Chapter X
Living in Consonance with Guru’s Tenets
Article XVI
A
Sikh’s living, earning livelihood, thinking and conduct
should accord with the Guru’s tenets. The Guru’s tenets
are:
(a) Worship should be rendered only to the One Timeless
Being and to no god or goddess.
(b) Regarding the ten Gurus, the Guru Granth and the ten
Gurus word alone as saviors and holy objects of
veneration.
(c) Regarding ten Gurus as the effulgence of one light
and one single entity.
(d) Not believing in cast or descent, untouchability,
magic, spells, incantation, omens, auspicious times,
days and occasions, influence of start, horoscopic
dispositions, shradh (ritual serving of food to priests
for the salvation of ancestors on appointed days as per
the lunar calendar), ancestor worship, khiah (ritual
serving of food to priests - Brahmins - on the lunar
anniversaries of the death of an ancestor), pind
(offering of funeral barley cakes to the deceased’s
relatives), patal (ritual donation of food in the belief
that that would satisfy the hunger of the departed
soul), diva (the ceremony of keeping an oil lamp lit for
360 days after the death, in the belief that that lights
the path of the deceased), ritual funeral acts, hom
(lighting of ritual fire and pouring intermittently
clarified butter, food grains etc. into it for
propitiating gods for the fulfillment of a purpose) jag
(religious ceremony involving presentation of
oblations), tarpan (libation), sikha-sut (keeping a tuft
of hair on the head and wearing thread), bhadan (shaving
of head on the death of a parent), fasting on new or
full moon or other days, wearing of frontal marks on the
forehead, wearing thread, wearing of a necklace of the
pieces of tulsi stalk [A plant with medicinal
properties], veneration of any graves, of monuments
erected to honour the memory of a deceased person or of
cremation sites, idolatry and such like superstitious
observances. [Most, though not all rituals and ritual or
religious observances listed in this clause are Hindu
rituals and observances. The reason is that the old
rituals and practices, continued to be observed by large
numbers of Sikhs even after their conversion from their
old to the new faith and a large bulk of the Sikh
novices were Hindu converts. Another reason for this
phenomenon was the strangle-hold of the Brahmin priest
on Hindus secular and religious life which the Brahmin
priest managed to maintain even on those leaving the
Hindu religious fold, by his astute mental dexterity and
rare capacity for compromise. That the Sikh novitiates
include a sizable number of Muslims is shown by
inclusion in this clause of the taboos as to the
sanctity of graves, shirni, etc.]
Not owning up or regarding as hallowed any place other
than the Guru’s place - such, for instance, as sacred
spots or places of pilgrimage of other faiths.
Not believing in or according any authority to Muslim
seers, Brahmins holiness, soothsayers, clairvoyants,
oracles, promise of an offering on the fulfillment of a
wish, offering of sweet loaves or rice pudding at graves
on fulfillment of wishes, the Vedas, the Shastras, the
Gayatri (Hindu scriptural prayer unto the sun), the Gita,
the Quran, the Bible, etc.. However, the study of the
books of other faiths for general self-education is
admissible.
(e) The Khalsa should maintain its distinctiveness among
the professors of different religions of the world, but
should not hurt the sentiment of any person professing
another religion.
(f) A Sikh should pray to God before launching off any
task.
(g) Learning Gurmukhi (Punjabi in Gurmukhi script) is
essential for a Sikh. He should pursue other studies
also.
(h) It is a Sikh’s duty to get his children educated in
Sikhism.
(i) A Sikh should, in no way, harbour any antipathy to
the hair of the head with which his child is born. He
should not temper with the hair with which the child is
born. He should add the suffix “Singh” to the name of
his son. A Sikh should keep the hair of his sons and
daughters intact.
(j) A Sikh must not take hemp (cannabis), opium, liquor,
tobacco, in short any intoxicant. His only routine
intake should be food.
(k) Piercing of the nose or ears for wearing ornaments
is forbidden for Sikh men and women.
(l) A Sikh should not kill his daughter, nor should he
maintain any relationship with a killer of daughter.
(m) The true Sikh of the Guru shall make an honest
living by lawful work.
(n) A Sikh shall regard a poor person’s mouth as the
Guru’s cash offerings box.
(o) A Sikh should not steal, form dubious associations
or engage in gambling.
(p) He who regards another man’s daughter as his own
daughter, regards another man’s wife as his mother, has
coition with his own wife alone, he alone is a truly
disciplined Sikh of the Guru.
(q) A Sikh shall observe the Sikh rules of conduct and
conventions from his birth right upto the end of his
life.
(r) A Sikh, when he meets another Sikh, should greet him
with “Waheguru ji ka Khalsa, Waheguru ji ki Fateh” [The
Khalsa is Waheguru’s; victory too is His!]. This is
ordained for Sikh men and women both.
(s) It is not proper for a Sikh woman to wear a veil or
keep her face hidden by veil or cover.
(t) For a Sikh, there is no restriction or requirement
as to dress except for he must wear Kachhehra [A drawer
type garment fastened by a fitted string round the
waist, very often worn as an underwear] and turban. A
Sikh woman may or may not tie turban.
Chapter XI
Ceremonies pertaining to Birth and Naming of Child
Article XVII
(a) In a Sikh’s household, as soon after the birth of a
child as the mother becomes capable of moving about and
taking bath (irrespective of the number of days which
that takes), the family and relatives should go to a
gurduwara with karhah prashad (sacred pudding) or get
karhah prashad made in the gurduwara and recite in the
holy presence of the Guru Granth Sahib such hymns as
“parmeshar dita bana” (Sorath M. 5), “Satguru sache dia
bhej” (Asa M. 5)) that are expressive of joy and
thankfulness. Thereafter if a reading of the holy Guru
Granth Sahib had been taken up, that should be
concluded. Then the holy Hukam (command) should be
taken. A name starting with the first letter of the hymn
of the Hukam (command) should be proposed by the granthi
(man in attendance of the holy book) and, after its
acceptance by the congregation, the name should be
announced by him. The boy’s name must have the suffix
“Singh” and the girl’s, the suffix “Kaur”.
After that the Anand Sahib (short version comprising six
stanzas) should be recited and the Ardas in appropriate
terms expressing joy over the naming ceremony be offered
and the karhah prashad distributed.
(b) The superstition as to the pollution of food and
water in consequence of birth must not be subscribed to
[There is a wide-spread belief among certain sections of
Indian people that a birth in a household causes
pollution (sutak) which is removed by the thorough
bathing of the mother, the baby and persons attending on
her as also by a thorough cleaning of the house, the
utensils and the clothes, after prescribed periods of
ten, twenty one and forty days.] , for the holy writ is:
“The birth and death are by His ordinance; coming and
going is by His will. All food and water are, in
principle, clean, for these life-sustaining substances
are provided by Him.”
(c) Making shirts or frocks for children out of the Holy
Book’s draperies is a sacrilege.
Anand Sanskar (Lit. Joyful Ceremonial: Sikh Matrimonial
Conventions and Ceremony)
Article XVIII
(a) A Sikh man and woman should enter wedlock without
giving thought to the prospective spouse’s caste and
descent.
(b) A Sikh’s daughter must be married to a Sikh.
(c) A Sikh’s marriage should be solemnized by Anand
marriage rites.
(d) Child marriage is taboo for Sikhs.
(e) When a girl becomes marriageable, physically,
emotionally and by virtue of maturity of character, a
suitable Sikh match should be found and she be married
to him by Anand marriage rites.
(f) Marriage may not be preceded by engagement ceremony.
But if an engagement ceremony is sought to be held, a
congregational gathering should be held and, after
offering the Ardas before the Guru Granth Sahib, a
kirpan, a steel bangle and some sweets may be tendered
to the boy.
(g) Consulting horoscopes for determining which day or
date is auspicious or otherwise for fixing the day of
the marriage is a sacrilege. Any day that the parties
find suitable by mutual consultation should be fixed.
(h) Putting on floral or gilded face ornamentation,
decorative headgear or red thread bands round the wrist,
worshipping of ancestors, dripping feet in mild mixed
with water, cutting a berry or jandi (Prosopis spicigera)
bushes, filling pitcher, ceremony of retirement in
feigned displeasure, reciting couplets, performing
havans [sacrificial fire], installing vedi (a wooden
canopy or pavilion under which Hindu marriages are
performed), prostitutes dances, drinking liquor, are all
sacrileges.
