Chapter XIII
Facets of Corporate Sikh Life
Article XXII
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The essential facets of Panthic life are:
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(1) Guru Panth (the Panth’s Guru status);
(2) The ceremony of ambrosial initiation;
(3) The statute of chastisement for aberrations;
(4) The statute of collective resolution;
(5) The appeal against local decisions.
Panth’s Status of Guruhood
Article XXIII
The concept of service is not confined to fanning the
congregation, service to and in the common
kitchen-cum-eating house, etc. A Sikh’s entire life is a
life of benevolent exertion. The most fruitful service
is the service that secures the optimum good by minimal
endeavor. That can be achieved through organized
collective action. A Sikh has, for this reason, to
fulfill his Panthic obligations (obligations as a member
of the corporate entity, the Panth), even as he/she
performs his/her individual duties. This corporate
entity is the Panth. Every Sikh has also to fulfill his
obligations as a unit of the corporate body, the Panth.
(a) The Guru Panth (Panth’s status of Guruhood) means
the whole body of committed baptized Sikhs. This body
was fostered by all the ten Gurus and the tenth Guru
gave it its final shape and invested it with Guruhood.
Ceremony of Baptism or Initiation
Article XXIV
(a) Ambrosial baptism should be held at an exclusive
place away from common human traffic.
(b) At the place where ambrosial baptism is to be
administered, the holy Guru Granth Sahib should be
installed and ceremonially opened. Also present should
be six committed baptized Sikhs, one of whom should sit
in attendance of the Guru Granth Sahib and the other
five should be there to administer the ambrosial
baptism. These six may even include Sikh women. All of
them must have taken bath and washed their hair.
(c) The five beloved ones who administer ambrosial
baptism should not include a disabled person, such as a
person who is blind or blind in one eye, lame, one with
a broken or disabled limb, or one suffering from some
chronic disease. The number should not include anyone
who has committed a breach of the Sikh discipline and
principles. All of them should be committed baptized
Sikhs with appealing personalities.
(d) Any man or woman of any country, religion or cast
who embraces Sikhism and solemnly undertakes to abide by
its principles is entitled to ambrosial baptism.
The person to be baptized should not be of very young
age; he or she should have attained a plausible degree
of discretion. The person to be baptized must have taken
bath and washed the hair and must wear all five K’s -
Kesh (unshorn hair), strapped Kirpan (sword), Kachhehra
(prescribed shorts), Kanga (Comb tucked in the tied up
hair), Karha (Steel bracelet). He/she must not have on
his/her person any token of any other faith. He/she must
not have his/her head bare or be wearing a cap. He/she
must not be wearing any ornaments piercing through any
part of the body. The persons to be baptized must stand
respectfully with hands folded facing the Guru Granth
Sahib.
(e) Anyone seeking to be rebaptized, having committed an
aberration, should be singled out and the five beloved
ones should award chastisement to him/her in the
presence of the congregation.
(f) One from amongst the five beloved ones administering
ambrosial baptism to persons seeking to be baptized
should explain the principles of the Sikh religion to
them:
The Sikh religion advocated the renunciation of the
worship of any created thing, and rendering of worship
and loving devotion to, and meditating on, the One
Supreme Creator. For the fulfillment of such devotion
and meditation, reflection on the contents of Gurbani
and practicing of its tenets, participation in the
congregational services, rendering service to the Panth,
benevolent exertion (to promote the good of others),
love of God’s name (loving reflection on the experience
of the Divine), living within the Sikh discipline after
getting baptized etc. are the principal means.
He
should conclude his exposition of the principles of Sikh
religion with the query: Do you accept these willingly?
(g) On an affirmative response from the seekers of
baptism, one from amongst the five beloved ones should
perform the Ardas for the preparation of baptism and
take the holy Hukam (command). The five beloved ones
should come close to the bowl for preparing the amrit
(ambrosial nectar).
(h) The bowl should be of pure steel and it should be
placed on a clean steel ring or other clean support.
(i) Clean water and sugar puffs should be put in the
bowl and the five beloved ones should sit around it in
bir posture [Sitting in bir posture comprises sitting
resting the body on the right leg, the right calf and
foot gathered inward and the left leg upto the shin kept
in a vertical position.] and recite the undermentioned
scriptural compositions.
(j) The scriptural composition to be recited are: The
Japuji, the Jaap, The Ten Sawayyas (commencing with
sarawag sud), The Bainti Chaupai (from “hamri karo hath
dai rachha” to “susht dokh te leho bachai”), the first
five and the last one stanza of the Anand Sahib.
(k) Each of the five beloved ones who recites the
scripture should hold the edge of the bowl with his left
hand and keep stirring the water with a double-edged
sword held in his right hand. He should do that with
full concentration. The rest of the beloved ones should
keep gripping the edge of the bowl with both hands
concentrating their full attention on the ambrosial
nectar.
(l) After the conclusion of the recitation, one from
amongst the beloved ones should perform the Ardas.
(m) Only that person seeking to be baptized who has
participated in the entire ceremony of ambrosial baptism
can be baptized. One who has turned up while the
ceremony was in progress cannot be baptized.
(n) After the Ardas as per clause (1) above, thinking of
our Father, the tenth Master, the wearer of the
aigrette, every person seeking to be baptized should sit
in bir posture, putting his/her right hand cupped on the
left cupped hand and be made to drink the ambrosial mix
five times, as the beloved one who pours the mix into
his cupped hand exclaims: say, Waheguru ji ka Khalsa,
Waheguru ji ki Fateh! (The Khalsa is of the Wondrous
Destroyer of darkness; victory too, is His!) The person
being baptized should after imbibling the ambrosia,
repeat: Waheguru ji ka Khalsa, Waheguru ji ki Fateh.
Then five handfuls of the ambrosial mix should be
sprinkled into the eyes of the person being baptized and
another five into his hair. Each such sprinkling should
be accompanied by the beloved one administering baptism
saying, “Waheguru ji ka Khalsa, Waheguru ji ki Fateh”,
and the person being baptized repeating the chant.
Whatever ambrosial mix is left over after the
administration of the ambrosial baptism to all
individual seekers, should be sipped by all (men and
women) baptized, together.
(o) After this the five beloved ones, all together in
chorus, communicating the name of Waheguru to all who
have been administered the ambrosial baptism, recite to
them the mul mantar (basic creed, seminal chant) and
make them repeat it aloud: ik aunkar satnam karta purakh
nirbhau nirwair akal murat ajuni saibhang gur prasad.
(p) After this, one from amongst the five beloved ones
should explain to the initiates the discipline of the
order: Today you are reborn in the true Guru’s
household, ending the cycle of migration, and joined the
Khalsa Panth (order). Your spiritual father is now Guru
Gobind Singh and, spiritual mother, Mata Sahib Kaur.
Your place of birth is Kesgarh Sahib and your native
place is Anandpur Sahib. You, being the sons of one
father, are, inter-se yourselves and other baptized
Sikhs, spiritual brothers. You have become the pure
Khalsa, having renounced your previous lineage,
professional background, calling (occupation), beliefs,
that is, having given up all connections with your
caste, descent, birth, country, religion, etc.. You are
to worship none except the One Timeless Being - no god,
goddess, incarnation or prophet. You are not to think of
anyone except the ten Gurus and anything except their
gospel as your savior. You are supposed to know Gurmukhi
(Punjabi alphabet). (If you do not, you must learn it).
And recite, or listen in to the recitation of, the
undermentioned scriptural compositions, the daily
repetition of which is ordained, every day: (1) The
Japuji Sahib, (2) The Jaap Sahib, (3) The Ten Sawayyas
(Quartrains), beginning “sarawag sudh”, (4) The Sodar
Rahiras and the Sohila. Besides, you should read from or
listen in to the recitation from the Guru Granth. Have,
on your person, all the time, the five K’s: The Keshas
(unshorn hair), the Kirpan (sheathed sword) [The length
of the sword to be worn is not prescribed.], the
Kachhehra [The Kachhehra (drawers like garment) may be
made from any cloth, but its legs should not reach down
to below the shins.], the Kanga (comb), the Karha (steel
bracelet) [The karha should be of pure steel.].
