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THE SIKHS, SIKHISM AND ORDER OF THE KHALSA
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| No. | Name | Date birth |
Date accession |
Date expired |
Outstanding work |
| 1. | Guru Nanak Dev | 1469 | ?1493 | 1539 | Founded the Sikh faith; established its basic principles and institutions. |
| 2. | Guru Angad Dev | 1504 | 1539 | 1552 | Perfected the Gurmukhi script in which the Gurus works came to be recorded and preserved. |
| 3. | Guru Amar Das | 1479 | 1552 | 1574 | Strengthened the tradition of Langar ; ensured equal status to women. |
| 4. | Guru Ram Das | 1534 | 1574 | 1581 | Organized excavation of the Pool of Immortality (Amritsar ). |
| 5. | Guru Arjan Dev | 1563 | 1581 | 1606 | Compiled the holy scripture, ( Guru Granth Sahib). |
| 6. | Guru Hargobind | 1595 | 1606 | 1644 | Established the Throne of the Immortal (Akal Takhat); and the doctrine of combined temporal and spiritual authority ( Miri-Piri ) |
| 7. | Guru Har Rai | 1631 | 1644 | 1661 | Continued the task of nation building started by Guru Hargobind. |
| 8. | Guru Har Kishan | 1656 | 1661 | 1664 | Gave his life serving the epidemic-stricken people. |
| 9. | Guru Tegh Bahadar | 1622 | 1664 | 1675 | Laid down his life for mankinds freedom of faith |
| 10. | Guru Gobind Singh | 1666 | 1675 | 1708 | Created the Order of the Khalsa in 1699. Guru Gobind Singh was a great nation-builder. In the words of Sir Gokul Chand Narang, a renowned Hindu leader, there was no existent concept of an Indian nation before Guru Gobind Singh. A nation he began to create by initiating the Order of the Khalsa. |
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The Order of the Khalsa
Three hundred years ago on the Vaisakhi day (March 30, 1699), Guru Gobind Singh, the 10th Guru, in an extraordinarily spectacular way, established the Order of the Khalsa. The term Khalsa means the pure or holy. It also means those belonging to God alone. On that momentous day, the Guru had convened a large assembly of the Sikhs from all over. Reliable historians put the attendance at around 40,000. In the midst of this assembly, the Guru stood on a specially erected platform, and addressing the congregation in a somber voice, said that he wanted some one to come forward and offer his head to him.
Every one was spell bound. Yet, up sprang a devotee and offered his head saying that his life had already been pledged to the Guru. Him the Guru heralded into an enclosure, and a while later, himself came back, blood dripping from his sword and called for another head. Another volunteer came forth. Five times he made the demand and every time some one came forth. Then, when the Guru re-emerged from the enclosure, he brought back all the five who had volunteered their heads and declared from the pulpit that they were his five beloved ones (panj piarey )
The Guru, then, took a steel bowl, filled it with water and started stirring it with a double-edged steel dagger (khanda), sitting by it in a heroic posture (bir asan) ,and reciting five specially selected holy texts. While this process was going on, came the Gurus wife, Jeetoji, and added sugar-bubbles to the water to make it sweet. Thus was prepared the holy water (amrit) with which the Guru anointed the five beloved ones to initiate them into the new Order.
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This done, the Guru now stood before his five beloved ones with folded hands, and entreated them to administer the amrit to them in the like manner. This established the unexceptional identity between the disciple and the Master (aape Gur chela).Since then, it has become the standard baptismal ceremony for the Sikhs to be initiated into the Order of the Khalsa. Many thousands got baptized during the week that followed. After initiation, a Sikh is obliged to follow a prescribed code of conduct ( rehat). This consists in recitation of prescribed liturgical texts every day, remembering God all the time and upholding righteousness. It also involves wearing, on ones person, the following five symbols/markers:
Kes (unshorn hair), signifying holiness.
Kanga (a comb), to keep the hair clean as also to signify cleanliness in general.
Kirpan (a sword), to signify preparedness to defend righteousness on the one hand and Spiritual
Wisdom on the other.
Kada (a steel bracelet), a weapon of defense as also a reminder of the vows..
Kachha (an underwear), signifying the control of passions and discipline of desires.
The Khalsa, its male members in particular, are required to cover their heads with a turban. The male members get the new last name Singh (lion), and the female members Kaur (princess). This signifies that they are now the Gurus spiritual progeny, and have been rid of their previous identities of religion, lineage, ethnicity, caste and rituals. All this resulted in the emergence of the Commonwealth of the Khalsa in which all the members had a shared corporate identity.
The Sikhs hold their congregations in their special places of worship known as the gurdwaras. In every gurdwara, a volume of Guru Granth Sahib is sited with full royal decorum. The holy book, being the living Guru for the Sikhs, is supposed to preside over the congregation.
The services in a Gurdwara consist of meditation on the Divine Name (simran), singing hymns of praise (kirtan), recitation of liturgical texts (path), expositions of the holy texts (katha), and prayerful supplication (ardas) followed by reading a random message from the holy book which is taken by all present as the commandment (hukamnama) for the day. After the conclusion of a service, the congregation shifts to the adjoining temple-of-bread (langar) where everyone partakes of the complimentary holy food prepared and served by volunteers with great devotion. The Gurus langar ensures that no one goes hungry. It also provides the devotees an outstanding venue for service, and where equality of mankind is also practiced.
Now, it is three hundred years since the Order of the Khalsa was promulgated. The tercentenary
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