|
Guru
Hargobind Ji
 |
While in prison, before his
execution at Lahore, Guru Arjun had sent a message to his
son, Guru Hargobind, then aged only eleven, that he should
henceforth maintain an army. At the very time of his
installation as Guru, he insisted that he should wear two
swords, one representing his spiritual leadership and the
other his temporal and political leadership. Soon after
it, he constructed in front of the Amritsar temple,
another building called the Akal Takhat (God's throne) as
the seat of temporal power. This place continues to the
present day as the centre of every sociopolitical
deliberation and power of the community. There, like the
two swords he wore, he raised aloft two flags representing
the two aspects of his activities. He told his followers,
"My rosary shall be my swordbelt and on my turban I shall
wear the emblem of royalty.''l9 The Sikhs were already
engaged in the trade of horses and the Guru advised every
Sikh to keep a sword and maintain a horse, wherever
possible. He started recruiting a regular army. He had a
personal bodyguard of 57 horsemen and kept 700 horses, 60
gunmen and 500 infantry men. Thus a state within a state,
started and developed by the earlier Gurus, was
consolidated by him. |
|
When this news
reached the Emperor, he demanded from the
Guru the fine imposed on his father. The
Guru was imprisoned in the Gwalior fort
along with other political prisoners of high
status. Later he was released. |
|
There is an
important incident which brings out the
religious policy of the Gurus. One Ram Das,
a Maharashtra saint, met Guru Hargobind. He
questioned him as to how he reconciled his
being a successor to the spiritual seat of
Guru Nanak with his living as a soldier,
maintaining an army and calling himself a
true Emperor. The Guru replied that Guru
Nanak had given up mammon (greed for money).
He had not renounced the world, and that the
sword was for the double purpose of
protecting the poor and destroying the
tyrant.20 These words of the Guru most
clearly bring out the religious and
spiritual philosophy of Sikh mysticism, its
originality and its break with the past.
Persons brought up in the tradition of old
beliefs and ideas of dichotomy between the
religious and the temporal life find it
difficult to understand and grasp the
significance of the Gurus' system. The
problem of comprehension that confronted
saint Ram Das was the same as arose with the
Nath Yogis in their dialogue with Guru
Nanak. It arises even now with some of our
present-day academicians. But, for the Sikh
mystic, participation in life is spiritually
essential. Consequently, the defense of
moral life, reaction and responses to
challenges from the environment form an
integral part of the Gurus' mystic system.
The reply of Guru Hargobind is an
unambiguous clarification of the system of
Guru Nanak as understood by the Gurus
themselves. This also explains the various
empirical steps taken by the first five
Gurus in order to develop their religious
system and organize the Sikhs in the way
they did. Saint Ram Das's meeting with the
Guru had a great historical consequence, for
he was so impressed by the Guru's thesis
that he later trained Shivaji, the great
Maratha leader, in the same manner. |
|
Guru Hargobind
sponsored the cause of the downtrodden
Hindus and provided leadership to the
oppressed people of Punjab. In this
struggle, he fought six battles with the
Mughals in the plains of the Punjab. People
came to him and joined his forces because
they felt that no one else had the power to
stand against the Emperor. In one of these
battles he defeated 7,000 Mughal soldiers.
Finally, he settled at Kiratpur. His
reputation as a military leader spread and
ambassadors of the hill Rajas waited upon
him. |
|
The
organization of the Sikhs into a separate
socio-religious group with political
implications had started from the time of
the very first Guru. This close and integral
combination of the temporal and the
spiritual life was a thesis which was
foreign to the Indian tradition. No wonder
that some of the people around the Sixth
Guru, including his own followers, could not
understand the spiritual character of these
military developments. This explains two
points. First, that the transformation of
the community into a spirituo- political
organization could only be gradual, because
the Gurus had to carry the people with them.
Unfortunately, they had all been conditioned
by the old traditions. The full
understanding and acceptance of the new
thesis could only be slow. |
|
The Gurus,
naturally, had to wait till their followers
fully realized the implications of the new
doctrine and owned its responsibilities.
Secondly, it also confirms the view that the
object was to organize a mission and a
movement in the empirical world and not
merely to deliver a message and embody it in
a scripture or a mythical tale. The
scriptural thesis had to be lived among the
people and not in the seclusion of a
monastery for the training of a few. The aim
was to uplift everyone irrespective of caste
and creed and to show that each one,
howsoever placed, could tread the spiritual
path. This choice was open to everyone and
the Guru was there to organize and lead the
movement. Hence, the progress could only be
gradual both in the education of the people
and in the pace of the movement. The latter
could not outstrip the former. The task was
stupendous. For, it had to take place in the
face of the understandable opposition of one
of the greatest empires of all times. |
|
One incident
is very significant of the socio-political
climate in the Guru's camp. During a hunt
being carried out by the Imperial party in a
jungle, the Sikhs also entered the same area
in pursuit of game. The Sikhs got hold of a
falcon, which was claimed by the official
party. A clash took place and the Imperial
forces were beaten off. But, what is
important is the approval of the Sikhs who
stressed, "you are talking of the return of
the baz (falcon), we are after your tag
(crown)." It clearly shows the independence
of political status claimed by the Guru and
his Sikhs. |
|
The number and
areas of sub-centres of preaching were
extended. The Guru himself controlled both
the religious centres and the temporal
centre at Amritsar. The Guru, thereby, only
brought out visibly and symbolically what,
in view of the steps that had already been
taken by the earlier Gurus, was inherent in
the integrated spiritual thesis of Guru
Nanak. In fact secure and clear foundations
had already been laid by him. While the
Gurus, and those engaged in these
developments, were fully aware of their
responsibility to maintain the original
spiritual purity of the religion and the
entire movement, to some outsiders,
including historians conditioned and
committed to different doctrines and systems
of religion and polity, the Sixth Guru s
work has seemed to show a departure from the
original growth. But, a departure, as we
have seen, it was not. |
|
<<:
Back Page
|
Next Page:
>> |
|
|
|