SKETCH OF
THE SIKHS; Si
lingular Ration, WHO
INHABIT THE
PROVINCES OF THE PENJAB, SITUATED BETWEEN
C6e
Etocttf
3[umna anD 3[ntw&
LIEUTENANT-COLONEL MALCOLM, AUTHOR OF THE POLITICAL SKETCH OF
INDIA.
LONDON: PRINTED FOR JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET, By James Moyes,
Greville Street, Hatton Garden.
1812.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS
INTRODUCTION.
W^HEN
with the
British
army
in the
Penjab, in 1805, I endeavoured to collect materials that would throw light history,
upon
the
manners, and religion of the Sikhs.
Though
this
subject
had been treated by
several English writers,
none of them had
possessed opportunities of obtaining more
than this
tives
very
general
information
extraordinary race; therefore,
though
have served more
and
regarding
their narra-
meriting
regard,
to excite than to gratify
curiosity.
In addition lected while the
to
the information
army continued
I
col-
within the
:
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
2 territories
of the Sikhs, and the personal
observations I was able to make,
during
that period, upon the customs and manners
of that nation, I succeeded with difficulty in obtaining a
copy of the Adi-Grant'h *,
and of some
historical
Calcutta, were
to
when
parts of which,
essential
Sikh priest of the
me by a Nirmala order, whom I
equally
cative,
and who spoke of
intelligent
this
it
at night,
real or affected reluctance, after
mise that stand,
I
would
treat
it
I
had met
This slender stock
Penjab.
copy, sent
restraint
less
* The sacred volume of the Sikhs.
me
and
the religion
whom
than any of his brethren
gave
communi-
and
ceremonies of his sect with
the
returned
I
explained to
found
with in
most
the
tracts,
The
chief,
who
and with either a
having obtained a pro-
with great respect.
I
under-
however, that the indefatigable research of
Mr. Colebrooke has procured
not
only
the
Adi-
Grant'h, but also the Dasima Padshah ka Grant'h
and
that, consequently,
he
is
in possession of the
most sacred books of the Sikhs.
two
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
much
of materials was subsequently riched by
favoured
my friend me with a
jabi
and Duggar
history
that
and
en-
who
Dr. Leyden,
has
translation of several
by Sikh authors
tracts written
3
in the
Pen-
dialects, treating of their
religion
which, though
;
warm imagery which marks
all
full
of
oriental
works, and particularly those whose authors enter on the boundless field of
Hindu my-
thology,
contain the most valuable
fications
of the different religious
tions of the It
was
voured to
institu-
Sikh nation.
my
first
add
intention to have endea-
to these materials,
have written, when of the Sikhs
veri-
;
I
had
and to
leisure, a history
but the active nature of
public duties has
made
it
impossible
my to
carry this plan into early execution, and I
have had the choice of deferring
a distant and uncertain period ing,
from what
religion.
it
to
or of giv-
I actually possessed, a short
and hasty sketch of and
;
The
their history, customs,
latter alternative I
have
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
4 adopted
:
defective,
although the information I
for,
may convey
in
will
it
may be
such a sketch
is
of importance
;
moment
be useful at a
when every information regarding and
it
very
the Sikhs
may, perhaps,
sti-
mulate and aid some person, who has more leisure
and
complish
better
that
opportunities,
which
task
I
ac-
to
once
con-
templated.
In composing Sikhs, I have difficulties.
still
had
There
biography in which
relates
impostors.
to
to encounter various
no part of oriental
is
it
separate truth from
which
the
is
more
difficult to
falsehood, than history
The account of
that
of religious their lives
by devoted
generally recorded, either ciples
sketch of the
this rapid
and warm adherents, or by
enemies and bigotted persecutors.
is
dis-
violent
The
for-
mer, from enthusiastic admiration, decorate
them with every quality and accomplish-
ment
that can adorn
men
:
the latter mis-
represent their characters, and detract from
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. all their
merits
remark
I
liar
5
and pretensions. This general
have found to apply with pecu-
by
force to the varying accounts given,
Sikh and
and
Muhammedan
his successors.
an endless and
As
authors, of it
Nanac
would have been
unprofitable task to have
entered into a disquisition concerning the points
in
which these authors
considerations have induced
many
give a preference,
on almost
to the original Sikh writers.
all
differ,
me
to
occasions,
all
In every
re-
search into the general history of mankind, it
is
of the most essential importance to
hear what a nation has
to
say of
itself;
and
the knowledge obtained from such sources
has a value, independent of utility.
its
intercourse,
and leads
to the establishment
of friendship between nations.
savage states prejudices, easily
historical
It aids the promotion of social
are
those
The most
who have most
and who are consequently most
conciliated
or
offended:
they are
6
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
always pleased and find,
that
those
flattered,
whom
when they
they cannot
admit to possess superior
intelligence,
but are
acquainted with their history, and respect their belief
and usages
trary, they hardly ever
:
and, on the con-
pardon an outrage
against their religion or customs, though
committed by men who have every
right to
plead the most profound ignorance, as an
excuse for the words or actions that have
provoked resentment.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
SECTION
I.
SKETCH OF THE HISTORY AND PRESENT STATE OF THE SIKHS WITH OBSERVATIONS ON THEIR RELIGIOUS INSTITUTIONS, USAGES, MANNERS, AND CHARACTER. ;
Nanac Shah,
the founder of the sect,
since distinguished
by the name of Sikhs*,
was born a small
in the year
of Christ 1469, at
called Talwandi-f,
village
in the
of Bhatti, in the province of Lahore.
district
His father, whose
* Sikh or Sicsha,
is
name was CaldJ, was of
a Sanscrit word, which means a
or devoted follower.
disciple,
corrupted into Sikh
:
it is
In the Penjabi
it
is
a general term, and appli-
cable to any person that follows a particular teacher.
f This become,
village,
is
now
or rather
called
town, for such
Rayapur.
It is situated
it
has
on the
banks of the Beyah, or Hyphasis. J
He
Vedi
is
is
a
called,
name
by some authors, Kalu Vedi
derived from his tribe or family.
;
but
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
8 the
Cshatriya
and
cast,
Vedi
of
tribe
Hindus, and had no family except Nanac,
and
his sister
of the
Nanaci, who married a Hindu
name of Jayaram,
that
was em-
ployed as a grain-factor by Daulet
Khan
Lodi, a relation of the reigning emperor of
Nanac
Delhi.
was, agreeably to the usage
of the tribe in which he was born, married to a
woman
early age*,
of respectable family, at an
by
whom
he had two sons,
named Srichand and Lacshmi Das. former,
who abandoned
world, had
the vanities of the
a son called
who founded
Dherm Chand,
the sect of Udasi
descendants are yet
Nanac Putrah,
The
known by
;
the
and
his
name of
or the children of Nanac.
Lacshmi Das addicted himself sures of this world,
and
left
to the plea-
neither heirs
nor reputation. * Several Sikh authors have heen very precise establishing the date of the riage,
which they
fix in
consummation of
the
ihis
month of Asarh, of
Ilind6 aera of Vicramaditya, 1545.
in
marthe
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. Nanac
is
stated,
have been, from devotion
;
by
his
Sikh
all
9
writers, to
childhood, inclined to
and the indifference which
this
feeling created towards all worldly concerns,
appears to have been a source of continual uneasiness to his father
by every
which
mind from
had taken.
it
effect this object,
Nanac a sum of money, one
who endeavoured,
effort, to divert his
religious turn
view to
;
With a
he one day gave to
purchase
village, in order to sell it at
in the
hope of enticing him
to
salt at
another; business,
by allowing him
to taste the sweets of
mercial
Nanac was
the
profit.
scheme, took
the
the
com-
pleased with
money,
and
pro-
ceeded, accompanied by a servant of the
name
of Bala,
of the tribe of Sand'hu,
towards the village where he was to his purchase.
the road, to
He fall
in with
mendicants,) with
make
happened, however, on
whom
some
Fakirs, (holy
he wished
to
com-
mence a conversation; but they were weak, from want of
victuals,
so
which they
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
10
had not tasted
days, that they
for three
could only reply to the observations
Nanac by bending civil
fected
by
me
" profit
to deal in
My
"
:
" unstable, and profitless
;
af-
comhas
father
with a view to
salt,
but the gain of
;
Nanac,
their situation, said to his
with emotion
panion,
" sent
and other
their heads,
of acquiescence.
signs
of
this
my
world wish
is
is
to
" relieve these poor men, and to obtain " that gain which
" nal."
" cution."
is
good
eter-
"
Thy
:
its
exe-
do not delay
Nanac immediately
money among
after
permanent and
His companion* replied:
" resolution
his
is
the hungry Fakirs
they had gained strength
refreshment which
it
;
from the
him on the unity
of God, with which he was
much
delighted.
returned next day to his father,
* Bala Sand'hu,
through Nanac's disciple.
who gave
life,
to
who,
obtained them, entered
into a long discourse with
He
distributed
be
who
this advice, continued,
his favourite attendant
and
H
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. demanded what
profit
he had
made ?
" I
" have fed the poor," said Nanac, " and " have obtained that gain "
endure
will
pened
As the
for ever."
have
to
little
you which
for
father hap-
value for the species of
wealth which the son had acquired, he was
enraged at having wasted,
poor
abused
him
struck
;
sentations of
his
money
so fruitlessly
and even
Nanac,
nor could
the
mild repre-
Nanaci save her brother from
the violence of parental resentment.
For-
tune, however, according to the Sikh nar-
anecdote of their teacher's
rators of this
early
life,
tector,
had raised him a powerful pro-
who
not only rescued him from
punishment, but established respectability
put him above
from
his
upon grounds all
and
fame and
that at once
fear of future
low-minded
When Nanac
his
bad usage
sordid
father.
was quite a youth, and em-
ployed to tend
cattle in the fields,
he hap-
pened to repose himself one day under the shade of a tree
;
and, as the sun declined
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
12
towards the west,
when a
rays
its
fell
on
his face,
large black snake*, advancing to
the spot where he lay, raised itself from the
and
ground,
interposed
its
spread hood
between Nanac and the suns Bolar-f , the ruler of the
district,
was pass-
ing the road, near the place where
and marked,
slept,
without reflection,
in silence,
the Fakirs.
to
Nanac
though not
unequivocal sign of
this
This chief overheard
his future greatness.
Calu punishing
Ray
rays.
kindness
his
son for his
He
immediately entered,
and demanded the cause of the uproar and,
when informed of
he severely chid Calu
*
The
snake
is
the circumstances,
for his
conduct, and
veneration which the Hindus have for the well
known
;
and
this tradition, like
many
others, proves the attachment of the Sikh writers to
that mythology, the errors of which they pretend to
have wholly abandoned.
f Ray, a applied district.
to
title inferior to
the
Hindu
that of a Rajah, generally
chief of a village, or small
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. interdicted
hand
him from ever again
Nanac, before whom,
to
nishment of with every
mark of
to the asto-
the most profound vene-
Though Calu, from
ration.
lifting his
humbled himself
present, he
all
13
this event,
was
obliged to treat his son with more respect
than formerly, he remained as solicitous as
him from
ever to detach
and
to fix
him
in
his religious habits,
some worldly occupation
and he prevailed upon Jayram,
his son-in-
law, to admit him into partnership in his business.
Nanac, obliged
to acquiesce in
these schemes, attended at the granary of
Daulet
Khan
Jayram
;
ployed in
Lodi, which was in charge of
but though
his
hands were em-
work, and his kindness of
this
manner made
all
the inhabitants of Sultan-
pur, where the granary was established, his friends, yet his heart
moment from fixed
its
object.
on the Divinity
he sat
in
never strayed for one
;
It
was incessantly
and one morning,
as
a contemplative posture, a holy
Muhammedan
Fakir approached, and ex-
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
14 claimed
:
Oh Nanac upon what
"
are thy
!
" thoughts
now employed
Quit such oc-
?
" cupations, that thou mayest obtain the
" inheritance of eternal wealth." said to
and
have started up at
after looking for a
of the Fakir, he
fell
this
is
exclamation,
moment
into
Nanac
in the face
a trance
from
;
which he had no sooner recovered, than he immediately distributed every thing
among
granary
the poor*
:
the
in
and, after this
act, proceeded with loud shouts out of the
gates of the city,
and running
into a pool of
water, remained there three days
which some
writers assert
during
;
he had an
inter-
view with the prophet Elias, termed by the
Muhammedans,
Khizzer, from
whom
he
learnt all earthly sciences.
While
Nanac remained
in
the
* This remarkable anecdote in Nanac's
the
narrative of Bhacta
told
life is
very differently by different Sikh authors. followed
pool,
Malli.
I
have
They
all
agree in Nanac's having, at this period, quitted the
occupations of the world, and become Fakir.
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS abstracted from
worldly considerations,
all
Jayram was put
poor
prophet,
a
with
converse
holding
1$
by Daulet Khan
in prison
Lodi, on the charge of having dissipated
Nanac, however, returned,
his property.
and
told
faultless
ment
Khan
that he
was the object of punish-
render the
to
lost.
posal
Jayram's
strictest
accounts
and, to the surprise of his favour
found in
he held himself
account of
The Khan accepted
he had :
that
that, as such,
and
;
ready
;
Jayram was
Daulet
all,
all
his pro-
were settled a balance was
on which he was not
;
only released, but reinstated in the employ-
ment and favour of told,
by
his
in a very great degree this
sterities
are
the Sikh authors, that these won-
derful actions increased the
from
We
master.
period,
of a holy
abstraction
in
and that he began, practise
to
man
the
;
fame of Nanac
;
all
the au-
and, by his frequent
contemplation
divine Being, and his abstinence
and
of the virtue,
16
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
he soon
acquired great celebrity through
all
the countries into which he travelled.
There are many extravagant accounts
One
garding the travels of Nanac.
who
treats
made
in
re-
author*,
of the great reform which he
God,
worship of the true
the
which he found degraded by the idolatry of the Hindus, and the ignorance of the
Muhammedans, the different
and
to
relates
Hindu
his
journey to
all
places of pilgrimage,
Mecca, the holy temple of the
Mu-
hammedans. It
would be
purpose of
nac
tedious,
and foreign
this sketch, to
in his travels,
to the
accompany Na-
of which the above-men-
tioned author, as well as others, has given
the most circumstantial accounts.
them) by a
accompanied (agreeable
to
brated musician, of the
name
Guru
Vali, author of the
cele-
of Merdana,
and a person named Bala Sand'hu * Bhai
He was
Gnyana
;
and
it
Ratnavali,
a work written in the Sikh dialect of the Penjabi.
:
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. is
on the
17
tradition of the latter of these
most of the miracles* and
disciples, that
wonders of
In
are related.
his journies
Bengal, the travellers had to encounter kinds of sorcerers and magicians.
all
Poor
Merdana, who had some of the propensities of Sancho, and preferred
good meals
to deserts
warm
and
constantly in trouble, and
had and
his
houses and
starvation,
was
more than once
form changed into that of a sheep,
of
several
Nanac,
animals.
other
however, always restored his humble friend to
the
human
and
shape,
as
constantly
read him lectures on his imprudence. is
stated,
in
It
one of those accounts, that
a Raja of Sivanab'hu endeavoured to tempt
Nanac, by
offering
him
all
the luxuries of
the world, to depart from his austere habits,
but in vain.
* Though
His presents of rich meats,
his biographers
Nanac, we never
find that
have ascribed miracles
he pretended
on the contrary, he derided those who
power from
evil spirits.
C
to
to
work any
did, as deriving
;;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
18
splendid clothes, and
fair
only af-
ladies,
many
forded the Sikh teacher so
of this
of decrying the vanities
tunities
oppor-
worid, and preaching to the Raja the blessings of eternal in
life
and he at last succeeded
;
making him a convert, and resided
Sivanab'hu
two years and
at
months
five
during which period he composed the Pran Sancali*,
for
After
lowers.
of his
the instruction
Nanac had
visited
of India, and explained to
cities
the great doctrines of the unity
presence of God, he went to
Medina, where
and
long disputations
his
celebrated tors, are
Muhammedan
the
all
all
ranks
and omni-
Mecca and
his
miracles,
with
the most
saints
and doc-
actions,
his
fol-
most circumstantially recorded by
his biographers.
He
is
stated, on this oc-
casion, to have maintained his
own
prin-
without offending those of others
ciples,
always professing himself the enemy of * It
is
believed
incorporated in the
dis-
work of Nanac has been
th.it
this
first
part of the Adi-Grant'li.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. cord,
and
cile the
faiths
and Hindus deavoured great
and
no object but to recon-
as having
two
in
to
of the
one
Muhammedans
religion
do by
;
recalling
original tenet, in
believed, the unity of
which he en-
them
which they had
which they both
During
fallen.
Nanac was introduced Baber*, before
to that
God, and by reclaim-
them from the numerous
ing
19
whom
he
to is
errors into his travels,
the
emperor have
said to
defended his doctrine with great firmness
and eloquence.
