SIKH
GURU'S

"The Palace of the Lord God is so beautiful. Within it, there are gems, rubies, pearls and flawless diamonds. A fortress of gold surrounds this Source of Nectar. How can I climb up to the Fortress without a ladder? By meditating on the Lord, through the Guru, I am blessed and exalted. The Guru is the Ladder, the Guru is the Boat, and the Guru is the Raft to take me to the Lord’s Name. The Guru is the Boat to carry me across the world-ocean; the Guru is the Sacred Shrine of Pilgrimage, the Guru is the Holy River. If it pleases Him, I bathe in the Pool of Truth, and become radiant and pure." (Guru Nanak)
DEFINITION
OF A GURU
The word "Guru" is a Sanskrit word meaning teacher, honoured person, religious person or saint. Sikhism though has a very specific definition of the word Guru. It means the descent of divine guidance to mankind provided through ten Enlightened Masters. This honour of being called a Sikh Guru applies only to the ten Gurus who founded the religion starting with Guru Nanak in 1469 and ending with Guru Gobind Singh in 1708; thereafter it refers to the Sikh Holy Scriptures the Guru Granth Sahib. The divine spirit was passed from one Guru to the next as "The light of a lamp which lights another does not abate. Similarly a spiritual leader and his disciple become equal, Nanak says the truth."
"They distinguish and separate one Guru from the other. And rare is the one who knows that they, indeed, were one. They who realised this in their hearts, attained Realisation of God." (Guru Gobind Singh, Dohira, Vachitra Natak)


Each one of the eleven Gurus represents a divine attribute:
Guru Nanak - Humility
Guru Angad
- Obedience
Guru Amar Das
— Equality
Guru Ram Das
- Service
Guru Arjan
- Self-Sacrifice
Guru Hargobind
- Justice
Guru Har Rai
- Mercy
Guru Harkrishan
- Purity
Guru Tegh Bahadur
-
Tranquillity
Guru Gobind Singh
- Royal Courage
Guru Granth Sahib
- The living embodiment of the Guru
CLICK ON PHOTOS BELOW FOR DETAILED INFORMATION
GURU
NANAK DEV JI (1469 to 1539)
GURU
ANGAD DEV JI (1504 to 1552)
GURU
AMAR DAS JI (1479 to 1574)
GURU
RAM DAS JI (1534 to 1581)
GURU
ARJAN DEV JI (1563 to 1606)
GURU
HARGOBIND SAHIB JI (1595 to 1644)
GURU
HAR RAI JI (1630 to 1661)
GURU
HAR KRISHAN JI (1656 to 1664)
GURU
TEGH BAHADUR JI (1621 to 1675)
GURU
GOBIND SINGH JI (1666 to 1708)

