“Me,
the bard out of work, the Lord has applied to His
service. In the very beginning He gave me the
order to sing His praises night and day. The
Master summoned the minstrel to His True Court. He
clothed me with the robe of His true honour and
eulogy. Since then the True Name had become my
ambrosial food. They, who under the Guru’s
instruction, eat this food to their satisfaction,
obtain peace. By singing the Guru’s hymns, I,
the minstrel
spread the Lord’s glory. Nanak, by praising the
True Name I have obtained the perfect Lord.”
(Guru Nanak, Pauri, pg. 150)
The
founder of the Sikh religion, Guru Nanak was born
on April 15, 1469 in the Western Punjab village of
Talwandi. He was born to a simple Hindu family.
His father Mehta Kalian Das was
an accountant in the employment of the local
Muslim authorities. From an early age Guru Nanak
made friends with both Hindu and Muslim children
and was very inquisitive about the meaning of
life. At the age of six he was sent to the village
school teacher for schooling in reading and
writing in Hindi and mathematics. He was then
schooled in the study of Muslim literature and
learned Persian and Arabic. He was an unusually
gifted child who learned quickly and often
question his teachers. At age 13 it was time for
Guru Nanak to be invested with the sacred thread
according to the traditional Hindu custom. At the
ceremony which was attended by family and friends
and to the disappointment of his family Guru Nanak
refused to accept the sacred cotton thread from
the Hindu priest. He sang the following poem;
"Let
mercy be the cotton, contentment the thread,
Continence the knot and truth the twist. O priest!
If you have such a thread, Do give it to me. It'll
not wear out, nor get soiled, nor burnt, nor lost.
Says Nanak, blessed are those who go about wearing
such a thread" (Rag Asa)
As
a young man herding the family cattle, Guru Nanak
would spend long hours absorbed in meditation and
in religious discussions with Muslim and Hindu
holy men who lived in the forests surrounding the
village. Thinking that if bound in marriage Guru
Nanak might start taking interest in household
affairs a suitable match was found for him. At age
16 he was married to Sulakhani daughter of a pious
merchant. Guru Nanak did not object as he felt
that married life did not conflict with spiritual
pursuits. Guru Nanak was happily married, he loved
his wife and eventually had two sons Sri Chand in
1494 and Lakshmi Chand three years later. Now that
he had a family of his own Guru Nanak was
persuaded by his parents to take a job as an
accountant in charge of the stores of the Muslim
governor of Sultanpur Daulat Khan Lodi. Guru Nanak
agreed and was joined by his family and an old
Muslim childhood friend Mardana, a musician by
profession. Guru Nanak would work during the days,
but early in the mornings and late at nights, he
would meditate and sing hymns accompanied by
Mardana on the rabab ( a string instrument). These
sessions attracted a lot of attention and many
people started joining the two.
Early
one morning accompanied by Mardana, Guru Nanak
went to the river Bain for his bath. After
plunging into the river, Guru Nanak did not
surface and it was reported that he must have
drowned. The villagers searched everywhere, but
their was no trace of him. Guru Nanak was in holy
communion with God. The Lord God revealed himself
to Guru Nanak and enlightened him. In praise of
the Lord, Guru Nanak uttered;
"There
is but One God, His name is Truth, He is the
Creator, He fears none, he is without hate, He
never dies, He is beyond the cycle of births and
death, He is self illuminated, He is realized by
the kindness of the True Guru. He was True in the
beginning, He was True when the ages commenced and
has ever been True, He is also True now." (Japji)
These
words are enshrined at the beginning of the Sikh
Holy Scriptures, the Guru Granth Sahib. Guru Nanak
did not believe in a Trinity of Gods, or the
belief that God can be born into human form.
After
three days Guru Nanak appeared at the same spot
from where he had disappeared. He was no longer
the same person he had been, there was a divine
light in his eyes and his face was resplendent. He
remained in a trance and said nothing. He gave up
his job and distributed all of his belongings to
the poor. When he finally broke his silence he
uttered "There is no Hindu, no Muslim".
Daulat Khan asked what he meant when he said to
Guru Nanak, "Perhaps the Hindus were no
longer Hindus but the Muslims remain devout to
their faith." Guru Nanak replied,
"Let
God's grace be the mosque, and devotion the prayer
mat. Let the Quran be the good conduct. Let
modesty be compassion, good manners fasting, you
should be a Muslim the like of this. Let good
deeds be your Kaaba and truth be your mentor. Your
Kalma be your creed and prayer, God would then
vindicate your honour." (Majh)
Guru
Nanak was thirty years old at this time in 1499.
The next stage of his life began with extensive
travels to spread the message of God. Accompanied
by his Muslim rabab player Mardana for company,
Guru Nanak undertook long journeys to convey his
message to the people in the form of musical
hymns. Guru Nanak choose this medium to propagate
his message because it was easily understood by
the population of the time. Wherever he traveled
he used the local language to convey his message
to the people. He traveled throughout the Indian
Subcontinent and further east, west, and north to
spread his mission. Wherever he went he set up
local cells called manjis, where his followers
could gather to recite hymns and meditate.
Once
when Guru Nanak came to the small town of Saidpur
in West Punjab he choose to stay there with Lalo,
a low caste carpenter. At the same time the local
chief of the town Malik Bhago, who was quite
wealthy and a very proud man was holding a feast
to which all holy men were invited. When Malik
Bhago found out that Guru Nanak would not attend
his feast but instead partook of the simple fare
of his host Lalo, he was quite angry and had the
Guru brought to him for questioning. When asked
why he didn't join in the feast, the Guru sent for
the meal served by Malik Bhago and also some of
the simple meal served by Lalo. Holding these in
separate hands he squeezed them, blood appeared
out of the rich food of Malik Bhago, while milk
oozed out of Lalos simple fare. Malik Bhago was
put to shame and realized that his riches had been
amassed by exploiting the poor, while what Lalo
offered was the milk of hard earned honest work.
Another
time while camped out at a town during the rainy
season, several devotees would come to the Guru on
a regular basis. One of them while on the way to
see the Guru, came across a prostitute and was
allured by her. Thereafter he would leave home on
the pretext of going to see the Guru, but instead
visited the prostitute. A few days later his
friend who daily came to pay homage to the Guru
was pricked by a thorn, while his neighbor, who
visited the prostitute, found a gold coin in the
street. The incident bewildered the Guru's devotee
who came every day religiously. He mentioned it in
the morning prayer meeting where Guru Nanak heard
it and was amused. He told the Sikh;
"Your
friend was destined to come across a treasure but
due to his evil ways, it has been reduced to a
single coin. While on the account of your past
karma you were to have been impaled with a stake,
but having reformed yourself, you have been let
off with the mere prick of a thorn." (Janamsakhi)
When
the Guru visited Kurukshetra in Haryana, a big
fair was being held at the holy tank to celebrate
the solar eclipse. There were a large number of
pilgrims all over the country. On his arrival at
the fair, Guru Nanak had Mardana cook them a meat
dish of a deer presented to them by one of his
followers. Upon finding that meat was being cooked
on the holy premises, a large angry crowd gathered
in anger to attack the Guru for what they thought
amounted to sacrilege (Bhai Mani Singh, Gyan
Ratnavali, pg. 123). Upon hearing the angry
crowd Guru Nanak responded;
"Only
fools argue whether to eat meat or not. They don't
understand truth nor do they meditate on it. Who
can define what is meat and what is plant? Who
knows where the sin lies, being a vegetarian or a
non- vegetarian?" (Malhar)
When
Guru Nanak stopped at Hardwar a pilgrimage center
on the Ganges river he found a large gathering of
devotees. They were taking ritual baths in the
holy river and offering water to the sun. When the
Guru asked "Why do you throw water like
that?" The pilgrims replied that they were
offering it to their ancestors. Guru Nanak upon
hearing this started throwing water in the
opposite direction towards the west. When the
pilgrims asked him what he was doing?. Guru Nanak
replied "I am sending water to my farm which
is dry". They asked, "How will water
reach you crops so far away?". Guru Nanak
replied, "If your water can reach your
ancestors in the region of the sun, why can't mine
reach my fields a short distance away?" The
pilgrims realized their folly and fell at the
Gurus feet.
