Moga district
Moga district is one of the twenty-three districts in the state of Punjab, India. It became the 17th district of Punjab state on 24 November 1995, being cut from Faridkot district. Moga district is among the largest producers of wheat and rice in Punjab, India. People from Moga city and Moga district belong to the Malwa culture. The district is noted for being the homeland for a high-proportion of Indian Punjabi expatriates who emigrated abroad and their descendants, which has given it the nickname of "NRI district".[2] Moga city, the headquarters of the district, is situated on Ferozpur-Moga-Ludhiana road. Moga is well-known for its Nestlé factory,[2][3] Adani Food Pvt Ltd[citation needed], and vehicle modifications[citation needed]. Highways connected with Moga are Jalandhar, Barnala, Ludhiana, Ferozpur, Kotkapura, Amritsar. Bus services and Railway services are well connected with some major cities like Ludhiana, Chandigarh, and Delhi. Moga district is notable for its higher standards-of-living compared to neighbouring Punjabi districts, based upon metrics such as access to education, electrification, and medical-care.[4] Much of this is attributed to the economic development of the district in the agricultural sector, such as the dairy industry.[4] EtymologyThe name of Moga may be ultimately derived from the Indo-Scythian king, Maues, who invaded and ruled the area in the 1st century BCE after conquering the Indo-Greek polities of the region.[5] "Moga" is the Indianized form of "Maues".[6] Another theory states Moga was named after Moga of the Gill clan, who owned a jagir that was located on the present-day location of Moga city.[7] HistoryAncient eraStructures and sites dating before the reign of the Mughal emperor Akbar are exceedingly rare due to the changing course of the Sutlej river throughout the centuries. As a result, very few sites dating back to antiquity have been uncovered in the local area of Moga. This effect is more pronounced in the western parts of the district. The location of ancient villages and towns can be inferred to the present of mounds of earth, brick, and pottery that have been excavated called thehs. These mounds are evidence that the banks of the river were inhabited in ancient times. A number of coins have been discovered at the site of these mounds.[8] Indus Valley CivilizationSites identified as belonging to the Indus Valley Civilization have been discovered in the area. Scholars have linked these finds to other sites uncovered in the Rupnagar area of Punjab.[8][9][10] Vedic periodThe composition of the Rigveda is proposed to have occurred in the Punjab circa 1500 and 1200 BCE.[11] Post-Vedic period (After 600 BCE)The region of Moga belongs to the Malwai cultural zone, named after the ancient Malava tribe who inhabited the area in ancient times.[12] During the reign of Porus in the 4th century BCE, the southern area of Punjab was ruled by both the Kshudrakas and Malavas. Some scholars believe they were pushed southwards due to martial and social pressures occurring in the north.[13] Alexander of Macedon warred with the Malavas for control of the region. This wrestle for power is recorded as being fierce and bitter in Greek historical accounts.[12] After the withdrawal of Macedonian forces in the area, the Malavas joined with anti-Greek forces to usurp Hellenistic power and control of the region, leading to the formation of the Mauryan dynasty. The decline of the Mauryan dynasty coincided with an invasion of Bactrian Greeks, who successfully took control of the region in the second century BCE. This seizure of power in the Punjab by the Bactrians led to the migration of the Malavas from the area to Rajasthan, and from there to the now-called Malwa plateau of Central India. Medieval eraThe region of Moga is mentioned in Punjabi folklore.[14] The settlement of Moga (later a town and now a city) was established around 500-years-ago in around the late 15th or 16th century.[15] The area is believed to have been under the writ of the Punwar clan of Rajputs during the early-mediaeval period.[16] They were headquartered in Janer, at the old riverbed location of the Sutlej river, over six kilometres north of the present-day city of Moga. Later on, the Bhati clan of Rajputs, originating from Jaisalmer, established themselves in the area, superseding the previous Punwars for authority of the region. Jat tribes, who had been practicing migratory, nomadic-pastoralism for much of their recorded history, began to permanently settle the Moga area during this time and take up a sedentary lifestyle of settled agriculture.