Ganda Singh Wala
Village in Punjab, Pakistan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ganda Singh Wala (Punjabi/Urdu: گنڈا سنگھ والا) is a village, just 58 km from Lahore City in Kasur District in the Punjab, Pakistan. Until 1986, it served as the main border crossing between Pakistan and India.[1] The Sutlej River flows by Ganda Singh Wala, and the area is prone to flooding.[2]
The village is now a 45-minute drive from Lahore after the construction of the new Lahore-Firozpur road. The Burj Naamdaar village nearby is noted for the cultivation of bamboo.[citation needed]
Etymology
The village was named after Ganda Singh Datt, a Sikh soldier in the British Indian Army. It lies on the border with Eastern Punjab, India. The Pakistani village, named after a Sikh man, lies opposite the Indian village of Hussainiwala, which in turn was named after a Muslim man.
India Pakistan Border
Border crossing
The border crossing is now closed. In the 1960s and 1970s, it was the principal road crossing between India and Pakistan,[3] but was replaced by the border crossing at Wagah, a little further north. In 2005 there were proposals to reopen the border.[4] Later, then Chief Minister of Punjab Shahbaz Sharif proposed the reopening of the border when he visited Attari in India, but it has remained closed.[citation needed]
Border ceremony
Since 1970, a daily 6 pm Beating Retreat Border Ceremony is jointly held at the border crossing by the militaries of both nations. It is similar to the Attari-Wagah border ceremony.[5] Attendees are seated close by, as compared to Wagah where crowds are kept far apart. Known for the two bordering villages, the Ganda Singh Wala-Hussainiwala border ceremony is attended mostly by the local Punjabis on either side of the border.