Guru Gobind Singh jayanti 2020
Guru Gobind Singh
This article is about the tenth Guru of the Sikh religion. For
the recipient of the Victoria Cross, see Gobind Singh
(VC). For the Malaysian politician, see Gobind Singh
Deo.
Guru
Gobind Singh (5 January 1666 – 7 October 1708), born Gobind Rai, was the tenth Sikh Guru,
a spiritual master, warrior, poet, and philosopher. When his
father, Guru Tegh Bahadur, was beheaded for refusing to convert to Islam, Guru
Gobind Singh was formally installed as the leader of the Sikhs at age
nine, becoming the tenth Sikh GuruHis four sons died during his lifetime –
two in battle, two executed by the Mughal army.
Among his notable
contributions to Sikhism are founding the Sikh warrior community
called Khalsa in 1699 and
introducing the Five Ks,
the five articles of faith that Khalsa Sikhs wear at all times. Guru Gobind
Singh also continued the formalization of the religion, wrote important Sikh
texts, and enshrined the scripture the Guru Granth Sahib as
Sikhism's eternal Guru.
Family and early life
Gobind Singh was the only
son of Guru Tegh Bahadur, the ninth Sikh guru, and Mata Gujri.
He was born in Patna, Bihar in the Sodhi Khatri
family while
his father was visiting Bengal and Assam. His birth name
was Gobind Rai, and a shrine named Takht Sri Patna Harimandar Sahib marks
the site of the house where he was born and spent the first four years of his
life.
In 1670, his family returned to Punjab, and in March 1672 they moved to
Chakk Nanaki in the Himalayan foothills of north India called the Sivalik
range, where he was schooled.
His father Guru Tegh
Bahadur was petitioned by Kashmiri Pandits. in
1675 for protection from the fanatic persecution by Iftikar Khan, the Mughal
governor of Kashmir under Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb.
Tegh Bahadur considered a peaceful resolution by meeting Aurangzeb but
was cautioned by his advisors that his life may be at risk. The young Gobind
Rai – to be known as Gobind Singh after 1699 – advised his father that no
one was more worthy to lead and make a sacrifice than him. His father made
the attempt but was arrested then publicly beheaded in Delhi on 11
November 1675 under the orders of Aurangzeb for refusing to convert to Islam
and the ongoing conflicts between Sikhism and the Islamic Empire. After this
martyrdom, the young Gobind Rai was installed by the Sikhs as the tenth Sikh
Guru on Vaisakhi on 29 March 1676.
The education of Guru
Gobind Singh continued after he became the 10th Guru, both in reading and
writing as well as martial arts such as horse riding and archery. In 1684, he
wrote the Chandi di Var in the Punjabi language – a legendary war between
the good and the evil, where the good stands up against injustice and tyranny,
as described in the ancient Sanskrit text Markandeya Purana. He
stayed in Paonta, near the banks of river Yamuna, till 1685.
Guru Gobind Singh
had three wives
at age 10, he
married Mata Jito on 21 June 1677 at Basantgaá¹›h, 10 km north of
Anandpur. The couple had three sons: Jujhar Singh (b.
1691), Zorawar Singh (b. 1696) and Fateh
Singh (b. 1699).
at age 17, he married Mata Sundari on
4 April 1684 at Anandpur. The couple had one son, Ajit Singh (b.
1687).
at age 33, he
married Mata Sahib Devan on 15 April 1700 at Anandpur. They had no
children, but she had an influential role in Sikhism. Guru Gobind Singh
proclaimed her as the Mother of
the Khalsa.
The life example and the leadership of Guru Gobind Singh have been of historical importance to the
Sikhs. He institutionalized the Khalsa (literally, Pure Ones), who played the
key role in protecting the Sikhs long after his death, such as during the nine
invasions of Panjab and holy war led by Ahmad Shah Abdali from Afghanistan
between 1747 and 1769.
Founding the Khalsa
Keshgarh Sahib Gurudwara at Anandpur
Sahib, Punjab, the birthplace of Khalsa
A Fresco of Guru Gobind Singh and The Panj Piare in
Gurdwara Bhai Than Singh built in the reign of Maharaja Ranjit Singh.
