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For more than five
hundred years, the Panth has faced a decisive challenge from
Brahminism and its ideologues, the individuals that sit at
the apex of the caste pyramid and have much incentive to maintain
their stranglehold.
The day Guru Nanak refused to wear the janao, which is the
sacred Hindu thread symbolic of caste apartheid, the founder
of the Sikh faith made an emphatic declaration of his intention
to topple the tyrannical caste-system through his revolution.
Each successive Nanak's nation building efforts struck at
the roots of this oppressive system that enslaves human beings
under the hegemony of the Brahmins and as a result limits
human potential.
To undermine Sikh ideology, Brahminical forces have largely
been responsible for the creation of antagonistic movements
- purporting to be mere schisms within the Panth-by individuals
such as Prithi Chand, Meharban, Dhirmal, Ram Rai and Harbhagat
Niranjania, to name just a few.
On commenting on these movements, Sirdar Kapur Singh elucidates,
"Sikh Gurus in their lifetime and the Sikh people subsequently
have tried to suppress and extirpate root and branch, through
all legitimate means available." (1)
"The
activities of Hindus have, therefore, been constantly
directed to the undermining of Sikhism both by preventing
the children of Sikh fathers from taking pahul and by
reducing professed Sikhs from their allegiance to their
faith. Hinduism has strangled Buddhism, once a formidable
rival to it and it has already made serious inroads into
the domain of Sikhism."
-- D. Petrie, English Civil Servant |
These movements, in their attempt to destroy Sikhism, also
colluded with the despotic regimes of the times for sustenance.
In recent times, unprincipled scholars of Sikhism have tried
to undermine the Sikh cause by employing extensive literature
created by these adversaries of the Panth. We are all familiar
with controversies about use of anti-Sikh literature such
as the Goindwal Pothis and GNDU Manuscript # 1245 that was
created to subvert the Sikh religion after the compilation
of the Adi Granth. (2)
These aforementioned movements might have waned, but new
ones have emerged and they are subtle and far more dangerous
than the earlier ones. Nakli Nirankaris - also know as Narakdharis,
Radhaswamis, Rashtria Sikh Sangat, Sikh Sangat of America
and Gobind Sadan are more recent groups that seek to destroy
the sovereign Sikh identity in order to promote interests
of the Indian state. They enjoy state patronage, as proven
beyond a reasonable doubt during events surrounding the Sikh
and the Nakli Nirankari clash of 1978, and they have a considerable
support base.
Manyy preach that Sikhism is a sect of Hinduism, denying
the supremacy of the Guru Khalsa Panth, the physical manifestation
of the Gurus to whom the Gurgaddi, the pontific throne of
Guru Nanak, was bestowed in conjunction with Guru Granth Sahib,
the Sikh scripture in 1708. Others practice alchemy of religion
by mixing Sikh and Hindu practices to confound the world though
subtle means. The members of all these groups wear turbans
and beards, even though they seek to undermine the very doctrines
these Sikh articles of faith represent.
Why this discussion?
On November 18, 2001 in Palermo, New York, as stated by Lenny
Hartle, the first assistant Palermo fire chief a "suspicious
fire" was reported at Gobind Sadan that "started
near a rear first-floor door of the temple, possibly outside."
On November 21, 2001, the Associated Press reported that the
fire had been declared a case of arson.
This was a horrific act, which ought to be condemned unequivocally.
Crimes motivated by racism and bigotry, even against those
we don't approve of, are out of bounds. This case of arson
appears to be a hate motivated crime because Gobind Sadan's
possessors, like Sikhs, wear turbans and beards; we all know
that Sikhs and other communities have been victims of such
crimes in the aftermath of September 11 attacks. The sympathy
of all Sikhs across the country is with the followers of Gobind
Sadan, just as our thoughts were with our Muslim brethren
upon the attempted destruction of a Mosque in Cleveland, Ohio
not too long ago.
