Sikh Religion
List of Paragraphs
- [1. Foundation of Sikhism—Bāba Nānak.]
- [2. The earlier Gurus.]
- [3. Guru Govind Singh.]
- [4. Sikh initiation and rules.]
- [5. Character of the Nānakpanthis and Sikh sects.]
- [6. The Akālis.]
- [7. The Sikh Council or Guru-Māta. Their communal meal.]
1. Foundation of Sikhism—Bāba Nānak.
Sikh, Akāli.—The Sikh religion and the history of the Sikhs have been fully described by several writers, and all that is intended in this article is a brief outline of the main tenets of the sect for the benefit of those to whom the more important works of reference may not be available. The Central Provinces contained only 2337 Sikhs in 1911, of whom the majority were soldiers and the remainder probably timber or other merchants or members of the subordinate engineering service in which Punjabis are largely employed. The following account is taken from Sir Denzil Ibbetson’s Census Report of the Punjab for 1881:
“Sikhism was founded by Bāba Nānak, a Khatri of the Punjab, who lived in the fifteenth century. But Nānak was not more than a religious reformer like Kabīr, Rāmānand, and the other Vaishnava apostles. He preached the unity of God, the abolition of idols, and the disregard of caste distinctions.[1] His doctrine and life were eminently gentle and unaggressive. He was succeeded by nine gurus, the last and most famous of whom, Govind Singh, died in 1708.
“The names of the gurus were as follows: