam Chand (his given name is also transliterated as Muhkam or Mohkhum), one of the Panj Pyare or the Five Beloved of honoured memory in the Sikh tradition, was the son of Tirath Chandi and Devi Bai, from Bet Dwarka (modern-day Gujarat, India). He was born into the Chhimba caste.

In about the year 1685, he came to Anandpur, then the seat of Guru Gobind Singh. He practised martial arts and took part in Sikhs battles with the surrounding hill chiefs and imperial troops. He was one of the five who offered their heads in response to Guru Gobind Singh's call on the Baisakhi day of 1699 and earned the appellation of Panj Pyare. Initiated into the order of the Khalsa, Mohkam Chand received the common surname of Singh and became Mohkam Singh. Bhai Mohkam Singh died in the battle of Chamkaur on 7 December 1704 or 1705 with Bhai Himmat Singh and Bhai Sahib Singh.

In older sources, he was the second position of the original Panj Pyare. However, later sources moved him down to fourth in-position and replaced the second position with Dharam Singh.[1]

References

  1. ^ Fenech, Louis E. (2021). The Cherished Five in Sikh History. Oxford University Press. p. 45. ISBN 978-0-19-753284-3.
  • Kuir Singh, Gurbilas Patshahi 10. Patiala, 1968
  • Chhibbar, Kesar Singh, Bansavalinama Dasan Patshahian Kd. Chandigarh, 1972
  • Gian Singh, Giani, Sri Guru Panth Prakash. Patiala, 1970