[17][18][19] First of them being the Dhaliwal clan, who firmly established themselves southeast of Moga at Kangar. They appear to have possibly obtained high repute, seeing as a woman of the clan, Dharm, who was the daughter of Chaudhary Mihr Mitha Dhaliwal, was wedded to the Mughal emperor Akbar.[20] The Gill clan of Jats, originally based in Bathinda, dispersed to the western parts of Moga district around this time. At the end of the 16th century, the Sidhu clan of Jats migrated northwards to the area from Rajasthan. A branch of the Sidhus, the Brars, established themselves in the south of Gill territory, pushing its former inhabitants northwards whilst taking control of their key places in the process. The Brars founded a chieftainship at Kot Kapura, 40 kilometres west of present-day Moga, and rebelled against the overlordship of Nawab Ise Khan, the Manj governor. During the early Mughal-Sikh Wars, in 1634 Guru Hargobind left Amritsar to avoid Mughal persecution and arrived near Moga with fresh recruits enlisted en-route to stage a counter-attack against the Mughal government.[21] When near Moga, he sent his family to safety in Kartarpur and whilst he remained in the Malwa region with his army.[21] Most of the Jat tribes of the local area were converted to Sikhism by the missionary works of the seventh Guru of the Sikhs, Har Rai. At Dagru village in Moga district, it is believed Guru Har Rai stayed there for some time whilst on a tour of the Malwa region.[22] Gurdwara Tambu Sahib was later constructed to commemorate his stay in the area.[22] According to Sikh tradition, the village of Dina located near the district's border with the neighbouring Bathinda district is where Guru Gobind Singh rested for a few days after the Second Battle of Chamkaur.[23] Furthermore, it is said he wrote and dispatched the Zafarnama letter to Aurangzeb from here.[23] Scholar Louis E. Fenech states the Guru rested at Dina at the house (specifically an upper story room called a chubārā) of a local Sikh named Bhai Desu Tarkhan after sending the Zafarnama from Kangar village, entrusted in the hands of Bhai Dharam Singh and Bhai Daya Singh.[24] A gurdwara, Zafarnama Gurdwara Lohgarh Sahib Pind Dina Patishahi Dasvin, commemorates his stay at Dina, Moga, and a sign there claims the Guru stayed at the location for 3 months and 13 days.[24] The Encyclopedia of Sikhism states the Guru only stayed at Dina for a few days conversely to the claims of the Gurdwara.[23] It further states that he stayed with two local Sikhs named Chaudhry Shamir and Lakhmir, the grandsons of a local cheiftain named Rai Jodh, who had served the sixth Sikh guru, Hargobind, and fought and died at the Battle of Mehraj.[23] Guru Gobind Singh gathered an army of hundreds of locals from Dina and the surrounding area and continued on his journey.[23] In 1715 CE, Nawab Ise Khan, the Manj governor, stirred a rebellion against the Mughal hegemony but was defeated and killed. In 1760 CE, the ascendency of Sikh power became grounded after the defeat of Adina Beg, who was the last Mughal governor of Lahore. Modern eraSikh periodThe Nishanwalia Misl was based in Singhanwala village of Moga district.[25][26] Bhuma Singh Dhillon, who succeeded as the second leader of the Bhangi Misl, was born in Hung village located in the Wadni parganah of Moga district.[27] The forces of Tara Singh, the misldar of the Dallewalia Misl of the Sikh Confederacy, led incursions into modern-day Moga district, conquering all the way to Ramuwala and Mari.[28] Fortresses (ਕਿਲਾ Kilā in Punjabi) were constructed at both of these places by the Sikh misl.[28] The local nawab of Kot Ise Khan in modern-day Moga district became a protectorate of the Ahluwalia Misl. In 1763-64, Gujar Singh, his brother Nusbaha Singh, and his two nephews, Gurbaksh Singh and Mastan Singh, of the Bhangi Misl, crossed the Sutlej river after a sacking of Kasur and gained control of the Firozepur area (including Moga) whilst Jai Singh Gharia, another band from the same quarters, seized Khai, Wan, and Bazidpur, and subordinated them.[8] Sada Kaur owned estates in Wadni, near modern-day Moga city.[29][30] The area of Moga was one of the 45 taluqas (subdistrict) south of the Sutlej River that was claimed by Maharaja Ranjit Singh as belonging to or claimed by him through Sada Kaur as per a list by Captain William Murray on 17 March 1828.