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Guru Nanak Dev Ji
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Sri Guru Nanak Dev ji was born in
1469 in Talwandi, a village in the Sheikhupura district,
65 kms. west of Lahore. His father was a village official
in the local revenue administration. As a boy, Sri Guru
Nanak learnt, besides the regional languages, Persian and
Arabic. He was married in 1487 and was blessed with two
sons, one in 1491 and the second in 1496. In 1485 he took
up, at the instance of his brother-in-law, the appointment
of an official in charge of the stores of Daulat Khan
Lodhi, the Muslim ruler of the area at Sultanpur. It is
there that he came into contact with Mardana, a low caste
(Mirasi) Muslim minstrel who was ten years senior in age.
By all accounts, 1496 was the year
of his enlightenment when he started on his mission. His
first statement after his prophetic communion with God was
"There is no Hindu, nor any Muslim." This is an
announcement of supreme significance it declared not only
the brotherhood of man and the fatherhood of God, but also
his clear and primary interest not in any metaphysical
doctrine but only in man and his fate. |
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It means
love your neighbour as yourself. In addition, it emphasized,
simultaneously the inalienable spirituo-moral combination of
his message. Accompanied by Mardana, he began his missionary
tours. Apart from conveying his message and rendering help
to the weak, he forcefully preached, both by precept and
practice, against caste distinctions ritualism, idol worship
and the pseudo-religious beliefs that had no spiritual
content. He chose to mix with all. He dined and lived with
men of the lowest castes and classes Considering the then
prevailing cultural practices and traditions, this was
something socially and religiously unheard of in those days
of rigid Hindu caste system sanctioned by the scriptures and
the religiously approved notions of untouchability and
pollution It is a matter of great significance that at the
very beginning of his mission, the Guru's first companion
was a low caste Muslim. The offerings he received during his
tours, were distributed among the poor. Any surplus
collected was given to his hosts to maintain a common
kitchen, where all could sit and eat together without any
distinction of caste and status. This institution of common
kitchen or hangar became a major instrument of helping the
poor, and a nucleus for religious gatherings of his society
and of establishing the basic equality of all castes,
classes and sexes. |
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When Guru Nanak Dev ji were 12 years
old his father gave him twenty rupees and asked him to do a
business, apparently to teach him business. Guru Nanak dev
ji bought food for all the money and distributed among
saints, and poor. When his father asked him what happened to
business? He replied that he had done a "True business" at
the place where Guru Nanak dev had fed the poor, this
gurudwara was made and named Sacha Sauda. |
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Despite the hazards of travel in those
times, he performed five long tours all over the country and
even outside it. He visited most of the known religious
places and centres of worship. At one time he preferred to
dine at the place of a low caste artisan, Bhai Lallo,
instead of accepting the invitation of a high caste rich
landlord, Malik Bhago, because the latter lived by
exploitation of the poor and the former earned his bread by
the sweat of his brow. This incident has been depicted by a
symbolic representation of the reason for his preference.
