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Originally published in The Sikh Review: January 1967

In the summer of 1921 a strange phenomenon was witnessed in the Punjab. That year the Sikhs launched a passive resistance movement to take possession of one of their historic shrines called Guru Ka Bagh, a few miles from Amritsar. Batches of passive resisters went to this shrine.

They were mercilessly beaten by the police. Their arms and legs were smashed; they were dragged by their long hair; many were hung upside down from branches of trees till they became senseless.

Instead of being cowed down by these brutalities, the number of passive resisters increased steadily till 500 strong jathas began to arrive every day at Guru Ka Bagh - amongst them many who had suffered beatings earlier and had been discharged from the hospital.

This "rare species of courage" as Gandhi and Rev. C.F. Andrews described "was born of religious fervour", in its turn, born of a legend widely accepted by the Sikhs. It was said that wherever five passive resisters assembled to say their prayers, Guru Gobind Singh appeared before them. He led them to Guru Ka Bagh. And he, not the passive resister, received the blows showered by the police. When these satyagrahis were produced in court and asked their names and addresses, they gave their names correctly. But of their parentage and address, the answer invariably was: "My father’s name is Guru Gobind Singh; my mother, Mata Sahib Devan. My home is the Guru’s town Anandpur."

The Guru Ka Bagh satyagraha went on for some months till the Punjab gaols were crammed. Ultimately it was the police and the Government which gave in and agreed to Guru Ka Bagh being handed over to the Sikhs.

I have met many of these passive resisters and, with my own ears, heard them tell of the darshan of the Guru, and his ethereal form lead them to face the police. They swear that they lost all fear, and when they were tortured they knew no pain.

Soon after Guru Ka Bagh yet another phenomenon was witnessed in the Punjab. The sacred pool surrounding the Hari Mandir in Amritsar was drained and desilted. In this Kar Seva, as it was known, millions of people took part. You can today meet hundreds of men and women who will swear that many a time while they were engaged in this Kar Seva the Guru’s white hawk swooped down from the skies and settled on the gold pinnacle of the Hari Mandir - and then as dramatically vanished into the blue heaven.

Sceptics will undoubtedly have explanation for these phenomena. Let us concede that in an atmosphere of religious fervour, such experiences are possible. However, the point to bear in mind is that for the Sikhs these phenomena have been usually connected with Guru Gobind Singh, because he has been to them their father-figure, their supreme hero, the sustainer of faith, hope and courage, and their beau-ideal - all in one.

What kind of man was this heroic Guru Gobind Singh? By now you must be familiar with the main events of his life. I will not repeat them. I will only draw your attention to five points to help you judge the Guru’s place in history. The choice of the number ‘five’ is deliberate. Five has some kind of mystic significance in the Punjab - the land of five rivers. The Guru himself subscribed to sanctity of the five:

pancon men nit bartat main hun
panc milan to piran pir.


"Wherever there are five there am I. Where five meet, they are the holiest of the holy."
First, it should be borne in mind that he was only a child of nine when his father, the ninth Guru, Tegh Bahadur was executed by the order of Emperor Aurangzeb. In any mortal such an experience would result in a traumatic shock followed, first, by fear and, then, by hate and desire for revenge against the people who had perpetrated the crime. I have little doubt that many persons must have tried to fill young Gobind’s mind with feelings of hatred and revenge against the Mughals. The Guru remained impervious to these influences. When he grew into manhood he announced his mission in life in the following words: "I came into the world charged with the duty to uphold the right in every place, to destroy sin and evil... the only reason I took birth was to see that righteousness may flourish, that good may live, and tyrants be torn out by their roots."

Secondly, it should be constantly before our minds that the Guru never subscribed to the theory "might is right". Although he introduced the worship of arms in Sikh religious ritual and even described the sword, the spear and the musket as ‘the pirs’ - religious mentors of the Sikhs, this was entirely in the context of force as the righter of wrongs. He was fully aware of the fact that the teachings of the first five Gurus and the Granth Sahib were pacific in content. But should truth and goodness be allowed to suffer annihilation at the hands of falsehood and evil? The Guru’s answer was a categorical "No". In a Persian composition entitled the Zafarnama, the Epistle of Victory said to have been sent to Emperor Aurangzeb, he wrote:

cu kar az hama hilate dar guzasht
halal ast burdan ba shamshir dast.