The existence of Gobind Sadan, unfortunately, is perhaps
just as disturbing for Sikhs as its destruction. According
to eyewitness accounts and Gobind Sadan's website, idolatry
and havans - a Hindu practice involving worship of fire -
are a mandatory practices at the center. More insulting to
Sikhs is the chanting of hymns from Sikh scripture along with
Hindu rituals that are specifically condemned by the Sikh
Scripture itself. Gobind Sadan is able to carry its subversion
of Sikhism under the garb of interfaith activity. This insidious
alchemy of religion by non-Sikhs is to be condemned unmistakably.
With the recent unfortunate arson, Gobind Sadan has been
given legitimacy. All news media sources, local police and
fire departments now recognize it as a "Sikh temple."
Some uninformed Sikhs have also started calling it a "Gurdwara."
Others, even more reckless, have started publicizing to the
media and to Sikh discussion forums that a "Sikh temple"
was burnt. Just because the Sikh scripture is placed in a
room and worshipped as an idol alongside Hindu bon fires,
as performed in Palermo, does not make it a Gurdwara. For
a place to be declared a Gurdwara, the activities within its
four walls must conform to the practice prescribed by Sikh
Rehat Maryada, the code of conduct ratified by the Guru
Khalsa Panth.
Virsa Singh, a known detractor of the Sikh Panth and the
head of Gobind Sadan, gave "Amrit" to members of
fascist Hindu groups such as Vishwa Hindu Parishad, Bajrang
Dal and RSS during the tercentenary of the Khalsa and initiated
them into the Order of the Khalsa, as reported in the mainstream
media. These right-wing groups believe Sikhism to be a sect
of Hinduism and the Khalsa to be the militant arm of Hindu
culture. As Hindus under Adi Shankracharya embraced Buddhism
and destroyed it from within, today similar attempts are being
made with Sikhism.
Did not Guru Gobind Singh deny Amrit to the Hindu hill chiefs,
who refused to reject the caste system? The above Hindu groups
seek to promote the caste ideology inherent in Brahminism.
How can members of such organizations receive Amrit and that
too from a man who does not practice Sikhism himself?
Hinduism
is like a "boa constrictor of the Indian forests,"
which "winds its opponent and finally causes it to
disappear in its capacious interior."
--Max Arthur Macauliffe, The Sikh Religion |
The Sikhs face a clear and present danger from Brahminical
outfits that have been enacted to subsume the Sikh religion
into the sea of Hinduism. According to Mohandas Gandhi, "Hinduism
is an ocean into which all the rivers run. It can absorb Islam
and Christianity and all other religions and only then can
it become an ocean. Otherwise it remains merely a stream along
which large ships cannot ply."(3) The vigilance of the
Khalsa that leads to guarding of our religious practices and
the sovereign Sikh identity is essential to ensure that this
vision of Gandhi does not become a reality.
As Sikhs, we should certainly be outraged by the arson at
Gobind Sadan and hope for the expedient capture of the felons.
At the same time, we should be careful not to dilute Sikh
ideology by referring to Gobind Sadan as a Gurdwara or a Sikh
place of worship. It is unfortunate that Virsa Singh has duped
the followers of Gobind Sadan into practicing a mutated form
of Sikhism intended to strangle the religion itself. The Sikh
community at large should reach out to these souls with love
and seek to educate them on the Sikh doctrine revealed to
the Sikh Gurus. Our thought and prayers are certainly with
them today.
1. Singh, Kapur, "Sikhism and Politics"
2. For an excellent discourse, see Dhillon, Balwant Singh,
Early Sikh Scriptural Tradition: Myth and Reality, (Amritsar:
Singh Brothers, 1999).
3. The Collected Works of Mahatama Gandhi, Publications Division,
New Delhi, Volume XC, p. 177 - as quoted by Gurtej Singh in
Tandav of the Centaur: Sikhs and Indian Secularism (Chandigarh:
Institute of Sikh Studies, 1996), p. 100-101.
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