Baber was pleased with
him, and ordered an ample maintenance to
be bestowed upon him ; which the Sikh priest refused; observing, that he trusted in
who provided alone a
man
for all
men, and from
returned from his travels,
* This interview must have taken place 1527
;
as
it
is
Daulet Khan
whom
of virtue and religion would
When
consent to receive favour or reward.
Nanac
him
he cast in
1526 or
stated to have been immediately after
Lodi had
visited
Paniput, in
1526;
where that prince had fought, and subdued Ibrahim, emperor of Hindustan,
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
20
garments of a Fakir, and wore plain
off the
clothes,
to his at
but continued
numerous
this
to give instructions
disciples
period,
;
and he appears,
have experienced the
to
most violent opposition from the Hindu, zealots,
who reproached him
laid aside the habits of
the
impiety of the
cited,
a Fakir, and with
doctrines
which
he
These accusations he treated with
taught.
great
with having
contempt
and an author, before
;
Bhai Guru Das Vali,
when he
visited
Vatala,
states,
that
he enraged the
Yogis waras* so much, that they tried their
powers of enchantment to
" Some," says
writer, "
this
terrify
all
him.
assumed the
" shape of lions and tigers, others hissed
" like snakes, one
fell
in
a shower of
fire,
" and another tore the stars from the firma-
" ment;" but Nanac remained tranquil:
and when required
to exhibit
some proof
of his powers that would astonish them, he * Recluse penitents, who, by means of mental and corporeal mortifications, have acquired a
over the powers of nature.
command
:
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. replied
21
" I have nothing to exhibit worthy
:
" of you to behold.
A
holy teacher has
" no defence but the purity of his doctrine " the world
"
is
may
change, but the Creator
unchangeable." These words, adds the
author, caused the miracles and enchant-
ments of the Yogiswaras all fell
at the feet
who was
and they
to cease,
of the humble Nanac,
protected by the
Nanac, according
all
to the
God.
perfect
same
authority,
went from Vatala to Multan, where he
communed the
" I
with* the Pirs, or holy fathers of
Muhammedan religion of that country. am come," said he, when he entered
that province, " into a country
"
like the sacred
Ganga,
From Multan he went he threw
off his
buried near
the
full
of Pirs,
visiting the ocean/'
to Kirtipur*,
earthly shape,
bank of the
where
and was
river Ravi,
which has since overflowed his tomb.
Kir-
tipur continues a place of religious resort
* Kirtipur Dehra, on the banks of the Ravi, or Hydraotes.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
22
and worship garment
It
of
is
and a small piece of Nanac's
exhibited to pilgrims, as a sacred
Dharmasala, or temple.
at his
relic,
;
would be
Nanac* on
we
the authority of
yet possess.
first
character
difficult to give the
any account
His writings, especially the
chapters of the Adi-Crant'h, will,
ever translated, be perhaps a criterion
which he
may
be
judged
fairly
sition
which he met,
genius
:
and the
combated the oppo-
afford -ample reason to
conclude that he was a
common
by
but the
;
great eminence which he obtained,
success with which he
if
and
man
this
of more than
favourable im-
pression of his character will be confirmed
*
He
is,
throughout
Muhammedan
historians
this
sketch,
called
generally term
Nanac.
him Nanac
Shah, to denote his being a Fakir, the name of Shah
being frequently given to sect.
The
men
of celebrity in that
Sikhs, in speaking of him, call
him Baba
Nanac, or Guru Nanac, father Nanac, or Nanac the teacher; and their writers term
him Nanac
which means Nanac the omnipresent.
Nirinkar,
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
23
by a consideration of the object of
and the means he took
Born
his life,
to accomplish
of India, at the very point where the
Mnhammed
of
gion
it.
a province on the extreme verge
in
reli-
and the idolatrous
worship of the Hindus appeared to touch,
and
at
moment when both
a
these tribes
cherished the most violent rancour and ani-
mosity towards each other, his great aim
was
blend
to
those jarring
elements
in
peaceful union, and he only endeavoured to effect this
purpose through the means
of mild persuasion.
His wish was to recall
Muhammedans and Hindus
both
to
exclusive attention to that sublimest of principles,
which inculcates devotion
combat the
and
the
other;
all
to
He had
God, and peace towards man. to
an
furious bigotry of the one,
deep-rooted
superstition
of the
but he attempted to overcome
obstacles
by
manity.
And we
the force of reason
all
and hu-
cannot have a more con-
vincing proof of the general character of
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
24
that doctrine which he taught, and the inoffensive light in which
the knowledge that
its
was viewed, than
it
success did not rouse
the bigotry of the intolerant and tyrannical
Muhaminedan government under which he lived.
Nanac
did not
deem
either of his sons,
before mentioned, worthy of the succession to
his
which he be-
functions,
spiritual
queathed to a Cshatriya of the Trehun tribe, called
Lehana, who had long been
attached to him, and
whom
he had
initiated
in the sacred mysteries of his sect, clothed
in the holy mantle of a Fakir,
with the ing
to
name
and honoured
of Angad*, which, accord-
some commentators, means own
body.
Guru Angad, *
This
Angad
fanciful
as a
is
the
etymology represents
compound of
signifies body,
own.
for that
name by the
and the Persian Khiid, which
This mixture of language
the jargon of the Penjab.
word
the Sanscrit Jug, which
is
quite
signifies
common
in
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. which he
is
known by
all
25
Sikhs, was born
Khandur, on the bank of
at the village of
the Beyah, or Hyphasis, in the province
His
of Lahore.
life
does not appear to
have been distinguished by any remarkable
He
actions.
taught the same doctrine as
Nanac, and wrote some chapters that now form part of the Grant'h.
Vasu and Datu, but
sons,
was his
initiated
two
left
neither of
them
and he was succeeded,
;
at
death*, which happened in the year
A. D. 1552, and of the
Amera Das, a B'hale, nial
He
Sam vat
1609, by
Cshatriya of the tribe
who performed
the duties of a
of
me-
towards him for upwards of twelve
years.
It
pation of
is
stated,
Amera Das was
from the Beyah miles, to
that the daily occu-
wash
river,
to bring water
a distance of six
the feet of his master
;
and
that one night, during a severe storm, as he
*
Angad
died
at
miles east of Lahore.
Khandur, a village about forty
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
26
was returning from slipped,
and he
his journey, his
and broke the
fell
foot
vessel
that contained the river water, opposite the
who
door of a weaver, to
lived next house
The weaver,
Angad.
noise,
demanded, in a loud
wife,
from
whence
woman, who was daily toils
voice, of his
and the devotion of Angad's
who knows
was poor Amera Das,
neither the sweets of sleep
" night, nor of
rest
by day/'
sation was overheard by
by
This conver-
Angad
;
and when
Amera Das came, next morning, form
The
proceeded.
it
well acquainted with the
servant, replied, " It
"
the
at
startled
to per-
he treated him with
his usual duties,
extraordinary kindness, and said
:
"
You
" have endured great labour; but, hence-
" forward, enjoy
rest/'
Amera Das was
distinguished for his activity in preaching
the tenets of Nanac,
and was very suc-
cessful in obtaining converts
by the aid of whom he
and followers
established
some
temporal power, built Kujarawal, and sepa-
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. rated from the regular Sikhs the
27
Udasi
sect,
which was founded by Dherm-Chand, the son
of Nanac,
and was
probably con-
sidered, at that period, as heretical.
Amera Das had two
a son
children,
named Mohan, and a daughter named M6hani,
known by
the
name
garding whose marriage he
been very anxious
and
is
stated to
have
as this event gave
a dynasty of leaders, who are almost
rise to
adored with
:
of B'haini; re-
among
much
the
Sikhs,
it
is
recorded
minuteness by the writers of
that nation.
Amera Das had communicated his
wishes,
regarding the marriage of B'haini, to a Brah-
men, who was
him
rected
Brahmen that he
to
head servant, and
make some
inquiries.
di-
The
did so, and reported to his master
had been
a youth every
successful,
way
of his daughter.
upon
his
and had found
suited to be the
husband
As they were speaking
this subject in the street,
Amera Das
SKETCH OF THE
28
SIKHS.
asked what was the boy's stature
?
" About
" the same height as that lad," said the pointing to a youth
Brahmen,
The
near them. instantly
and
intently fixed
he had pointed.
lad said his
Amera Das
withdrawn from the Brahmen,
was
his tribe, his
attention of
standing
upon
He
whom
the youth to
asked him regarding
name, and
his family.
name was Ram Das, and
The that
he was a Cshatriya, of a respectable family, of the Sondi tribe, and an inhabitant of the village of
Gondawal.
Amera Das,
pleased
with the information he had received, took
no more notice of the Brahmen and
his
choice of a son-in-law, but gave his daughter to the
youth
whom fortune had
so casually
introduced to his acquaintance*. *
Though a
contrary belief
is
Amera
inculcated by Nanac,
the Sikhs, like the Hindus, are inclined to be predestinarians, and this gives their
minds a great tendency
view accidents as decrees of Providence; and
it
to is
probable that this instance of early good fortune in
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. Das
died in the year A. D. 1574, and of the
Sam vat
of Gondawal,
16*31, at the village
province of Lahore, and was suc-
in the
ceeded by
he had his
%g
his son-in-law,
Ram
Das*,
whom
initiated in the sacred mysteries
holy profession, and
and
for his piety,
still
of
who became famous more from the im-
provements he made at Amritsar, which
was
for
some time
called
daspu'r, after him.
Rampur,
Some Sikh
or
Ram-
authorities
ascribe the foundation of this city to him,
which
is
not correct,
ancient town,
Ram
known
as
it
was a very
formerly under the
Das, by impressing his countrymen with an idea
of his being particularly favoured of Heaven, gave rise to
an impression that promoted,
that success which
*
No
rule of
it
in
no
slight degree,
anticipated.
dates of the events which occurred during the
Ram
from which
Das this
ever, states, that
are given in any of the authorities
sketch
is
drawn.
One
author,
how-
he lived in the time of Akber, and was
honoured with the favour of that truly tolerant and great emperor.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
30
name
of Chak.
to
population, and built a famous tank,
its
He, however, added much
or reservoir of water, which he called Ara-
a
ritsar,
name
mortality,
that
signifying the water of im-
and which has become so sacred,
has given
it
sanctity, to the
its
name, and imparted
its
town of Ramdaspur, which
has become the sacred city of the Sikh nation,
and
is
now
only
known by the name
of Amritsar. After a
life
passed in the undisturbed
propagation of his tenets, in explanation of
which he wrote several works, he died, the year A.
in
D. 1581, and of the Samvat
1638, at Amritsar, leaving two sons, Ar-
junmal and Bharatmal.
by
the former*,
who
He was
has rendered himself
* Arjunmal, or Arjun, as he called, according to B'hai
of the
Gnyan
succeeded
is
more commonly
Guru Das
B'hale, the author
Ratnavali, was not
sacred mysteries of his father.
initiated
in
the
This author says, that
Arjun, though a secular man, did not suffer the office of Guru, or priest, to leave the Sondi tribe.
" Like a
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
31
by compiling the Adi-Grant'h *.
famous
The Adi-Grant'h,
or
first
sacred volume of
the Sikhs, contains ninety-two sections
was
partly
composed by Nanac and
immediate successors, but received sent form
its
it
:
his
pre-
and arrangement from Arjunmalf,
" substance," he adds, " which none
else
could
" gest, the property of the family remained
di-
the
in
« family."
* Grant'h means book riority to all others,
" Book."
it
;
but, as a
is
mark of its supe-
given to this work, as "
Adi Grant'h means, the
book, and guish
is
first
The
Grant'h, or
generally given to this work to distin-
from the Dasama Padshah ka Grant'h, or the
book of the tenth king, composed by Guru Govind.
f Though
the original Adi-Grant'h was compiled
by
Arjunmal, from the writings of Nanac, Angad, Amera •Das, and
own
Ram Das,
and enlarged and improved by
additions and commentaries,
some small
his
portions
have been subsequently added by thirteen different persons,
whose numbers, however, are reduced, by the
Sikh authors, to twelve and a half: the
last contri-
butor to this sacred volume being a woman, admitted to rank in the ungallant writers.
list
as a fraction,
is
only
by these
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
32
who
has blended his
own
what he deemed most valuable
in the
positions of his predecessors.
It
then,
the
who ought, from
who gave
first
this act, to
it
:
is
com-
Arjun,
be deemed
consistent form
to the religion of the Sikhs
though
with
additions
and order
an act which,
has produced the effect he wished,
of uniting that nation more closely, and of increasing
their
numbers, proved
fatal to
The jealousy of the Muhammedan government was excited, and he was made
himself.
its sacrifice.
happened
The mode of his
in the year of Christ 1606,
of the Samvat 1663, ferently
by
death, which
is
and
related very dif-
different authorities
:
but several
of the most respectable agree in stating, that his martyrdom, for such they term
was caused by the active hatred of a
Hindu
zealot,
it,
rival
Danichand Cshatriya, whose
writings he refused to admit into the Adi-
Grant'h, on the ground that the tenets incul-
cated in them were irreconcileable to the
pure doctrine of the unity and omnipotence
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
33
sacred
volume.
of God,
taught in
that
This rival had sufficient influence with the
Muhammedan
governor of the province to
procure the imprisonment of Arjun affirmed,
is
by some
from the severity of
by
others, to
writers, to his
who
have died
confinement
have been put to death
;
and,
in the
In whatever way his
most cruel manner. life
;
was terminated, there can be no doubt,
from
its
dered,
consequences, that
by
his
followers,
as
murder, committed by the
it
was
consi-
an atrocious
Muhammedan
government ; and the Sikhs, who had been, till
then,
an
inoffensive, peaceable sect, took
arms under Har Govind, the son of Arjunmal, and wreaked their vengeance upon
whom
they thought concerned in the death
of their revered
The against
all
priest.
contest carried the
on by Har Govind
Muhammedan
chiefs
in
the
Penjab, though no doubt marked by that animosity which springs from a deep and
implacable sense of injury on one part, and
D
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
34
the insolence and violence of insulted power
on the other, could not have been of great
magnitude or importance,
else
it
would
have been more noticed by contemporary
Muhammedan fruits
writers
but
;
of that desperate
which was soon
it
was the
of hostility,
spirit
after to
distinguish the
Nanac and
wars between the followers of
Muhammed
those of
:
and, from every ac-
count of Har Govind's
have been
his
first
life,
it
appears to
anxious wish to inspire his
followers with the
most irreconcileable hatred
of their oppressors. It
is
stated, that this warlike*
Guru, or
* Several historical accounts of the Sikhs, particularly that published in general,
by Major Browne, which
drawn from authentic
in error with regard to the period at first
is,
sources, appear to be
which
this race
took arras, which the last author states to have
occurred under
Guru G6vind; but
several Sikh au->
thors, of great respectability
and information, agree
ascribing to the efforts of
Har Govind,
in
the son of
Arjun, this great change in the Sikh commonwealth;
and
their correctness, in this point, appears to
be placed
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. priest
wore two
militant,
swords in
girdle.
Being asked why he did so
" one/'
said he, "
" of
my
father
" miracles of
beyond B'hai
all
;
35
to revenge the death
is
the other, to destroy the
Muhammed."
by a passage
question,
Guru Das B'hale who ;
in the Ratnavali of
observes, "
" (of divine grace) were distributed
That five phials
to five Pirs (holy
" men), but the sixth Pir was a mighty Guru " Arjun threw
his
" The
:
off his
(priest).
earthly frame, and the form
" of Har Govind mounted the seat of authority.
The
" Sondi race continued exhibiting their different forms " in their turns.
Har Govind was
" armies, a martial
Guru
(priest),
" performed great actions."
European
writers
on
The mistake
this subject
in a confusion of verbal accounts
of the
name of Har Govind,
Govind, the son of
last
Ram
Ray, which
;
and the similarity
the son of Arjunmal, and
In the Persian sketch, which
translates, the
not mentioned.
of some
probably originated
and greatest of the Sikh Gurus, the
Tegh Bahadur.
Major Browne
the destroyer of
a great warrior, and
The son is
of that manuscript.
name
of
of Arjunmal
Har Govind is
called
is
Guru
obviously a mistake of the author
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
3(5
Har Govind
reputed, by
is
have been the
to
lowers to eat* the flesh of the exception of the
some
:
it
He had
diers -f.
their
in
bammedans,
whom
to
faith
bis
among
with it
by
Babu Guru-
The two
* Nanac had forbidden hog's
compliance
sol-
Tegh Bahadur, Anna
Ray, and Atal Ray.
species of food
band of
sons,
five
daitya, Saurat Singh,
cile
effected a
by converting a race of peaceable
enthusiasts into an intrepid
in
change
this great
more remarkable revolution
habits,
mon
appears not
when he
in their diet at the time
his fol-
animals, with
all
cow and
improbable that he made
still
authors,
who allowed
first
flesh,
died
last
though a com-
the lower tribe of Hindus,
of
the
prejudices
was
his great wish to
every
concession
Mu-
the
recon-
and
per-
suasion.
f
It is stated,
by a Sikh author named Nand,
Har Govind, during tice of
that
his ministry, established the prac-
invoking the three great Hindu
Vishnu, and Siva: but this other authority which
I
is
deities,
Brahma,
not confirmed by any
have seen.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
Saurat Singh and
without descendants.
