Who started the Kuka Movement?
Baba Ram Singh started the Kuka Movement. The Kuka movement is also referred to as the Kuka revolt. Let us know more about the Kuka movement and Baba Ram Singh.
Baba Ram Singh
Baba Ram Singh was born in the year 1815 as a son of a poor carpenter, in a small village of Bhaini which was around 7 kilometers away from Ludhiana. In the early 1840s, he served as a soldier in the Sikh Army of Prince Naunihal Singh. He left the army after the overthrow of the Sikh rule. In the year 1838, he came in contact with Baba Balak Singh, and he also remained in touch with Bhagat Jawar mal as well.
Kuka Movement
The Kukas were also referred Namdharis, who were a sect within Sikhism. They started as a group for religious purification in Sikhism under Ram Singh. The movement received a political overtone with the established aim of restoring Sikh rule in Punjab and ousting the foreign powers. The Kukas wore only white, hand-woven clothes and boycotted British education, products, and laws. In 1872, Ram Singh was captured and exiled to Rangoon and 65 Kukas were blown away from canons by the British.