[31] Kalsia State also held territory in the region.[32] British periodDuring the First Anglo-Sikh War, the forces of the Sikh Empire crossed the river Sutlej on 16 December 1845, and fought battles at Mudki, Firozshah, Aliwal, and Sabraon. The Sikh forces were defeated by the British and retreated back beyond the Sutlej. After the war, the British acquired all former territory of the Lahore Darbar south and east of the Sutlej. When the Sutlej campaign drew to a close at the end of 1846, the territories of Khai, Baghuwala, Ambarhar, Zira, and Mudki, with portions of Kot Kapura, Guru Har Sahai, Jhumba, Kot Bhai, Bhuchcho, and Mahraj were added to the Firozepur district. Other acquisitions by the British were divided between the Badhni and Ludhiana districts. In 1847, the Badhni district was dissolved and the following areas were incorporated into the Firozepur district: Mallanwala, Makhu, Dharmkot, Kot Ise Khan, Badhni, Chuhar Chak, Mari, and Sadasinghwala.[8] During the Mutiny of 1857, there were reports of a Roman Catholic church being burnt down amongst other buildings of the colonial establishment in Firozepur district during sparks of tension.[33] During the late 19th century, the Kuka movement was prevalent in the areas of Moga, with many of its followers drawing from the laypersons of the district.[34][35] The Kukas are believed to be one of the first resistance movement of the subcontinent towards Indian independence from European powers.[36] In 1899, a co-educational school was founded in Moga (then in the Ferozpore district) by the Dev Samaj.[37]: 21 The Dev Samaj school was later upgraded to become the Dev Samaj High School.[38] In 1901, the railway reached Moga locality and former jagir lands of Moga Gill were converted into the settlement.[7] At that era, Moga locality was an important location for the tea trade, which led to the coining of the phrase: Moga chah joga (meaning "Moga only has tea").[7] In 1901, a plague was ravaging the local region, including Moga.[39] However, there were not enough huts established to treat victims and infected and non-infected persons were requested to congregate in the camps, increasing the infections.[39] In 1894, the Christian missionary Rev. John Hyde, commonly known as "Praying Hyde", arrived in India and worked in the areas of Ferozepore and Moga.[40] In the early 20th century, a Christian missionary named Ray Harrison Carter drafted a "Moga plan" for the betterment of destitute Christian converts in Moga by establishing village schools and a training school focusing on agricultural education.[41] One of these educational institutions established by the Christian missionaries was the 'Moga Training School for Village Teachers', which was established in 1908 by the American Presbyterian Mission and conceived by Ray Harrison Carter.[42][43][44][45] The principal of the missionary school from 1914 to 1925 was William McKee, an American.[42][46] The institution focused on spreading Christianity throughout the villages of Moga.[42][43][44] Some of the missionaries who served at the institution were women, such as Arthur E. Harper and Irene Mason Harper.[44] Arthur Harper and Irene Harper, both Americans, served at the missionary institution from 1914 until their retirement in 1952.[46] The Moga School became renowned internationally for its approach to rural reconstruction by combining principles of self-help, character-building, and "practical agricultural demonstration", and it published its own periodical titled Village Teachers' Journal.[42][45] In November 1914, two officials were shot dead in Moga by Ghadarites during a raid on a local treasury.[47] In March 1921, pro-Gandhi slogans were raised by passengers disembarking from a train at Moga, who refused to present their tickets to the station-master.[48] In 1926, the Dayanand Mathra Dass College was established in present-day Moga city, making the city one of the few to have had an established college within it prior to independence.[note 1][7] Moga locality was the headquarters of eye-surgeon Mathra Das Pahwa, who established a hospital there in 1927, where he operated on cataract patients free-of-charge.[49][7][50][51] A large amount of cataract patients were treated over the years by Mathra Das Pahwa, with an operation of his being witnessed by Mahatma Gandhi.