Harpal Singh has worked as a journalist for over three decades in India and elsewhere. His latest twin-assignments were a regional satellite television news station, Day & Night News, Chandigarh, where he worked as the Editor, and its digital sibling, GoNews India, where he was Head of Operations.
He has had a long innings at India Today magazine where he started as a Trainee Journalist in 1989 and became its News Editor in 1997. He has been the Head of Forward Planning for NDTV, Systems Editor for ABNi (now CNBC), Night Editor for The Indian Express, Associate Executive Producer for Aaj Tak & Headlines Today (now India Today Television), Senior Executive Producer for NewsX and Program Editor for Al Jazeera English at Doha.
He completed his Honours in English from Delhi University's Rajdhani College in 1987 and a post-graduate programme in journalism from the Centre for Mass Media of the New Delhi YMCA the following year before entering the media.
He is a World Press Institute (WPI)-trained trainer on transparency reporting (Minnesota, 2005) and has regularly taught a variety of media subjects since 1996. He is widely travelled & considers news-gathering and creative writing his core competencies.
Harpal has taken up oral history to fulfil an abiding life goal: to create a credible and comprehensive digital repository on the Sikh Genocide of 1984 in which 2,733 persons were killed over three days in Delhi alone after the assassination of the then Indian Prime Minister, Mrs. Indira Gandhi, by her Sikh bodyguards. He is a victim and survivor of that pogrom.
His interests, however, extend beyond his community and what it has endured. His touchstone for shining an illuminating light on a subject is the violation of human rights, impinging of personal liberties, discrimination, and peddling of hate anywhere in the world, from Kashmir in India to Kabul in Afghanistan to Aleppo in Syria to Rakhine in Myanmar to Caracas in Venezuela.
“I’m attempting to move away from writing the ‘first rough draft of history’ to learning to write the first rough draft of oral history,” he says. “It is a leap of faith, similar to my leap into journalism over three decades ago.”
Harpal is a radio buff, but ironically, he has never worked in that space because radio news is still a State monopoly in India.