"When all other means have failed, it is righteous to draw the sword."

In this context, it is significant that although Guru Gobind Singh dictated the final version of the Guru Granth Sahib, he did not include any of his own compositions exhorting people to rise in arms in the sacred text.

Thirdly, the Guru took, special care that anti-Muslim sentiment should not stain the crusade he was about to launch against the Mughals. "My sword strikes tyrants, not men", he said. Amongst the earliest recruits to his army were Muslims. Although he fought the Mughals all his life - as indeed he did the Hindu Rajputs of the hills - he had both Muslims and Hindus fighting on his side, shoulder to shoulder with his Sikhs. This followed naturally from his conviction that all men were of one caste - manas ki jat sab ek pacanbo - he exhorted. And that the mosque and the temple to be the same; the call of the muezzin and the chanting of the pandit were the same.

The non-communal tradition started by Guru Gobind Singh was continued into the time of Maharajah Ranjit Singh who was, as pointed out by Pandit Nehru in his "Discovery of India", one of the few genuinely secular rulers of our country. It was, therefore, in the fitness of things that in the crowning success of Sikh arms, the flag that the Muslim General, Colonel Basswan, carried through the streets of Kabul bore the emblem of Guru Gobind Singh; likewise, the Dogra, General Zorawar Singh, planted this saffron banner bearing Guru Gobind Singh’s Chakra, with Kirpans crossed, beneath, in the heart of Tibet.

Guru Gobind Singh was able to raise his fight against Mughals into a struggle of the down-trodden against oppression of the rich, into a demand for justice against tyranny of wrong-doers, in short, into a crusade, a veritable dharma yudha against the powers of evil. He forbade his soldiers from looting. He made them take solemn vows that they would never molest women of the enemy. He emulated the example of our ancient rishis and yogis and insisted that all Sikhs should wear their hair and beards unshorn - for they were not common soldiers but Sant Sipahis, Soldier-Saints.

Fourthly, what deserves your attention is the incredible sense of loyalty and sacrifice that the Guru was able to arouse amongst his followers. Let me give you a few examples. You may have heard of the famous ‘baptismal’ ceremony when five men willingly agreed to have their heads cut off.

There are innumerable examples of similar sacrifice. As well known as these first five Sikhs, known as Panj Piyaras, were another group of forty known as chali mukte. Under great stress during the prolonged siege of Anandpur these forty men asked the Guru to let them go. After getting a deed of renunciation, the Guru released them from their obligation. When these men returned to their homes their women folk taunted them for disloyalty to the Master. The men (including amongst them a woman, Mai Bhago) rejoined the Guru at Muktsar and fell fighting. The last request their leader, Mahan Singh, made to the Guru, was to have the deed of renunciation torn up before he closed his eyes for ever.

Yet another example was of an old woman who came to the Guru for help. She told him that her husband and two sons had been killed fighting. All that remained of her family was her youngest son who was dangerously ill. She begged the Guru’s blessings to restore him to health - not to have some one to look after her in old age - but in order that this son too could attain martyrdom in the battle field.

How was Guru Gobind Singh able to fire his followers with this kind of reckless valor? Primarily by setting an example himself. This is the fourth point of your consideration. He fought alongside his men. He never put his family before his followers. On the contrary, at one of the engagements, he allowed two of his sons to go to a certain death before he allowed any of his Panj Piyaras to do so. Within a few months he lost all his four sons: two were killed fighting, the other two, aged nine and seven, were executed by the Governor of Sirhind. His own mother died of grief. When his wife asked him in tears for her four sons, the Guru answered, "What if four be dead; thousands live to continue the battle."