[52][53] During the Indian Independence Movement, many revolutionaries came from Moga district. Many of them were tried and executed as a result of their activities against the colonial government.[54] During the third Round Table Conference held in December 1932, the Akalis boycotted the talks so the colonial government sponsored Sardar Tara Singh of Moga as the Sikh representative to the talks.[note 2][37]: 177 Tara Singh of Moga was disowned by the Khalsa Darbar as a result of this.[37]: 177 In 1934, Malcolm Darling wrote that the settlement of Moga had a population of around 15,000 people.[55] During a tour of Punjab in 1938, Nehru visited Moga town and met with Ghadar/Kirti leaders and socialist workers.[56]: 126 In September 1938, agrarian protestors in parts of present-day Moga district under Kalsia State back then were protesting excessive land revenue, requesting a reduction of them, when they were lathi-charged by state police.[57] The cattle fairs at Chirak village (that was held between 11 September 1938 and 20 September 1938) and Mari village was boycotted by the farmers' leaders, leading to a loss of revenue for Kalsia State.[57] This movement was known as the "Kalsia agitation" and around 125 were arrested and held at a jail in Chhachroli, in poor conditions.[57] Moga was the centre of the agitation.[57] At the end of June in 1939, another agriculturalist movement arose in Chuhar Chak village over farmers wanting to stop paying the chowkidara tax, which had long been a demand.[56]: 182 A delegation of the farmers sent to Moga town to meet with the tehsildar were arrested for tax non-payment.[56]: 182 With news spreading of the arrests, jathas arrived in Moga from Chuhar Chak village and over a period of a few days, around 350 people (incl. 50 women) courted arrest.[56]: 182 The agitation effectively wanted to end payment of land revenue.[56]: 182 However, the Punjab Kisan Committee, distracted by other concerns at the time involving the Lahore Kisan Morcha, and not wanting to divert more of its resources, suspended the Chuhar Chak agitation by commanding the local committee to stop it.[56]: 182 Partition of PunjabLeading up to the partition of Punjab in 1947, the Sikhs of Moga were considered "battle-ready".[58] Prior to partition, Moga tehsil was one of the only two tehsils of British Punjab that had a Sikh-majority, with the other being Tarn Taran tehsil.[59] Whilst travelling around tehsils of Punjab, Professor Quraishi of the Muslim League was preparing a list of tehsils based on their religious composition, with Muslim-majority areas being considered grounds for areas of inclusion into a conceptual Pakistan.[60] However, the list notes that Moga was "predominantly Hindu".[60] In July 1947, 80,000 ruppees were collected from the Moga grain market to purchase weapons to be used against local Muslims of Moga.[61] Furthermore, an Akali martyr squad named Khalsa Sewak Dal was organized.[61] The Hindu organization, Rashtriya Sawayamsevak Sangh (R.S.S.), also made a resolve against the Muslims of Moga.[61] A local Muslim League leader named Sukh Annyat hired trucks and left the city with property and family.[61] However, his brother Hadayat Khan was murdered in the violence of partition by the son of an RSS leader named Lala Ram Rakha Sud, who was in-charge of the local RSS outfit.[61] On 1 August 1947, Sikhs massacred eighteen Muslim villagers in Kokri village and the murderers were absolved by the Ferozepore Deputy Commissioner, by claiming the Muslims were murdered over "mutual conflict over a relationship".[61] The next day on 2 August 1947, six Muslim mendicants were murdered near the Ludhiana-Moga railway line, with the deceased victims being accused of being bomb-makers.[61] News of these two incidents created further communal tensions in the region, especially amongst the rural villages, with Sikhs and Hindus being pitted against Muslims and vice-versa.[61] The advice of village elders appealing for calm was ignored, and violence, looting, and killing erupted in the area.[61] The Muslim-majority village of Athhur (Hatur) assaulted the Sikhs, with all of the inhabitants of the village being butchered in the aftermath after three days of fighting.[61] In Pato Hira Singh village, around 250 Muslim inhabitants were murdered.[61] Curfew was put in-place on 17 August 1947, however by 23 August 1947, there were reportedly no Muslims to be found any longer in Moga town and the surrounding villages, with the former Muslims having fled as refugees over the Radcliffe Line into Western Punjab.[61] When Robert Atkins visited Moga town during the partition of India, he recounts that he witnessed mutilated bodies strewn over the town resulting from a massacre that occurred there.[62] Moga was one of the regions of the Punjab that had experienced heavy losses in human lives and property during the partition.[63] Post-independenceAfter the partition of Punjab, a total of 349,767 refugees from what became Pakistan settled in Ferozepore district (which at that time included Moga and Muktsar tehsils which were later transferred to Faridkot district in 1972), as per the 1951 census of India.[64] Much of these refugees hailed from Bahawalpur State, and the districts of Montgomery, Sheikhupura, Lyallpur, and Lahore, whom crossed over the border into Ferozepore district.[64] Eighty percent of these refugees settled in the rural parts of Ferozepore district but around twenty percent settled in urban areas.[64] On 24 September 1954, the 12th session of the All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS) was held at Moga, with a decision to form an organization that was separate from the AIKS being decided at the meeting.[65] Due to the protectionist policies of the Indian government that required international firms to set-up local production in some industries, the Nestlé company decided to establish its first Indian factory at Moga in 1961.[4] The factory began service on 9 February 1962.[66] According to Hwy-Chang Moon, the establishment of the Nestlé factory led to an increase of development in the district.[4] In the early 1960's, the Moga area was poor and undeveloped, with there being a dearth of infrastructure (such as electricity, transportation, telephones, or medical-care) and the typical agricultural family owned less than five acres of poorly-irrigated land that had low fertility.[4] Nestlé initially could only procure dairy from 180 local farmers.[4] The typical household only had access to poor-quality milk that was oftentimes contaminated and could not be transported faraway, due to a lack of refrigeration, poor transportation, and the non-existence of quality control of dairy.[4] Whilst local families kept livestock, they typically only had one cow that could only produce enough milk to meet the familial needs and most calves did not survive to adulthood.[4] Thus, Moon argues that with the coming of Nestlé into the local area, the company brought-in experts (including veterinarians, nutritionists, agronomists, etc.), educated the local populace on modern animal husbandry and agriculture through monthly training sessions (teaching them modern dairy farming techniques, irrigation, and crop-management practices), and developed the local infrastructure.[4] With these financial and technological investments, it allowed local farmers to dig deeper wells that improved irrigation, and soon farmers were producing surpluses of crops and the survival rates of livestock increased, increasing the development of the area.[4] Nestlé also helped with the construction of local village-schools, drinking-water facilities, and toilets, in the area and provided the local farmers with cattle-feed, fodder seeds, veterinary medicines, mineral mixtures, and bank loans.[4] With the quality of milk in the area being improved, Nestlé started paying local producers higher amounts for their products than what was set by the Indian government, with the company purchasing at biweekly intervals and this income for farmers helping them get bank credit.[4] The company also helped establish clinics to help tuberculosis patients.[4] Moon describes the situation as a win-win, with Nestlé profiting from the expanded local market whilst locals benefit from the economic and infrastructural development of the region.[4] All of this led to the development of an industrial cluster at Moga.[4] An event called the All-India Workers' Conference was held in Moga in September 1968, establishing the Bharatiya Khet Mazdoor Union with a membership of 251,000 at the time.[67][68] The areas of Moga district were heavily effected by Communist insurgencies in the latter half of the 20th century, being one of the worst affected areas of the state of Punjab.[69] On 5 October 1972, a group of people were protesting against the black marketing of tickets at a movie theatre in Moga when police opened fire on them, leading to the deaths of four people.