Chaar Sahibzaade: Rise Of Banda Singh Bahadur 【8K】
In 1708, at Nanded, Guru Gobind Singh Ji met an ascetic named .
The narrative follows Banda Singh Bahadur (voiced by actor Tom Alter) as he transitions from a pacifist monk to a brilliant military commander. He travels north, rallying the oppressed local population—farmers, cobblers, weavers, and outcasts—into a formidable guerrilla army. chaar sahibzaade: rise of banda singh bahadur
By baptizing him into the Khalsa fold, the Guru gives him a new name—Banda Singh Bahadur—and a new mission: to travel to Punjab, unite the oppressed peasantry, and uproot the tyranny of the Mughal Empire, specifically targeting Wazir Khan, the Governor of Sirhind responsible for the execution of the younger Sahibzaade. Narrative Style and Visuals In 1708, at Nanded, Guru Gobind Singh Ji
The animated film’s sequel, Chaar Sahibzaade: Rise of Banda Singh Bahadur (2016), bridges the heartbreak of 1705 with the thunder of revolution in 1710. This article delves deep into the historical and thematic rise of Banda Singh Bahadur—the hermit turned warrior—who transformed the ashes of the Sahibzaade into the fire of the first Sikh sovereign kingdom. By baptizing him into the Khalsa fold, the
Banda Singh Bahadur was a revolutionary figure in Indian history—one of the first to issue land grants to peasants and abolish the zamindari system. The film highlights this socio-economic revolution, showing farmers and low-caste individuals standing shoulder-to-shoulder with warriors.
The movie depicts several key historical conflicts that led to the establishment of the first Khalsa Raj:

