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Satwant Singh is now
thirteen. He is no longer a little boy; it's time to join
the fraternity of young men. So, I was sitting through the
rite of Dastaar Bandhi to mark his rite of passage.
As I sat I couldn't help wondering why we have not yet evolved
a comparable rite for our young women at the threshold of
womanhood. Some other religions have. For example, Jews who
have for centuries celebrated only Bar Mitzvah for young boys
have now added a celebration of Bat Mitzvah for young girls.
We, too, need to think about this. It doesn't have to be Dastar
Bandhi for girls, but somehow some note must be taken of the
fact that gender equality lies at the core of Sikh teaching.
His uncle and aunt sang shabads. His father, too,
sang one and my thoughts went to what might be going through
the father's head as he thus escorted his son into the world
of Sikh men.
I remember that Satwant's father was a tad younger than his
son when he landed in this country 30 years ago. About nine
or ten years old, I remember he could not sit quietly for
more than a New York minute - that is an immeasurably, infinitesimally
small moment euphemistically dubbed a minute. Much of the
energy is still with him and he has matured into an energetic
young man full of plans for his family and his community.
I remember meeting the family when they first arrived here
in 1970. There were no more than a handful of recognizable
Sikhs in New York and we had not yet built the first permanent
gurdwara. Our community was too small to afford the luxury
of catfights, legal battles and splits which distinguished
us in the coming years.
This family was two little boys, a sister and the parents,
obviously attached to their Sikh roots. In the New York of
those times, even if he came from a Sikh family, it was a
rare Sikh boy who could be seen with his unshorn keshas
at school or play. But cutting the hair of the two boys was
not an option entertained by the parents.
The boys were rambunctious; Satwant, too, is assertive and
aggressive, much like his father and uncle.
As I witnessed the ceremony I wondered if the father was
thinking about his own rough times as the often-lone Sikh
boy at school as he looked at his son. But then my thoughts
went to the time when Satwant was born and his father probably
thought then of the rough times that lay ahead for his son.
I have seen the whole family mature in their sense of Sikhism
and carry the torch that is now symbolically in the hands
of the thirteen year old Satwant. He is the third generation
in this country.
Years ago, the father was placed on the road less traveled
by his father and now young Satwant has embarked on it. Why
this path and what lies ahead?
We know the history. Guru Gobind Singh created the Khalsa
300 years ago but the foundation stone was laid by Guru Nanak
two centuries earlier. Khalsa was destined to be an army of
winners, fearless in pursuit of righteousness. In this discipline,
each disciple was to hone, cultivate and heed his own conscience
and plumb the depths of his own faith. Guru Gobind Singh saw
that each of us has a constant battle to fight and the enemies
are not necessarily out there. In all the battles of life
that must be fought there is no battlefield of greater importance
than the one of our own mind. Three hundred years ago, Guru
Gobind Singh staged the lesson of life: Live each moment of
your life so that you can put your head on the line; in whatever
you do, do it so that you can live and die with dignity.
Three hundred years have passed since these lessons were
engraved on Sikh psyche. Guru Gobind Singh now does not appear
before his Sikhs flashing a naked sword and demanding your
head. Or does he? Why stay on the road less traveled?
Times have changed and now the question is framed differently.
The flashing sword is replaced by the prospect of social isolation,
economic disaster or harassment at the job or neighborhood.
The instrument of challenge is now the affable man behind
the desk asking all those awkward questions over a cup of
coffee. The question is asked a hundred times a day and in
a myriad ways. Your head is still on the line and, in life,
as it always will. Those are the lessons of our history. It
is still the Guru who challenges you to live fearlessly with
your head in the palm of your hand.
If dignity and integrity lie at the core of a Sikh existence,
Satwant must become a man who can see "us in them and
them in us" in other men and in women no matter what
they look like, what religion they profess and which passport
they carry. It is a lesson not easily learnt and never comfortably
accepted but one that our history, heritage, tradition, community
and family will have to help him discover and integrate into
his life.
The path of Sikhism is unique and original. Its precepts
are not only for the space and geography where they were first
articulated and practiced; they are universal. The teachings
are not just for the time when they were enunciated, but for
all time and they are most powerfully expressed through the
five articles of faith. The challenge is to integrate the
outer external garb of a Sikh with the internal life and character
of one; it is not in being a Sikh but in becoming one.
History is alive only to those who remember it.
Welcome, Satwant, to living history.
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