In 1699, the Guru
requested the Sikhs to congregate at Anandpur on Vaisakhi (the
annual spring harvest festival).] According
to the Sikh tradition, he asked for a volunteer from those who gathered,
someone willing to sacrifice his head. One came forward, whom he took inside a
tent. The Guru returned to the crowd without the volunteer, but with a bloody
sword. He asked for another volunteer and repeated the same process of
returning from the tent without anyone and with a bloodied sword four more
times. After the fifth volunteer went with him into the tent, the Guru returned
with all five volunteers, all safe. He called them the Panj Pyare and the first Khalsa
in the Sikh tradition. Guru Gobind Singh then mixed water and sugar into an
iron bowl, stirring it with a double-edged sword to prepare what he
called Amrit ("nectar"). He then administered this to
the Panj Pyare,
accompanied with recitations from the Adi Granth, thus founding the khanda ka paul (vaporization
ceremony) of a Khalsa – a warrior community. The Guru also gave them a new
surname "Singh" (lion). After the first five Khalsa had been
baptized, the Guru asked the five to baptize him as a Khalsa. This made the
Guru the sixth Khalsa, and his name changed from Guru Gobind Rai to Guru Gobind
Singh.
Guru Gobind Singh
initiated the Five K's tradition of the Khalsa
Kangha: a wooden comb.
Kara: an iron or steel bracelet worn on the wrist.
Kirpan: a sword or dagger.
Kacchera: short breeches.
He also announced a code
of discipline for Khalsa warriors. Tobacco, eating 'halal' meat (a way of
slaughtering in which the animal's throat is slit open and it is left to bleed
before being slaughtered), fornication and adultery were forbidden. The
Khalsa's also agreed to never interact with those who followed rivals or their
successors. The co-initiation
of men and women from different castes into the ranks of Khalsa also
institutionalized the principle of equality in Sikhism regardless of one's
caste or gender. Guru Gobind Singh's significance to the Sikh
tradition has been very important, as he institutionalized the Khalsa, resisted
the ongoing persecution by the Mughal Empire, and continued "the defense
of Sikhism and Hinduism against the Muslim assault of Aurangzeb".
He introduced ideas that
indirectly challenged the discriminatory taxes imposed by Islamic authorities.
For example, Aurangzeb had imposed taxes on non-Muslims that were collected
from the Sikhs as well, for example, the jizya (poll tax on
non-Muslims), pilgrim tax and Bhaddar tax
– the last being a tax to be paid by anyone following the Hindu ritual of
shaving the head after the death of a loved one and cremation. Guru Gobind
Singh declared that Khalsa does not need to continue this practice,
because Bhaddar is
not Dharam, but a pharma (illusion).
Not shaving the head also meant not having to pay the taxes by
Sikhs who lived in Delhi and other parts of the Mughal Empire. However,
the new code of conduct also led to internal disagreements between Sikhs in the
18th century, particularly between the Nanakpanthi and the Khalsa.
Guru Gobind Singh had a deep respect for the
Khalsa, and stated that there is no difference between the True Guru and
the Sangat (path). Before
his founding of the Khalsa, the Sikh movement had used the Sanskrit word Sisya (literally, disciple or
student), but the favored term thereafter became Khalsa. Additionally,
prior to the Khalsa, the Sikh congregations across India had a system of Masands appointed by the Sikh
Gurus. The Masands led
the local Sikh communities, local temples, collected wealth and donations for
the Sikh cause.
Guru Gobind Singh concluded that the Masands system had become corrupt, he abolished them and
introduced a more centralized system with the help of Khalsa that was under his
direct supervision. These developments created two groups of Sikhs, those who
initiated as Khalsa, and others who remained Sikhs but did not undertake the
initiation. The Khalsa Sikhs saw themselves as a separate religious entity,
while the Nanak-pantie Sikhs retained their different perspectives.
The Khalsa warrior community the tradition started by Guru Gobind Singh has contributed to modern scholarly
debate on pluralism within Sikhism. His tradition has survived into the modern
times, with initiated Sikhs referred to as Khalsa Sikh, while those who do not
get baptized referred to as Sahajdhari Sikhs.
Sikh scriptures
The Dasam Granth is attributed to Guru Gobind Singh. It
incorporates the warrior-saint mythologies of ancient India.