Sri Guru Nanak pressed in one hand the coarse loaf of bread
from Lallo's hut and in the other the food from Bhago's
house. Milk gushed forth from the loaf of Lallo's and blood
from the delicacies of Bhago. This prescription for honest
work and living and the condemnation of exploitation,
coupled with the Guru's dictum that "riches cannot be
gathered without sin and evil means," have, from the very
beginning, continued to be the basic moral tenet with the
Sikh mystics and the Sikh society. |
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During his tours, he visited numerous
places of Hindu and Muslim worship. He explained and exposed
through his preachings the incongruities and fruitlessness
of ritualistic and ascetic practices. At Haridwar, when he
found people throwing Ganges water towards the sun in the
east as oblations to their ancestors in heaven, he started,
as a measure of correction, throwing the water towards the
West, in the direction of his fields in the Punjab. When
ridiculed about his folly, he replied, "If Ganges water will
reach your ancestors in heaven, why should the water I throw
up not reach my fields in the Punjab, which are far less
distant ?" |
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He spent twenty-five years of his life
preaching from place to place. Many of his hymns were
composed during this period. They represent answers to the
major religious and social problems of the day and cogent
responses to the situations and incidents that he came
across. Some of the hymns convey dialogues with Yogis in the
Punjab and elsewhere. He denounced their methods of living
and their religious views. During these tours he studied
other religious systems like Hinduism, Jainism, Buddhism and
Islam. At the same time, he preached the doctrines of his
new religion and mission at the places and centres he
visited. Since his mystic system almost completely reversed
the trends, principles and practices of the then prevailing
religions, he criticized and rejected virtually all the old
beliefs, rituals and harmful practices existing in the
country. This explains the necessity of his long and arduous
tours and the variety and profusion of his hymns on all the
religious, social, political and theological issues,
practices and institutions of his period. |
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Finally, on the completion of his
tours, he settled as a peasant farmer at Kartarpur, a
village in the Punjab. Bhai Gurdas, the scribe of Guru
Granth Sahib, was a devout and close associate of the third
and the three subsequent Gurus. He was born 12 years after
Guru Nanak's death and joined the Sikh mission in his very
boyhood. He became the chief missionary agent of the Gurus.
Because of his intimate knowledge of the Sikh society and
his being a near contemporary of Sri Guru Nanak, his
writings are historically authentic and reliable. He writes
that at Kartarpur Guru Nanak donned the robes of a peasant
and continued his ministry. He organized Sikh societies at
places he visited with their meeting places called
Dharamsals. A similar society was created at Kartarpur. In
the morning, Japji was sung in the congregation. In the
evening Sodar and Arti were recited. The Guru cultivated his
lands and also continued with his mission and preachings.
His followers throughout the country were known as Nanak-panthies
or Sikhs. The places where Sikh congregation and religious
gatherings of his followers were held were called Dharamsals.
These were also the places for feeding the poor. Eventually,
every Sikh home became a Dharamsal. |
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One thing is very evident. Guru Nanak
had a distinct sense of his prophet hood and that his
mission was God-ordained. During his preachings, he himself
announced. "O Lallo, as the words of the Lord come to me, so
do I express them." Successors of Guru Nanak have also made
similar statements indicating that they were the messengers
of God. So often Guru Nanak refers to God as his Enlightener
and Teacher. His statements clearly show his belief that God
had commanded him to preach an entirely new religion, the
central idea of which was the brotherhood of man and the
fatherhood of God, shorn of all ritualism and priest craft.
During a dialogue with the Yogis, he stated that his mission
was to help everyone. He came to be called a Guru in his
lifetime. In Punjabi, the word Guru means both God and an
enlightener or a prophet. During his life, his disciples
were formed and came to be recognized as a separate
community. He was accepted as a new religious prophet. His
followers adopted a separate way of greeting each other with
the words Sat Kartar (God is true). Twenty-five years of his
extensive preparatory tours and preachings across the length
and breadth of the country clearly show his deep conviction
that the people needed a new prophetic message which God had
commanded him to deliver. He chose his successor and in his
own life time established him as the future Guru or
enlightener of the new community. This step is of the
greatest significance, showing Guru Nanak s determination
and declaration that the mission which he had started and
the community he had created were distinct and should be
continued, promoted and developed. By the formal ceremony of
appointing his successor and by giving him a new name, Angad
(his part or limb), he laid down the clear principle of
impersonality, unity and indivisibility of Guruship. At that
time he addressed Angad by saying, Between thou and me there
is now no difference. In Guru Granth Sahib there is clear
acceptance and proclamation of this identity of personality
in the hymns of Satta-Balwanda. This unity of spiritual
personality of all the Gurus has a theological and mystic
implication. It is also endorsed by the fact that each of
the subsequent Gurus calls himself Nanak in his hymns. Never
do they call themselves by their own names as was done by
other Bhagats and Illyslics. That Guru Nanak attached the
highest importance to his mission is also evident from his
selection of the successor by a system of test, and only
when he was found perfect, was Guru Angad appointed as his
successor. He was comparatively a new comer to the fold, and
yet he was chosen in preference to the Guru's own son, Sri
Chand, who also had the reputation of being a pious person,
and Baba Buddha, a devout Sikh of long standing, who during
his own lifetime had the distinction of ceremonially
installing all subsequent Gurus. |
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All these facts indicate that Guru
Nanak had a clear plan and vision that his mission was to be
continued as an independent and distinct spiritual system on
the lines laid down by him, and that, in the context of the
country, there was a clear need for the organization of such
a spiritual mission and society. In his own lifetime, he
distinctly determined its direction and laid the foundations
of some of the new religious institutions. In addition, he
created the basis for the extension and organization of his
community and religion. |
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The above in brief is the story of the
Guru s life. We shall now note the chief features of his
work, how they arose from his message and how he proceeded
to develop them during his lifetime. |
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(1) |
After his enlightenment, the first
words of Guru Nanak declared the brotherhood of man. This
principle formed the foundation of his new spiritual gospel.
