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  *Nehru’s ’59 b’day gift*

The Gabbar Singh that Ramesh Sippy missed

  Chandan Nandy, Bangalore, Nov 14, DH News Service:

[image: Just desserts: Gabbar Singh]Between 3 and 4 pm. November 13, 1959.
Leading a posse of policemen, R P Modi, a wiry, 26-year-old Madhya Pradesh
deputy superintendent of police had surrounded a small band of dacoits at
Ghum-Ka-Pura village, in a saucer-like depression between the national
highway and the narrow gauge railway line, in Bhind district. Darkness was
about to set in. Advancing cautiously, taking shelter in the rugged and
rocky knolls of the Chambal ravines, they fired intermittently from Enfield
rifles. Before long, they had shot dead 11 of the bandits. The last to go
down was Gabbar Singh Gujar, a part of his face blown up by shrapnels from a
grenade that Modi had hurled at him. In the twilight, hundreds of people
watched from atop buses the police operation that felled Gabbar, the gang
leader.

Modi was no Thakur Baldev Singh, but Gabbar Singh was real; the police
operation was as dramatic as the scene in which the Thakur crushes Gabbar
Singh’s face with his nail-studded ‘jooti’ in Ramesh Sippy’s blockbuster
‘Sholay’.

Yes, Gabbar Singh indeed; not of ‘Sholay’ fame and definitely not the
fictional character that Amjad Khan played with aplomb. Sippy’s Gabbar was
picked from Tarun Coomar Bhaduri’s book ‘Abhisapta Chambal’ (The Accursed
Chambal).

Today is the 50th anniversary of the dreaded ‘nose-chopper’ dacoit of the
famed Chambal. The ‘real’ Gabbar, or Gabra as he was known among his gang
members, was born in a Gujar family, in a small village in Bhind district,
in 1926.

Obdurate, wayward and a vagabond ever since his childhood days, Gabbar took
to brigandry in his early twenties.

Gabbar’s stories of infamy and wanton cruelty are chronicled in a book ‘The
British, The Bandits and The Bordermen’, which is based on the diaries of K
F Rustamji, the then Madhya Pradesh inspector general of police who planned
and launched the operation against Gabbar. The book was edited by another
IPS officer P V Rajgopal.
Speaking to Deccan Herald, Rajgopal, who worked for the Research and
Analysis Wing in the late-eighties said: “The real Gabbar, like the
character in Sholay, was ruthless, cruel and had a penchant for chopping off
the noses of those who informed on him to the police” — acts reminiscent of
Sholay’s Gabbar who shot the Thakur’s grandchildren beside chopping off his
hands.

According to Rajgopal, sometime in 1957, Bhind’s Gabbar, codenamed G-4,
lined up 22 children and shot them “because somebody from the village, of
which the children were residents, had reported him to the police”.
Rustamji’s book says that Gabbar Singh was told by a tantric that he would
be immortal if he chopped off the noses of 116 children and offered them to
the deity he worshipped. He could manage to disfigure the faces of 19. One
can imagine the fear that Gabbar struck in the hearts of Bhind’s mothers,
similar to the film’s “pachas pachas kos dur jab bachcha rota hai to ma
kehti hai so ja nahin to Gabbar aajyega...”

Unlike Sholay’s Gabbar, Gabra was corpulent, with lion-like mane and mien
and grizzled beard. Rajgopal believes there was a “remarkable resemblance”
between Amjad Khan who immortalised the Gabbar character, and Gabbar of
Bhind. But like Bhind’s Gabbar, Sippy’s namesake wore police khakis, strung
a belt of cartridges across his chest and strode the hills of the Chambal on
foot and horse.
At the height of his brigandry, the MP police had declared a reward of Rs
20,000 on Gabbar, the UP cops had declared another Rs 20,000 and the
Rajasthan police Rs 10,000 — “pooray pachas hazaar” as in Sholay.

A day after Gabbar Singh’s death (Nov 14, 1959), while wishing Jawaharlal
Nehru on his birthday, Rustamji is believed to have said: “Sir, on your
birthday, my police force and I gift you with the news of Gabbar Singh’s
death.” Nehru, according to Rajgopal, had personally ordered the MP police
chief to eliminate the dacoits of Chambal.

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