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Gurus Knowing Guru Nanak Sahib Ji

Dr Karminder Singh

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Sep 3, 2009
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Much of what the average Sikh know about Guru Nanak is narrated through some 2,000 odd stories. The source of these so called sakhis is NOT the writings of Guru Nanak, argues DR KARMINDER SINGH

Eminent Sikh scholar Bhai Gurdas Ji – a contemporary of Guru Arjun Dev ji, and in whose hand the first copy of Granth Sahib as narrated by the fifth Guru was written – describes the coming of Guru Nanak Paatshah in the following verses:

ਸਤਿਗੁਰ ਨਾਨਕ ਪ੍ਰਗਟਿਆ ਮਿਟੀ ਧੁੰਧ ਜਗ ਚਾਨਣ ਹੋਆ॥ Satgur Nanak Pargetiya Mitee Dhund Jug Chanan Hoa

ਜਿਉਂ ਕਰ ਸੂਰਜ ਨਿਕਲਿਆ ਤਾਰੇ ਛਪੇ ਅੰਧੇਰ ਪਲੋਆ॥ Jio Kar Suraj Nikelya, Tarey Chupey Andher Paloa.

Bhai ji says the coming of Guru Nanak was like the rising of the morning sun whose rays cut through the mist of dawn and lighted the skies, within which brightness, the mighty stars disappeared together with the darkness within which these stars reigned.

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In spiritual terms Bhai ji is saying that Guru Nanak’s spirituality is one of enlightenment. It is an enlightenment that is as bright as the rising sun. It is an enlightenment that cuts through the mist of the existing (even if much bigger and older) spiritualties of ritual and superstition.

Some 400 years later, one of India’s most illuminated minds – Sir Ullama Mohamad Iqbal, PhD (Ludwig, Germany) – the son of a Kashmiri Brahmin who converted to Islam and the author of India’s national song Tarana-e-Hind – writes in his Urdu language book Bang-e-dra regarding the coming of Guru Nanak, as follows:

Butkdaa Fir Baad Mudat Sey Roshan Hua

Nuur-e Ibrahim Se Aazar Kaa Ghar Roshan Hua


Once again, after an age, the Temple became radiant. Once again, the house of God shone with the glory of God.

Shama-e Huq Se Jo Munavar Hai Ye Voh Mehfil Na Thee

Barshey Rehmat Hue Lekin Zamee Kabil Na Thee.


Nanak was the lamp of enlightenment, but the audience was not one which prized illumination – it was blind. Nanak brought along the rain of mercy that poured from the heavens, but the land was not one which cherished rains – it was utterly barren.

Aaah Budkismat Rahey Awaaze Huq Se Bekhabar

Ghafil Aapney Ful Kee Sheereene Sey Hota Hai Sazar.


Poor wretched people – they never did awaken to the call of Truth. Just like a mighty tree that is dead to the awareness of the sweetness of its own fruit.

Ullama Dr Iqbal’s lament is a painful, but accurate depiction of the Sikh psyche in relation to knowing and understanding Guru Nanak. Put plainly: the Sikh psyche is blind to the enlightenment of Guru Nanak and the Sikh heart is barren to the blessings of Guru Nanak.

Put even more plainly, the Sikh heart and mind is incapable of appreciating Guru Nanak. Put even more plainly – the coming of Guru Nanak is a waste to the people of India. Dr Iqbal captures this waste in the following verse:

Hind Ko Lekin Khyalee Falsafey Pur Naaz Thaa.

But the people of India were content to hold on, with (false) pride to their empty and imaginary spiritualties.

Powerful words. Equally powerful a slap to the spiritual face of Sikhs of Guru Nanak. Powerful but true. Necessary even.

For how much does the average Sikh know about Guru Nanak? Much of what we know is narrated through some 2,000 odd stories that we euphemistically call Sakhis, and are repeated by our parcharaks, preachers, writers, historians, kirtanias, dhadees etc.

The source of these so called sakhis is NOT the writings of Guru Nanak.

The origin of these sakhis are a variety of books called Janam Sakhis – the oldest being composed in 1733 by Dya Raam (writer) and illustrated with pictures by Alam Chand Raj (painter / artist). This Janam Sakhi – also called the B40 Janam Sakhi, (after its Accession Number assigned by the India Office Library in London) is thus written 264 years AFTER Guru Nanak’s advent.

The most popular Janam Sakhi amonst Sikhs is Bhai Bala’s Janam Sakhi – purportedly written by Guru Nanak’s Hindu companion Bala. Bhai Bala is a fictitious character. He did not exist. Guru Nanak’s companion was Mardana. How many Sikhs know of this basic untruth – that their entire story of Guru Nanak is written by a non-existent character?

Viewed collectively, these Janam Sakhis paint Guru Nanak as a mystic, a miracle performer, a faith healer, a magician, a purveyor of superstitious beliefs, a practitioner of super-natural powers, a recluse, an ascetic, an unproductive child, a neglecting father, demanding blind faith and so much more. Snakes come over to shade him as he slept while his cows ate the fields of others. His father slaps him for wasting his hard earned money. In the wink of an eye he brings back to life fields eaten by his cows. Elsewhere he drowns in a river and comes back to life three days later. He brings dead people back to life, and stops a mountain of a stone hurled at him with his palm. He flies over the mountains to meet Yogis and Sidhs residing there. He orders his son to hang out clothes to dry in the middle of the night and tells his disciple Bhai Lehna to eat a corpse. This is the Guru Nanak that Sikhs seem to know. The non-existant one, of course.

This is perhaps what Dr Iqbal meant when he said “Hind Ke Lekin Khyalee Falsafey Pur Naaz Thaa”. We wanted to stick to our “khayalee” beliefs and reject Guru Nanak’s real, practical and absolute enlightenment. To make our khyalee beliefs acceptable, we wanted to paint and portray Guru Nanak himself to be a practitioner and purveyor of our wrong beliefs.

So instead of wanting to stand in the divine enlightenment that was Guru Nanak, we pulled the Guru into the shadows of our own “khyalee” darkness. For this is exactly what the authors of much for 2,000 sakhis have succeeded in doing.

At its most basic level, the Janam Sakhis changed Guru Nanak’s birth date from Vesakh 1469 to Kathik 1469. In accordance with the Vedic believers who were complicit in changing the date, Vesakh is the month of celebration fit for events belonging to the upper Bhramin classes, while Kathikh is the month fit for the celebration of the lesser castes. In the minds of the Janam Sakhi writers, Guru Nanak’s parkash could not be allowed to sit in Vesakh beacause he was not a Brahmin. They falsely determined Kathik Dee Puranmashi as the specific day for Guru Nanak’s birthday. In accordance to Vedic beliefs of auspiciousness – this days is the MOST inauspicious.

Sikhs have no such beliefs, but Sikhs ought to object to the distortion, and REVERT to the reality.

Guru Gobind Singh, the tenth Guru knew of Guru Nanak’s birth in Vesakh, which is why he too chose Vesakh 1699 to create the Khalsa. It was supposed to be one complete circle. When Sikhs celebrate Vesakhi – they would celebrate BOTH – the birth of their FOUNDER Guru Nanak and their OWN birth as Khalsas. Sikhs obviously did so, until the Sakhi writers infiltrated into the Sikh psyche almost in total and changed Guru Nanak’s birth date to Kathik.

Guru Nanak wrote a great deal of banee – all of which is contained within the Guru Granth Sahib Ji. Nine hundred and forty seven shabads and saloks of his are contained in the Guru Granth Sahib. How many of these shabads have Sikhs read? How many have we understood? How many do our ragis, –parcharaks, dadhees and kirtanias preach – without resorting to some half-cooked sakhi to distort its meaning? How many have we attempted to apply his banee in our lives? These 947 shabads are the real Guru Nanak. These 947 shabads are the divine enlightenment of Guru Nanak and the Godly rain of blessings that he brought.

Will we continue to be blind and barren so as to ignore these 947 shabads that tell us of the real Guru Nanak and instead link with what are mostly half baked, half cooked, patently false, semi-false stories called sakhis that are plagiarised/stolen from others – especially from the bigger stars (Tarey Chupey) that Bhai Gurdas ji is talking about?

Let us just take one verse of Guru Nanak: ਹੁਕਮਿ ਰਜਾਈ ਚਲਣਾ ਨਾਨਕ ਲਿਖਿਆ ਨਾਲਿ ॥ ੧ ॥ Hukum Rajayee Chalna, Nanak Likhiya Naal. It is on page 1 of the Guru Granth Sahib. It captures the essence of Guru Nanak’s enlightenment – Hukam. Guru Nanak’s Sikhi is about Hukam – about attempting to know and understand the Will of the Creator; about wanting to abide by (chalna) and live one’s life within the confines of this will; about wanting to be part and parcel of this will (likhiya naal), and about making the will of the Creator as the object of our spiritual life (rajayee).

Should one apply the message of just this one SINGLE verse of Guru Nanak, 90 percent of the sakhis of the Janam Sakhis would crumble because they show Guru Nanak going against the Will of the Creator. How can a Guru tell us Sikhs to know, understand, and abide by the Hukam of the Creator, while he himself destructed the Hukam at every step of the way, in every sakhi?

If we had read the Banee of Guru Nanak, we would know that his companion is Mardana who is placed in the SGGS by Guru Nanak at three places. We would know that Bala did not exist because in the 947 shabads (and 40 Vaars of Bhai Gurdas ji), Bala is not mentioned even once.

We Sikhs need to cure the blindness that Islamic luminary Dr Iqbal is pointing out for us. The cure is within the enlightenment of Guru Nanak’s 947 shabads and the rest of Gurbani. We also need to transform our barren hearts and souls so that we can contain the blessing that Guru Nanak brought for us. The way to irrigate these barren hearts and souls is again to connect with the messages of Gurbanee.

The year 2019 will celebrate the 550th birth anniversary of Guru Nanak our Guru. One can almost hear the soul of the Guru cry out from the pages of the GGS: Enough of darkness and baren-ness; come to the enlightenment that Guru Nanak is: ਗੁਰਬਾਣੀ ਇਸੁ ਜਗ ਮਹਿ ਚਾਨਣੁ ਕਰਮਿ ਵਸੈ ਮਨਿ ਆਏ ॥ ੧॥ SGGS 67. Gurbanee Es Jug Mein Chanan, Karam Vasei Mun Aiye. Gurbani is the enlightenment (Chanan) within which the divine blessings (Karam) will fill the heart of the enlightened. End.
 
Aug 19, 2018
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Thank You! This is a much needed realisation about our guru and values.
Gurbani - must be kept pure, free from any additions or alterations, we might adopt different ways of interpreting it but the IDEA must be same.
You have given the right examples to this.
On a similar note,
What can be said about Guru Nank Dev ji's Udasis (his travels around the world), which are claimed to be covering impossoble distances?
 

Loveisthereason

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Apr 6, 2019
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I take a different approach to this subject. I don't think sakhis etc are the problem. I think that in the subcontinent and possibly worldwide, mental health issues are not addressed. People who believe in super men and superstition today are what needs tackling. I have no qualm with accepting that my Guru's were special beings and that they may have had special powers, but I don't live my life by it I know that those time space variables were different. To me whether or not miracles occurred are not the issue, the issue today is about serious mental health issues, there are people within SIKHI who follow the cult of decay within society, they look to physical attributes of holy men and women as if this means something, they are easily seduced by the nefarious cults which have been cultivated by covert intelligence agencies, they are engrossed by money and power and become "trend climbers". Applying gurbani to our lives is not an easy thing to do, for the last century the practice of SIKHI has been to listen to kirtan and partially be present at a recital of gurbani. I like the fact that people are starting to understand gurbani for themselves with a view to applying this in the market place of ideas but we should never chuck the baby out with the bathwater.
 

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