(i) The marriage party should be as small a number of
people as the girl’s people desire. The two sides should
greet each other singing sacred hymns and finally by the
Sikh greeting of Waheguru ji ka Khalsa, Waheguru ji ki
Fateh.
(j) For marriage, there should be a congregational
gathering in the holy presence of Guru Granth Sahib.
There should be hymn-singing by ragis or by the whole
congregation. Then the girl and boy should be made to
sit facing the Guru Granth Sahib. The girl should sit on
the left side of the boy. After soliciting the
congregation’s permission, the master of the marriage
ceremony (who may be a man or woman) should bid the boy
and girl and their parents or guardians to stand and
should offer the Ardas for the commencement of the Anand
marriage ceremony.
The officiant should then appraise the boy and girl of
the duties and obligations of conjugal life according to
the Gurus tenets.
He
should initially give to the two an exposition of their
common mutual obligations. He should tell them how to
model the husband-wife relationship on the love between
the individual soul and the Supreme Soul in the light of
the contents of circumambulation (lavan) hymns in the
Suhi measure (rag) section of the Guru Granth Sahib.
He
should explain to them the notion of the state of “a
single soul in two bodies” to be achieved through love
and make them see how they may attain union with the
Immortal Being discharging duties and obligations of the
householders life. Both of them, they should be told,
have to make their conjugal union a means to the
fulfillment of the purpose of the journey of human
existence; both have to lead clean and Guru-oriented
lives through the instrumentality of their union.
He
should then explain to the boy and girl individually
their respective conjugal duties as husband and wife.
The bridegroom should be told that the girl’s people
having chosen him as the fittest match from among a
whole lot, he should regard his wife as his better half,
accord to her unflinching love and share with her all
that he has. In all situations, he should protect her
person and honour, he should be completely loyal to her
and he should show as much respect and consideration for
her parents and relations as for his own.
The girl should be told that she has been joined in
matrimony to her man in the hallowed presence of the
Guru Granth Sahib and the congregation. She should ever
harbour for him deferential solicitude, regard him the
lord and master of her love and trust; she should remain
firm in her loyalty to him and serve him in joy and
sorrow and in every clime (native or foreign) and should
show the same regard and consideration to his parents
and relatives as she would, to her own parents and
relatives.
The boy and girl should bow before the Guru Granth Sahib
to betoken their acceptance of these instructions.
Thereafter, the girl’s father or the principal relation
should make the girl grasp one end of the sash which the
boy is wearing over his shoulders and the person in
attendance of the Guru Granth Sahib should recite the
matrimonial circumambulation stanzas (lavan of the
fourth Guru in the Suhi musical measure section of the
Guru Granth). After the conclusion of the recitation of
each of the stanzas, the boy, followed by the girl
holding the end of the sash, should go round the Guru
Granth Sahib while the ragis or the congregation sing
out the recited stanza.
The boy and girl, after every circumambulation, should
bow before the Guru Granth Sahib in genuflexion,
lowering their forehead to touch the ground and then
stand up to listen to the recitation of the next stanza.
There being four matrimonial circumambulation stanzas in
the concerned hymn, the proceeding will comprise four
circumambulations with the incidental singing of the
stanza. After the fourth circumabulation, the boy and
girl should, after bowing before the Guru Granth Sahib,
sit down at the appointed place and the ragis or the
person who has conducted the ceremony should recite the
first five and the last stanza of the Anand Sahib.
Thereafter, the Ardas should be offered to mark the
conclusion of the Anand marriage ceremony and the sacred
pudding distributed.
(k) Persons professing faiths other than the Sikh faith
cannot be joined in wedlock by the Anand Karaj ceremony.
(l) No Sikh should accept a match for his/her son or
daughter for monetary consideration.
(m) If the girl’s parents at any time or on any occasion
visit their daughter’s home and a meal is ready there,
they should not hesitate to eat there. Abstaining
fromeating at the girl’s home is a superstition. The
Khalsa has been blessed with the boon of victuals and
making others eat by the Guru and the Immortal Being.
The girl’s and boy’s people should keep accepting each
other’s hospitality, because the Guru has joined them in
relationship of equality.
(n) If a woman’s husband has died, she may, if she so
wishes, finding a match suitable for her, remarry. For a
Sikh man whose wife has died, similar ordinance obtains.
