Binod Singh had followed Guru Gobind Singh from
Delhi to
Nanded in the
Deccan.
Alliance with Banda Singh Bahadur Regarding Binod Singh,
Kahn Singh Nabha states in Mahankosh: He was one of the five companions of
Banda Bahadur (1670-1716) sent by the Guru in 1708 from Nanded to the
Punjab to punish
Wazir Khan, Nawab of
Sirhind. According to
Ganda Singh, a serious disagreement erupted between Binod Singh and
Banda Singh during the
Siege of Gurdas Nangal. Some sources, such as the Mahma Prakash, claim that the discord arose because Banda Singh wanted to take a second wife—an unlikely notion given their desperate, starving condition. More plausibly, the dispute centered on a proposal during a war council to abandon their current position and revert to their old tactic of breaking through enemy lines to reach safety.
Banda Singh opposed this plan for reasons known only to him, while Binod Singh favored it. The disagreement soon escalated into a violent clash, with words giving way to the sound of clashing swords. In the heat of the fight, Kahan Singh, Binod Singh’s son, intervened to mediate and suggested that one of the two should leave. Binod Singh accepted this decision, mounted his horse, and rode out of the besieged area, single-handedly cutting down enemy soldiers as he made his escape. After Binod Singh and other Sikhs left, Banda Bahadur was captured and prosecuted in Delhi. Binod Singh came to Goindwal after dispute with Banda Bahadur at Gurdas Nanagal. Binod Singh then stayed at Amritsar for a bit but after found employment with the Mughals and accompanied the Mughals when they besieged Banda Singh Bahadur's forces at Gurdas Nangal. However, Binod Singh did not wish to fight his co-religionists and tried to leave but the Mughals did not allow this to happen so they tried to eliminate Binod Singh and the retinue of a few thousand of Sikhs that accompanied him. Thus, after Binod Singh tried to retire from the fighting, him and his 10,000-strong force was attacked on all sides by the Mughals. ==Death==