It involved a fundamental doctrinal change because moral
life received the sole spiritual recognition and status.
This was something entirely opposed to the religious systems
in vogue in the country during the time of the Guru. All
those systems were, by and large, other-worldly. As against
it, the Guru by his new message brought God on earth. For
the first time in the country, he made a declaration that
God was deeply involved and interested in the affairs of man
and the world which was real and worth living in. Having
taken the first step by the proclamation of his radical
message, his obvious concern was to adopt further measures
to implement the same. |
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(2) |
The Guru realized that in the context
and climate of the country, especially because of the then
existing religious systems and the prevailing prejudices,
there would be resistance to his message, which, in view of
his very thesis, he wanted to convey to all. He, therefore,
refused to remain at Sultanpur and preach his gospel from
there. Having declared the sanctity of life, his second
major step was in the planning and organization of
institutions that would spread his message. As such, his
twenty-five years of extensive touring can be understood
only as a major organizational step. These tours were not
casual. They had a triple object. He wanted to acquaint
himself with all the centres and organizations of the
prevalent religious systems so as to assess the forces his
mission had to contend with, and to find out the
institutions that he could use in the aid of his own system.
Secondly, he wanted to convey his gospel at the very centres
of the old systems and point out the futile and harmful
nature of their methods and practices. It is for this
purpose that he visited Haridwar, Kurukshetra, Banaras,
Kashi, Maya, Ceylon, Baghdad, Mecca, etc. Simultaneously, he
desired to organize all his followers and set up for them
local centres for their gatherings and worship. The
existence of some of these far-flung centres even up-till
today is a testimony to his initiative in the Organizational
and the societal field. His hymns became the sole guide and
the scripture for his flock and were sung at the Dharamsals. |
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(3) |
Guru Nanak's gospel was for all men.
He proclaimed their equality in all respects. In his system,
the householder's life became the primary forum of religious
activity. Human life was not a burden but a privilege. His
was not a concession to the laity. In fact, the normal life
became the medium of spiritual training and expression. The
entire discipline and institutions of the Gurus can be
appreciated only if one understands that, by the very logic
of Guru Nanak's system, the householder's life became
essential for the seeker. On reaching Kartarpur after his
tours, the Guru sent for the members of his family and lived
there with them for the remaining eighteen years of his
life. For the same reason his followers all over the country
were not recluses. They were ordinary men, living at their
own homes and pursuing their normal vocations. The Guru's
system involved morning and evening prayers. Congregational
gatherings of the local followers were also held at their
respective Dharamsals. |
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(4) |
After he returned to Kartarpur, Guru
Nanak did not rest. He straightaway took up work as a
cultivator of land, without interrupting his discourses and
morning and evening prayers. It is very significant that
throughout the later eighteen years of his mission he
continued to work as a peasant. It was a total involvement
in the moral and productive life of the community. His life
was a model for others to follow. Like him all his disciples
were regular workers who had not given up their normal
vocations Even while he was performing the important duties
of organizing a new religion, he nester shirked the
full-time duties of a small cultivator. By his personal
example he showed that the leading of a normal man's working
life was fundamental to his spiritual system Even a
seemingly small departure from this basic tenet would have
been misunderstood and misconstrued both by his own
followers and others. In the Guru's system, idleness became
a vice and engagement in productive and constructive work a
virtue. It was Guru Nanak who chastised ascetics as idlers
and condemned their practice of begging for food at the
doors of the householders. |
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(5) |
According to the Guru, moral life was
the sole medium of spiritual progress In those times, caste,
religious and social distinctions, and the idea of pollution
were major problems. Unfortunately, these distinctions had
received religious sanction The problem of poverty and food
was another moral challenge. The institution of hangar had a
twin purpose. As every one sat and ate at the same place and
shared the same food, it cut at the root of the evil of
caste, class and religious distinctions. Besides, it
demolished the idea of pollution of food by the mere
presence of an untouchable. Secondly it provided food to the
needy. This institution of hangar and pangat was started by
the Guru among all his followers wherever they had been
organized. It became an integral part of the moral life of