GURU
GRANTH SAHIB JI
The Guru Granth Sahib was
first compiled by the Fifth Sikh Guru, Arjan Dev, in 1604 in the city of
Amritsar. Its second and last version was the handiwork of Guru Gobind Singh,
and it was finalised at Damdama Sahib in the year 1705. He added the hymns of
his father, Guru Tegh Bahadur, the Ninth Master, and a couplet of his own to the
volume wrought a century earlier. Since then, the authorised version has been
transcribed and printed a number of times, and it abides. Its adoration or
veneration is an article of faith with the Sikhs. Religious literature is
sometimes sectarian and monolithic, if not partisan and polemical. It may admit
of few variations and shades. No word but its own may be allowed sanctity and
sovereignty. One of the greatest glories of the Guru Granth Sahib is its
catholic character. Hardly any other scripture of that stature is completely
free from bias, animus and controversy. Indeed, the uniqueness of the Granth in
this respect is all the more astonishing when we think of the obscurantism,
factionalism and fanaticism of the period in which it was composed. Perhaps it
is the only scripture of its kind which contains within its sacred covers the
songs, hymns and utterances of a wide variety of saints, sages and bards. For,
it is instructive to note that a fairly substantial part of the volume carries
the compositions of Hindu bhaktas, Muslim divines, Sufi poets and other
God-intoxicated souls. Of course, their hymns and couplets rendered in their own
idiom find a ready correspondence in the songs of the Sikh Gurus. Obviously, the
idea of Guru Arjan Dev was to affirm the fundamental unity of all religions, and
the unitary character of all mystic experience. It was, so to speak, an integral
congress of minds and spirits operating on the same spiritual beam. To have thus
elevated the songs of the bhaktas and the bhats to the condition of the logos
was to salute the power of the word whatever form it might take to reveal the
glory of God. For, it may be observed that Guru Granth Sahib comprehends
the compositions and
utterances of the high-born Brahmins and the proud Kashatriyas as also of the so
called lowly Shudras and the unlettered Jats. This was done at a time when the
caste system in India had paralysed the conscience of man. The revolutionary
egalitarianism which such a step symbolised was, therefore, to become the creed
of the Sikhs. Above all, a poetic and mystic collage bespeaks the essential
humility of the Sikh mind, for humility has been given pride of place in the
table of virtues drawn up by the Gurus. The Guru Granth Sahib, then, is a sui
generis scripture in the world.
It is indeed, a magnificent
compendium of the religious, mystic and metaphysical poetry written or uttered
between the 12th Century and the 17th in different parts of India. It is, also,
at the same time, a mirror of the sociological, economic and political
conditions of those days. The satire on the reactionary and tyrannical rulers,
on the obscurantist clergy and sects, on the fake fakirs and their like, is
open, uncompromising and telling. In showing the path to spiritual salvation,
the Guru Granth does not ignore the secular and creative side of man.
The poetry of the Guru
Granth is in itself a subject worthy of the highest consideration. The language
principally employed is the language of the saints evolved during the medieval
period-a language which, allowing for variations, still enjoyed wide currency in
Northern India. Its appeal lay in its directness, energy and resilience. Based
upon some of the local dialects, it was leavened with expressions from Sanskrit,
Prakrit, Persian and Arabic.
Another outstanding feature
of the Guru Granth Sahib is the precision of its prosody. While a great deal of
it, cast in traditional verse forms (salokas and pauris), could best be
understood in the context of the well-known classical ragas, its hymns and songs
make use of popular folk meters such as alahanis, ghoris, chands etc. The
integral relationship between music and verse has been maintained with scholarly
rectitude and concern. This complete musicalisation of thought in a scientific
and studied manner makes for the unusually rigorous, yet supple, discipline of
the Granth's metrics and notations. The entire Bani whose printed version in its
current format comes to 1430 pages is divided into 33 sections. While the first
section comprises the soulful and inspiring song of the Japji composed by Guru
Nanak as also a few selected pauris or couplets, the final section is collection
of assorted verses including the shalokas and the swayyas of the bhattas. The
remaining 31 sections are named after the well-known classical ragas such as sri,
magh, gauri, gujri, devghandhari, dhanassari, bilawal, kedara, malhar,
kalyan etc. The division, thus, is strictly based on Indian musicology.
Furthermore, each psalm or song is preceded by a number (mohalla) which denotes
the name of the composer-Guru from Guru Nanak onwards. It may be noted that the
apostolic succession extends from the First to the Tenth Guru, and that the
Gurus are often referred to reverentially by their place in the order. What is
more, each Guru speaks in the name of the Founder Guru whose spirit permeates
his successors. The House of Nanak is indeed a spiritual decagon based upon a
complete, inviolate geometry of vision. The major hymns-Japji (Guru Nanak),
Anand (Guru Amar Das), Sukhmani (Guru Arjan Dev), Rehras (Guru Nanak, Guru Ram
Das, Guru Arjan Dev) are widely recited solo and in congregation by the faithful
as morning and evening prayers. Their soothing and ambrosial airs have brought
solace and cheer to countless people all over the world.
The Sikh philosophy as
embodied in the Guru Granth Sahib is chiefly a philosophy of action, deed and
consequence. Though in its essentials, it is completely in tune with the ancient
Indian thought regarding the genesis of the world and the ultimate nature of
reality, it moves away from quietism, passivity and abstractions. The emphasis
is on shared communal experience, and on purposive and idealistic involvement.
The extinction of the ego or self is the corner-stone of Sikhism. A person, we
learn, finds fulfilment only by immersion in the sea of life. Thus, the path of
renunciation, abdication, aloofness, flagellation etc., so typical of Hindu
thought, is abjured. It's enjoined on a Sikh to be an insider, viewing with distrust
all forms of alienation. Of course, the ideal Sikh is supposed to
cultivate the qualities of contemplation, stillness and inwardness in the midst
of labour business and engagement. He too regards the world as ultimately Maya or
illusion, and the life of man as a tableau of light and shade, but the Nirvana
may not be achieved except through an acceptance of the reality of this
unreality, and a proper disposition of the allotted role in the phantasmagoria
of life. To that extent, the relative concreteness or solidity of the world is
to be endorsed as a measure of understanding. So long as man has a role to play,
the artefact of the stage or the theatre has to be taken for granted. For, it
has thus pleased the Creator to bring about the world and people it with
multiples of His self. And the whole creation moves according to a predestined
plan. Many a time has the grand show on earth been mounted and dismantled. It is
not given to creature man to fully comprehend the essence of reality.
As for the concept of the
Godhead in the Guru Granth Sahib, it sets upon the trinity of sat chit and anand. God is omnipotent and omniscient. He is the Initiator and the End. He is
Self-Creator and Self-Propeller. The soul too in its essence symbolises this
trinity or the God within, though quite often it loses the state of bliss as a
result of the ego and the Id. Caught in the meshes of power and pelf, it loses
its true moorings, and is tossed about by the whirligig of time. A soul thus
abandoned by the Lord, or alienated from Him, keeps spinning through a eons and
a eons of suffering. The road to heaven is paved with pity and piety. The idea of
the soul as the Lord's consort is repeated in the Guru Granth Sahib with amazing
variations. The mystique of the marriage is invoked time and again to emphasise
the indissoluble and ineluctable nature of the union. Man is ordained wife, and
commanded to live in the Will of the Lord. Any infidelity or transgression is inconceivable. The nuptial and spousal imagery of the hymns is sensuously rich,
apposite and striking. It will thus be seen that the Guru Granth Sahib presents
a comprehensive Weltanschauung or world-view. It offers a perfect set of values
and a practical code of conduct. It is, indeed, the complete teacher.
Guru Ram Das Ji was the son-in-law of Guru Amar Das Ji
Guru Arjan Dev Ji was the son of Guru Ram Das Ji
Guru Hargobind Ji was the son of Guru Arjan Dev Ji
Guru Har Rai Ji was the grandson of Guru Hargobind Ji
Guru Harkrishan Ji was the son of Guru Har Rai Ji
Guru Tegh Bahadur Ji was the son of Guru Hargobind Ji
Guru Gobind Singh Ji was the son of Guru Tegh Bahadur Ji.
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