Tegh Singh,
or
Tegh Bahadur, were, by
the cruel persecution of the forced to
Muhammedans,
northward of the Penjab.
His eldest son,
Gurudaitya, died early, but
Daharmal and Har Ray
to the
mountains
into the
fly
37
two
left
sons,
the latter of whom
;
succeeded his grandfather,
who
died in the
year A. D. 1644, and of the Samvat 1701. It
does not appear that
much temporal into
any
dans
:
power, or that he entered
Muhamme-
with the
hostilities
his rule
Har Ray enjoyed
was tranquil, and passed
without any remarkable event; owing, probably,
to
the
vigor
medan power had
Muham-
which the
attained
in
the
part of the reign of Aurungzeb.
death, which
happened
in
early
At
the year
his
A.D.
1661, and of the Samvat 1718, a violent contest arose
the
succession
leader;
for
among to
the Sikhs, regarding
the
office
the temporal
of spiritual
power of
ruler was, at this period, little
their
more than
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
38
The
nominal.
dispute between his sons,
some Sikh authors
or, as
grandson,
state, his
Har Crishn and
Ram
son and
Ray, was
referred to Dehli, whither both parties
went
and, by an imperial decree of Aurungzeb, the Sikhs were allowed to elect their
They chose Har
priest.
at Dehli in the year A.
Samvat 1721
;
and was succeeded by
*
his
The
nephew,
Ram
Ray*, who remained
violent contests of the Sikhs are mentioned
by most of
their writers
;
and, though they disagree
in their accounts, they all represent falling the innocent
sacrifice
potism and intolerance of
all
;
of
Muhammedan Muhammedan
thors, would appear not to be the
by a
as
des-
fact.
au-
Tegh Be-
agreeable to them, provoked his execution
series of crimes.
Moslem
Tegh Behadur
which, from the evidence
respectable contemporary
hadur,
his
He, however, had
most violent opposition
to encounter the
from
who died
D. 1664, and of the
Tegh Behadur.
uncle,
Crishn,
own
Fakir, of the
He
joined, they state, with a
name of Hafiz ed Din
;
and,
supported by a body of armed mendicants, committed the
most violent depredations on the peaceable
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. at Dehli,
and
and endeavoured, by every
intrigue,
to
quence of
his
Dehli,
to
art
he was
effect his ruin:
and brought
seized,
39
in
conse-
nephew's misrepresentations
and, after being in prison for two years,
was released at the intercession of Jayasingh, Raja of Jayapur, to Bengal.
up
whom
Tegh Behadur
was pursued, agreeable his retreat, with
to
Patna*
;
but
Sikh authors, to
implacable rancour, by the
and ambition of
jealousy
afterwards took
city of
abode at the
his
he accompanied
Ram Ray who ;
at last accomplished the destruction of his
He was
rival.
by
brought from Patna, and,
the accounts of the
licly
put
gation
to death,
same
authors, pub-
without even the
beyond a
of a crime,
inhabitants of the Penjab.
Mutakhherin says he was,
The author of in
A
the Seir
and
his
body cut
which was hung up
gate of the fortress.
*
and
consequence of these
excesses, put to death at Gwalior, into four quarters, one of
firm
alle-
Sikh college was founded in that
city.
at each
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
40
undaunted assertion of the truth of that he was the high
of which
faith
This event
is
the year A.
1732
:
said to
priest.
have taken place in
D. 1675, and of the Samvat
but the Sikh records of their
own
history,
from the death of Har Govind to
that of
Tegh Behadur,
are contradictory
and unsatisfactory, and appear attention.
little
The
was almost crushed, first effort to attain
vind
;
fact
in
is,
to merit
that the sect
consequence of
their
power, under Har Go-
and, from the period of his death to
that of
Tegh Behadur,
the
Mogul empire
was, as has been before stated, in the zenith of
its
Sikhs,
power, under Aurungzeb
who
strength, their
were
rendered
own internal
still
dissensions.
have endeavoured to supply their history
:
and the
had never attained any real weaker by Their writers this
chasm
by a fabulous account of
in
the
numerous miracles which were wrought by their priests,
even
the
Ram
Ray, Har Crishn, and
unfortunate
T6gh Behadur,
at
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. Dehli,
all
of
whom
41
are said to have asto-
nished the emperor and his nobles, by a display of their supernatural powers their
wide difference from each
these relations, would prove, if
was wanting,
that
all
:
but
other, in
any proof
the annals of that
period are fabricated.
The of It
history of the Sikhs, after the death
Tegh Behadur, assumes a new is
aspect.
no longer the record of a sect, who,
revering the conciliatory and mild tenets of their founder, desired
more
to protect
selves than to injure others
nation, who, adding to a injuries they
;
but that of a
deep sense of the
had sustained from a bigotted
and overbearing government, of
them-
men commencing
all
the ardour
a military career of
glory, listened, with rapture, to a son glow-
ing with vengeance against the murderers
of his father, to the
upon hood,
who
taught a doctrine suited
troubled state of his mind, and called his followers,
by every
to lay aside their
feeling of
man-
peaceable habits, to
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
42
graft the resolute courage of the soldier
on
of the devotee, to
the enthusiastic faith
swear eternal war with the cruel and haughty
Muhammedans, and to steel, as the
to devote themselves
only means of obtaining
every blessing that
this
world, or that to
come, could afford to mortals. This was the doctrine of the son of
Guru Govind,
Tegh Behadur; who, though
very young at his father's death, had
the deepest horror at
mind imbued with that event,
and cherished a
spirit
considered as his murderers. to this object,
we
find
of im-
whom
he
Devoting
his
placable resentment against those
life
his
him, when quite
a youth, at the head of a large party of his followers,
amid the
hills
of Srinagar, where
he gave proofs of that ardent and daring mind, which afterwards raised him to such eminence.
He was
not, however, able to
maintain himself against the prince of that country, with hostilities;
whom
he had entered into
and, being obliged to leave
it,
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
43
where
he was
he went to the Penjab,
warmly welcomed by a Hindu chief bellion against the
government.
in re-
This chief
gave Govind possession of Mak'haval*, and
where he
several other villages, his followers,
aiding
him
and repaid
in
settled with
Govind
depredations.
his
by
his benefactor
appears, at this moment, to have been universally
acknowledged by the Sikhs, as
Sat-gurti, or chief spiritual leader
;
their
and he
used the influence which that station, sufferings,
his
and the popularity of his cause,
gave him, to
effect
a complete change in
the habits and religion of his countrymen-)-.
would be tedious and
It
useless to follow
the Sikh writers through those volumes of fables
in
which they have narrated the
wonders that prognosticated the *
A
town on the
+ Guru Govind spectability,
B'hai
of
this,
Satlej. is
stated,
by a Sikh author of
Guru Das
fourteen years of age death.
rise
when
B'hale,
to
his father
re-
have been
was put
to
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
44 the
most revered of
power; or those
to enter,
at
any
is
into
length,
Govind
accounts which they, and
himself, for he
to
priests,
their
all
equally celebrated as an
author and as a warrior, have given of his It will
exploits.
be
pur-
sufficient, for the
pose of this sketch, to state the essential
changes which he effected in
his tribe,
and
the consequences of his innovations.
Though
the
Sikhs had already, under
Har Govind, been
in
initiated
arms, yet
they appear to have used these only in defence the
:
Brahmen
may,
to the lowest of the Sudra,
in cases of necessity, use
any infringement of the
them without
original institutions
of their tribe, no violation of these tutions
was caused by the
which, framed carefully
with the lus
self-
and as every tribe of Hindus, from
rules of
insti-
Nanac
with a view to conciliation,
abstained
from
civil institutes
more daring
all
interference
of the Hindus.
successor,
But
Guru Govind,
saw that such observances were at variance
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
45
with the plans of his lofty ambition
;
and
he wisely judged, that the only means by
which he could ever hope to oppose the
Muhammedan government
with
success,
were not only to admit converts from tribes,
all
but to break, at once, those rules by
which the Hindus had been so long chained to arm, in short, the
the country, and to
and rank an
;
whole population of
make
object to
worldly wealth
which Hindus, of
every class, might aspire.
The
extent to which Govind succeeded
in this design will
be more
It is here
another place.
fully noticed in
only necessary to
state the leading features of those changes
by
which he subverted, in so short a time, the hoary institutions of Brahma*, and excited
#
The
object of
tions of cast
Nanac was
to the adoration of that all
to abolish the distinc-
amongst the Hindus, and
men, he contended, were equal.
who adopted
all
to bring
them
Supreme Being, before whom
Guru Govind,
the principles of his celebrated prede-
cessor, as far as religious usages
were concerned,
is
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
46 terror
and astonishment
in the
minds of the
Muhammedan conquerors of India, who saw the religious prejudices of the Hindus, which
they had calculated upon as one of the of their safety, because they limited
pillars
the great majority
of the population to
peaceable occupations,
fall
before the touch
of a bold and enthusiastic innovator,
opened
at once, to
men
of the lowest tribe*,
the dazzling prospect of earthly glory.
who
subscribed to his
who
All
tenets were upon a
reported to have said, on this subject, that the four tribes of
Hindus, the Brahmen, Cshatriya, Vaisya,
and Sudra, would, sitpari (betle-nut),
become
all
* Some
like
pan
and khat
of one colour,
men
(betle-leaf),
chunam
(lime),
(terra japonica, or catechu),
when
well chewed.
of the lowest Hindu
tribe,
of the occu-
pation of sweepers, were employed to bring away the corpse of
Tegh Behadur from
Dehli.
Their success
was rewarded by high rank and employment. of the same tribe,
who have become
Several
Sikhs, have been
remarkable for their valour, and have attained great reputation.
They
are distinguished,
by the name of Ran-Rata Singh.
among
the Sikhs,
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. level,
47
and the Brahmen who entered
had no higher claims lowest Sudra
to
who swept
his sect
eminence than the his house.
the object of Govind to
make
It
all
was
Sikhs
equal*, and that their advancement should
depend upon
solely
well aware
men
how
exertions:
their
necessary
it
was
and
to inspire
of a low race, and of groveling minds,
with pride in themselves, he changed the
name
of his followers from Sikh to Singh, thus giving to
lion;
or
that honourable
exclusively
That
is,
which had been before
of Hindus
equal in civil rights.
and every
:
He
wished to
the disqualifications of birth, and do
move
That he did not completely that
followers
his
assumed by the Rajaputs, the
military class
first
*
title
all
some
distinctions
away
effect this object,
of their
former
tribes,
ticularly those relating to intermarriage, should
re-
cast.
and parstill
be kept up by the Sikhs, cannot be a matter of asto-
nishment to those acquainted with the deep-rooted prejudices of the Hindus upon this point; which
much
is
a feeling of family pride as of religious usage.
as
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
48 Sikh
himself at once elevated to rank
felt
with the highest, by
The
disciples of
proud appellation.
this
Govind were required
to
devote themselves to arms, always to have steel
about them
in
wear a blue dress
grow
to exclaim,
;
Wd !
some shape ;
when they met each
Guru*
!
institutions
!
Wd
!
other,
Guruji
ki
The
intention of
obvious
is
Victory attend the
:
made soldiers
some of
these
such as that prin-
ciple of devotion to steel,
made
to
which means, " Success to the
!
" state of the Guru! "
;
to allow their hair to
Gurdji kd khdlsah
futteh
or other
by which
all
were
and that exclamation, which
;
the success of their priest, and that
of the commonwealth, the object of their hourly prayer.
It
became,
in
watchword which was continually in the
gations
minds of the Sikh he
owed
to
fact,
the
to revive,
disciple, the obli-
that
community of
* Spiritual leader.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
49
which he had become a member, and to
had adopted.
that faith which he
Of the
causes which led Govind to enjoin
his followers
the
to regard
it
as impious to cut
of their heads,
hair
shave
or
their
beards, very different accounts are given.
Several
both
Muhammedan ordination,
this
authors state, that
and the one which
directed his followers to wear blue clothes,
was given
in
consequence of
his gratitude
some Afghan mountaineers, who aided
to his
escape from a
besieged,
by
fort,
clothing
in
him
which he was in a
chequered
blue dress, and causing him to allow his hair to grow, in order to pass him for one
of their
own
Pirs, or holy fathers
they succeeded. is
;
in
which
This account, however,
not supported by any Sikh writer; and
one of the most respectable and best
formed authors of that
when Guru Govind
first
sect
went
states,
to
in-
that
Anandpur
Mak'haval, which was also called Cesgher, or the house of hair, he spent
E
much
of
his
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
50 time
devotion,
in
at
Durga
a temple of
Bhavani, the goddess of courage, by
he was directed to unloose
draw of
his
this
would
hair
and
consequence
in
pretended divine order, vowed he preserve
to that divinity, to
Govind,
sword.
his
whom
as
consecrated
and directed
his followers
hair,
his
The
do the same*.
origin of that blue
which was
at
one time
chequered f
dress,
worn by
Govind's followers, and
all
worn by the
is
Acalis, or never-dying,
still
(the
most remarkable class of devotees of that sect,)
thors
is
:
differently stated
but
it
different au-
by
appears probable, that both
these institutions proceeded from the policy
f The goddess Durga Bhavani author, to be represented, in
said,
is
by a Sikh
some images, with her
hair long and dishevelled.
f This the
institution
is
Hindu mythology.
also said to be
Bala Ram,
of Crishna, wore blue clothes
Nilambar, or
the clothed in
the blue clothed.
;
borrowed from
the elder brother
from which he
dark blue
;
and
is
called
Shitivas, or
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. of Govind,
who
lowers from
all
much by gion
sought to separate his
fol-
other classes of India, as
appearance as by
their
51
their reli-
and he judged with wisdom when
:
he gave consequence to such distinctions; which,
though
forms,
soon
belief;
and,
become the
established
first
supersede
the
mere
when strengthened by usage, points to which ignorant
unenlightened minds have, in
shown the most
world,
as
substance of
all
resolute
and
ages of the
and uncon-
querable adherence. Guru. Govind inculcated his tenets upon his followers
by
and
;
his
works
his preaching, his actions,
among which is
the
Dasama
Padshah ka Grant'h, or the book of the
Guru Govind being
tenth king or ruler;
the tenth leader of the sect from
This volume, which gious subjects, but his
of
is
Nanac.
not limited to
filled
reli-
with accounts of
own. battles, and written with the view stirring
lation
up a
among
spirit
of valour and emu-
his followers, is at least as
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
52
much
revered,
among
to
have
first
among
the
is
said
Sikhs
the
The
meets at Amritsar.
as
Guru Mata,
instituted the
council,
state
Sikhs,
Govind
the
Adi-Grant'h of Arjunmal.
;
or
which
and
constitution
be
usages of this national assembly will described hereafter: sary to observe,
it
that
is
here only necesinstitution
its
one more proof to those already
adds
stated, of
the comprehensive and able mind of
bold reformer,
who
gave, by
its
this
foundation,
that form of a federative republic, to the
commonwealth of the
Sikhs,
most calculated to rouse
which was
his followers
from
their indolent habits, and deep-rooted pre-
judices,
by giving them a personal share
in
the government, and placing within the
reach of every individual the attainment of
rank and influence could
It
in the state.
not be expected
that
Guru
Govind could accomplish
all
those great
schemes he had planned.
He
planted the
tree
;
but
it
was not permitted, according to
:
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. Sikh writers, that he should see maturity which
and
this,
it
was destined
mancy.
It
One
that in
to reach
foretold
skilled in necro-
would be tedious to dwell on
such fables*; and
*
in that
it
was
these authors state,
him by some Brahmens,
to
53
it is
time to return to the
of the most popular of these fables states, of the Hijerah
the year
vind, agreeably to
the directions
Guru Go-
1118,
he had
received
from two Brahmen necromancers, threw a number of magical compounds, given him by these Brahmens, into a
fire,
near which he continued in prayers for
several days.
A
sword of lightning at
last burst
from
the flame of fire; but Govind, instead of seizing this
sword
in
an undaunted manner, as he was instructed,
was dazzled by in
alarm.
its
splendour, and
The sword
shrunk from
instantly flew to heaven
whence a loud voice was heard " vind! thy wishes shall be
to say, "
fulfilled
by thy
" and thy followers shall daily increase."
mens were
in despair at this failure
reflection, they told
;
Govind, there was
;
it
from
Guru G6posterity,
The Brah-
but, after deep still
one mode
of acquiring that honour for himself, which appeared,
by the decree that had been pronounced, doomed his posterity. If he
for
would only allow them to take off his
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
54
Go vine!
of
political life
,
which
is
marked
by but few events of importance. These are
who
Muhammedan
by
related
either
detract from
enemy of their
all
faith
authors,
the pretensions of this
and name
by
;
his dis-
ciples, .who exalt the slightest of his actions
into
the achievements
by himself,
own
for
his
work, however,
is
more calculated his followers,
or
;
he wrote an account of
This
wars.
of a divinity
last
to inflame the
than
to
courage of
convey correct
in-
formation of actual events.