On
an eastern journey Guru Nanak visited Gorakhmata
where he discussed the true meaning of asceticism
with some yogis;
"Asceticism
doesn't lie in ascetic robes, or in walking staff,
nor in the ashes. Asceticism doesn't lie in the
earring, nor in the shaven head, nor blowing a
conch. Asceticism lies in remaining pure amidst
impurities. Asceticism doesn't lie in mere words;
He is an ascetic who treats everyone alike.
Asceticism doesn't lie in visiting burial places,
It lies not in wandering about, nor in bathing at
places of pilgrimage. Asceticism is to remain pure
amidst impurities. (Suhi)
After
his first long journey, Guru Nanak returned home
after twelve years of propagating his message. He
then set out on a second journey traveling as far
south as Sri Lanka. On his return north he founded
a settlement known as Kartharpur (the Abode of
God) on the western banks of the Ravi river. Guru
Nanak would one day settle down here in his old
age. It was also here that he met a young devotee
who would later go on to serve five of the
following Gurus, Baba Buddha (the revered old
one). On his third great journey Guru Nanak
traveled as far north as Tibet. Wherever Guru
Nanak traveled he always wore a combination of
styles worn by Hindu and Muslim holy men and was
always asked whether he was a Hindu or Muslim.
Guru Nanak visited Sheikh Ibrahim the muslim
successor of Baba Farid the great Sufi dervish of
the twelfth century at Ajodhan. When asked by
Ibrahim which of the two religions was the true
way to attain God, Guru Nanak replied; "If
there is one God, then there is only His way to
attain Him, not another. One must follow that way
and reject the other. Worship not him who is born
only to die, but Him who is eternal and is
contained in the whole universe."
On
his fourth great journey in life Guru Nanak
dressed in the blue garb of a Muslim pilgrim
traveled to the west and visited Mecca, Medina and
Baghdad. Arriving at Mecca, Guru Nanak fell asleep
with his feet pointing towards the holy Kabba.
When the watchman on his night rounds noticed this
he kicked the Guru, saying, "How dare you
turn your feet towards the house of God". At
this Guru Nanak woke up and said, "Good man,
I am weary after a long journey. Kindly turn my
feet in the direction where God is not." When
pilgrims and the holy men of the shrine gathered
to hear Guru Nanak and question him, he sang in
Persian;
"I
beseech you, O Lord! pray grant me a hearing. You
are the truthful, the great, the merciful, and the
faultless Creator. I know for certain, this world
must perish, And death must come, I know this and
nothing else. Neither wife, nor son, nor father,
nor brothers shall be able to help. I must go in
the end, none can undo what is my fate. I have
spend days and nights in vanity, contemplating
evil. Never have I thought of good; this is what I
am. I am ill-starred, miserly, careless,
short-sighted, and rude. But says Nanak, I am
yours, the dust of the feet of your
servants." (Tilang)
While
in Baghdad contradicting the Muslim priests views
that their were only seven upper and as many lower
regions Guru Nanak shouted out his own prayer
saying,
"There
are worlds and more worlds below them and there
are a hundred thousand skies over them. No one has
been able to find the limits and boundaries of
God. If there be any account of God, than alone
the mortal can write the same; but Gods account
does not finish and the mortal himself dies while
still writing. Nanak says that one should call Him
great, and God Himself knows His ownself." (Japji)
In
1916 a tablet with the following inscription was
uncovered in Baghdad, "In memory of the Guru,
the holy Baba Nanak, King of holy men, this
monument has been raised anew with the help of the
seven saints." The date on the tablet 927
Hijri corresponds to A.D. 1520-1521.
On
his return journey home he stopped at Saidpur in
western Punjab during the invasion of the first
Mughal Emperor Babar. On seeing the extent of the
massacre by the invaders, Mardana asked Guru Nanak
why so many innocent people were put to death
along with those few who were guilty. Guru Nanak
told Mardana to wait under a banyan tree and after
a while he would return to answer his question.