the Sikhs. Considering that a large number of his followers
were of low caste and poor members of society, he, from the
very start, made it clear that persons who wanted to
maintain caste and class distinctions had no place in his
system In fact, the twin duties of sharing one's income with
the poor and doing away with social distinctions were the
two obligations which every Sikh had to discharge. On this
score, he left no option to anyone, since he started his
mission with Mardana, a low caste Muslim, as his life long
companion. |
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(6) |
The greatest departure Guru Nanak made
was to prescribe for the religious man the responsibility of
confronting evil and oppression. It was he who said that God
destroys 'the evil doers' and 'the demonical; and that such
being God s nature and will, it is man's goal to carry out
that will. Since there are evil doers in life, it is the
spiritual duty of the seeker and his society to resist evil
and injustice. Again, it is Guru Nanak who protests and
complains that Babur had been committing tyranny against the
weak and the innocent. Having laid the principle and the
doctrine, it was again he who proceeded to organize a
society. because political and societal oppression cannot be
resisted by individuals, the same can be confronted only by
a committed society. It was, therefore, he who proceeded to
create a society and appointed a successor with the clear
instructions to develop his Panth. Again, it was Guru Nanak
who emphasized that life is a game of love, and once on that
path one should not shirk laying down one's life. Love of
one's brother or neighbour also implies, if love is true,
his or her protection from attack, injustice and tyranny.
Hence, the necessity of creating a religious society that
can discharge this spiritual obligation. This is the
rationale of Guru Nanak's system and the development of the
Sikh society which he organized. |
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(7) |
The Guru expressed all his teachings
in Punjabi, the spoken language of Northern India. It was a
clear indication of his desire not to address the elite
alone but the masses as well. It is recorded that the Sikhs
had no regard for Sanskrit, which was the sole scriptural
language of the Hindus. Both these facts lead to important
inferences. They reiterate that the Guru's message was for
all. It was not for the few who, because of their personal
aptitude, should feel drawn to a life of a so-called
spiritual meditation and contemplation. Nor was it an
exclusive spiritual system divorced from the normal life. In
addition, it stressed that the Guru's message was entirely
new and was completely embodied in his hymns. His disciples
used his hymns as their sole guide for all their moral,
religious and spiritual purposes. Thirdly, the disregard of
the Sikhs for Sanskrit strongly suggests that not only was
the Guru's message independent and self-contained, without
reference and resort to the Sanskrit scriptures and
literature, but also that the Guru made a deliberate attempt
to cut off his disciples completely from all the traditional
sources and the priestly class. Otherwise, the old concepts,
ritualistic practices, modes of worship and orthodox
religions were bound to affect adversely the growth of his
religion which had wholly a different basis and direction
and demanded an entirely new approach. |
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The following hymn from Guru Nanak and
the subsequent one from Sankara are contrast in their
approach to the world. |
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"the sun and moon, O Lord, are Thy
lamps; the firmament Thy salver; the orbs of the stars the
pearls encased in it. |
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The perfume of the sandal is Thine
incense, the wind is Thy fan, all the forests are Thy
flowers, O Lord of light. |
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What worship is this, O Thou destroyer
of birth ? Unbeaten strains of ecstasy are the trumpets of
Thy worship. |
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Thou has a thousand eyes and yet not
one eye; Thou host a thousand forms and yet not one form; |
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Thou hast a thousand stainless feet
and yet not one foot; Thou hast a thousand organs of smell
and yet not one organ. I am fascinated by this play of thine. |
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The light which is in everything is
Chine, O Lord of light. |
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From its brilliancy everything is
illuminated; |
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By the Guru's teaching the light
become thy manifest. |
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What pleases Thee is the real
worship. |
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O God, my mind is fascinated with Thy
lotus feet as the bumble-bee with the flower; night and day
I thirst for them. |
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Give the water of Thy favour to the
Sarang (bird) Nanak, so that he may dwell in Thy Name."3 |
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Sankara writes: "I am not
a combination of the five perishable elements I am neither
body, the senses, nor what is in the body (antar-anga: i.e.
