Remembering the bravery and sacrifice of #ChaarSahibzaade and #BandaSinghBahadur Watch the inspiring animated film "Chaar Sahibzaade: Rise of Banda Singh Bahadur" and share with your friends and family! #SikhHistory #FaithAndCourage
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.
The movie showcases the values of courage, sacrifice, and loyalty, highlighting the significance of the Chaar Sahibzade and Banda Singh Bahadur in Sikh history. The animation and storytelling aim to bring this important historical narrative to a wider audience, particularly the younger generation. chaar sahibzaade: rise of banda singh bahadur
Wazir Khan swung his scimitar. Banda Singh parried. The two men—the Nawab who had killed children, and the hermit who had become a warrior—stood face to face.
The battle began at Chappar Chiri on a hot May morning. The Mughal elephants, armored and drunk, charged the Sikh lines. Men were crushed under their feet. For a moment, the Sikhs faltered. Banda Singh saw a young boy, barely older than Guru Gobind Singh’s martyred sons, drop his sword and run. He stood there for a long time, his head bowed
The Nawab fell. The Mughal army collapsed like a house of cards.
But as the sun set over Delhi, the Mughals saw a strange sight. From the hills of Punjab, a new flame had been lit. The Sahibzaade were dead. Banda Singh was dead. But the Khalsa—the community of the pure—had been baptized in fire. They had learned that a saint without a sword is a coward, and a sword without a saint is a tyrant. Wazir Khan swung his scimitar
Lachhman Dev fell at his feet. “I sought moksha , Master. But I have seen what Wazir Khan did to your children. What use is liberation when tyranny dances on the graves of innocence?”
And so, the story of Banda Singh Bahadur is not an end. It is the beginning of the long, bloody, glorious dawn of the Sikh Empire—a dawn paid for by the blood of the four princes and the hermit who became their thunderbolt.
The movie revolves around the life of Banda Singh Bahadur, a devoted Sikh warrior who played a pivotal role in the Sikh history. The film depicts his journey from being a loyal follower of Guru Gobind Singh Ji to becoming a fearless leader who fought against the Mughal Empire.