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-: Religious Paths :-
Buddhism |
Sikhism
[Kirpan] [Panj
Pyare] [Guru
Nanak] [Panj
Kakke]
The Sikh faith originates with Guru Nanak
(1469-1539), an itinerant teacher who preached a
simple monotheistic faith shorn of idolatry,
predicated on the equality of all men, critical
of caste distinctions, and respectful of the
dignity of human labor. Nanak was succeeded by
Guru Angad (1504-52), who developed the Gurmukhi
script and collected the writings of Nanak; the
fourth Guru, Ram Das (1534-81), founded the holy
city of Amritsar, where his successor Arjan
(1563-1606) built a gurdwara (literally, doorway
to the Guru) or Sikh temple. Guru Arjan also
engaged in the construction of numerous other
gurdwaras, and gave definite shape to the
compilation of Nanak's writings, which along
with the hymns of Hindu and Muslim saints and
the writings of the other Gurus were constituted
into the Adi Granth or Guru Granth Sahib, the
holy book of the Sikhs. The Sikhs thereby
became, in the words of one scholar, a "textual
community".
Guru Arjan's efforts to put his faith on a firm
basis and secure for it an organizational
structure attracted the attention of India's
Mughal dynasty, and he was consequently put to
death in the city of Lahore. This was, on the
conventional account, also the fate of Tegh
Bahadur (1621-75), the ninth Guru, who refused
conversion to Islam. His son, Gobind Singh
(1666-1708), having assumed the leadership of
his people at the age of ten, conceived of a
plan in his later years to save the Sikh
community from possible extinction and safeguard
the interests of the community. He initiated
five of his followers, known as the Panj Pyaras,
or the Five Beloved, into a new brotherhood
which he called the Khalsa, or the Pure. They
were given, as would have any monks joining a
Hindu order, new names to each of which was
attached the suffix 'Singh' or lion. (Sikh
Khalsa women receive the name 'Kaur'.) They were
also enjoined to wear, as a mark of their
devotion to the faith and as an indication of
their membership in the Khalsa, panj kakke or
what are known as the five symbols of the Sikh
faith: kes (uncut hair), kangha (a comb), kara
(a steel bangle), kirpan (a sword or knife) and
kachcha (special breeches or undergarments).
Having further commanded them to abstain from
tobacco, alcohol, and halal meat (that is, meat
slaughtered in the ritualistic Muslim manner),
Gobind Singh then baptised the five men, and was
in turn baptised by them. Thus was formed the
Khalsa.
Despite continued persecution under the Mughal
emperor Aurangzeb, the Sikh community managed to
flourish, and by the middle part of the
eighteenth century, Sikh rule was regularized by
the imposition of a revenue demand from the
Punjab peasantry equal to one-fifth of the
harvest in return for the protection of the
khalsa. In the early part of the nineteenth
century, Ranjit Singh came to preside over the
formidable Sikh kingdom, which was not subdued
by the British until the Anglo-Sikh wars of the
1840s. During the 1857-58 rebellion, otherwise
known as the Sepoy Mutiny, the British were able
to enlist the Sikhs to their cause in
suppressing the rebellion, and thereafter the
Sikhs, considered one of the primary "martial
races", were inducted into the Indian army in
numbers much larger than their share of the
population. The partition of India in 1947 was
deeply wounding to the Sikh community, and from
time to time, there have been demands for a
separate Sikh state. The first exponent in
recent times of the idea of a Sikh homeland was
Master Tara Singh, but since the early 1980s,
the most vivid expression of the idea of a
distinct Sikh community is to be found in the
views of militant and sometimes secessionist
Sikhs who authored the idea of "Khalistan".
There is scarcely any doubt that Sikhism is a
distinct Indian religion. Nonetheless, as the
Constitution of India itself suggests, there is
a tendency to think of Sikhs (as well as
Buddhists and Jains) as none other than Hindus,
and not everyone is persuaded that Sikhism and
Hinduism are all that different. The boundaries
between Sikhism and Hinduism were never sharply
drawn until very recent times, and in the Punjab
it was not uncommon at all, until the violent
secessionist movement of the 1980s began to
alter the landscape, for a Hindu family to raise
one of its children as a Sikh. Sikhs who have
abandoned the most overt marks of their faith,
such as unshorn hair, can scarcely be
distinguished from Hindus, and it is not in the
least incorrect to suggest that the wrath of
orthodox Sikhs is directed at least as much at
moderate Sikhs as at Hindus. There are other
considerations, as well, which suggest the
vastly altered circumstances under which one
must contemplate the future of Sikhism. At one
time the Sikhs were entirely confined entirely
to India, and it is in the nineteenth century
that some began to go overseas, such as those
who were taken as a laboring force to build
railroads in Uganda. The first taste of the
world outside for many Sikh males came when they
were recruited to fight in the two world wars,
and in the aftermath of World War II, as the
worn-torn economies of Europe struggled to stand
on their feet, the Sikhs were enticed to
Britain, Germany, and Holland with the promise
of citizenship in return for their labor. Today,
nearly 15% of Sikhs live outside India, and the
Sikhs have become one of the worlds great
diasporic communities. How will the religious
and cultural practices of Sikhs outside India
alter Sikhism and the nature of the Sikh
community within India? This is scarcely an idle
question, when one considers that the demand for
Khalistan is now greater among Canadian,
British, and American Sikhs than it is among the
Sikhs in India itself. |