e., the mind). I am not the ego-function: I am not the group
of the vital breath forces; I am not intuitive intelligence
(buddhi). Far from wife and son am 1, far from land and
wealth and other notions of that kind. I am the Witness, the
Eternal, the Inner Self, the Blissful One (sivoham;
suggesting also, 'I am Siva')." |
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"Owing to ignorance of
the rope the rope appears to be a snake; owing to ignorance
of the Self the transient state arises of the
individualized, limited, phenomenal aspect of the Self. The
rope becomes a rope when the false impression disappears
because of the statement of some credible person; because of
the statement of my teacher I am not an individual
life-monad (yivo-naham), I am the Blissful One (sivo-ham
)." |
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"I am not the born; how can there be
either birth or death for me ?" |
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"I am not the vital air; how can there
be either hunger or thirst for me ?" |
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"I am not the mind, the organ of
thought and feeling; how can there be either sorrow or
delusion for me ?" |
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"I am not the doer; how can there be
either bondage or release for me ?" |
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"I am neither male nor female, nor am
I sexless. I am the Peaceful One, whose form is
self-effulgent, powerful radiance. I am neither a child, a
young man, nor an ancient; nor am I of any caste. I do not
belong to one of the four lifestages. I am the
Blessed-Peaceful One, who is the only Cause of the origin
and dissolution of the world."4 |
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While Guru Nanak is
bewitched by the beauty of His creation and sees in the
panorama of nature a lovely scene of the worshipful
adoration of the Lord, Sankara in his hymn rejects the
reality of the world and treats himself as the Sole Reality.
Zimmer feels that "Such holy megalomania goes past the
bounds of sense. With Sankara, the grandeur of the supreme
human experience becomes intellectualized and reveals its
inhuman sterility."5 |
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No wonder that Guru Nanak found the
traditional religions and concepts as of no use for his
purpose. He calculatedly tried to wean away his people from
them. For Guru Nanak, religion did not consist in a 'patched
coat or besmearing oneself with ashes"6 but in treating all
as equals. For him the service of man is supreme and that
alone wins a place in God's heart. |
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By this time it should be
easy to discern that all the eight features of the Guru's
system are integrally connected. In fact, one flows from the
other and all follow from the basic tenet of his spiritual
system, viz., the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of
man. For Guru Nanak, life and human beings became the sole
field of his work. Thus arose the spiritual necessity of a
normal life and work and the identity of moral and spiritual
functioning and growth. |
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Having accepted the
primacy of moral life and its spiritual validity, the Guru
proceeded to identify the chief moral problems of his time.
These were caste and class distinctions, the institutions,
of property and wealth, and poverty and scarcity of food.