[70] Two students, Harjit Singh and Swarn Singh of Charrik village, and passersbys Gurdev Singh and Kewal Krishan, were killed in the police firing, near Regal Cinema in Moga.[14][7][70] The incident lead to a movement known as the Moga agitation, a student movement which was led by leftist groups where protestors set afire government buildings and public transport for two months.[note 3][71][72][73][14][7][74] The student movement had ramifications throughout the Punjab.[75][74] The Punjab Students Union (PSU) was formed the same year.[70] In 1972, PSU president Iqbal Khan and general secretary Pirthipal Singh Randhawa led protests against the price rise and the black marketing of cinema tickets.[70] A library would later be established at former location of Regal Cinema to commemorate the martyred students.[14] The incident has been likened to the earlier Jallianwala Bagh massacre of 1919.[7] At the Moga Sangram Rally of 1974, the Congress-run government of Indira Gandhi was challenged.[70] The PSU later opposed the bus fare hike in 1979.[70] In the 1970's, the historical fortress of Sada Kaur at Wadhni (south of Moga city) was demolished and a gurdwara and statue honouring Sada Kaur was erected at the location of the destroyed fort.[30] During the period of Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale, a common story that Bhindranwale told was about a Sikh girl being stripped naked by Hindus in a village near Moga, with the girl's father supposedly being forced to engage in intercourse with her.[76] However, when Bhindranwale was pressed for further details to investigate and conform the story, he became agitated and hostile.[76] During the time period of Dharam Yudh Morcha, Sikh militants (and allegedly foreign personnel) were sheltering in gurdwaras in Moga town, thus an order was given on 30 May that the temples should be sieged by BSF paramilitary forces until the militants inside them surrendered, however the Sikh priests of Amritsar protested the siege and threatened to lead a march toward Moga.[77][78][79] The government eventually backed-down and doing so may have emboldened Bhindranwale and his followers to hole-up in Sikh shrines.[79] On 26 June 1989, during the Punjab insurgency, an event known as the Moga massacre occurred, when suspected Khalistani militants opened fire on RSS workers undergoing a morning exercise and indoctrination session in Nehru Park in Moga city.[80] The attack led to the deaths of 24 people and was suspected of being carried out by the Khalistan Commando Force.[80] Moga district also experienced encounter-killings during the insurgency, such as the case of Bharpur Singh (aged 21), Bobby Monga, and Satnam Singh, on the Moga-Talwandi road at Khukhrana village on 27–28 December 1990.[81][82] The three were travelling together through Moga when a police group led by Mangal Singh indiscriminately fired on them, killing Bharpur and Bobby but Satnam survived, with the police characterizing the incident as "cross firing between the police and militants".[82] In 1996, at a historic conference in Moga known as the Moga Conference, the Shiromani Akali Dal adopted a moderate Punjabi agenda and shifted its party headquarters from Amritsar to Chandigarh.[83][84] In 2003, Gursewak Singh Sodhi of Dhilwana Kalan village in Moga district was reprimanded by the SGPC for sending turban and clothing relics of Guru Gobind Singh to Canada to be displayed, in-exchange for money and gold.[85] In March 2013, around over 150 farmers were arrested during an agitation in the state.[86] During the 2020–2021 Indian farmers' protest, many of the participants of the movement against the three farm bills hailed from Moga district.[87][88] In-fact, the 2020–21 Indian farmers' protest originated from Moga, where 32 farmers' unions resolved to oppose the three farm bills and launch a protest against them.[89] The Guru Granth Sahib Bagh is an initiative of EcoSikh, working in-collaboration with PETALS, regarding the establishment and upkeeping of a garden near the historical Sikh shrine, Gurusar Sahib, located in Moga district.[90] The garden was inaugurated in September 2021 and contains all fifty-eight plant species that find mention by name within the hymns of the Guru Granth Sahib.[90] Each plant is accompanied by a stone with an engraving containing the relevant excerpt from the Sikh scripture mentioning the specie.[90] In April 2023, Sikh leader Amritpal Singh was arrested in a gurdwara in Moga city.