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Sants and Sikhs

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regard God as nirgun (attributeless), to be known only by Name, not form ... Only meditation on God's name will liberate humans from samsara and facilitate ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sants and Sikhs


1
Sants and Sikhs
  • Jeffrey L. Richey, Ph.D.
  • REL 231
  • Religions of India and Tibet
  • Berea College
  • Fall 2005

2
BACKGROUND TO SIKHISM SANTS AND NATHS
  • Subsets of Hindu Vaisnava bhakti and Tantric
    traditions
  • Popular in northern India between 1300s and
    1700s
  • Sants (saints)
  • regard God as nirgun (attributeless), to be known
    only by Name, not form
  • reject ritual means of salvation
  • prefer vernacular languages to Sanskrit
  • Naths (masters)
  • abandon external aids to devotion (temples,
    idols, etc.)
  • reject caste system
  • Rely on Naths as guides
  • Most famous exponent Kabir

3
KABIR (1400s)
  • Born in Benares (Varanasi) in north central
    India to Muslim julaha (weaver) family
  • In spite of evident Muslim background, seems more
    familiar with Vaisnava bhakti and Nath tantra
    than with Islam
  • Uses poetry to express concept of God as
    transcendent of all forms, especially theological
    orthodoxies
  • Becomes focus of popular devotion in his own
    right, with the result that his poems are found
    in Hindu, Muslim, and Sikh collections

4
NANAK (1469-1539)
  • Born near Lahore (in modern Pakistan) to Hindu
    vaisya family
  • According to tradition, at age 29 has near-death
    experience in bathing pool, the result of which
    is the insight I shall follow Gods path.
    God is neither Hindu nor Muslim and the path
    which I follow is Gods.
  • Attracted sikhs (disciples) with his teachings
  • God is one (ek) and known only by nam (name), not
    form
  • Haumai (self-centeredness) and maya (illusion)
    separate humans from God
  • Only meditation on Gods name will liberate
    humans from samsara and facilitate eternal union
    with God
  • Succeeded by nine gurus, all later seen as his
    reincarnations

5
AMAR DAS (1479-1574)
  • Second successor to Nanak
  • Devout Vaisnava Hindu until old age
  • In spite of Nanaks rejection of external
    festivals, pilgrimages (tirath), and rituals,
    Amar Das establishes pilgrimage center at
    Goindval (Puñjab) with related festivals and
    rituals
  • Builds baoli (well) to which 84 steps
    (corresponding to 8,400,000 types of Hindu
    rebirth) lead, as ritual focus for anti-ritual
    performance
  • Begins compilation of Sikh scriptures

6
ARJAN (1563-1606)
  • Son of fourth guru, Ram Das (1534-1581), and born
    in Goindval (by now, major Sikh center)
  • Begins construction of Golden Temple in Amritsar
    (Puñjab), which eventually replaces Goindval as
    major Sikh center
  • Compiles Sikh scriptures in Adi Granth (Original
    Book), to which writings of his successor also
    are added, and which eventually functions as guru
    in its own right
  • Executed by Mughal authorities, allegedly for
    promoting Hindu and Muslim heterodoxies

7
HARGOBIND (1595-1644)
  • Son of fifth guru, Arjan
  • Leader of panth (Sikh community) at time when its
    growing size emerges as threat to Mughal rule in
    Puñjab
  • Responds to Mughal hostility by relocating panth
    from Puñjab plains to Sivalik region (Himalayan
    foothills), center of Hindu Devi (Great Goddess)
    bhakti, in which sakti (energy) is cultivated by
    male devotees through devotion to female deity
  • Emphasizes need for Sikhs to defend themselves
    militarily from Mughal aggression

8
GOBIND SINGH (1666-1708)
  • Tenth and final guru
  • Regards Sarab-loh (All-Steel) as Gods true name
    and uses sword imagery extensively in innovative
    rituals
  • Credited with establishment of Khalsa (Army of
    Purity), a military order within panth, members
    of which are distinguished by
  • kes (uncut beard and hair)
  • carrying kangha (comb)
  • wearing kara (bangle)
  • bearing kirpan (dagger)
  • wearing kacch (short pants)
  • adopting name Singh (lion) if male, Kaur
    (princess) if female
  • abstinence from intoxicants
  • daily ritual bathing and meditation
  • avoidance of association with Islam

9
SIKHISM AFTER THE GURUS
  • Adi Granth, also known as Guru Granth Sahib
    (Lord-Master Book) replaces human gurus
  • Copies become sacred center of Sikh gurdwaras
    (temples)
  • Ranjit Singh (1780-1839) defeats Mughals and
    established independent Sikh kingdom, Khalistan
    (Land of Purity) in what is now Pakistan, which
    endures until defeat by British in 1849
  • Puñjab divided by Partition in 1947, forcing over
    2 million Sikhs to relocate
  • Dream of Khalistan still animates separatist
    violence today (e.g., Sikh assassination of
    Indian prime minister Indira Gandhi in 1984)

10
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