(o) The remarriage may be solemnized in the same manner
as the Anand marriage.
(p) Generally, no Sikh should marry a second wife if the
first wife is alive.
(q) A baptized Sikh ought to get his wife baptized.
Funeral Ceremonies
Article XIX
(a) The body of a dying or dead person, if it is on a
cot, must not be taken off the cot and put on the floor.
Nor must a lit lamp be placed beside, or a cow got
bestowed in donation by, him/her or for his/her good or
any other ceremony, contrary to Guru’s way, performed.
Only Gurbani should be recited or “Waheguru, Waheguru”
repeated by his/her side.
(b) When some one shuffles the mortal coil, the
survivors must not grieve or raise a hue and cry or
indulge in breast beating. To induce a mood of
resignation to God’s will, it is desirable to recite
Gurbani or repeat “Waheguru”.
(c) However young and deceased may be, the body should
be cremated. However, where arrangements for cremation
cannot be made, there should be no qualm about the body
being immersed in flowing water or disposed of in any
other manner.
(d) As to the time of cremation, no consideration as to
whether it should take place during day or night should
weigh.
(e) The dead body should be bathed and clothed in clean
clothes. While that is done, the Sikh symbols - comb,
kachha, karha, kirpan - should not be taken off.
Thereafter, putting the body on a plank, Ardas about its
being taken away for disposal be offered. The hearse
should then be lifted and taken to the cremation ground,
hymns that induce feeling of detachment should be
recited. On reaching the cremation ground, the pyre
should be laid. Then the Ardas for consigning the body
to fire be offered. the dead body should then be placed
on the pyre and the son or any other relation or friend
of the deceased should set fire to it. The accompanying
congregation should sit at a reasonable distance and
listen to kirtan or carry on collective singing of hymns
or recitation of detachment-inducing hymns. When the
pyre is fully aflame, the Kirtan Sohila (prescribed
pre-retirement night Scriptural prayer) be recited and
the Ardas offered. (Piercing the Skull half and hour or
so after the pyre has been burning with a rod or
something else in the belief that that will secure the
release of the soul - kapal kriya - is contrary to the
Guru’s tenets). The congregation should then leave.
Coming back home, a reading of the Guru Granth Sahib
should be commenced at home or in a nearby gurduwara,
and after reciting the six stanzas of the Anand Sahib,
the Ardas, offered and karhah prashad (sacred pudding)
distributed. The reading of the Guru Granth Sahib should
be completed on the tenth day. If the reading cannot, or
is sought not to, be completed on the tenth day, some
other day may be appointed for the conclusion of the
reading having regard to the convenience of the
relatives. The reading of the Guru Granth Sahib should
be carried out by the members of the household of the
deceased and relatives in cooperation. If possible,
Kirtan may be held every night. No funeral ceremony
remains to be performed after the “tenth day”.
(f) When the pyre is burnt out, the whole bulk of the
ashes, including the burnt bones, should be gathered up
and immersed in flowing water or buried at that very
place and the ground leveled. Raising a monument to the
memory of the deceased at the place where his dead body
is cremated is taboo.
(g) Adh marg (the ceremony of breaking the pot used for
bathing the dead body amid doleful cries half way
towards the cremation ground), organized lamentation by
women, foorhi (sitting on a straw mat in mourning for a
certain period), diva (keeping an oil lamp lit for 360
days after the death in the belief that that will light
the path of the deceased), pind (ritual donating of
lumps of rice flour, oat flour, or solidified milk (khoa)
for ten days after death), kirya (concluding the funeral
proceedings ritualistically, serving meals and making
offerings by way of shradh, budha marna (waving of
whisk, over the hearse of an old person’s dead body and
decorating the hearse with festoons), etc. are contrary
to the approved code. So too is the picking of the burnt
bones from the ashes of the pyre for immersing in the
Ganga, at Patalpuri (at Kiratpur), at Kartarpur Sahib or
at any other such place.
Other Rites and Conventions
Article XX
Apart from these rites and conventions, on every happy
or sad occasion, such as moving into a new house,
setting up a new business (shop), putting a child to
school, etc., a Sikh should pray for God’s help by
performing the Ardas. The essential components of all
rites and ceremonies in Sikhism are the recitation of
the Gurbani (Sikh Scriptures) and the performing of the
Ardas. |