[91] Creation of districtOriginally, Moga used to be part of the Ferozepur district, but it was bifurcated and the then tehsils of Moga and Muktsar were transferred to the then-newly created Faridkot district on 7 August 1972.[92] From that point onwards, Moga was a subdivision of Faridkot district until the then Chief Minister of Punjab, Harcharan Singh Brar, agreed to the public request to make Moga a district on 24 November 1995.[2][14] The judicial court system of Moga district was tied to Faridkot' district's until Saturday, 28 April 2012, when it was officially separated in-order to speed-up the processing of judicial cases and ease the workload.[7] Administrative divisionsMoga district, which occupies 2,216 square kilometres, is divided into two tehsils, two sub-tehsils, and four community development blocks.[14][7] The two tehsils are: Bagha Purana and Nihal Singh Wala tehsils.[7] The two sub-tehsils are: Badhni Kalan and Dharamkot sub-tehsils.[7] Moga city is the headquarters of the district.[14] The district contains around three towns and 180 villages.[14] Moga is bordered by Ferozepur district to the north, Ludhiana district to the east, Sangrur district to the southeast, Bathinda district to the south, and Faridkot district to the west.[14][7] Moga district is interconnected through roadways and railways to its neighbouring districts.[14] A railway connects Ferozepur, Moga, and Ludhiana districts together.[14] Moga district itself is part of the Firozpur division.[7] LocalitiesThe towns of Bagha Purana, Badhni Kalan, Dharamkot, Kot Ise Khan, Nihal Singh Wala and Ghal Kalan fall in Moga district.[citation needed] The villages like Rattian Khosa Randhir, Dhalleke, Thathi Bhai, Rajiana, Dunne Ke, Landhe Ke, Samadh Bhai, Kotla Rai-ka, Bhekha, Bughipura, Daudhar, Dhudike, Lopon, Himmatpura, Manooke, Bahona, and Chugawan, also fall within this district.[citation needed] Takhtupura Sahib is one of the well-known villages in this district.[citation needed] Takhtupura Sahib is a historical village.[citation needed] Bagha Purana lies on the main road connecting Moga and Faridkot and thus is a major hub for buses to all across Punjab.[citation needed] Bagha Purana's police station has the largest jurisdiction in Punjab; over 65 'pinds' or villages are within its control.[citation needed] The town is basically divided into 3 'pattis' or sections: Muglu Patti (the biggest one), Bagha Patti, and Purana Patti.[citation needed] The town has its fair share of rich people and thus the standard of living is above average as compared to the surrounding towns and villages.[citation needed] Dharamkot is a city and a municipal council in the Moga district.[citation needed] Daudhar is the largest village in Moga.[citation needed] CultureThe local dialect of Punjabi is spoken by local inhabitants.[14] Religious sitesMany historical gurdwaras associated with the Sikh gurus can be found in Moga district.[14] There are gurdwaras associated with Guru Hargobind, Guru Har Rai, and Guru Gobind Singh, to be found in the district.[14] There is a Punjabi folk shrine dedicated to the folk deity Lakhdata in Langiana village in Moga district.[93] Shrines dedicated to Lakhdata are known as nigaha.[94] A dhuna dedicated to Sri Chand can be found in Korewal village in Daroli Baike in Moga district, which as per oral tradition was established by a roaming sadhu.[95]
FestivalsTraditional celebrations, observations, and festivals include Guru Nanak Gurpurab, Guru Gobind Singh Gurpurab, Guru Arjan Shaheedi Diwas, Guru Tegh Bahadur Shaheedi Diwas, Basant, Vaisakhi, Hola Maholla, Shivratri, Ram Naumi, Janmashtami, Tis, Gugga Naumi.[14] At Dina village, Zafarnama Diwan is also celebrated.[14] Demographics
In the 2001 census, Moga had a population of 886,313.[14] According to the 2011 census Moga district has a population of 995,746,[97] roughly equal to the nation of Fiji[98] or the US state of Montana.[99] This gives it a ranking of 447th in India (out of a total of 640).[97] The district has a population density of 444 inhabitants per square kilometre (1,150/sq mi) .[97] Its population growth rate over the decade 2001-2011 was 10.9%.[97] Moga has a sex ratio of 893 females for every 1000 males,[97] and a literacy rate of 71.6%. Scheduled Castes made up 36.50% of the population.[97] GenderThe table below shows the sex ratio of Moga district through decades.
The table below shows the child sex ratio of children below the age of 6 years in the rural and urban areas of Moga district.
