Musafir joined the freedom movement in the early 1920s and courted arrest several times till 1947. He courted arrest in the
Civil disobedience movement in 1930. He became the head of
Akal Takht, central seat of religious authority for the
Sikhs. He held this office from 12 March 1930 to 5 March 1931. He also served for a time as secretary of the
Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee as well as general secretary of the
Shiromani Akali Dal. He also courted arrest as part of
Satyagraha and
Quit India movements. In 1949, he became the President of the
Punjab Pradesh Congress Committee. He held the office of the President for 12 years and was also an elected member of the
Congress Working Committee. He was elected to the
Lok Sabha in 1952, 1957 and 1962, representing
Amritsar constituency. In 1966, he resigned from the Lok Sabha and became the
Chief Minister of Punjab state after its re-organization. In 1967, he contested the
Vidhan Sabha election from Amritsar constituency, but he was defeated by
Satyapal Dang of the
Communist Party of India. Musafir died in Delhi on 18 January 1976. He was posthumously awarded
Padma Vibhushan in 1976. Musafir was a member of the Indian delegations to the International Peace Conference in Stockholm in 1954,
World Peace Conference in Helsinki in 1965, and the
World Peace Conference in Berlin in 1969. He also led the Indian delegations to the World Progressive Writers Conference in Japan in 1961 and the Indian Writers Afro-Asian Conference in
Baku in 1965. == Role in Constituent Assembly of India ==