In the 16th and 17th
century multiple versions of the Sikh scripture by unknown authors, all
claiming to be the words of Guru Nanak, were in circulation. Guru
Arjan (d. 1606) attempted to remove corruption and interpolation of the
text and compiled a purer version of the Adi Granth. In the 17th century, the text was called the Pothi,
and three manuscripts claimed to be authentic. There was a Kartarpur version
(dated 1604); a slightly longer Khara Mangat version (dated 1642); and a third
(quite different) Lahore version (date unknown).
Guru Gobind Singh is credited in the Sikh
tradition with finalizing the Kartarpur
Pothi into the Guru Granth Sahib in Bathinda and
releasing it in 1706. The final version did not accept the extraneous
hymns in other versions and included the compositions of his father Guru Tegh
Bahadur. Guru Gobind Singh also declared this text to be the eternal Guru
for Sikhs.
Guru Gobind Singh composed other texts,
particularly the Dasam Granth which many Sikhs consider to be a
scripture next in importance after the Guru Granth Sahib. The Dasam Granth
includes compositions such as the Jaap Sahib, Amrit Savaiye and Benti Chaupai which
are part of the daily prayers/lessons (Nitnem)
of Sikhs.[45] The
Dasam Granth is largely versions of Indian theology from the Puranas and
secular stories.[46][47][48] The Sarbloh
Granth has also been attributed to the Guru.
Wars
Guru Gobind
Singh, Zafarnamah
The period following the
execution of Guru Tegh Bahadur – the father of Guru Gobind Singh, was a period
where the Mughal Empire under Aurangzeb was an increasingly hostile enemy of
the Sikh people. The Sikh resisted, led by Gobind Singh, and the Muslim-Sikh
conflicts peaked during this period. Both the Mughal administration and Aurangzeb's
army had an active interest in Guru Gobind Singh. Aurangzeb issued an order to
exterminate Guru Gobind Singh and his family. Guru Gobind Singh believed in
a Dharam Yudh (war in
defense of righteousness), something that is fought as a last resort, neither
out of a wish for revenge nor for greed nor for any destructive goals. To
Guru Gobind Singh, one must be prepared to die to stop tyranny, end persecution
and to defend one's own religious values. He led fourteen wars with these
objectives, but never took captives nor damaged anyone's place of worship.
Significant battles
Guru
Gobind Singh fought 13 battles against the Mughal Empire and the
kings of Siwalik Hills.
Battle of Bhangani (1688),
which states chapter 8 of Gobind Singh's Bicitra Natak, when Fateh Shah, along with mercenary commanders
Hayat Khan and Najabat Khan attacked his forces without any purpose. The
Guru was aided by forces of Kripal (his maternal uncle) and a Brahmin named
Daya Ram, both of whom he praises as heroes in his text. The Guru's cousin
named Sango Shah was killed in the battle, a cousin from Guru
Hargobind's daughter.
Battle of Nadaun (1691),
against the Islamic armies of Mian Khan and his son Alif Khan, who were
defeated by the allied forces of Guru Gobind Singh, Bhim Chand, and other Hindu
kings of Himalayan foothills. The non-Muslims aligned to the Guru had refused
to pay tribute to the Islamic officials based in Jammu.
In 1693, Aurangzeb was fighting
the Hindu Marathas in the Deccan region of India, and he issued orders that
Guru Gobind Singh and Sikhs should be prevented from gathering in Anandpur in
large numbers.
Battle of Guler (1696),
first against the Muslim commander Dilawar Khan's son Rustam Khan, near Sutlej
river, where the Guru teamed up with the Hindu king of Guler and routed the
Muslim army. The commander sent his general Hussain Khan against the armies of
the Guru and the Guler kingdom, a war fought near Pathankot and Hussain Khan
was defeated and killed by the joint forces.
Battle of Anandpur (1700),
against the Mughal army of Aurangzeb, who had sent 10,000 soldiers under the
command of Painda Khan and Dina Beg.