Immoral institutions could be substituted and replaced only
by the setting up of rival institutions. Guru Nanak believed
that while it is essential to elevate man internally, it is
equally necessary to uplift the fallen and the downtrodden
in actual life. Because, the ultimate test of one's
spiritual progress is the kind of moral life one leads in
the social field. The Guru not only accepted the necessity
of affecting change in the environment, but also endeavored
to build new institutions. We shall find that these eight
basic principles of the spirituo-moral life enunciated by
Guru Nanak, were strictly carried out by his successors. As
envisaged by the first prophet, his successors further
extended the structure and organized the institutions of
which the foundations had been laid by Guru Nanak. Though we
shall consider these points while dealing with the lives of
the other nine Gurus, some of them need to be mentioned
here. |
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The primacy of the
householder's life was maintained. Everyone of the Gurus,
excepting Guru Harkishan who died at an early age, was a
married person who maintained a family. When Guru Nanak,
sent Guru Angad from Kartarpur to Khadur Sahib to start his
mission there, he advised him to send for the members of his
family and live a normal life. According to Bhalla,8 when
Guru Nanak went to visit Guru Angad at Khadur Sahib, he
found him living a life of withdrawal and meditation. Guru
Nanak directed him to be active as he had to fulfill his
mission and organize a community inspired by his religious
principles. |
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Work in life, both for
earning the livelihood and serving the common good,
continued to be the fundamental tenet of Sikhism. There is a
clear record that everyone upto the Fifth Guru (and probably
subsequent Gurus too) earned his livelihood by a separate
vocation and contributed his surplus to the institution of
hangar Each Sikh was made to accept his social
responsibility. So much so that Guru Angad and finally Guru
Amar Das clearly ordered that Udasis, persons living a
celibate and ascetic life without any productive vocation,
should remain excluded from the Sikh fold. As against it,
any worker or a householder without distinction of class or
caste could become a Sikh. This indicates how these two
principles were deemed fundamental to the mystic system of
Guru Nanak. It was defined and laid down that in Sikhism a
normal productive and moral life could alone be the basis of
spiritual progress. Here, by the very rationale of the
mystic path, no one who was not following a normal life
could be fruitfully included. |
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The organization of moral
life and institutions, of which the foundations had been
laid by Guru Nanak, came to be the chief concern of the
other Gurus. We refer to the sociopolitical martyrdoms of
two of the Gurus and the organization of the military
struggle by the Sixth Guru and his successors. Here it would
be pertinent to mention Bhai Gurdas's narration of Guru
Nanak's encounter and dialogue with the Nath Yogis who were
living an ascetic life of retreat in the remote hills. They
asked Guru Nanak how the world below in the plains was
faring. ' How could it be well", replied Guru Nanak, "when
the so- called pious men had resorted to the seclusion of
the hills ?" The Naths commented that it was incongruous and
self-contradictory for Guru Nanak to be a householder and
also pretend to lead a spiritual life. That, they said, was
like putting acid in milk and thereby destroying its purity.
The Guru replied emphatically that the Naths were ignorant
of even the basic elements of spiritual life.9 This
authentic record of the dialogue reveals the then prevailing
religious thought in the country. It points to the clear and
deliberate break the Guru made from the traditional system. |
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While Guru Nanak was
catholic in his criticism of other religions, he was
unsparing where he felt it necessary to clarify an issue or
to keep his flock away from a wrong practice or prejudice.
He categorically attacked all the evil institutions of his
time including oppression and barbarity in the political
field, corruption among the officials and hypocrisy and
greed in the priestly class. He deprecated the degrading
practices of inequality in the social field. He criticized
and repudiated the scriptures that sanctioned such
practices. After having denounced all of them, he took
tangible steps to create a society that accepted the
religious responsibility of eliminating these evils from the
new institutions created by him and of attacking the evil
practices and institutions in the Social and political
fields. This was a fundamental institutional change with the
largest dimensions and implications for the future of the
community and the country. The very fact that originally
poorer classes were attracted to the Gurus, fold shows that
they found there a society and a place where they could
breathe freely and live with a sense of equality and
dignity. |
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Dr H.R. Gupta, the
well-known historian, writes, "Nanak's religion consisted in
the love of God, love of man and love of godly living. His
religion was above the limits of caste, creed and country.