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The undermentioned four transgressions (tabooed
practices) must be avoided:
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(1) Dishonouring the hair;
(2) Eating the meat of an animal slaughtered the
Muslim way;
(3) Cohabiting with a person other than one’s
spouse;
(4) Using tobacco.
In
the event of the commission of any of these
transgressions, the transgressor must get rebaptised. If
a transgression is committed unintentionally and
unknowingly, the transgressor shall not be liable to
punishment. You must not associate with a Sikh who had
uncut hair earlier and has cut it or a Sikh who smokes.
You must ever be ready for the service of the Panth and
of the gurduwaras (Sikh places of worship). You must
tender one tenth of your earnings to the Guru. In short,
you must act the Guru’s way in all spheres of activity.
You must remain fully aligned to the Khalsa brotherhood
in accordance with the principles of the Khalsa faith.
If you commit transgression of the Khalsa discipline,
you must present yourself before the congregation and
beg pardon, accepting whatever punishment is awarded.
You must also resolve to remain watchful against
defaults in the future.
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(q) The following individuals shall be liable to
chastisement involving automatic boycott:
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(1) Anyone maintaining relations or communion with
elements antagonistic to the Panth including the
minas (reprobates), the masands (agents once
accredited to local Sikh communities as Guru’s
representatives, sine discredited for their faults
and aberrations), followers of Dhirmal or Ram Rai,
et. al., or users of tobacco or killers of female
infants;
(2) One who eats/drinks left-overs of the unbaptised
or the fallen Sikhs;
(3) One who dyes his beard;
(4) One who gives off son or daughter in matrimony
for a price or reward;
(5) Users of intoxicant (hemp, opium, liquor,
narcotics, cocaine, etc.);
(6) One holding, or being a party to, ceremonies or
practices contrary to the Guru’s way;
(7) One who defaults in the maintenance of Sikh
discipline.
(r)
After this sermon, one from among the five beloved ones
should perform the Ardas.
(s) Thereafter, the Sikh sitting in attendance of the
Guru Granth Sahib should take the Hukam. If anyone from
amongst those who have received the ambrosial baptism
had not earlier been named in accordance with the Sikh
naming ceremony, he should renounce his previous name
and be given a new name beginning with the first letter
of the Hukam now taken.
(t) And finally, the karhah prashad should be
distributed. All the newly launched Sikh men and women
should eat the karhah prashad together off the same
bowl.
Method of Imposing Chastisement
Article XXV
(a) Any Sikh who has committed any default in the
observance of the Sikh discipline should approach the
nearby Sikh congregation and make a confession of his
lapse standing before the congregation.
(b) The congregation should then, in the holy presence
of Guru Granth Sahib, elect from among themselves five
beloved ones who should ponder over the suppliant’s
fault and propose the chastisement (punishment) for it.
(c) The congregation should not take an obdurate stand
in granting pardon. Nor should the defaulter argue about
the chastisement. The punishment that is imposed should
be some kind of service, especially some service that
can be performed with hands.
(d) And finally an Ardas for correction should be
performed.
Method of Adopting Gurmatta
Article XXVI
(a) The Gurmatta can only be on a subject that affects
the fundamental principles of Sikh religion and for
their upholding, such as the questions affecting the
maintenance of the status of the Gurus or the Guru
Granth Sahib or the inviolability of the Guru Granth
Sahib, ambrosial baptism, Sikh discipline and way of
life, the identity and structural framework of the Panth.
Ordinary issues of religious, educational, social or
political nature can be dealt with only in a Matta
[resolution].
(b) A Gurmatta [Holy resolution] can be adopted only by
a select primary Panthic group or a representative
gathering of the Panth.
Appeals against Local Decisions
Article XXVII
An
appeal can be made to the Akal Takht against a local
congregation’s decision. |