In direct combat between Guru Gobind Singh and Painda Khan, the latter
was killed. His death led to the Mughal army fleeing the battlefield.[
Battle of Anandpur (1701),
against the neighboring Hindu kingdom chiefs who controlled the mountain
kingdoms. This was accompanied by a battle wherein Jagatullah was killed by
Sikh forces. The hill chiefs laid a siege of Anandpur, and the Guru had to
temporarily leave Anandpur as a condition for peace. According to Louis
Fenech, his wars with kings of the Himalayan kingdoms was likely triggered by
the growing army of Sikhs, which then raided and plundered villages in nearby
mountainous kingdoms for supplies; the Hindu kings joined forces and blockaded
Anandpur.
Battle of Nirmohgarh
(1702), against the forces of Aurangzeb, led by Wazir Khan on the banks of
Nirmohgarh. The battle continued for two days, with heavy losses on both sides,
and the Wazir Khan army left the battlefield.
Battle of
Basoli (1702), against the Mughal army; named after the kingdom
of Basoli whose Raja Dharampul supported the Guru in the battle. The Mughal army was supported by the rival kingdom of Kahlur led by Raja Ajmer Chand.
The battle ended when the two sides reached a tactical peace.
First Battle of Chamkaur
(1702)
First Battle of Anandpur
(1704), the Mughal army led first by Saiyad Khan and then by Ramjan Khan;
Second Battle of Anandpur,
The Mughal general was fatally wounded by Sikh soldiers, and the army withdrew.
Aurangzeb then sent a larger army with two generals, Wazir Khan and Zaberdast
Khan in May 1704, to destroy the Sikh resistance. The approach the Islamic
army took in this battle was to lay a protracted siege against Anandpur, from
May to December, cutting off all food and other supplies moving in and out,
along with repeated battles. Some Sikh men deserted the Guru during Anandpur
siege in 1704 and escaped to their homes where their women shamed them and
they rejoined the Guru's army and died fighting with him in 1705. Towards the
end, the Guru, his family, and followers accepted an offer by Aurangzeb of safe
passage out of Anandpur. However, as they left Anandpur in two batches, they
were attacked, and one of the batches with Mata Gujari and Guru's two sons –
Zorawar Singh is aged 8 and Fateh Singh aged 5 – were taken captive by the Mughal
army. Both his children were executed by burying them alive into a wall. The
grandmother Mata Gujari died there as well.
Battle of Sarsa (1704),
against the Mughal army led by general Wazir Khan; the Muslim commander had
conveyed Aurangzeb's promise of a safe passage to Guru Gobind Singh and his
family in early December. However, when the Guru accepted the offer and left,
Wazir Khan took captives, executed them and pursued the Guru. The retreating
troops he was with were repeatedly attacked from behind, with heavy casualties to
the Sikhs, particularly while crossing the Sarsa river.
Battle of Chamkaur (1704) Regarded
as one of the most important battles of Sikh history. It was against the
Mughal army led by Nahar Khan; the Muslim commander was killed, while
on Sikh side the remaining two elder sons of the Guru – Ajit Singh and Jujhar
Singh, along with other Sikh soldiers were killed in this battle.
Battle of Muktsar (1705),
the Guru's army was re-attacked by the Mughal army, being hunted down by
general Wazir Khan, in the arid area of Khidrana-ki-Dhabi. The Mughals were
blocked again, but with many losses of Sikh lives – particularly the
famous Chalis Mukte (literally,
the "forty liberated ones"), and
this was the last battle led by Guru Gobind Singh. The place of battle called
Khidrana was renamed about a 100 years later by Ranjit Singh to Muktsar
(literally, "lake of liberation"), after the term "Mukt" (moksha)
of the ancient Indian tradition, in honor of those who gave their lives for
the cause of liberation.
Death of family members
Gurudwara Parivar Vichora Sahib, Majri, Rupnagar, Punjab where
Mata Gujri with the two youngest Sahibzadas (Fateh Singh and Zorawar
Singh) were separated from the Guru's regiment. Many Sikhs drowned or were
martyred while crossing the river.
Guru's mother Mata Gujri
and his two younger sons were captured by Wazir Khan, the Muslim governor of
Sirhind. His youngest sons, aged 5 and 8, were tortured and then executed by
burying them alive into a wall after they refused to convert to Islam and Mata
Gujri collapsed on hearing her grandsons' death. Both his eldest sons,
aged 13 and 17, also killed in the battle of December 1704 against the Mughal
army.