Guru Govind tac,
a work
in the
Singh, in the Vichitra
written
Na-
by himself, and inserted
Dasania Padshah ka Grant n, traces
lhc descent of the Cshatriya tribe of Sondi, to which he belongs, from a race of
head, and throw citated to the
it
into the fire,
Hindu
he would he resus-
enjoyment of the greatest glory.
Guru excused himself from trying
this
The
experiment,
deelaring that he was content that his descendants
should enjoy the fruits planted.
of that tree
which he had
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. who founded
Rajas*,
the cities of Casur
He was
and Lahore.
born, he stales, at
Patan, or Patna, and brought
Des,
55
up
at
Madra
the Penjab.
lie went, after his
father's death, to the
banks of the Cal'mdi,
or
in
Yamuna, and addicted
himself to hunt-
ing the wild beasts of the forest, and other
manly
diversions
:
but
this
occupation, he
adds, offended the emperor of Dchli,
ordered chiefs, of the
Guru Govind
to attack him. this
Muhammedan
describes, in
work, with great animation, his
feats,
and those of
who race,
own
his friends -j-, in the first
* These Rajas appear, from the same authority, to
be descended
in
a direct line from Hindu gods.
f The following short extract from the translation of the Vichitra Natac, will show that Govind gave his friends their full
meed of
the character of his style
" mace
:
" Khan.
:
praise,
and
will also exhibit
" Cripal rages, wielding his
he crushed the skull of the
He made
fierce
Hj'at
the blood spurt aloft, and scat-
" tered the brains of the chief, as Crishna crushed the
" earthen vessel of butter. " in dreadful
ire,
Then Nand Chand raged
launching the spear, and wielding
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
56
of his actions
arrows
the
of
He
" the sword.
u his dagger, " Then
my
in which,
;
by
were
Sikhs
the
his account, victori-
broke his keen scimitar, and drew
to support the
honour of the Sondi
race.
maternal uncle, Cripal, advanced in his
u rage, and exhibited the
skilful war-feats of a true
" Cshatriya.
warrior,
The mighty
though struck by
" an arrow, with another made a valiant Khan
fall
" from his saddle, and Saheb Chand, of the Cshatriya
"
and slew a blood-
race, strove in the battle's fury,
" thirsty Khan, a warrior of Khorasan." After recording the actions of his
own deeds
many
others,
Govind thus describes
" The blood-drinking spectres and
:
¥ ghosts yelled for carnage; the
fierce
Vetala, the
" chief of the spectres, laughed
for joy,
and sternly
" prepared for his
The
repast.
vultures
" around, screaming for their prey.
hovered
Hari Chand, (a
" Hindu chief
in the emperor's army,) in his wrath,
" drawing
bow,
" arrow
:
his
struck
first
my
steed with an
aiming a second time, he discharged his
" arrow; but the Deity preserved me, and " me, and only grazed "
my
breast
:
it
tore
my
car.
" was kindled;
I
passed
open the mail, and pierced the
" skin, leaving a slight scar; but the " adore saved me.
it
His third arrow struck
When drew
I felt this
my bow
God whom
hurt,
my
1
anger
and discharged an
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. ous
of the
sabres
over the
57
Muhamme-
dans *. This
first
success appears to have greatly
number of Guru Govind's
increased
the
followers,
whom
he established at Anand-
pur, Khilor, and the towns in their vicinity
;
" arrow
where they remained,
:
all
my
" onwards to the
many
called to
champions did the same, rushing battle.
" hero, and struck him. "
till
of his host
;
Then
I
aimed at the young
Hari Chand perished, and
death devoured him,
who was
" called a Raja among a hundred thousand Rajas. " Then
all
the host, struck with consternation, fled,
" deserting the
field
of combat.
I
obtained the vic-
" tory through the favour of the Most High; and, " victorious
in the field,
" triumph.
Riches
fell
we
raised aloud the song of
on us
like rain,
and
all
our
" warriors were glad."
* Hyat Khan and Nejabet
Khan
are mentioned as
two of the principal chiefs of the emperor's army that fell
in this first action.
of the
latter, says
:
"
Govind, speaking of the
When
" world exclaimed, Alas
!
Nejabet
Khan
fell,
fall
the
but the region of Svvarga
" (the heavens) shouted victory."
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
58
aid the Raja of
who was
threatened with an invasion by
Jammu
the Raja, of to hostilities
then at
Nadon*, Bhima Chand,
who had been
;
excited
by Mia Khan, a Mogul
chief,
war with Bhima Chand.
Guru Govind
gives
an account of
this
war, which consisted of attacking and de-
moun-
fending the narrow passes of the tains.
He
Bhima Chand and him-
describes
self as leading
on
their warriors,
who
ad-
vanced, he says, to battle, " like a stream " of flame consuming the forest."
They
were completely successful
expe-
dition
*
A
the Rajd of
;
in this
Jammu, and
his
Mu-
mountainous tract of country, that borders on
the Penjab. S. E. of
It lies to the
Jammu.
The
N.
W.
of Srinagar, and the
present Raja, Sansar Chand,
a chief of great respectability.
His country has
is
lately
been overrun by the Raja of INcpal and Gorc'ha.
1
derived considerable information regarding this family,
and
their territories,
from the envoy of Sansar Chand,
who attended Lord Lake, army was
in the
Penjab.
in
1805,
when
the British
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
hammedan
allies,
59
having been
defeated,
and chased with disgrace across the
Guru Govind next
relates the
of the son of Dilawer
The
against him.
Muhammcdan
of the
object
Khan
Satlej.
advance
chief
appears to have been, to surprise Govind
and
his followers at night
project
was defeated,
his troops
with a panic, and fled
The
out a contest.
when
but,
:
that
were seized
from the Sikhs with-
father,
enraged at the
disgraceful retreat of his son, collected his followers,
made
and sent Ilusain Khan, who
successful inroads
upon
the
Though
the account of this war
style sufficiently inflated for the
and angels
;
yet, as
Govind
Sikhs,
A
forts *.
taking several of their principal
*
all
is
given
iti
a
wars of the demons
relates, that
Husain Khan
returned a messenger, which one of the principal liajas
had sent him, with "
down
this
message
to his
master
;
"
Pay
ten thousand rupees, or destruction descends
" on thy head ;"
we may judge, both from
the demand,
and the amount of the contribution, of the nature of this contest, as well as its scale.
It
was evidently one 4
of those petty provincial wars, which took place in
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
50
general action at last took place, in which
the
Khan,
valour,
performing prodigies of
after
was defeated, and
Guru
lost his life.
Govind was not present
at
" The lord of the
he says, " de-
" tained
me
from
" the rain of
earth/'
this conflict,
steel to
this
battle.
and caused
descend in another
" quarter/'
Khan and Rustam Khan
Dilawer
next
marched against the Sikhs, who appear have been disheartened at the
loss
to
of some
of their principal chiefs, and more at the
accounts
they
received
of
Aurungzeb's
rage at their progress, and of his having
detached
his
son to the district of Madra*,
every remote part of the Indian empire, when distracted
engaged
:
in the
was
Dek'hin, and the northern provinces
were consequently neglected, and in a
it
and, at this period, Aurungzeb was wholly
weak and
their
governments
unsettled state.
# This must have been
in
the year
1701,
Bahader Shah was detached from the Dek'hin
when
to take
charge of the government of Cabul, and was probably ordered, at the same time, to settle the disturbances in
the Penjab.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. in order to take
61
measures to quell them. At
the prince's approach, " every body," says
Guru Govind, " was
struck
with terror.
" Unable to comprehend the ways of the " Eternal, several deserted me, and
fled,
" and took refuge in the lofty mountains.
" These
cowards were," he adds, " too
vile
" greatly alarmed in mind to understand
" their own advantage; " sent troops,
who
" those that had
burnt the habitations of
He
fled."
casion of denouncing this
the emperor
for
takes this oc-
every misery that
world can bring, and
all
the pains and
horrors of the next, on those their
Guru, or
" does
this,"
" child nor
he
priest.
"
who
desert
The man who
writes, " shall neither
offspring.
have
His aged parents
" shall die in grief and sorrow, and he
"
a dog, and be thrown
shall perish like
" into
hell to lament."
After
many more
curses on apostates, he concludes this ana-
thema by
stating,
of prosperity in
that the good
this
world,
genius
and eternal
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
62
blessings in the next, shall be the certain
reward of
Guru
:
all
who remain
attached to their
and, as an instance, he affirms, that
not one of those faithful followers,
adhered to him at
this trying
who had
crisis,
had
received the least injury*.
Guru Govind
closes his
work, the
first
Vichitra Natac, with a further representation
on the shame that attends apostasy,
and the rewards that await those that prove true to their religion
by a prayer
;
and he concludes
to the Deity,
and a declaration
of his intention to compose, for the use of his disciples, a
* There
is
still
larger
work
;
by which
a remarkable passage in this chapter,
which Guru Govind
appears
to
in
acknowledge the
supremacy of the emperor. " God," he
says, "
formed
" both Baba (Nanac) and Baber (the emperor of that " name).
Look upon Baba
" religion, and
"
who
will
as the
Padshah (king) of
Baber, the lord of the world.
not give
Nanac a
He
single damri, (a coin the
" sixteenth part of an ana,) will receive a severe
a punishment from Baber."
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. meant the
the Sikhs conceive that he
Dasama Padshah ka
of the
5*3
rest
Grant'h,
which the Vichitra Natac forms the
of
first
section.
An
account of Govind's war with the
Raja of Kahilur*,
is
found in a work writ-
ten in the Dugar, or mountain dialect of the Penjabi tongue, which gives
an account
of some other actions of this chief.
account
this
doubt
is
greatly exaggerated,
some
states
this authority, the
and
facts correctly,
a brief notice.
fore merits
Aurungzeb from
they
stated
Kahilfir, or Kahlore,
above Mak'haval.
It
is
the
is
court of
Guru Govind, that
When
received great injuries.
*
to
and disgraced in
for aid against
whom,
no
there-
According
applied to
actions,
and
it
Rajas of Kahilur, Jiswal,
others, being defeated
several
Though
they had
the
emperor
situated on the Satlej,
near the mountains through
which that
river flows
place of the
name of Kahlur,
into
the Penjab. or Kahlore,
is
Another situated a
short distance from Lahore, to the N. E. of that city.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
64 asked who
was:
made
" It
" servant,
the complaint, the answer
the chief of Kahilur, thy
is
who
has been despoiled of his
" country by violence, though a faithful
" Zemindar (landholder), and one who has " always been punctual in paying his con" tributions." tions,
this
obtained
Such were the representa-
author the
aid
states,
by which they
of an
army from
the
emperor. Their combined forces proceeded against
Guru were
Govind obliged
and
shut
to
their fortresses,
who
followers,
his
up
themselves
in
where they endured every
misery that sickness and famine can bring
upon a besieged suffering
mined
the
place.
greatest
Govind,
hardships,
deter-
He
ordered
to attempt his escape.
his followers to leave the fort,
at midnight,
and
they went out. tion,
child,
after
one by one,
to separate the
moment
The misery of this
separa-
which divided the father from the the husband
from
the
wife,
and
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. brothers from sisters,
6$
was horrible; but
it
was the only chance which they had of
and
safety,
his
himself went,
undergoing
many
orders were
among
great
and, after
the rest;
and
fatigue,
dangers, he arrived at
He
obeyed.
escaping
Chamk6ur, by
the Raja of which place he was received in
a kind and friendly manner.
had entered the the
moment he
soners his
fortress
;
two
fled,
which Govind
left,
and made many
among which were children,
His enemies
his
who were
pri-
mother and carried
to
Foujdar Khan, the governor of Sirhind,
by whose orders they were inhumanly massacred*.
The army of
by the Rajas
the emperor, aided
hostile to Govind, next
Chamkour, and encompassed
to
sides.
Govind, in
hands,
called
sword -j\ * this
"
the
The world
it
on
goddess of the
sees,"
he exclaimed,
The Muhammedan authors blame
Vizir
Khan
unnecessary and impolitic act of barbarity,
f Bhavani Durga. F
all
clasping his
despair,
upon
marched
for
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
66 " that
we have no help but
!
thee " saying
which, he prepared, with his few followers, to
make
the most desperate resistance.
The emperor's army, employed period against Govind, was
at this
commanded by
Khwajeh Muhammed and Nahar Khan,
who deputed, siege,
at the
an envoy
commencement of the
to the Sikh leader, with the
following message
:
"This army
" belonging to Rajas and Rands " of the great Aurungzeb
:
not one
is
:
it is
that
show, therefore,
" thy respect, and embrace the true faith."
The envoy proceeded,
in the execution of
his mission, with all the pride of those
represented. self to
"
" Listen/' said he, from him-
Guru Govind,
Nawab
:
he
" to the words of the
leave off contending
" and playing the
infidel
;
for
with us,
it is
evident
" you never can reap advantage from such " an unequal war."
He was
stopped by
Ajit Singh, the son of Govind, from saying
more.
That youth,
exclaimed
:
seizing
his
scimetar,
" If you utter another word, I
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. "
will
humble your pride
I
:
67
will
smite
" your head from your body, and cut you " to pieces, for daring to speak such lan" guage before our chiefs/'
The blood of
the envoy boiled with rage, and he returned
with
this
answer
to his master.
This effort to subdue the fortitude and faith of
Govind having
commenced with description
is
the siege
failed,
A
great vigour.
given by
B'hai
long
Guru Das
B'hale and other Sikh authors, of the actions that
Amongst
were performed.
the
most distinguished, were those of the brave, but unfortunate, Ajit Singh*, the son of
* In the Penjabi narrative of B'hai Guru Das B'hale, the actions of Ajit Singh,
and Ranjit Singh,
sons of Govind, are particularly described
one part of the description,
it
;
and, from
would appear that the
family of Govind, proud of their descent, had not laid aside the zunar, or holy cord, to
which they were,
belonging to the Cshatriya race, entitled. of these youths, the author says
" Turk and Pahlan
whom
:
as
Speaking
" Slaughtering every
they saw, they adorned
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
68
Guru Govind, whose death "
A second
time the
thus recorded
is
Khan
r
advanced, and
" the battle raged.
Some
"
covered with glory,
Ajit
fled.
Singh,
fought,
" departed to Svvarga (heaven).
"
first
of the gods (Devatas),
some
Indra*,
advanced
" with the celestial host to meet him
;
he
" conducted him to Devapur, the city of " the gods, and seated him on a " throne
:
celestial
having remained there a short
" time, he proceeded to the region of the " sun.
Thus/' he concludes, " Ajit Singh
" departed in glory
;
and
his
fame extends
" their sacred strings, by converting them into sword-
"
belts.
Returning from the
"
father,
who bestowed
field,
they sought their
a hundred blessings on their
" scimetars." * The Sikh author, though he stitious idolatry
may
reject the super-
of the Hindus, adorns his descriptions
with every image
its
mythology can furnish
;
and
claims for his hero the same high honours in Swarga, that a race.
Brahmen would expect
for
one of the Pandu
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
69
" over three worlds, for the fame of the
" warrior
lives for ever/'
Though Govind showed an spirit,
invincible
and performed prodigies of
having
own
with his
killed,
valour,
hand, Nahar
Khan, and wounded Khwajeh Muhammed, the other leader of the emperor's troops, it
was impossible
to
contend longer against
such superior numbers
and he
;
at
last,
taking advantage of a dark night, fled from
Chamkour, covering
his face,
according to
shame
the Sikh author, from
at his
own
disgrace.
This sketch of the piled
from
his
life
of Govind
own works, and
other Sikh writers, such as
Guru Das
;
is
comof
those
Nand and
B'hai
and the events recorded, allow-
ing for the colouring with which such narratives are written in the East,
correct
:
the leading
established
appear to be
facts are almost
all
by the evidence of contemporary
Muhammedan trust for the
writers, to
remainder of
whom we must his
history
;
as
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
70
the authorities
we have
followed end at the
period of his flight from Chamkour.
Most accounts agree
that
Guru Govind,
from a sense of
after his flight, was,
his
misfortunes, and the loss of his children,
and wandered about
bereft of his reason, for
a considerable time
plorable
the
in
most de-
One account
condition.
states,
that he died in the Penjab; another, that
he went to Patna, where he ended a
third,
serts
taken from a Sikh
that
some time he had
his
days
;
authority*, as-
Gtiru Govind, after remaining in the Lak'hi-Jungle, to
fled,
which
returned without molestation
* Mr. Foster has followed this authority in his
account of the Sikh nation believe that the part of vind's
it
:
and
which
I
am
inclined
relates to
to
Guru G6-
dying at Nader, in the Dek'hin, of a wound
received from a Patan,
is
correct; as
it is
written on
the last page of a copy of the Adi-Grant'h, in
my
pos-
session, with several other facts relative to the dates of
the births and deaths of the principal high priests of the Sikhs.
SKETCH OF THE
SIKHS.
to his former residence in the
71
Penjab
and
;
so far from meeting with any per-
that,
secution from
the
Muhammedan
govern-
ment, he received favours from the emperor,
Bahader Shah
military talents, gave
command
who, aware of
;
him a small
in the Dek'hin,
stabbed by a Patan
his
military
where he was
soldier's son,
and ex-
pired of his wounds, in the year 1708, at
Nader, a town
situate
on the Godaveri
river,
about one hundred miles from Haiderabad. It
sufficiently established,
is
from these
contradictory and imperfect accounts of the latter years
of
Guru Govind,
that he per-
formed no actions worthy of record his
flight
after
from Chamkour: and when we
consider the enthusiastic ardour of his mind, his active habits, his valour,
tiable
thirst
cherished
of revenge,
through
derers of his father, his sect,
life,
and the
which
against the
had mur-
and the oppressors of
we cannot think, when
passion of his
insa-
he
that leading
mind must have been
in-
:
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
72
creased by the massacre of his
children,
and the death or mutilation* of
his
most
would
have
attached
followers,
remained inactive
much
;
he
that
less that
he would
have sunk into a servant of that government, against which he had been in constant rebellion
leader as
:
nor
is
it
Guru Govind
likely that such a
could
ever have
been trusted by a
Muhammedan
and there appears,
therefore, every reason
to give credit to those accounts
prince
which
state,
that mental distraction, in consequence of
deep
distress
and disappointment, was the
cause of the inactivity of declining years. all
at
Guru Govind's
Nor is such a
killed at
Nader, as
he was reduced he continued,
till
it is
probable, even
the close of his existence,
famished Sikhs attempted
them cut
off.
were
taken,
if
to the state described, thai
* Both at Chamkour, and other the
conclusion at
variance with the fact of his being
and
had
forts,
from which
to
escape,
their
noses
many and
of
ears
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. that
wandering and
73
adventurous
to
life
which he had been so early accustomed. In the character of Sikhs,
many
it
this
not
impossible
is
of those
reformer of the to
recognise
which have
features
dis-
tinguished the most celebrated founders of political
communities.
The
object he at-
tempted was great and laudable. the emancipation
of his
pression and persecution
;
tribe
It
was
from op-
and the means
which he adopted, were such as a comprehensive
mind could alone have
suggested.
The Muhammedan conquerors of India,
as
added
to
they added to their their strength,
the double
and
territories,
by making proselytes through
means of persuasion and
these, the
their faith,
became
power against who, bound
moment
in
the supporters of their
the efforts of the
the chains of their
Hindus civil
religious institutions, could neither their
force
they had adopted
number by admitting
add
converts,
;
and to
nor
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
74 allow
more than a small proportion of the
population of the country to arm against
Govind saw that he could
the enemy.
only hope for success by a bold departure
from usages which were calculated to keep those,
whom
by
they
a degraded subjection "
intolerant race.
were observed, in to
an insulting and
You make Hindus Mu-
" hammedans, and are justified " laws," he
rungzeb
:
"
is
" laws,
"
will
You may
" security
:
said to have written to
now
" preservation,
by your
I,
on a principle of
which
is
superior
Auself-
to
all
make Muhammedans Hindus*. rest,"
he added, "
but beware
!
in fancied
for I will teach
" the sparrow to strike the eagle to the " ground."
A fine
allusion to his design of
* Meaning Sikhs; whose
faith,
though
it
differs
widely from the present worship of the Hindus, has
been thought
to
have considerable analogy to the
pure and simple religion originally followed by that nation.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. inspiring the lowest races
75
among the Hindus
with that valour and ambition which would lead
them
to perform the greatest actions.
The manner
which Govind endea-
in
voured to accomplish the great plan he
had formed, has been exhibited
in the
perfect sketch given of his
His
to establish that temporal
life.
power
im-
efforts
in his
own
person, of which he laid the foundation for his tribe,
a
great
admit
:
were daring and successful degree
but
as
circumstances
in as
would
was not possible he could
it
create means,
in
a few years, to oppose,
with success, the force of one of the greatest
empires in the universe. ever,
The
which he infused into
was handed down as a their children
Baba Nanac
;
spirit,
how-
his followers,
rich inheritance to
who, though they consider
as the author of their religion,
revere, with a just gratitude,
Guru Govind,
as the founder of their worldly greatness
and
political
independence.
scious, indeed, that they
They
are con-
have become, from
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
76
and
the adoption of his laws
the scourge of their enemies
quered
and
held,
institutions,
and have con-
;
more than half a
for
century, the finest portion of the once great
empire of the house of Taimur. .
Guru Govind was
the last acknowledged
A
religious ruler of the Sikhs.
had limited
number of
spiritual
their
ten;
and
prophecy
guides to the
their superstition, aided,
no doubt, by the action of that independence which introduced, caused cess,
its
institutions
his
however, of Banda, a Bairagi,
Guru Govind, his banners.
of his priest,
A is
Banda
suc-
who
friend
of
said,
at the misfortune
by Sikh
authors, to
a gloomy and desperate
The con-
revenge his wrongs.
fusion which
had
short period after Govind's
settled into
to
and
of
established their union under
death, the grief of
desire
The
fulfilment.
was the devoted follower
have
spirit
took place on the death of
Aurungzeb, which happened
in
the year
1707, was favourable to his wishes.
After
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
77
plundering the country, and defeating most of the petty
Muhammedan
chiefs that
were
opposed
him, he thought himself
suffi-
to
ciently strong to venture
on an action with
Foujdar Khan, the governor of the province of Sarhind, and the
man
of
all
others
most
abhorred by the Sikhs, as the murderer of the infant children of
action was fought with valour
hammedans
;
This
Guru Govind.
and with
all
by the Mu-
that desperation
on the part of the Sikhs, which the most savage spirit of revenge could inspire and :
by the courage and conduct
aided
this,
of their leader, gave them the victory, after
a severe contest.
most of
his
Foujdar
army, to
Sikhs gave no quarter.
Khan
fell,
with
whom
the enraged
Nor was
their savage
revenge satiated by the destruction of the
Muhammedan army:
they
put to death
the wife and children of Vizir
almost
all
Khan, and
the inhabitants of Sarhind.
They
destroyed or polluted the mosques of that city
;
and, in a
spirit of wild
and
brutal
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
78
dug up the
rage,
and exposed them
and
cess,
Banda city,
be
to
hardened
by
to deeds of the
by
devoured
Encouraged by
beasts of prey.
dead,
carcasses of the
the
this suc-
lessons
most horrid
of
atro-
the Sikhs rushed forward, and sub-
dued
all
the country between the Satlej
and the Jumna; and, crossing that
made
inroads
haranpur*.
into It
the
province of Sa-
unnecessary
is
river,
to
state
the particulars of this memorable incursion,
which, from
been
one
all
accounts, appears to have
of the severest scourges with
which a country was ever
afflicted.
Every
excess that the most wanton barbarity could
commit, every cruelty that an unappeased appetite of revenge could suggest, was inflicted
upon the miserable
the provinces through which
inhabitants of
they passed.
Life was only granted to those
* This province
lies
who
con-
a few miles to the N. E. of
Dehli, between the rivers
Jumna and Ganges.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. formed to the habits
religion,
79
and adopted the
and dress of the Sikhs
;
and
if
Be-
hadur Shah had not quitted the Dek'hin, which he did to
the
think
in
A. D. 1710, there
is
reason
whole of Hindustan would
have been subdued by these merciless
in-
vaders.
The
check the Sikhs received was
first
from an army under Sultan Kuli Khan.
That chief defeated one of
their
advanced
corps at Panipat'h, which, after being dispersed, fled to join their leader Banda, at
The death of Behadur Shah
Sarhind.
vented
this
pre-
success from being pursued
;
and the confusion which followed that event, to the Sikhs.
was favourable
Banda
de-
feated Islam
Khan, the viceroy of Lahore,
and one of
his
fanatic followers stabbed
Bayezid Khan, the governor of Sarhind,
who had marched out encounter the last
this
army.
of Banda's
of that town
This, however, successful
to
was
atrocities.
Abdal Samad Khan, a general of great
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
80
reputation,
was detached, with a
large army,
by the emperor Farakhseir, against the Sikhs,
whom
perate action
hammedan
he defeated ;
way
to
Mu-
Banda performed
pro-
authors,
and was only obliged
the superior numbers and
never able to
make a
and were hunted,
stand after this defeat,
like wild beasts,
strong hold to another,
the emperor;
by whom
most devoted
to
dis-
The Sikhs were
cipline of the imperialists.
his
a very des-
in which, agreeable to
digies of valour,
give
in
from one
by the army of their leader,
followers,
were at
and last
taken, after having suffered every extreme
of hunger and fatigue*.
Abdal Samad Kh&n put
*
They were taken
in the fort of
to death great
Lohgad, which
one hundred miles to the north-east of Lahore. fortress
is
This
was completely surrounded, and the Sikhs
were only starved into surrender, having been reduced to
such extremes, that they were reported to have
eaten,
what
flesh of the
to
them must have been most
cow.
horrible, the
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. numbers of the Sikhs Lohgad, the refuge
;
fortress
81
after the surrender of
in
which they took
but sent Banda, and the principal
chiefs of the tribe,
to
Dehli, where they
were first treated with every kind of obloquy
and
insult,
and then executed.
harnmedan writer*
relates
A Mu-
the intrepidity
with which these Sikh prisoners, but particularly
" It
is
their
leader,
singular,"
Banda, met death.
he writes,
" thai these
" people not only behaved firmly during " the execution,
but they would dispute
" and wrangle with each other
" suffer
first
;
and they made
who should
interest with
" the executioner to obtain the preference. " Banda/' he continues, " was at last pro-
" duced, his son being seated
in
his lap.
" His father was ordered to cut his throat, " which he did, without uttering one word. " Being
*
then brought nearer the magis-
The author
of the Seir Mutakherin.
G
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
32 "
trate's
"
flesh to
" and
"
his
it
ordered his
the latter
tribunal,
be torn off with red hot pincers
was in those moments he expired
black soul taking
its flight,
by one of
" those wounds, towards the regions
" which
was so well
it
:
for
fitted."
Thus perished Banda; who, though a brave and able leader, was one of the most cruel
and
of men, and endea-
ferocious
voured to impart
to his followers that feel-
ing of merciless resentment which he cherished race,
against
whom
the
whole
Muhammedan
he appears to have thought
accountable for the cruelty and oppression
of a few individuals of the persuasion*.
* It
is
necessary, however, to state, that there
schismatical sect of Sikhs,
the followers of Banda,
who
who
is
a
are termed Bandai, or
totally
deny
this
account
of the death of Banda, and maintain that he escaped severely
wounded from
in B'habar,
two
his last battle,
where he quietly ended
sons, Ajit
and took refuge
his days, leaving
Singh and Zorawcr Singh, who success-
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. Though the by a
Sikhs, from being animated
similar feeling,
and encouraged by
successes, followed
first
Banda
termed,
heretic
;
to the field,
by some of
authors,
their
a
who, intoxicated with victory, en-
deavoured to change the religious tions
his
memory; and he
they do not revere his is
83
institu-
and laws of Guru G6vind, many of
whose most devoted followers
this
fierce
chief put to death, because they refused
depart from those usages which that
to
revered spiritual leader had taught them to
Among
consider sacred.
Banda wished
to
their blue dress,
and eating ing ki
Wd I
Futteh
flesh
;
and, instead of exclaim-
ki
Futteh
them
!
Wd !
banks of the Indus.
They
G6-
This sect chiefly re-
Multan, Tata, and the other
but not the
Khdlsaji
to exclaim, Futteh
propagated his doctrine.
sides in
abandon
from drinking
the salutations directed by
vind, he directed
fully
the Sikhs
to refrain
Gdruji !
make
other changes,
cities
on the
receive the Adi-Grant'h,
Dasama Padshah ka
Grant'h.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
84
D'herm
Futteh
!
dersan
" Success to piety!
!
which
means,
Success to the sect!"
These innovations were very generally sisted
;
but the dreaded severity of
made many conform class of Acalis*,
to his
been established by Guru
Banda The
orders.
or immortals,
re-
who had
Govind, con-
tinued to oppose the innovations with great
obstinacy
;
and many of them
tyrdom, rather
mode
at the death of Banda,
or dress their
All the institutions of
vind were restored
:
mar-
change either
than
of salutation, diet,
umphed.
suffered
their
and,
;
cause
tri-
Guru Go-
but the blue dress,
instead of being, as at
first,
worn by
all,
appears, from that date, to have become the
right of the
particular
valour, in clusive
its
Acalis,
whose
defence, well merited the ex-
privilege
of wearing this original
uniform of a true Sikh.
#
An
given.
account of
this class
of Sikhs will be hereafter
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. After the
85
defeat and death of Banda,
every measure was taken,
that
an active
resentment could suggest, not only to destroy the power, but to extirpate the race,
of the Sikhs. that sect
An
astonishing
must have
number of
fallen, in the last
two
or three years of the contest with the imas
the irritated
dans gave them
no quarter.
perial armies,
Muhammethe
After
execution of their chief, a royal edict was issued, ordering
gion of
Nanac
all
to
who
professed the
be taken
To
and put give
wherever found.
to this
mandate, a reward was offered
head of every Sikh
were ordered to shave pain of death.
;
and
all
for
Hindus
their hair off,
The few
to
effect
death,
the
reli-
under
Sikhs, that escaped
this general execution, fled into the
moun-
tains to the N. E. of the Penjab, where
they found a refuge from the rigorous persecution by which their tribe was pursued
while
numbers bent before
which they could not
resist,
the
;
tempest
and abandoning
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
86
the outward usages of their religion,
satis-
fied their consciences with the secret practice
of its
rites.
From till
the defeat and
death of
by Nadir Shah,
the invasion of India
a period of nearly
we
thirty years,
nothing of the Sikhs
but,
;
Banda
hear
on the occur-
rence of that event, they are stated to have fallen
upon the peaceable
Penjab,
who sought
inhabitants of the
and
shelter in the hills,
have plundered them of that property
to
which they were endeavouring to secure from the rapacity of the Persian invader.
Enriched with these the
hills,
and
built the fort of
the Ravi, from tory incursions,
added both
spoils, the
Sikhs
Dalewal, on
whence they made predaand are
to their wealth
to
stated
Nadir Shah's army, which, when
it
was encumbered with
marched, from a contempt of with a disregard to
all
have
and reputation,
by harassing and plundering the
to Persia,
left
order.
rear
spoil,
its
of
returned
and
enemies,
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. The weak
state to
which the empire of
Hindustan was reduced into
87
and the confusion
;
which the provinces of Lahore and
Cabul were thrown, by the death of Nadir were events of too favourable a nature to
who
the Sikhs to be neglected by that race,
became
daily
more bold, from
their
num-
bers being greatly increased
by the union
who had taken
shelter in the
of
all
those
mountains; the readmission into the sect of those who, to save their
lives,
had ab-
jured, for a period, their usages; and the
conversion of a
number of
proselytes,
who
hastened to join a standard, under which
robbery was
made
sacred
;
and
to plunder,
was to be pious.
Aided with these extended
recruits, the
their irruptions over
provinces of the Penjab
:
Sikhs now-
most of the
and though
it
was
some time before they repossessed themselves of Amritsar, they began, after
immediately
they quitted their fastnesses, to flock
to that holy
city
at the periods of their
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
88
Some performed
feasts.
secret,
and
in disguise
this
pilgrimage in
but in general, ac-
:
cording to a contemporary
Muhammedan
author, the Sikh horsemen were seen riding, at
gallop,
full
towards " their favourite
" shrine of devotion.
" slain in making
They were
often
this attempt, and some-
" times taken prisoners
;
but they used, on
" such occasions, to seek, instead of avoid-
" ing, the crown of martyrdom
:
and the
" same authority states, that an instance " was never "
way
"
faith."
It
known
of a Sikh, taken in his
to Amritsar, consenting to abjure his
is
foreign to the object of this sketch into a detail of those
to enter
efforts
by
which the Sikhs rose into that power which ihey
now
possess.
It will
be
sufficient lo
glance at the principal events which have
marked their
their progress,
from the period of
emerging from the mountains, to which
they had
Banda,
been driven
after the death
to that of the conquest
of
and subjec-
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. tion of those fine provinces over rule
is
now
established.
been before a
stated,
This
which
their
sect, as
has
have never admitted death of
spiritual leader since the
Govind.
89
Guru
was success, and the force of
It
a savage but strong genius, which united
them,
for a period,
under Banda; and they
have, since his death, had no acknowledged
Each
general, leader, or prince.
followed to the
who, from
field
individual
the Sirdar or chief,
birth, the possession
of property,
or from valour
and experience, had become
his superior.
These
different
chiefs
again were of
rank and pretensions: a greater
number of
followers, higher reputation, the
possession of wealth, or lands, constituted that difference
;
and, from one or other of
these causes, one chief generally enjoyed a
decided pre-eminence, and, consequently,
had a lead
But,
in their military councils.
nevertheless, they always
went through the
form of selecting a military leader at
Guru-mata, or
national
council;
their
where,
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
90
however, influence prevailed, and the most powerful was certain of being elected.
Such a mode of government was
in itself
calculated to give that strength and
little
union which the cause of the Sikhs quired
:
re-
but the peculiarities of their usages,
the ardent character of their faith, the power
of their enemies, and the oppression they
endured, amply supplied the place of
To
other ordinances.
all
unite and to act in
one body, and on one principle, was, with the
first
Sikhs, a law of necessity
:
it
was,
amid the dangers with which they were surrounded, their only hope of success, and their sole
was
to
means of preservation
these
causes,
:
and
combined with
it
the
weakness and internal contests of
their ene-
mies, to which this sect owes
extraordi-
nary
rise,
—not
to their boasted constitution
we
which, whether
which it
really
Sikhs consider
its
is
it
an
or a theocracy, which the
;
it
call
;
oligarchy,
;
has not a principle in
composition that would preserve
it
its
one day
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. from
ruin, if vigorously assailed.
this
their
history
But of the
furnish
will
gx
best
example.
Encouraged by the confusion which took place on the
made
Sikhs
Afghan*
first
Duab
siderable part of the Jalendra-f-,
invasion, the
themselves masters of a con-
and extended
of Ravi and
their incursions
to the neighbouring countries.
They, how-
ever, at this period received several severe
checks from Mir Manu, the governor of
Lahore,
who
is
by Muhammedan
said,
authors, to have been only withheld from
destroying them minister,
by
the
counsel
Koda Mai, who was
Sikh of the KhalasaJ
tribe.
of his
himself a
Mir Manu
* A. D. 1746.
f The country between and that J
A
river
and the
the rivers Ravi and Beyah,
Satlej.
sect of non-conformist Sikhs,
who
believe in the
Adi-Grant'h of Nanac, but do not conform to the tutions of
Guru Govind.
This word
is said,
They
by some,
to
insti-
are called Khalasa.
be from
khalis,
pure or
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
92
appointed Adina
Beg Khan
to the charge
of the countries in which the Sikhs maintained themselves
and, as that able but
;
artful chief considered this turbulent tribe
no other
in
light
than as the means of
his
personal advancement, he was careful not
them altogether;
to reduce
ing
them
in
but, after defeat-
an action, which was fought
near Mak'haval, he entered into a secret
understanding with them, by which, though their excursions
were limited, they enjoyed
a security to which
they had been unac-
customed, and from which they gathered strength
At took
and resources
the death of all
for future efforts.
Mir Manu*,
the Sikhs
those advantages, which the local
distractions of a falling
empire offered them,
of extending and establishing their power.
select,
and
to
mean
the purest, or the select
from khalas,free, and
to
mean
alluding to the tribe being
imposed on the other Sikhs. * A. D. 1752.
:
by others,
the freed or exempt,
exempt from the usages
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
93
Their bands, under their most active leaders,
plundered in every direction, and were sucpossession of several
cessful in obtaining
countries,
from which they have never since
been expelled
was
period,
:
and
their success,
promoted,
at this
of being
instead
checked, by the appointment of their old friend,
Adina Beg Khan,
to
Lahore; as
that brave chief, anxious to defend his
own
imme-
government against the Afghans,
diately entered into a confederacy with the
whom he encouraged to plunder territories of Ahmed Shah Abdali. Sikhs,
The Afghan monarch, datory warfare,
in
resenting this pre-
which the governor of
Lahore was supported Dehli,
the
by the court of
determined upon invading India.
Adina Beg, unable
to
oppose him,
and the Sikhs could only venture
fled
;
to plunder
the baggage, and cut off the stragglers of the Afghan
Ahmed
army
;
by which they so
irritated
Shah, that he threatened them with
punishment on
his return
;
and,
when he
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
94 marched
he
to Cabul,
Khan, and
left his
son,
Taimur
Jehan Khan, at La-
his vizir,
hore, with orders to take vengeance on the
Sikhs for
all
The
committed.
Khan was
the excesses which they had
against their capital, Amritsar,
which he destroyed, tank, and polluting ship:
expedition of Taimur
first
filling
up
all their
their sacred
places of wor-
by which action he provoked the
whole race to such a degree, that they assembled at Lahore,
tempted to between the
cut fort
and not only
at-
communication
the
off
all
and country, but collected
and divided the revenues of the towns and villages
around
it.
Taimur Khan, enraged
at this presumption,
made
several attacks
upon them, but was constantly defeated and being at
last
reduced
of evacuating Lahore,
to the necessity
and
retreating
to
Cabul, the Sikhs, under one of their celebrated leaders, called Jasa Singh Calal, im-
mediately took possession of the vacant
Subah of Lahore, and ordered rupees
to
be
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
95
coined, with an inscription to the following
import: " sah
" Coined by the grace of Khal-
ji,
in the
country of
Ahmed,
con-
" quered by Jasa Singh Calal."
The
who were
Sikhs,
so deeply indebted
to the forbearance of Adina
now
Beg Khan,
considered themselves above the power
of that chief; who, in order to regain
his
government from them and the Afghans,
was obliged
to invite the
Raghunat'h Rao, Saheb
he
first
leaders,
and Malhar
Pateil,
Aided by these
Rao, to enter the Penjab. chiefs,
Mahrata
advanced to Sarhind, where
he was joined by some Sikhs that remained attached to him.
who had been
Samad Khan, in charge
left
the officer
of Sarhind
by Ahmed Khan, found himself obliged evacuate that place sooner done, plunder.
which
Sikhs
the
to
he had no
The Mahratas, always
their booty,
them
than
;
began
to
jealous of
determined to attack and punish
for this violation of
their exclusive privilege
what they deemed :
but Adina Beg
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
96
intelligence
receiving
communicated
it
of their intentions,
to the Sikhs
;
who, taking
advantage of the darkness of the night, saved themselves by After the
fall
flight.
of Sarhind, the Mahratas,
accompanied by Adina Beg Khan, vanced
ad-
Lahore, and soon expelled both
to
the Sikhs and the Afghans from the principal towns of the provinces of Sarhind
Lahore
;
and
of which they not only took pos-
session, but sent
of Multan
;
a governor to the province
and Saheb Pateil advanced
to
the Attock*, where he remained for a few
months.
But the commotions of Hindusthe
Dek'hin soon obliged these
foreigners to
abandon the Penjab; which
tan and
they did the same year they had reduced it.
They appointed Adina Beg Khan
vernor of Lahore. #
The empire of
moment, reached
its
He
died in the ensuing
the Mahratas had, at this proud zenith.
The
battle of Panipat'h
took place soon afterwards; since which declined.
go-
it
has rapidly
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. year
;
tunity
and, by his death, afforded an opporthe
to
Sikhs,
make
seized, to
which they eagerly
themselves again masters
of the province of Lahore. was, however,
Shah Abdali
;
checked by
soon
who,
Their success
irritated
by
dued turbulence, and obstinate
made
97
Ahmed
their
unsub-
intrepidity,
every effort (after he had gained the
victory of Panipat'h, which established his
supremacy
at Dehli) to destroy their
power
and, with this view, he entered the Penjab early in 1762,
and overran the whole of
that country with a
numerous army, defeat-
ing and dispersing the Sikhs in every direc-
That
tion.
against the
sect,
unable
to
make any
army of the Abdali, pursued
their old plan of retreating near the
tains
;
and collected a
northern
above
districts
one
to
be
in
moun-
large force in the
of Sarhind, a distance of
hundred miles from Lahore,
where the army of
camped.
stand
Ahmed Shah was
en-
Here they conceived themselves perfect safety
H
:
but that prince
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
98
made one
of those rapid movements for
which he was so celebrated, and reaching the Sikh
army on
pletely surprised,
In
slaughter.
com-
the second day,
and defeated
this action,
with great
it
which was fought
in February, 1762, the Sikhs are said to
have
lost
upwards of twenty thousand men, fled into the hills,
and the remainder doning ghans,
all
aban-
the lower countries to the Af-
every ravage that a
who committed
barbarous and savage
enemy could
devise.
Amritsar was razed to the ground, and the reservoir
sacred ruins.
choaked with
again
Pyramids* were
and covered
erected,
with the heads of slaughtered Sikhs is
mentioned, that
# This
is
conquerors.
to be
a very
The
Ahmed Shah
:
and
it
caused the
mosques, which the Sikhs
walls of those
had polluted,
its
washed with
common
their blood,
usage amongst eastern
history of Jenghiz
Khan, Taimur
and Nadir Shah, afford many examples of of treating their vanquished enemies.
this
mode
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
99
that the contamination might be removed,
and the
insult offered to the religion of
hammed
Mu-
expiated*.
This species of savage retaliation appears to
have animated, instead of depressing, the
courage of the Sikhs
;
who, though they
could not venture to meet
Ahmed
army
with an inces-
in action, harassed
sant predatory
warfare
sovereign was obliged,
;
it
and,
Shah's
when
that
by the commotions
of Afghanistan, to return to Cabul, they attacked and defeated the general he had left in
Lahore, and
made themselves
masters
of that city, in which they levelled with the
ground those mosques which the Afghans had, a few months before, purified with the
blood of their brethren.
Ahmed
Shah, in 1763, retook Lahore,
and plundered the provinces around being obliged to return to his
it
;
but,
own country in
the ensuing year, the Sikhs again expelled his
* Foster's Travels, Vol.
I. p.
279.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
10
and made themselves masters of the
garrison,
Penjab; and, from that period until his death, a constant war was maintained, in which the enterprise
and courage of the Afghans
way
gradually gave activity
and
enemies
;
before the astonishing
invincible perseverance of their
who,
unable to stand a general
if
action, retreated to impenetrable mountains,
and the moment they saw an advantage, rushed again into the plains with renewed
and recruited numbers.
vigour,
Several
Sikh authors, treating of the events of this period, mention a great action having been
by
fought,
their
countrymen, near Amritsar,
against the whole
Afghan army, commanded
by Ahmed Shah
in
person
;
but they
differ
with regard to the dale of this battle, some fixing
it
pretend
in
1762, and others
that
sacredness
the
of the
Sikhs,
inspired
ground on
action was fought, contended against
superior
They
later.
numbers with
by the
which for
this
victory
the
most
desperate fury, and that the battle termi-
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. nated in
both
iQl
quitting
parties
the
field,
without either being able to claim the least
The
advantage.
however,
are,
historians of
silent
Ahmed Shah
regarding this action;
which, indeed, from
all
the events of his
long contests with the Sikhs, appears unlikely to
have occurred.
It
is
possible the
Sikhs fought, at Amritsar, with a division of the
Afghan army, and
commanded by
that might
the prince;
improbable they had
but
have been it is
ever force
to
very en-
counter the concentrated army of the Abdalis
;
before which, while
it
remained in
a body, they appear, from the last
first
to the
of their contests with that prince, to
have always retreated, or rather
The
fled.
internal state of Afghanistan, since
the death of
Ahmed
Shah, has prevented
the progress of the Sikh nation receiving
any
serious
check from that quarter; and
the distracted and powerless condition of the empire of India has offered province after
province to their usurpation.
Their
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
10 2
during
history,
this
but a relation of village warfare, and
little
Their
predatory incursions. first
period, affords
latter
hammedan
chiefs
Penjab, and
the numerous
against
directed
hostilities
who were
who defended,
were
Mu-
settled in the
as long as they
could, their jagirs, or estates, against them:
but these have either been conquered, or
reduced to such narrow their
security
to
their
insignificance,
the precarious friendship of
Sikh
who,
and
gained;
or
some powerful they
have
by protecting
them
support
whose
chief,
owe
limits, as to
against the other leaders of his tribe, obtains
a
slight
accession
of strength and
who
have, throughout
influence.
The Sikh
nation,
their early history,
always appeared, like a
suppressed flame, to
rise into
higher splen-
dour from every attempt to crush them,
had become, while they were oppressed,
as
formidable for their union, as for their deter-
mined courage and unconquerable
spirit
of
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. resistance distress
103
but a state of persecution and
:
was the one most favourable
action of a
constitution like theirs
;
for the
which,
formed upon general and abstract principles, fices
required constant and great sacri-
of personal advantage to the public
good; and such can alone be expected from men, acting under the influence of that enthusiasm, which the fervor of a religion, or
a struggle for independence, can
alone impart, readily all,
new
and which are ever most
made, when
it
becomes obvious
to
that a complete union in the general
cause
is
the
only
hope
of
individual
safety.
The Sikhs would appear, from historians, to
they
made
their
own
have attributed the conquests
entirely to their valour,
and
to
have altogether forgot that they owed them chiefly to the decline of the
house of Tai-
mur, and the dissensions of the government of Cabul.
Intoxicated with their success.
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
104
they have given
way
which
minds of men in the pos-
assail the
session of power.
to all those passions
The
petty chief entertained,
of building
territories,
which every
desire,
of increasing his
and
strong forts,
adding to the numbers of
his
volved them in internal wars
;
troops, in-
and
these,
however commenced, soon communicated to numbers,
who engaged
in the dispute as
passion or interest dictated.
Though such
feuds have, no doubt, helped to maintain their military
virulence that
yet their extent and
spirit,
have completely broken down
union,
which
their
Govind, laboured to
great legislator,
establish.
Quarrels
have been transmitted from father to son and, in a country where the infant
voted to as
his
steel,
and taught
is
de-
to consider
war
only occupation, these could not
but multiply in an extraordinary degree
;
and, independent of the comparative large
conquests in which the greater chiefs occa-
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
105
sionally engaged, every village* has
an object of dispute
become
and there are few,
;
any, in the Penjab, the rule of which
not
between
brothers or near rela-
In such a
state, it is obvious, the
contested tions f.
is
if
Sikhs could alone be formidable
most weak
and
the
to
governments.
distracted
Such, indeed, was the character,
till
within
late period, of all their neighbours
a very
and they continued
* All the as they
to
villages in the
are in
almost
all
plunder, with im-
Penjab are walled round;
the countries of India that
are exposed to sudden incursions of horse,
which
this
defence can always repel.
f
When
the British and Mahrata armies entered
the Penjab, they were both daily joined
tented petty chiefs of the Sikhs, to the
power that would put them
a village or a statement, father
who
or
cations,
fort,
they had brother.
in the possession of
from which, agreeably to their been
unjustly
excluded by a
Holkar encouraged these appli-
and used them to
his advantage.
commander abstained from disputes.
by discon-
offered their aid
all
The
British
interference in
such
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
106
punity, the upper provinces of Hindtistan, until
establishment of the
the
power of
Daulet Rao Sindia, when the regular gades,
commanded by French
bri-
officers in
the service of that prince, not only checked
made
their inroads, but
all
the Sikh chiefs,
to the southward of the Satlej, acknowledge
obedience and pay tribute to Sindia: and it
was
the
in
had
Perron,
contemplation of General
war
the
with
government not occurred, the Penjab, and
made
of his possession
quainted
:
to
the
English
have subdued
the Indus the limit
and every person ac-
with his means,
and with the
condition and resources of the Sikhs, must satisfied
he would have accomplished
this project
with great ease, and at a very
be
early period.
When
Holkar
fled
into the
Penjab, in
1805, and was pursued by that illustrious British
commander, Lord Lake, a com-
plete opportunity
was given of observing
the actual state of this nation, which
was
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. found weak and distracted,
in
107 a degree
that could hardly have been imagined.
was altogether
destitute
It
And
of union.
though a Guru-mata, or national council,
was
called, with
a view to decide on those
means by which they could
best avert the
danger by which their country was threatened, from the presence of the English and
Mahrata armies, chiefs
:
it
was attended by few
and most of the absentees, who had
any power, were bold and forward offers to resist
any resolution
council might come. negotiations of
moment,
all
The
to
in their
which
intrigues
appeared, indeed, at
this
and this
to be entirely directed to objects
of personal resentment, or personal aggran-
dizement; and every shadow of that concord,
which once formed the strength of
the Sikh nation, seemed to be extinguished.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
108
SECTION Neither
II.
the limits of this sketch, nor
the materials from which
admit of
my
it is
drawn,
will
giving a particular or correct
account of the countries possessed by the
manners, and habits these
subjects
and
excite
:
may
but a cursory view of
be useful, and
direct that curiosity
cannot expect to
may
which
il
gratify.
The country now
possessed by the Sikhs,
which reaches from
beyond
of government,
forms
or of their
Sikhs,
latitude
latitude 32° N.,
28° 40'
and includes
all
to
the
Penjab*, a small part of Multan, and most
*
A
general estimate of the value of the country
possessed by the Sikhs stated,
that
it
formed, when
may he
it
is
contains, besides other countries, the
whole of the province of Lahore
Mr. Bernier, produced,
in
;
which, agreeable to
the reign of Aurungzeb, two
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. of that tract of country which the
Jumna and
the Satlej,
is
109 between
lies
bounded,
the northward and westward, by the
of the king of Cabul
tories
;
to
terri-
to the east-
ward, by the possessions of the mountaineer Rajas of
and
Jammu, Nad6n, and by the
to the southward,
Srinagar;
territories
of
the English government, and the sandy deserts of Jasalmer
The
who
Sikhs,
between the
Satlej
Malawa
called
and Hansyd Hisar. inhabit
the
country
and the Jumna, are
Singh, and were almost
all
converted from the Hindu tribes of Jats
and Gujars.
