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Buddhism |
Sikhism
[Kirpan] [Panj
Pyare] [Guru Nanak] [Panj
Kakke]
Guru Nanak, with whom the Sikh religion
originates, was born in 1469 at Talwandi, now in
Pakistan, to Mehta Kalu and Tripta. As is quite
common in the accounts furnished of the founders
of major religions or religious movements, his
birth is said to have been accompanied by
auspicious signs, and the family pandit is
described as having declared that Nanak would
become a great prophet. The little boy was named
Nanak after his sister Nanki, and in childhood
he is said to have had a sonorous voice, which
brought him to the attention of Rai Bular, the
Muslim landlord on whose land Nanaks father
worked. In his childhood, Nanak is said to have
been precocious; but as he was thought to be an
idler in his adolescence, who brought neither
fame nor profit to his father, it was suggested
that he be married off to a girl by the name of
Sulakhni. And so Nanaks parents resorted, in
1485, to the practice still commonly encountered
in Indian families to turn boys into responsible
fathers, and so make men of them.

From the cover of Guru
Nanak, Amar Chitra Katha comic series, no. 590.
Nanak took a job as storekeeper in the state
granary of Daulat Khan Lodi. In the twelfth year
of his employment, upon being falsely accused of
embezzlement, he is described as having taken a
resolution to forsake the worldly life. One
evening he failed to turn up at home, and when
he finally showed up on the third day, he
announced that he had received a divine command
to speak in a new language, the language not of
religious insularity but of religious tolerance
and pluralism. Declaring himself to be neither a
Muslim nor a Hindu, Nanak decided to forgo the
life of the householder, and though a married
man with two sons, he left his home and became
an itinerant preacher. In his travels he was
accompanied by Mardana, a childhood friend, and
in the village of Saidpur, Nanak acquired his
first disciple, the carpenter Lalo whose humble
home he shared. Nanak preached a simple
monotheistic faith, shorn of idolatry and
predicated on the equality of all men and women.
He perceived God as sat, as truth and being.
As Nanak roamed over the Punjab and north India,
he rapidly began to acquire disciples or shishya,
from which the word Sikh was ultimately
derived. Nanak spoke of the dignity of labor,
and one of the first stories that began to
circulate about him concerned his interaction
with Malik Bhago, the zamindar of Saidpur
village. Nanak refused the hospitality of his
home, and when asked to explain his conduct, it
is said that he took out a dry crust of bread
from his pocket that he had brought from Lalos
home. When he squeezed the sweets that Bhago had
placed before him, it is said that drops of
blood fell from the sweets; but when he squeezed
the piece of bread, drops of milk fell forth.
The moral of this story could not have been lost
on Bhago, or on Nanaks contemporaries, but the
cynic who is witness to the late
twentieth-century, where immense fortunes are
made with the twinkling of an eye, and affluence
has little or no relation to the true fruits of
ones labor, might well wonder whether Bhago was
as contrite as Nanaks hagiographies suggest. In
the event, it is possible to view Guru Nanak as
an early spokesperson of working class people,
and to view the revolt he lead not only as a
form of dissent against the oppressions of caste
and religion, but as a form of class awakening.
Nanaks teachings are best understood against
the backdrop of bhakti, the devotional movement
which was then sweeping north and western India,
and in the context of the ossification of both
Hinduism and Islam into religious faiths which
inculcated blind beliefs in their followers.
During the course of his travels, Nanak reached
Hardwar, where he encountered Brahmins who,
while standing in the Ganga, were throwing water
towards the sun to appease the souls of their
ancestors. It is reported that Nanak bent down
and began throwing water in the opposite
direction, and when asked what he was doing, he
replied that he was watering his fields in the
Punjab. When his reply was met with derision,
Nanak reportedly told the Brahmins that if the
water they were sprinkling could reach the sun,
then doubtless the water could also reach his
fields, which were merely a few hundred miles
away. Similarly, Nanakss travels took him to
Mecca. When he arrived in the city, exhausted
and hungry, Nanak lay down, and was rudely
awaken by a Muslim priest, who asked how Nanak
had dared to sleep with his feet pointing
towards the Kaaba. Nanaks rejoinder, whereby he
invited the Kazi to turn his feet wherever God
could not be found, is said to have left the
Kazi speechless.
In his later years, Nanak is said to have
encountered the Mughal emperor Babar, who was
impressed by Nanaks spiritual demeanor. At the
age of 52, Nanak decided to embrace the life of
the householder, and he is described by
contemporary accounts as having settled down to
the life of a farmer at Kartarpur. It is there
that he established one of the most distinctive
social institutions associated that came to be
associated with Sikhism, namely langar or the
community kitchen. This was a radical departure
from the norms of Hindu community living, where
caste rules made it unthinkable for members of
different castes to share food from the same
table or kitchen. As he neared the end of his
life, Nanak was keen on appointing a successor,
and though he could easily have chosen one of
his own sons, he devised a simple test to
determine who was most deserving of leading the
community. He dropped his eating bowl into a
dirty sewer, whereupon one of his disciples,
Lehna, recovered the bowl and brought it before
Nanak. Lenha was anointed Nanaks successor, and
renamed Guru Angad; and it is in his hands that
the future of the Sikh faith was entrusted.
Guru Angad would, in turn, be succeeded by eight
other gurus or teachers, but their histories
belong to the larger history of Sikhism. On 22
September 1539, Guru Nanak passed away, and in
the aftermath of his death Hindus and Muslims
were to provide the clearest testimony that his
simple teachings had barely been absorbed by
them. Both Hindus and Muslims laid claim to his
remains: the former wished to burn the body,
while the latter desired to cremate him. In the
words of one couplet,
" Guru Nanak, the King of Fakirs.
To the Hindu a Guru, to the Mussulman a Pir "
Even while acknowledging him as a saint, both
Muslims and Hindus continued to view him from
the perspective of their respective faiths. When
the quarreling Hindus and Muslims tugged at the
sheet covering Nanaks body, they found instead
a heap of flowers and so Nanaks simple faith
would, in course of time, flower into a
religion, beset by its own contradictions and
customary practices. |