While sitting under the tree Mardana was suddenly
bitten by an ant. In anger Mardana killed as many
ants as he could with his feet. Guru Nanak said to
him, "You know now Mardana, why do the
innocents suffer along with the guilty?"
Guru
Nanak and Mardana were both taken prisoner by the
Mughal's. While in jail Guru Nanak sang a divine
hymn about the senseless slaughter of the
innocents by the Mughal invaders. Upon hearing it
the jailer reported it to his king. Babar sent for
the Guru and upon hearing him realized that Guru
Nanak was a great religious figure. He asked for
the Gurus forgiveness and set him free offering
him a pouch of hashish. Guru Nanak refused saying
the he was already intoxicated with the love and
name of God.
After
having spent a lifetime of traveling abroad and
setting up missions, an aged Guru Nanak returned
home to Punjab. He settled down at Kartharpur with
his wife and sons. Pilgrims came from far and near
to hear the hymns and preaching of the Master.
Here his followers would gather in the mornings
and afternoons for religious services. He believed
in a castless society without any distinctions
based on birthright, religion or sex. He
institutionalized the common kitchen called langar
in Sikhism. Here all can sit together and share a
common meal, whether they were kings or beggars.
While
working the fields one day in 1532 Guru Nanak was
approached by a new devotee who said, "I am
Lehna," Guru Nanak looked at him and replied,
"So you have arrived Lehna - the creditor. I
have been waiting for you all these days. I must
pay your debt." ("Lehna" in Punjabi
means debt or creditor.) Lehna was a great devotee
of the Hindu God Durga. One day having hearing
about Guru Nanak and his teachings, he decided to
visit and see the Guru for himself. Once Lehna met
Guru Nanak he left his previous beliefs and became
an ardent disciple of the Guru. Lehna's devotion
to Guru Nanak was absolute, when he was not
working on the farm, he would devote his spare
time to the contemplation of God. Over time he
became Guru Nanak's most ardent disciple. Guru
Nanak put his followers to many tests to see who
was the most faithful. Once while accompanied by
Lehna and his two sons Guru Nanak came across what
looked like a corpse covered with a sheet.
"Who would eat it?" asked Guru Nanak
unexpectedly. His sons refused, thinking that
their father was not in his senses. Lehna though
agreed and as he removed the cover he found that
it was a tray of sacred food. Lehna first offered
it to Guru Nanak and his sons and then partook of
the leftovers himself. Guru Nanak on seeing this
replied;
"Lehna,
you were blessed with the sacred food because you
could share it with others. If the people use the
wealth bestowed on them by God for themselves
alone or for treasuring it, it is like a corpse.
But if they decide to share it with others, it
becomes sacred food. You have known the secret.
You are my image." (Janamsakhi)
Guru
Nanak then blessed Lehna with his ang (hand) and
gave him a new name, Angad, saying "you are a
part of my body". Guru Nanak placed five
coins and a coconut in front of Guru Angad and
then bowed before him. He then had Bahi Budhha
anoint Angad with a saffron mark on his forehead.
When Guru Nanak gathered his followers together
for prayers he invited Angad to occupy the seat of
the Guru. Thus Guru Angad was ordained as the
successor to Guru Nanak. Feeling his end was near,
the Hindus said we will cremate you, the Muslims
said we will bury you. Guru Nanak said; "You
place flowers on either side, Hindus on my right,
Muslims on my left. Those whose flowers remain
fresh tomorrow will have their way." He then
asked them to prey and lay down covering himself
with a sheet. Thus on September 22, 1539 in the
early hours of the morning Guru Nanak merged with
the eternal light of the Creator. When the
followers lifted the sheet they found nothing
except the flowers which were all fresh. The
Hindus took theirs and cremated them, while the
Muslims took their flowers and buried them.
Thus
having spread the words of reform throughout his
lifetime, Guru Nanak successfully challenged and
questioned the existing religious tenants and laid
the foundations of Sikhism.
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