The
title
of
was conferred upon them
Malawa Singh for their
extra-
ordinary gallantry, under the Bairagi Banda,
who
is
stated to have declared, that the
countries granted to
hundred and rupees
;
or
them should be
forty-six lacks
fruitful
and ninety-five thousand
two millions, four hundred and sixty-nine
thousand, five hundred pounds sterling.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
HO as
Malwa, one of the provinces*
The
principal
among
chiefs
in India.
the
Malawi
Singhs, are, Saheb Singh, of Patiala; B'hang&
Singh, of Thanesur
and
B'hailal
;
B'hag Singh, of Jhind
Singh, of Keintal.
Besides
these, there are several inferior chiefs,
as
Gurudah
Singh
;
all
Singh, Jud'h Singh, and
whom
of
have a few
;
such
Carm
villages,
and some horse, and consider themselves independent; though they, in general, are content to secure their possessions by attaching themselves to one or other of the
more powerful
leaders.
The country of some it,
the
Malawa Singh
is,
in
parts, fruitful: but those districts of
which border on Hansya and Carnal, are
very barren and, in water.
;
being covered with low wood,
many
places, almost destitute of
Sarhind was formerly the capital of
* This province now forms almost the whole tory of Daulet
Rao
Sinclia.
terri-
m
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. country
this
and has
;
but
now a complete
it is
probably
never
ruin,
recovered
the
dreadful ravages of the Bairagi Banda,
who
not only to have destroyed
stated
is
mosques, but to have levelled
and public Patiala
now
is
with
buildings
the largest
all its
its
palaces
ground.
the
and most
flourish-
ing town of this province, and next to T'hanesur, which
is
still
held in high
gious veneration by the Hindtis also
;
reli-
who have
a very high reverence for the river
which flows through
Serasweti,
The
vince.
territories
this
of the chiefs of
the Satlej
pro-
Ma-
W. by
lawa Singh are bounded to the N.
between which and the Bey ah,
;
the country called
is
it
or Jalendra
Duab;
the Jalendra
the
Beit,
Sikhs inhabiting
which are called the DtiaM Singh, or the Singhs
*
who
With
Duab we
dwell between the rivers*.
The
the chiefs of the Sikhs in the Jalendra are
little
acquainted. Tara Singh
is
the most
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
112
country of Jalendra Duab, which reaches
from the mountains to the junction of the Satlej
and the Beyah,
of
the possessions of the Sikhs
all
is
the most fruitful ;
and
is,
perhaps, excelled in climate and vegetation
by no province of
but very productive
open and
here in
:
soil is light,
the country, which
felt in
other parts of India,
unknown
;
is
abounds with every kind of
That want of water, which
grain.
much
level,
The
India.
as
it
is
is
so
must be
found every where
abundance, within two, or at furthest from the surface of the
three, feet
The
soil.
towns of Jalendra and Sultanpur are the principal in the
Duab.
The country between Ravi
rivers
is
called Bari
and the Sikhs
considerable
;
weakened by divisions.
the
Duab,
inhabiting
it
Beyah and or Manj'ha are
;
called
but he and the others have been greatly their
constant and increasing internal v
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. The
Manj'ha Singh.
Amritsar are both in
113
of Lahore and
cities
province; and
this
it
becomes, in consequence, the great centre of the power of of Lahore
;
Ranjit Singh,
this nation.
Fateh Singh*, of Alluwal
;
and
Jud'h Singh, of Ramgadia-f ; are the principal chiefs of this country.
The country of Bari fertile,
particularly towards the mountains,
than Jalendra level, it
but, as
;
it lies
on the same
must possess nearly the same
mate and
The
said to be less
is
cli-
soil.
inhabitants of the country between
the Ravi and Chanhab, are called D'harpi
Singh,
from
D'harpi.
the
country
being
The D'hanigheb Singh
called
are be-
yond the Chanhab J, but within the Jehalam
river.
/
* Fateh Singh
is,
like
Ranjit Singh, of a Jat family.
f Jud'h Singh, of Ramgadia, I
The term Gujarat Singh
is
of the carpenter cast.
is
sometimes given to
the inhabitants of this Duab, of which the chiefs of
Gujarat and Rotas are the principal I
rulers.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
1X4
The Sind Singh
is
the term
by which
the
inhabitants of the districts under the Sikhs,
bordering on the Sind, are
Nakai Singh
is
the
name
known; and
given to the Sikhs
who reside in Multan. With the leaders of the Sikhs in these provinces, the extent of their possessions, or the climate
and productions
of the country under their rule, I
acquainted.
Those in Multan,
am
little
as well as
those settled on the river Jehalam, are said to be constantly
engaged in a predatory
warfare, either with the officers of the Af-
Muhammedan
ghan government, or with chiefs
who have jagirs
in their vicinity.
The government of the in
its
stated,
theory,
may,
as
Sikhs, considered has, been
be termed a theocracy.
a temporal chief, preserves his
it
is
true
;
before
They obey
but that chief
power and authority by pro-
fessing himself the servant of the Khalsa*,
*
The word Khalsa, which has
plained to
mean
before been
the state or commonwealth,
is
exsup-
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
115
or government, which can only be said to act,
in
times of great public emergency,
through the means of a national council, of
which every chief
is
a member, and which
supposed to deliberate and resolve under
is
the immediate inspiration
an
invisible being;
and impulse of
who, they
believe,
always
watches over the interests of the commonwealth.
The nature of
the
power
by
established
the temporal chiefs of the Sikhs, has been sufficiently
explained in the narrative of It will be necessary, before
their history.
any account
given
is
of the forms and
actions of their Guru-mata, or great national council,
which
is
intended to have a su-
preme authority over
their federative
re-
posed, by the Sikhs, to have a mystical meaning , and 1
to imply that superior government, under the protec-
tion of
which " they
live,
and to the established rules
" and laws of which, as fixed by Guru G6vind,
"
is
their civil
and religious duty to conform."
it
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
ng to
public,
take a view of that body of
who, under the double
Acalis, or immortals,
character of fanatic priests and desperate
have usurped the
soldiers,
at Amritsar,
religious affairs
all
which
is
men
leading
consequently,
sole direction of
which deliberates under
all
are,
a council
in
held at that sacred
and
place,
and
the influence of
religious enthusiasm.
The Acalis*
are a class of Sikh devotees
who, agreeably to the nation, were
whose
first
;
historians of that
founded by Guru Govind,
institutes, as
it
has been before stated,
they most zealously defended against the innovations of the Bairagi Banda.
wear blue chequered
*
Aca.li,
cal, death,
clothes,
derived from Acal, a
It
is
and bangles,
compound term
and the Sanscrit privative
never-dying, or immortal.
They
a,
of
which means
one of the names of the
Divinity; and has, probably; been given to this re-
markable ing Acal
!
class of devotees,
Acal
!
from their always exclaim
in their devotions.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. round
or bracelets of steel*, initiate converts,
117
their wrists,
and have almost the
direction of the religious ceremonies at ritsar,
where they
deem themselves
reside,
sole
Am-
and of which they
the defenders
sequently, never desire to quit
and, con-
;
unless in
it
cases of great extremity.
* All Singbs do not wear bracelets
pensable to bave steel
;
but
it is
indis-
about their persons, which they
generally have in the shape of a knife or dagger.
In
support of this ordinance they quote the following verses of
Guru Govind Saheb bea
Tuhi
ki
:
rach'ha hamne,
Sri Saheb, churi, kati,
Acal puvukh
ki rach'ha
katar—
hamne,
Serv loh di rach'ha hamne, Servacal di rach'ha hamne,
Serv lohji di sada rach'ha hamne.
which may be translated "
infinite
"
lass,
Lord
is
over us
:
" The protection of the
:
thou art the lord, the cut-
The
the knife, and the dagger.
" the immortal Being
is
over us
:
protection of
the protection of
the protection of all-time
" all-steel
is
"
the protection of all-steel
is
over us
u over us."
:
over us
:
is
constantly
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
H8
This order of Sikhs have a place,
or
Bunga*, on the bank of the sacred
reser-
where they generally
resort,
voir of Amritsar,
but are individually possessed of properly,
though they charity
;
affect poverty,
and
subsist
which, however, since their
upon
num-
bers have increased, they generally extort,
by accusing the principal imposing
fines
chiefs of crimes,
upon them
;
and, in
the
event of their refusing to pay, preventing
them from performing
their
ablutions, or
going through any of their religious cere-
monies at Amritsar. It will not,
*
when the above circumstances
The Shahid and Nirmala, two
among
tribes
other religious
the Sikhs, have Bungas, or plaees, upon
the great reservoir of Amritsar;
but both these are
peaceful orders of priests, whose duty
is
to address the
Deity, and to read and explain the Adi-Grant'h to the Sikhs.
A
They
are, in general,
Sikh, of any tribe,
these classes, as their
among
body who choose
men
of some education.
may be admitted the Acalis, to
conform
into either of
who admit
all
to their rules.
into
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
||g
are considered, be thought surprising, that the most powerful of the Sikh chiefs should desire to conciliate this
body of
no
fanatics,
individual of which can be offended with
impunity, as the cause of one
cause of the whole
;
and a
is
made
chief,
the
who
is
become unpopular with the Acalis, must not only avoid Amritsar, but
have
his
likely
to
dependants taught, when they pay
devotions
their
is
at
that
place,
that
it
is
pious to resist his authority.
The
Ac&lis have a great interest in main-
taining both the religion
and government of
the Sikhs, as established
by Guru G6vind
on
as,
its
religious
pend. of
continuance in that shape, their
and
political influence
must de-
Should Amritsar cease to be a place
resort, or
be no longer considered as the
religious capital of the state, in
which
all
questions that involve the general interests
of the commonwealth are to be decided, this
formidable order would at once
fall
from that power and consideration which
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
120 they
now
to a level
possess,
with other
mendicants.
When council, to be,
a Guru-mata, or great national is
called, (as
it
always
or ought
is,
when any imminent danger
threatens
the country, or any large expedition
be undertaken,)
the Guru-matd,
and when the occasion,
it
is
this
solemn
concluded that
all
private
;
sacri-
and, actuated by prin-
pure patriotism, thinks of nothing
but the interests of the
monwealth,
When
man
personal feelings at the shrine of
the general good ciples of
called
meet upon
animosities cease, and that every fices his
is
convened by the Acalis
chiefs
is
to
the Sikh chiefs assemble
all
The assembly, which
at Amritsar.
is
to
religion,
and com-
which he belongs.
the chiefs
and principal leaders
are seated, the Adi-Grant'h and
Dasama
Padshah ka Grant'h are placed before them.
They
all
tures,
and exclaim, Wli
W& !
Giiriyi hi Fat eh
bend
their
heads before these scrip-
!
!
Guruji ka Khalsa
A
!
great quantity of
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. cakes,
made of wheat,
121
and
butter,
sugar,
are then placed before the volumes of their
sacred writings, and covered with a cloth.
These holy cakes, which are
comme-
in
moration of the injunction of Nanac, to eat
and
to give to others to eat, next receive
who then
the salutation of the assembly, rise,
and the A calls pray aloud, while the
musicians
The
play.
when the
Acalis,
prayers are finished, desire the council to
They
be seated.
sit
down, and the cakes
being uncovered, are eaten of by those
of Sikhs: tribes,
which
*
A
all
classes*
of original
on other occasions, kept
are,
up, being on
token of
distinctions
this
occasion laid aside, in
their general
and complete union
custom of a similar nature, with regard
tribes eating promiscuously,
is
observed
among
Hindus, at the temple of Jagannath, where all
religions
Maha
and
casts,
the temple.
the
men
of
without distinction, eat cf the
Prasad, the great offering;
by the cooks of the
to all
idols,
i.
e.
food dressed
and sold on the
stairs
of
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
122 in
one cause*.
The A calls then exclaim
" Sirdars! (chiefs)
this
:
a Guru-mata!"
is
on which prayers are again said aloud.
The
chiefs, after this, sit closer,
each other
:
"
The
sacred Grant'h
" us,
let
"
internal disputes,
all
This
and say
to
betwixt
is
us swear by our scripture to forget
moment
patriotism,
is
and
to be united/'
of religious fervor and ardent
taken to reconcile
They then proceed
mosities.
all
ani-
to consider
the danger with which they are threatened, to settle the best plans for averting
to choose the generals
*
The Sikh
priest,
who
who gave an account of
medan
Sikhs, and those
sweeper eat a
prejudices, he at
cast,
little
and
are to lead their
custom, was of a high Hindu tribe
some of his
it,
first said,
who were
this
and, retaining
;
that
Muham-
converts from the
were obliged, even on
this occasion, to
apart from the other Sikhs
:
but, on being
closely questioned, he admitted the fact as stated in
the narrative;
saying, however,
solemn occasion that these with the others.
it
was only on
tribes are
this
admitted to eat
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. armies* against the first
123
common enemy.
The
Guru-mat& was assembled by Guru
Govind
and the
;
when the
British
was called
latest
in
1805,
army pursued Holkar
into
the Penjab.
The
principal chiefs of the Sikhs are all
descended from Hindu
tribes.
There
indeed, no instance of a Singh of a
hammedan
is,
Mu-
family attaining high power-f-:
a circumstance to be accounted for from the hatred
of
still
cherished, by the followers
Guru Govind,
* The army
is
against the descendants of
called,
when thus assembled, the
Dal Khalsa, or the army of the
state.
f The Muhammedans who have become and
their
descendants,
are,
in
the
Sikhs,
Penjabi jargon,
termed Mezhebi Singh, or Singhs of the faith; and they are subdivided into the four classes which are vulgarly, but erroneously, supposed to distinguish the followers of
Moghul tions the
the
Muhammed, Sayyad
Singh, Sheikh Singh,
Singh, and Patan Singh; by which designa-
names of the particular race or country of
Muhammedans have been
distinctions of cast.
affixed,
by Hindus, as
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
124 his
persecutors
spirit
their
dans
and that
:
may
undiminished,
is
this
be seen from
treatment of the wretched
who
remain in
yet
rancorous
Muhamme-
their
territories.
These, though very numerous, appear to be all
poor, and to be an oppressed, despised
They
race.
the ground, and are
till
ployed to carry burdens, and to do of hard labour
:
em-
kinds
all
they are not allowed to eat
beef, or to say their prayers aloud,
seldom assemble
and but
mosques*; of
their
in
which few, indeed, have escaped destruction.
The lower
happy
:
they are protected from the tyranny
and violence of the they
live,
religion, try,
*
more
order of Sikhs are
chiefs,
by the precepts of
under their
and by the condition of
which enables them The Muhammedan
to flock to the British
their
coun-
abandon, when-
inhabitants of the Penjab used
camp; where, they
enjoyed luxuries which no
had not suffered privation. and feast upon beef.
to
whom
common
man
said, they
could appreciate that
They could pray
aloud,
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. ever they
a
choose,
125
whom
leader
they
and the distance of a few miles
dislike;
generally places
them under the protection
of his rival and enemy.
It
is
from
this
cause that the lowest Sikh horseman usually
assumes a very independent
style,
highest chief treats
with attention and conciliation. officers,
—
to
whom
The
civil
the chiefs intrust their
and the
accounts,
and the
his military followers
management of
their
property and revenue concerns, as well as the conduct of their negotiations, general, Sikhs of the
—
Khalasa cast
are, in ;
being followers of Nanac, and not of
who,
Guru
Govind, are not devoted to arms, but educated they
peaceful occupations, in
for
which
become very expert and
often
in^
telligent.
In the collection of the revenue in the
Penjab that
the
it
is
stated to be a general rule,
chiefs,
to
whom
the
territories
belong, should receive one half of the pro-
:: ;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
126
duce*, and the farmer the other
:
but the
chief never levies the whole of his share
and
in
no country, perhaps,
or cultivator, treated with
Commerce
not
is
and
the Rayat,
much encouraged
so
heavy duties are levied upon through whose
rulers
is
more indulgence.
it
districts
by it
added to the distracted
this,
all
petty
passes state in
which the Penjab has been, from the internal disputes of
its
possessors, caused the rich
produce of Casmir to be carried to India
by the
difficult
and mountainous
Jammu, Nad6n, and
Srinagar.
tract of
The Sikh
however, discovered the injury
chiefs have,
have suffered from
which
their interests
cause,
and have endeavoured, and not with-
out success,
merchant
now
;
flows
to restore
this
confidence to the
and great part of the shawl trade through the
cities
of Lahore,
Amritsar, and Patiala, to Hindustan. * Grain pays in kind; sugar-cane, melon?, 8cc. pay in cash.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. The tries
127
administration of justice in the coun-
under the Sikhs,
imperfect state
;
for,
inculcate general
is
in
a very rude and
though
their scriptures
maxims of
are not considered, as the
they
justice,
Old Testament
by the Jews, or the Koran by the Mu-
is
hammedans,
as
books of law
:
and, having
no fixed code, they appear to have adopted that irregular practice, which
is
most con-
genial to the temper of the people, best suited to the unsteady
and
and changing
character of their rule of government.
