Published: June 23, 2025
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🧵 THREAD: What if I told you 2 trains in Bharat were stopped… and every Hindu was shot dead? Welcome to the Massacre of 1991. Let’s remember what they want us to forget. 👇

Image in tweet by Manisha Singh

3/ The train didn’t break down. It was sabotaged. Terrorists hotwired the signal system to stop it. Then, like demons in the dark, they stormed in with Automatic rifles. AK-47s. And one deadly question: “Are you Hindu?”

Image in tweet by Manisha Singh

4/ They didn’t just shoot. They executed. 62 passengers, mostly Hindus, were gunned down. 40 more injured. Bodies slumped over benches. Mothers shielding children. Blood flooding the aisles. This was no robbery. It was a religious pogrom on Indian soil, in peacetime.

Image in tweet by Manisha Singh

5/ That was just the beginning. Same night. Different train near Qila Rajan, Ludhiana. Terrorists boarded the Dhuri-Hisar passenger train. This time, the attack was even more methodical. They separated Hindus from Sikhs. Forced the Hindus off the train. Then, like animals, lined

6/ The media called it “Unrest.” We call it what it was: Genocide. Both attacks happened within hours of each other, orchestrated by the KCF. It was the largest mass killing on a single day in Punjab’s history. But that night wasn’t done spilling blood.

Image in tweet by Manisha Singh

7/ That same day, Khalistani terrorists assassinated Jatinder Singh, an Assembly candidate from the All-India Sikh Students Federation (AISSF), inside a gurdwara in Ropar. He became the 21st political candidate killed in cold blood. Two policemen were killed elsewhere. In Tarn

8/ Punjab was already burning. By mid-June 1991, over 700 civilians had been killed in the run-up to elections. Army had been deployed. The State was under President’s Rule since 1987. And just a day before the train massacres, Punjab was declared a disturbed area. This wasn’t

9/ The nightmare returned on December 26, 1991. A passenger train. Nightfall. Village Sohian, near Ludhiana. Terrorists already on board, pulled the emergency cord at 7:30 PM. Then began a systematic execution of Hindu passengers.

10/ They searched every compartment. Checked faces, Names, IDs. 49 Hindus shot dead. 20 more injured. Six more gunmen joined in at Sohian crossing. Then they disappeared into the night like ghosts, leaving carnage behind. No arrests. No outrage. No headlines.

Image in tweet by Manisha Singh

11/ Who were these monsters? The attackers were from the Khalistan Commando Force (KCF), a group funded and trained by Pakistan’s ISI. Their goal? To ethnically cleanse Punjab of Hindus. To split India. To create a theocratic Khalistan.

12/ Think of it now: Two train massacres. 125+ Hindus dead. Zero Netflix shows. Zero monuments. Zero remembrance. Had the roles been reversed, this would be in every school textbook. But since the dead were Hindus, they were erased. Deliberately.

13/ Why don’t you know this? Because the Indian State stayed silent. The media stayed complicit. The Congress-led ecosystem swept it under the carpet, just like the Kashmiri Pandit genocide. Hindu blood isn’t secular enough to mourn.

14/ Where are the killers now? Some fled to Canada and UK, given refugee status. Raise Khalistan flags in London, Canada. Fund “human rights” NGOs from Vancouver. Their propaganda thrives.

15/ And some call Bhindranwale a "revolutionary." Still today, Punjab politicians flirt with Khalistani sympathizers. Still today, Sikh for Justice runs campaigns in the West. And still, Hindus are expected to forget. But we won’t.

16/ Why is this relevant today? Because the same Khalistani groups are rebranding themselves as victims on social media. They cry about "1984", but never about 1991, Ludhiana train massacre. They abuse Bharat, yet want free healthcare, citizenship, and asylum from it.

17/ We remember. We will speak. We will write. Because truth buried is terror reborn. June 1991 was India’s own train holocaust and secular Congress looked away. Let the world know: Khalistan was built on Hindu blood by Congress. RT the first post and Follow @ManiYogini for

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