It was by this kind of personal example that the Guru was able to train poor rustics who had handled nothing more lethal than a lathi and flabby, pot-bellied, timid shopkeepers, to become some of the greatest fighters India has ever known. He redeemed his pledge that ‘he would train the sparrow to fight the hawk’ and ‘teach one man to fight a legion’. Pathans, Persians, Afghans and Baluchis of the North West Frontier region who had for centuries invaded India, terrified, massacred and looted our people, were beaten back into the homelands by these new soldiers of Guru Gobind Singh.

It has never been fully appreciated by our historians that these Sikhs set up a human barricade against the invaders and so made possible the rise of Maratha power in the Deccan.

Fifthly, and this is my final point, is the genuinely democratic spirit of this great leader of men. Guru Gobind Singh never claimed divinity for himself. He denounced those who tried to make him an incarnation of God. "I was ordained to establish a sect and lay down its rules," he wrote. "But whosoever regards me as Lord shall be damned and destroyed. I am - and this let there be no doubt, I am but a slave to God, as other men are: a beholder of the wonders of creation." He took no credit for what he did: he attributed all achievements to the Khalsa - all his victories, his power, his prestige, he said was due to the efforts of his followers. Although he was their Guru, he made himself their disciple - ape gur-cela. Whenever the congregation passed a resolution it acquired the sanctity of a gurumata - an ordinance of the Guru binding even on the Guru himself.

Guru Gobind Singh was thus a rare combination of many qualities - a sophisticated aesthete composing poetry in many languages - Sanskrit, Prakrit, Persian and Punjabi; a handsome cavalier fond of chase and danger; a soldier who dedicated his life to fight tyranny; a leader who looked upon his followers as comrades and equals, a Guru who exhorted people to worship the God they love best but insisted they look up their fellow beings as equals; a man who sacrificed all he had - his family and his worldly possessions and ultimately himself for his ideals. This ideal he stated in lines which have become the most quoted of his compositions:

O Lord of Thee these boons I ask
Let me never shun a righteous task.
Let me be fearless when I go to battle.
Give me faith that victory will be mine.
Give me power to sing Thy praise,
And when comes the time to end my life,
Let me fall in mighty strife...

Has the world produced many men as great as Guru Gobind Singh?

Guru Gobind Singh - The Man

By Khushwant Singh
01/05/2006 From The Sikh Review: January 1967.

Bhai Nand Lal's verses in praise of Guru Gobind Singh Ji.

Bhai Nand Lal (c. 1633-1713), was a poet famous in the Sikh tradition and favourite disciple of Guru Gobind Singh. His poetry, all in Persian except for Joti Bikas, which is in Punjabi, forms part of the approved Sikh canon and can be recited along with scriptural verse at Sikh religious divans. Nand Lal adopted the pen-name of "Goya," though at places he has also subscribed himself as "Lal," the word being the last part of his name. He was a scholar, learned in the traditional disciplines of the time, and his image in Sikh history is that of a man who loved and venerated Guru Gobind Singh and has been in turn loved and venerated by generations of Sikhs. Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the helper of others, Guru Gobind Singh Ji has the help of God

Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the treasurer of God, Guru Gobind Singh Ji is bestower of merciful gifts
Guru Gobind Singh Ji knows God well, Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the emperor of emperors
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the king of both worlds, Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the warrior who gives life to enemies
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the giver of great gifts Guru Gobind Singh Ji tells the secrets of God
Guru Gobind Singh Ji puts a veil over everyone's sins, Guru Gobind Singh Ji is a cloud of mercy
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is accepted out of the accepted, Guru Gobind Singh Ji has reached God
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is a river of divine knowledge, Guru Gobind Singh Ji is a sea of God's gifts
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is beloved of God, Guru Gobind Singh Ji is a lover of God
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is an expert with the sword, Guru Gobind Singh Ji knows the secrets of every heart
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the master of the crown, Guru Gobind Singh Ji has God's shade over Him
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the treasurer of all God's treasures, Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the cure for all pain
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the master of the world, Guru Gobind Singh Ji is unequalled in both worlds
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is praised by God Himself, Guru Gobind Singh Ji has many great virtues
Guru Gobind Singh Ji has very important people falling at His feet, Guru Gobind Singh Ji gives instruction to even demi-gods
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is praised by accepted ones, Guru Gobind Singh Ji knows what is in everyone's heart
Guru Gobind Singh Ji's feet are kissed by the heavens, Guru Gobind Singh Ji's drum sounds in both worlds
Guru Gobind Singh Ji has the three loks(worlds) under Him, Guru Gobind Singh Ji has the stamp of His command all over the world
Sudas is the servant of Guru Gobind Singh Ji, Guru Gobind Singh Ji slows down the zealous energy of enemies
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is holy and free from enmity, Guru Gobind Singh Ji is a mirror who shows the true God
Guru Gobind Singh Ji understands the true God, Guru Gobind Singh Ji is a king and a saint as-well
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is kind, merciful and wise, Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the giver who gives great gifts
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the giver of givers, Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the merciful of merciful
Guru Gobind Singh Ji kindly gives gifts to those who give, Guru Gobind Singh Ji gives to beneficent people
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is forever sound and steady, Guru Gobind Singh Ji is beautiful and blessed
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is blessed by God, Guru Gobind Singh Ji is a wonder of the timeless being's light
Those who've listened to the name of Guru Gobind Singh Ji Have seen God with the grace of Guru Gobind Singh Ji
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is a picture of virtues, Guru Gobind Singh Ji has become one with supernatural powers
Those who've sung the praises of Guru Gobind Singh Ji Have been kindly blessed by Guru Gobind Singh Ji
Those who have had a sight of Guru Gobind Singh Ji Have become intoxicated in the passage of Guru Gobind Singh Ji
Those who have kissed the dust of Guru Gobind Singh Ji's feet Have been kindly blessed by Guru Gobind Singh Ji
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the doer of all actions Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the helper of the weak
Everyone does homage to Guru Gobind Singh Ji Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the embodiment of all kindness
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the chief all leaders, Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the highest of the high
Great demi-gods are servants of Guru Gobind Singh Ji They sing the praises of Guru Gobind Singh Ji
Eminent goddesses are under the order of Guru Gobind Singh Ji. They are the servants of Guru Gobind Singh Ji
Nature has the utmost respect for Guru Gobind Singh Ji, Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the servant of God
The nine cosmos (khand) are the dust of Guru Gobind Singh Ji's feet They are the wise servants of Guru Gobind Singh Ji
The highest throne is beneath Guru Gobind Singh Ji, Guru Gobind Singh Ji has God's court within His reach
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is excellent in all virtues, Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the permanent leader
Guru Gobind Singh Ji gives light to the world All bodies and souls have blossomed from Guru Gobind Singh Ji
Guru Gobind Singh Ji's advancement is improving two-fold every day Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the beauty of all king's thrones
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the helper in both worlds, Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the sight of every eye
Guru Gobind Singh Ji has the whole creation in His command, Guru Gobind Singh Ji's praise is the highest of all
Both worlds are the army of Guru Gobind Singh Ji Everyone is in the protection of Guru Gobind Singh Ji
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the giver of givers, Guru Gobind Singh Ji achieves victory everywhere
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is of excellent conduct, Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the soul in every body
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is very loving and affectionate, Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the light in every eye
Guru Gobind Singh Ji is the giver of daily food to everyone, Guru Gobind Singh Ji showers the grace of God
Even the stars are the beggars of Guru Gobind Singh Ji They are the servants of Guru Gobind Singh Ji's darbar
The five elements praise Guru Gobind Singh Ji The seven spiritual guides are a sacrifice unto Guru Gobind Singh Ji
Guru Gobind Singh Ji has His hand on both worlds, Guru Gobind Singh Ji owns everything high and low
Nand Lal is the slave-dog of Guru Gobind Singh Ji Nand Lal is aiming for the name of Guru Gobind Singh Ji
I am lower than the dogs of Guru Gobind Singh Ji I nible at the small pieces in the dishes of Guru Gobind Singh Ji
I am a beggar of Guru Gobind Singh Ji For the holy dust of the feet of Guru Gobind Singh Ji
May my life be a sacrifice unto Guru Gobind Singh Ji And may my head stay at the feet of Guru Gobind Singh Ji

- Kushwant Singh - Originally published in The Sikh Review: January 1967



 

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