Mughal accounts
Guru Gobind Singh's letter written to Rama and Tiloka. Dated 2 August 1696.
The Muslim historians of
the Mughal court wrote about Guru Gobind Singh as well as the geopolitics of
the times he lived in, and these official Persian accounts were the readily available
and the basis of colonial-era English-language description of Sikh history.
According to Dhavan, the
Persian texts that were composed by Mughal court historians during the lifetime
of Guru Gobind Singh were hostile to him, but presented the Mughal perspective.
They believed that the religious Guru tradition of Sikhs had been
corrupted by him, through the creation of a military order willing to resist
the Imperial army. Dhavan writes that some Persian writers who wrote
decades or a century after the death of Guru Gobind Singh evolved from relying on entirely on court histories of the Mughals which disparage the Guru, to
including stories from the Sikh gerbil's text
that praise the Guru.
The Mughal accounts
suggest that the Muslim commanders viewed the Sikh Panth as one divided into sects with different loyalties,
and after the battle of Anandpur, the Mughals felt that the Guru's forces had
become a small band of leftover warriors.
Post-war years
GGS Marg Map
After the Second Battle
of Anandpur in 1704, the Guru and his remaining soldiers moved and stayed in
different spots including hidden in places such as the Machhiwara jungle of
southern Panjab.
Some of the various spots
in the north, west and central India that the Guru lived after 1705, include Heather
with Kirpal Das (maternal uncle), Manuka, Mehdiana, Chakkar, Takhtupura and
Made and Dina (Malwa (Punjab) region). He stayed with relatives or
trusted Sikhs such as the three grandsons of Rai Jodh, a devotee of Guru
Har Gobind.
Zafarnama
Main article: Zafarnama
(letter)
Guru Gobind Singh saw the
war conduct of Aurangzeb and his army against his family and his people as a
betrayal of a promise, unethical, unjust and impious.
After all of Guru Gobind Singh's children had been killed by the Mughal
army and the battle of Muktsar, the Guru wrote a defiant letter in Persian to
Aurangzeb, titled Zafarnama (literally,
"epistle of victory"), a letter which the Sikh tradition considers
important towards the end of the 19th century.
The Guru's letter was
stern yet conciliatory to Aurangzeb. He indicted the Mughal Emperor and his
commanders in spiritual terms, accused them of a lack of morality both in
governance and in the conduct of war. The letter predicted that the Mughal
Empire would soon end because it persecutes, is full of abuse, falsehood, and
immorality. The letter is spiritually rooted in Guru Gobind Singh's beliefs
about justice and dignity without fear.
Final days
Takht Sri Hazur Sahib, Nanded, built over the place where Guru Gobind Singh was
cremated in 1708, the inner chamber is still called Angitha Sahib.
Aurangzeb died in 1707,
and immediately a succession struggle began between his sons who attacked each
other. The official successor was Bahadur Shah, who invited Guru Gobind
Singh with his army to meet him in person in the Deccan region of India, for a
reconciliation but Bahadur Shah then delayed any discussions for months.
Wazir Khan, a Muslim army
commander and the Nawab of Sarhandh, against whose army the Guru had fought
several wars, commissioned two Afghans, Jamshed Khan, and Wasil Beg, to follow
the Guru's army as it moved for the meeting with Bahadur Shah, and then assassinate the
Guru. The two secretly pursued the Guru whose troops were in the Deccan area of
India, and entered the camp when the Sikhs had been stationed near river Godavari for
months. They gained access to the Guru and Jamshed Khan stabbed him with a
fatal wound at Nanded. Some scholars state that the assassin who killed
Guru Gobind Singh may not have been sent by Wazir Khan, but was instead sent by
the Mughal army that was staying nearby.
According to
Senapati's Sri Gur Sobha,
an early 18th-century writer, the fatal wounds of the Guru was one below his
heart. The Guru fought back and killed the assassin, while the assassin's companion was killed by the Sikh guards as he tried to escape.
Guru Gobind Singh with his horse
The Guru died of his
wounds a few days later on 7 October 1708 His
death fuelled a long and bitter war of the Sikhs with the Mughals. After that
the struggle continued by Banda Singh Bahadur along with Baj
Singh, Binod Singh, and others.
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