He gave his love to all, Hindus, Muslims, Indians and
foreigners alike. His religion was a people's movement based
on modern conceptions of secularism and socialism, a common
brotherhood of all human beings. Like Rousseau, Nanak felt
250 years earlier that it was the common people who made up
the human race They had always toiled and tussled for
princes, priests and politicians. What did not concern the
common people was hardly worth considering. Nanak's work to
begin with assumed the form of an agrarian movement. His
teachings were purely in Punjabi language mostly spoken by
cultivators. Obey appealed to the downtrodden and the
oppressed peasants and petty traders as they were ground
down between the two mill stones of Government tyranny and
the new Muslims' brutality. Nanak's faith was simple and
sublime. It was the life lived. His religion was not a
system of philosophy like Hinduism. It was a discipline, a
way of life, a force, which connected one Sikh with another
as well as with the Guru."'° "In Nanak s time Indian
society was based on caste and was divided into countless
watertight Compartments. Men were considered high and low on
account of their birth and not according to their deeds.
Equality of human beings was a dream. There was no spirit of
national unity except feelings of community fellowship. In
Nanak's views men's love of God was the criterion to judge
whether a person was good or bad, high or low. As the caste
system was not based on divine love, he condemned it. Nanak
aimed at creating a casteless and classless society similar
to the modern type of socialist society in which all were
equal and where one member did not exploit the other. Nanak
insisted that every Sikh house should serve as a place of
love and devotion, a true guest house (Sach dharamshala).
Every Sikh was enjoined to welcome a traveler or a needy
person and to share his meals and other comforts with him."
Guru Nanak aimed at uplifting the individual as well as
building a nation." |
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Considering the religious
conditions and the philosophies of the time and the social
and political milieu in which Guru Nanak was born, the new
spirituo- moral thesis he introduced and the changes he
brought about in the social and spiritual field were indeed
radical and revolutionary. Earlier, release from the bondage
of the world was sought as the goal. The householder's life
was considered an impediment and an entanglement to be
avoided by seclusion, monasticism, celibacy, sanyasa or
vanprastha. In contrast, in the Guru's system the world
became the arena of spiritual endeavor. A normal life and
moral and righteous deeds became the fundamental means of
spiritual progress, since these alone were approved by God.
Man was free to choose between the good and the bad and
shape his own future by choosing virtue and fighting evil.
All this gave "new hope, new faith, new life and new
expectations to the depressed, dejected and downcast people
of Punjab."'3 |
|
Guru Nanak's religious
concepts and system were entirely opposed to those of the
traditional religions in the country. His views were
different even from those of the saints of the Radical
Bhakti movement. From the very beginning of his mission, he
started implementing his doctrines and creating institutions
for their practice and development. In his time the
religious energy and zeal were flowing away from the
empirical world into the desert of otherworldliness,
asceticism and renunciation. It was Guru Nanak's mission and
achievement not only to dam that Amazon of moral and
spiritual energy but also to divert it into the world so as
to enrich the moral, social the political life of man. We
wonder if, in the context of his times, anything could be
more astounding and miraculous. The task was undertaken with
a faith, confidence and determination which could only be
prophetic. |
|
It is indeed the emphatic
manifestation of his spiritual system into the moral
formations and institutions that created a casteless society
of people who mixed freely, worked and earned righteously,
contributed some of their income to the common causes and
the hangar. It was this community, with all kinds of its
shackles broken and a new freedom gained, that bound its
members with a new sense of cohesion, enabling it to rise
triumphant even though subjected to the severest of
political and military persecutions. |
|
The life of Guru Nanak shows
that the only interpretation of his thesis and doctrines
could be the one which we have accepted. He expressed his
doctrines through the medium of activities. He himself laid
the firm foundations of institutions and trends which
flowered and fructified later on. As we do not find a trace
of those ideas and institutions in the religious milieu of
his time or the religious history of the country, the
entirely original and new character of his spiritual system
could have only been mystically and prophetically inspired. |
|
A part from the continuation,
consolidation and expansion of Guru Nanak's mission, the
account that follows seeks to present the major
contributions made by the remaining Gurus. |
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