KIKKAR SINGH, PAHILVAN (1857-1914). wrestler of legendary fame, was born on 13 January 1857 to Javala Singh Sandhu and Sahib Kaur, a farming couple of moderate means living in the village of Ghameke, in Lahore district (now in Pakistan). Javala Singh, himself a wrestler, wished his only son to train as one. Young Kikkar Sihgh began his apprenticeship in his mother`s native village, Nurpur, under Ghulam, the potter. As he returned to his own village, he started practising with an elderly wrestler, Vasava Singh, who taught him many fine points of the sport.
MADDAR, village five kilometre north of Balloke head works in Pakistan, was known to Sikhs in prepartition Punjab for its Gurdwara Sachchi Manji and some relics of the Gurus it claimed to preserve. One of these was a cot (manji, in Punjabi, after which the Gurdwara was named), said to have been used by Guru Nanak at the time of his visit to the village. Another was one of the pair of Guru Amar Das\' shoes kept in the house of Bhai Chaina Mall, also known as Pero Mall.
PAKKA KALAN, village 24 km south of Bathinda (30° 14`N, 74° 59`E), is sacred to Guru Gobind Singh, who broke journey here on his way from Jassi to Talvandi Sabo in 1706. The original shrine to the southeast of the village together with its landed properly passed into private possession subsequent to the Gurdwara enactment of 1925. A new gurdwara, named Gurdwara Jand Sahib Patshahi 10, constructed after the partition of the country in 1947, is located in the northern part of the village near an old jand (Prosopis specigerd) tree which is believed to have sprouted from a peg to which Guru Gobind Singh`s horse had been fastened. It comprises a hall, with the 4 metre square sanctum at the far end. The shrine is affiliated to the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee and is managed by a local committee.