Book explores Gurmeet Ram Rahim’s exploits, his downfall
Team Udayavani, Apr 25, 2018, 3:44 PM IST
New Delhi: A new book tells the story of Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh Insaan, who hailed from a farming family and went on to become the head of a quasi-religious sect before law caught up with him and put him in jail.
Once known for his flamboyant lifestyle, revered as a god by lakhs of followers, and someone with powerful political connections, Gurmeet is now known as ‘qaidi’ (prisoner) number 1997 by his fellow inmates in Rohtak jail, writes Anurag Tripathi in “Dera Sacha Sauda and Gurmeet Ram Rahim: A Decade-long Investigation”.
The book stems from Tripathi’s journalistic investigation that began in 2007 into the reported criminal activities at the Dera Saccha Sauda, headed by Gurmeet. The story of Gurmeet’s rise allegedly involved gory murders, sexual exploitation, forced castrations, private militias, illegal trade in arms and opium, and land grab at an untold scale, the book, published by Penguin, says.
Tripathi argues that unlike the first two Dera chiefs, Gurmeet’s philosophy was far from spiritual and it was oriented from the beginning towards the acquisition and accumulation of power. He says in order to fund his grandiose plans of setting up an exploitative empire, the Dera chief began manipulating the minds of his followers.
“He started telling them that if they desired to connect directly with the supreme power, they had to show a willingness to give away their worldly possessions to the Dera, including donating their lands. Many who fell prey to this blindly signed sales deeds in favour of the Dera at throwaway rates,” he says.
The Dera, in turn, sold these lands at a premium and used the money to buy more land in Sirsa, he adds. Then as his wealth grew, Gurmeet thought of raising a private army to protect his empire. “In early 2000, the Dera chief discussed the idea with some army veterans who were Dera followers. A blueprint was made and recruitment for the purpose began,” the book says.
“The Dera’s militia had three wings. The inner wing was to closely guard Gurmeet and was handpicked by the trainers. The wing’s responsibility was to steer the chief away from the site during an eventuality. “The second wing was to provide external cover while the Dera chief was shifted to a safe base in case of a crisis. The outer wing was to monitor every corner of the Dera premises and not let anyone in during a crisis,” it says.
Udayavani is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest news.
Top News
Related Articles More
Tabla Maestro Zakir Hussain passes away at 73 in San Francisco
I am the happiest person today, says Amit Shah as he meets surrendered Naxals
Mix of old and new, heavyweights and debutantes: Maharashtra gets 39 new ministers
Over 22 lakh devotees in 29 days at Sabarimala, revenue up: Top official
Those left out in cabinet expansion to also get chance later: Ajit Pawar
MUST WATCH
Latest Additions
When Zakir Hussain’s tabla performance left Mangaluru spellbound
Tabla Maestro Zakir Hussain passes away at 73 in San Francisco
Kaup: Young cricketer dies by suicide
I am the happiest person today, says Amit Shah as he meets surrendered Naxals
Mix of old and new, heavyweights and debutantes: Maharashtra gets 39 new ministers
Thanks for visiting Udayavani
You seem to have an Ad Blocker on.
To continue reading, please turn it off or whitelist Udayavani.