In addition, only the fact that Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was assassinated promoted this view; despite the bombing of the Golden Temple by the Indian army, many Sikhs were murdered. As Western countries form specific images of specific populations and their cultures when opposed to foreign beliefs, whenever there is a crisis in these groups that require international attention, the West side Wondering whether countries should intervene or have the right to intervene, 685: 2001).
The power of Sikhs Karsa began in the 17th century when it was a fierce battle with the Mughal dynasty. When Guru Gobind Singh dispatched General Sikh Banda Singh Bahadur to fight against those who committed atrocities against Indian Mughal rulers and Pir Buddhu Shah, the establishment of the Sikh Empire began. Banda Singh pushed his troops to Sirhind, the main city of Muslim Muslims, and punished all the criminals according to Guru's instructions. Immediately after Sirhind 's invasion, resting in his room after Rehras prayed for Guru Gindind Singh, it was stabbed by the Pathan assassin hired by Mughals. Gobind Singh killed an attacker with a sword. A European surgeon sutured the wounds of the master, but after a few days the guru was violently destroyed, causing massive bleeding, which led to the death of Gobind Singh, the wound opened again.
In 1606, the order that Jahangir tortures and executes Guru Ajun was thought by scholars as a turning point in the history of Sikhism. Faith and loved ones. Since then Sikhs have regarded the violence against the Mughal empire as a rebellion of religious persecution and the only practical form of Islamic teaching. The increase in religious violence between Sikhs and Muslims resulted in officially taking office in 1699 by Mr. Gobind Singh, a ten Sikh singer, in the Military Brotherhood.
On April 29, 1986, Akal Takht 's separatist Sikh assembly announced the establishment of an independent state in Harstan. After these incidents, 10 years of violence and conflict occurred in Punjab province, after which the area returned to normal state. From the late 1980s to the early 1990s, the fierce national fighting power of Punjab rose sharply. During the rebellion, Sikhs extremists collided with police and Hindu - Nilankari factions. The radical activity of Khalistani killed 32 Hindu bus passengers near Lalru in 1987 and listed several attacks, including killing 80 train passengers in Ludhiana in 1991 did.