LanguagesAt the time of the 2011 census, 96.21% of the population spoke Punjabi and 3.21% Hindi as their first language.[102] ReligionThe district have the second highest percentage of Sikhs by district in Punjab, after Taran Taran (according to 2001 census). The table below shows the population of different religions in absolute numbers in the urban and rural areas of Moga district.[104]
EconomyThe income of Municipalities and Municipal corporations in Moga district from municipal rates and taxes in the year 2018 was 577,781 thousand rupees.[105] Much of the economic development of the district is attributed to the Nestlé factory, with an industrial cluster forming to support the dairy industry, consisting of competing dairy farms and factories.[4] Nestlé purchases dairy from over 75,000 local farmers in the district, collecting twice a day from more than 650 village dairies.[4] In 2012, the Nestlé factory directly employed around 2,400 people, with a further 86,371 people being provided employment through Nestlé's main suppliers.[106] AgricultureThe local economy of Moga is dominated by the agricultural sector, with 90% of the land of the district being considered agricultural land.[14] The main staples of crop grown in Moga's farms are wheat, cumin, maize, barley, and millet.[14] Cotton, oilseeds, and potatoes are also cultivated, to a lesser extent.[14] The district exports much of the food-grains grown in it.[14] The grain markets of Moga are prominent, where surplus stocks of wheat, rice, pulses, oil-seeds, and cotton, are on sale.[14] The main kind of livestock kept in Moga are cows, buffalos, bullocks, horses, mules, sheep, and goats.[14] The district contains a cattle hospital.[14] IndustryMany factories in the state are for making agricultural-related products, nut-bolts, mustard-oil, engine-oil, coffee, condensed-milk, and footwear.[14] The district contains a Nestlé factory.[14] The Nestlé factory produces milk, milk-products, and maggi.[14] A surge of foreign-exhange coming into the district is related to the exporting of products such as motor-parts, cotton-seeds, oil-seeds, and nuts to international markets, such as Russia, the United Kingdom, the United States, Malaysia, Thailand, Poland, and others.[14] In 2010-11, there were 2,850 registered Micro and Small Enterprise (MSE) units in Moga district, which provided employment to 21,218 people. There were 5 registered Medium and Large industrial units, which provided employment to 1,699 people.[107] PoliticsIn 1952, before the delimitation exercise, Moga existed back then as Moga-Dharamkot constituency, which was represented by two candidates, Rattan Singh (Congress) and Devinder Singh (Akali Dal).[75] Moga tends to vote against the general trend.[75] In the last 14 elections that Moga assembly constituency had witnessed since 1952, the voters voted for the losing candidate at 12 elections.[75] It was only twice that the winning candidate from here belonged to the ruling party, with those candidates namely being Malti Thapar (Congress) in 1992 and Tota Singh of the Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) in 1997.[75] Voters in the region do not generally vote based upon caste or religion.[75] Of the last fourteen MLAs, nine were Sikhs, with the remaining being Hindus: Sathi Rup Lal, Malti Thapar, and Joginderpal Jain.[75] The secular nature of the voters in the region has been attributed to the numerous social and political movements that occurred in Moga over the years.[75] On different occasions, the Akali Dal has launched their political campaigns from Moga before going for the assembly polls, such as in 1996, 2006, and 2011, before returning to power.[75][108] Moga has been described as a key place in Punjabi politics.[108] All three majors parties, SAD, Congress, and the AAP, place importance on starting their political rallies from Moga.[108] In September 2016, the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) released their manifesto at a political rally for farmers at Bagha Purana.[108] List of MLAs per assembly constituency
EducationMoga city is also known for its advanced number of educational institutes, such as middle, high, and senior secondary schools, colleges, and libraries.[14] The district also contains Ayurvedic colleges.[14] The district has two public libraries which contain reading-room facilities.[14] Notable schools and colleges of Moga include: EnvironmentFloraThe district currently has a low amount of its area under forest cover, partly due to past deforestation during the Green Revolution,[109] but afforestation and reforestation drives have led to the planting of saplings in the district.[110] 9 million tree saplings are planned to be planted in the district before 2026 by NITI Aayog to meet the demands of a World Economic Forum initiative, with hopes of increasing Moga district's percentage of land under forest cover from the current 1.25% (2,575 hectares) to over 5% (11, 575 hectares).[110] In September 2021, a garden, named 'Guru Granth Sahib Bagh', was set-up in the historical village of Patto Hira Singh in the district. The garden is notable as it contains flora species mentioned in the Guru Granth Sahib, the primary Sikh canonical scripture and is intended on highlighting the connection between the Sikh Gurus and the natural world.[111] HealthMany ayurvedic and allopathic health facilities, such as dispensaries and hospitals, can be found in the district.[14] There are also regular hospitals and family-planning centres.[14] The table below shows the data from the district nutrition profile of children below the age of 5 years, in Moga, as of year 2020.
The table below shows the district nutrition profile of Moga of women between the ages of 15 and 49 years, as of year 2020.
The table below shows the current use of family planning methods by currently married women between the age of 15 and 49 years, in Moga district.
The table below shows the number of road accidents and people affected in Moga district by year.
Deputy CommissionersMoga district have following Deputy Commissioners so far:[116]
Notable people
See alsoNotesReferences
External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Moga district.
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