The
following appears to be the general outline
of their practice in the administration of justice.
Trifling disputes
tled
about property are
by the heads of the
tion*,
or
* This general ferences
is
by the
chiefs.
village,
by
arbitra-
Either of these
called Penchayat, or a court of five
number of
set-
;
the
arbitrators chosen to adjust dif-
and disputes.
It is usual to
assemble a Pan
cbayat, or a court of arbitration, in every part of India,
under a native government; and, as they are always
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
12 8
modes, supposing the parties consent to refer to
it, is
final
one or other. perty
is
;
and they must agree
recovered, and the party punished
by the person from
who
is
whom
was
it
stolen,
aided on such occasions by the inha-
bitants of his
village,
punishment, however,
Murder
is
or is
his
The
chief.
never
capital*.
generally revenged by the rela-
tions of the deceased,
who,
in
such cases,
rigorously retaliate on the murderer,
on
often
to
If a theft occurs, the pro-
and
all
who endeavour
men
of the best reputation in the place
protect
to
him. chosen from
where they meet,
this court
has a high character for
justice.
*
A
cutta,
Sikh
gave
among and
his
who
has been several years in Cal-
this outline
of the administration of justice
priest,
countrymen.
He
spoke of
it
with rapture
insisted, with true patriotic prejudice,
on
its
;
great
superiority over the vexatious system of the English
government; which was, he and
expensive,
rogues.
and
said, tedious, vexatious,
advantageous
only
to
clever
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. The
Sikhs, or rather
character of the
Singhs, which
Guru Govind, who
of
followers
name by which
the
is
129
are
devoted to arms, are distinguished,
They
marked.
somewhat
and are
their long beards,
active as the
Mahratas
all
Hindu
full
by as
and much more
;
a better and colder climate. equal, at
all
very
altered
to the
robust, from their living fuller,
is
is
have, in general, the
cast of countenance,
the
and enjoying
Their courage
times, to that of
any natives
of India; and when wrought upon by prejudice or religion, are
all
their
from
and as
are bold,
address
They
country, except for the defence
forts
rally serve
They
quite desperate.
horsemen, and have no infantry in
own
of their
is
;
villages,
though they gene-
infantry in
foreign armies.
and rather rough,
which appears more
to
in their
a stranger
their invariably speaking in a loud tone*
* Talking aloud
is
so habitual to a Sikh, that he
bawls a secret in your
It
ear.
me, that they have acquired
K
it
has often occurred to
from living in a country
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS
13
of voice
but
:
alike used
this is quite
by them
express
to
ments of regard and
a habit, and the
The Sikhs
hatred.
have been reputed deceitful and cruel I
is
senti-
but
;
know no grounds upon which they can
be considered more so than the other of India.
They seemed
intercourse I
to
me, from
had with them,
tribes all
the
more
to be
open and sincere than the Mahratas, and less
rude and savage than the Afghans.
They have, success, too
and too
indeed, become, from national
proud of
own
their
irritable in their
strength,
tempers, to have
patience for the wiles of the former
;
and
they retain, in spite of their change of manners
and
religion, too
much
of the original
where internal disputes have so completely destroyed confidence, that they can only carry on conversation
with each other at a distance to
impute
this boisterous
:
but
it is
fairer,
perhaps,
and rude habit to their living
almost constantly in a camp, in which the voice certainly loses that nice
modulated tone which
guishes the more polished inhabitants of
cities.
distin-
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. character of their
Hindu
131
ancestors, (for the
great majority are of the
Hindu
race,) to
have the constitutional ferocity of the
The Sikh
soldier
generally
is,
latter.
speaking,
brave, active, and cheerful, without polish,
but neither destitute of sincerity nor attach-
ment
;
and
humanity,
if
he often appears wanting in not so
it is
much
to be attributed
to his national character, as to the habits of
a
life,
which, from the condition of the
society in which he
is
born,
is
generally
passed in scenes of violence and rapine.
The Sikh merchant, soil, if
he
is
a Singh,
or cultivator of the differs
little
in cha-
racter from the soldier, except that his oc-
cupation renders him boisterous.
He
also
less
presuming and
wears arms, and
is,
from education, prompt to use them whenever his individual interest, or that of the
community
in
which he
lives*, requires
* The old Sikh soldier generally returns village,
where
his
wealth,
him
to his native
courage, or experience,
always obtains him respect, and sometimes station and
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
132 to
do
The
so.
general occupations of the
Khalasa Sikhs has been before mentioned. The second march which
consequence.
army made
the British
into the country of the Sikhs, the head-
quarters were near a small village, the chief
who was upwards
a soldier, and retained
see
general, who was 3iniled,
and
said
which,
manner of
the look and
all
He came
former occupation. his anxiety to
or'
of a hundred years of age, had been
to
Lord Lake.
showed him the
I
He
sitting alone, in his tent, writing.
he knew better
:
his
me, and expressed
" The hero
who had
" overthrown Sindia and Holkar, and had conquered " Hindustan, must be surrounded with attendants, and " have plenty of persons to write for him."
him
that
coming
it
was Lord Lake; and, on
I
his
assured lordship
to breakfast, I introduced the old Singh,
seeing a
number of
officers collect
last satisfied of the truth of
what
I
who
round him, was at said
;
and, pleased
with the great kindness and condescension with which
he was treated by one great a man, sat talkative,
and related
sion of Nadir
whom
down on
Shah
all
he justly thought so
became quite
the carpet,
he had seen, from the inva-
to that
moment.
Lord Lake,
pleased with the bold manliness of his address, and the
independence of his sentiments, told him he would grant
him any favour he wished.
"
I
am
glad of
it,"
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. Their character
133
widely from that of
differs
the Singhs. Full of intrigue, pliant, versatile,
and
insinuating, they have
lower classes
employed
whom,
all
the art of the
of Hindus, who
business
transacting
in
are usually
from
:
indeed, as they have no distinction
of dress,
very
is
it
difficult
distinguish
to
them.
The
religious
of Acalis, Shahid,
tribes
Their
and Nirmala, have been noticed.
said the old 4<
from
my
man
" then march away with your army
;
which
village,
be destroyed."
will otherwise
Lord Lake, struck with the noble
spirit
of the request,
assured him he would march next morning, and that, in the mean-time,
he should have guards, who would
protect his village from injury.
Satisfied
with this
assurance, the old Singh was retiring, apparently full
of admiration and gratitude at Lord Lake's goodness,
and of wonder meeting two
at the scene he
officers at the
had witnessed, when,
door of the
tent,
hand upon the breast of each, exclaiming time, " Brothers <(
you
at this
!
where
zcere
you
born,
he put a
at the
moment?" and, without waiting
answer, proceeded to his village.
same
and where are for
an
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
134
general character
of
The Acahs
life.
and daring which
formed from
is
are insolent, ignorant,
presuming upon those
:
numbers and
their
have established,
their
strangers,
for
deportment
whom
hardly
they entertain a
The Shahid and
particularly
is
and insufferable
contempt, which they take conceal.
rights
fanatic courage
tolerant to the other Sikhs, to
their habits
little
pains to
the Nirmala,
have more know-
the latter,
ledge, and more urbanity. They are almost all
men
many
and
of quiet, peaceable habits;
of them are said to possess learning.
There
is
called the
another tribe
Nanac
among
the Sikhs,
Pautra, or descendants of
Nanac, who have the character of being a mild, inoffensive race
not acknowledge the
;
and, though they do institutions
of Guru.
Govind, they are greatly revered by followers,
race
who
hold
of their
sacrilege to injure the
founder
advantage which fords them, the
it
his
;
and,
under the
this general veneration af-
Nanac Pautra pursue
their
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. occupations cants,
which,
if
they are not mendi-
generally that of travelling mer-
is
They do not
chants. fess,
;
135
carry arms
and pro-
;
agreeably to the doctrine of Nanac, to
be at peace* with
The Sikh stated,
all
mankind.
converts,
continue,
after
it
has been before
they have quitted
their original religion, all those civil usages
and customs of the
tribes to
which they
belonged, that they can practise, without infringing the tenets of tutions of Gurd
Nanac, or the
insti-
Govind. They are most par-
ticular with regard to their intermarriages
and, on this point, Sikhs descended from
Hindus almost invariably conform
to Hindti.
customs, every tribe intermarrying within
*
When
Lord Lake entered the Penjab,
in 1805,
a
general protection was requested, by several principal chiefs, for the
Nanac Pautra, on
the ground of the
veneration in which they were held, which enabled
them,
it
was
stated, to travel all over the
country with-
out molestation, even when the most violent wars existed.
It
was, of course, granted.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
136
The Hindu
itself.
usage, regarding diet,
also held equally sacred
;
is
no Sikh, descended
from a Hind 6 family, ever violating
it,
ex-
cept upon particular occasions, such as a
Guru-mata, when they are obliged, by
and
institutions, to eat promiscuously.
strict
observance of these usages has
tenets
The
their
enabled
many
of the Sikhs, particularly of
the Jat* and Gujarf* tribes, which include
almost
all
those settled to the south of the
Satlej, to preserve
an intimate intercourse
with their original tribes
;
who, considering
the Sikhs not as having lost cast,
Hindus that have joined a *
The
but as
political associa-
are Hindus of a low tribe,7 who,' takinc o advantage of the decline of the Moghul empire, have,
by
their
Jats
courage and enterprise, raised themselves into
some consequence on the north-western dustan, and
India are
many
still
parts of Hin-
of the strongest forts of that part of
in their possession.
f The Gujars, who
are also Hindus, have raised
themselves to power by means not dissimilar to those used by the Jats. are of this tribe.
Almost
all
the thieves in Hindustan
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
137
which obliges them to conform
tion,
general rules established for
its
to
preservation,
neither refuse to intermarry* nor to eat with
them.
The
higher cast of Hindus, such as Brah-
mens and
Cshatrijas,
who have become
Sikhs, continue to intermarry with converts
of their
own
tribes,
but not with Hindus of
the cast they have abandoned, as they are
polluted
by eating animal food
;
all
kinds
of which are lawful to Sikhs, except the
cow, which
it
held sacrilege to slay-f.
is
Nanac, whose object was
Muhammedans
to
his
hog's flesh also; but his
successors, as
spirit
it
to conciliate the
creed,
prohibited
was introduced by
much, perhaps, from a
of revenge against the Moslems, as
from considerations of indulgence
*
A
to
the
marriage took place very lately between the
Sikh chief of Patiala, and that of the Jat Raja, of B'haratpur.
f Their
prejudice regarding the killing of cows
stronger, if possible, than that of the Hindus.
is
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
138
numerous converts of the Jat and Gujar
among whom
tribe,
wild hog
a favourite
is
species of food.
The Muhammedans, who become
Sikhs,
intermarry with each other, but are allowed preserve none
to
of their usages, being
obliged to eat hog's flesh, and abstain from circumcision.
The but
Sikhs are forbid the use of tobacco*,
allowed
liquors,
excess
;
indulge
to
which they almost
and
it is
* The Khalasa Sikhs,
f Spirituous
all
drink
to
rare to see a Singh soldier,
Their drink
after sunset, quite sober.
Guru Govind's
spirituous -j*
in
who
institutions,
is
an
follow Nanac, and reject
make
use of
it.
liquors, they say, are allowed
by that
verse in the Adi-Grant'h, which states, " Eat, and give
" unto others to eat.
" drink.
Be
Drink, and give unto others to
glad, and
also an authority, quoted
make
others glad."
There
is
by the Sikhs, from the Hindu
Sastras, in favour of this drinking to excess.
Durga,
agreeably to the Sikh quotations, used to drink, because liquor inspires courage; and this goddess, they say,
was drunk when she slew Mahishasur,
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. made
ardent spirit*,
139
the Penjab; but
in
they have no objections to either the wine
when they can obtain
or spirits of Europe,
them.
The use of opium,
common
to intoxicate,
is
very
with the Sikhs, as with most of the
They
military tribes of India.
also take
B'hang-f, another inebriating drug. to their
women
no material respect from
that of
The conduct of the Sikhs differs in
the tribes of Hindus,
from
whom
they
are
or
Muhammedans,
moral character with regard #
When
him by a
phant, and
to
women, and
Fateh Singh, of Aluwal, who was quite a
young man, was with the gratified
field
attended
I
British army, Lord
review.
He
;
him upon another.
and B'hag Singh, an old
ners, at
"
is
once
said,
ashamed
Lake
was upon an
before sunset he became low and uneasy. it
Their
descended.
I
chief, of frank,
A
ele-
little
observed
rough man-
" Fateh Singh wants his dram, but
to drink before you."
I
requested
lie
would follow his custom, which he did, by drinking a large cup of spirits,
f Cannabis
sativa.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
140
indeed in most other points, may, from the
freedom of
be con-
their habits, generally
sidered as
much more
ancestors,
who
lived
severe restrictions,
lax than that of their
under the
and whose
communication from
their
restraint of
fear of ex-
at
cast,
least
obliged them to cover their sins with the veil
of decency.
Sikhs despise
famy which
:
This the emancipated
and there
this
is
hardly an in-
debauched and
dissolute
race are not accused (and I believe with justice) of
committing in the most open
and shameful manner.
The Sikhs
are almost
all
horsemen, and
they take great delight in riding.
Their
horses were, a few years ago, famous
;
and
those bred in the Lak'hi Jungle, and other parts of their territory,
were justly
cele-
brated for their strength, temper, and activity
:
but the internal distractions of these
territories
has
been
unfavourable to the
encouragement of the breed, consequently declined
;
which has
and the Sikhs now
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. are
in
no
respect
it
would be
difficult to
of their
select
would be admitted as
horses that
mount
mounted than
better
From a hundred
the Mahratas.
cavalry
141
native
troopers
in
the
ten to
fit
English
service.
Their horsemen use swords and spears,
and most of them now carry matchlocks, though some
still
use the
bow and arrow
;
a
species of arms, for excellence in the use of
which
their forefathers
which
their descendants
were celebrated, and
appear to abandon
with great reluctance.
The education of
the Sikhs renders them
hardy, and capable of great fatigue; and the condition of the society in which they live, affords
spirit
constant exercise to that restless
of activity and enterprise which their
religion has generated.
not be epicures
:
rally to despise
they appear, indeed, gene-
luxury of
themselves in their coarse is
Such a race can-
diet,
fare.
and pride Their dress
also plain, not unlike that of the Hindus,
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
142
and
equally light
divested
of ornament.
Some
of the chiefs wear gold bangles
this
rare ;
is
their dress
The
but
characteristic of
living, is simplicity.
principal leaders
affect to
among
the Sikhs
be familiar and easy of intercourse
with their
and
and the general
and mode of
;
inferiors,
and
to despise the
Muhammedan
state of the
chiefs
pomp :
but
their
pride often counteracts this disposi-
tion;
and they appeared
proportion
in
quence, more if
to
me
to have,
to
their
rank and conse-
state,
and
to maintain equal,
not more, reserve and dignity with their
followers, than
usual with the Mahrata
is
chiefs.
It
would be
difficult, if
to ascertain the
of the Sikh the
territories,
number of
raise
or even to
compute
the armies which they could
bring into action.
can
not impracticable,
amount of the population
They boast
that they
more than a hundred thousand
horse: and,
if it
were possible
to
assemble
every Sikh horseman, this statement might
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. not be an exaggeration haps, no chief
143
but there
:
among them, except
is,
per-
Ranjit
Singh, of Lahore, that could bring an effec-
body of four thousand men
tive
The
field.
in 1805,
force of Ranjit Singh did not,
amount
to eight
thousand; and
part of that was under chiefs
subdued from a
state of
whose turbulent minds pation which they
but
is
it is
independence, and
ill
brooked an usur-
commonwealth.
now more numerous
than
it
His was,
composed of materials which have
no natural cohesion check which its
who had been
deemed subversive of the
constitution of their
army
into the
it
dissolution.
;
and the
first
serious
meets, will probably cause
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
144
There is
is
SECTION
III.
no branch of
this
sketch which
more curious and important,
offers
more
difficulties to
the religion of the Sikhs.
or
that
the inquirer, than
We
meet with a
creed of pure deism, grounded on the most
sublime general truths, blended with the belief of all the absurdities of the
mythology, and the fables of
danism;
for
Nanac
Hindu
Muhamme-
professed a desire to
reform, not to destroy, the religion of the tribe in
which he was born
;
and, actuated
by the great and benevolent design of reconciling the jarring faiths of
Muhammed,
Brahmd and
he endeavoured to conciliate
both Hindus and Moslems to his doctrine,
by persuading them
to reject those parts of
their respective beliefs
and usages, which,
he contended, were unworthy of that
God
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
whom
He
they both' adored.
145
upon
called
the Hindus to abandon the worship of idols,
and
to return to that pure devotion of the
Deity, in which their religion originated.
He
called
stain
upon
the
Muhammedans
to ab-
from practices, like the slaughter of
cows, that were offensive to the religion of the Hindus, and to cease from the persecution of that race.
He
to conciliate them,
many
adopted, in order
maxims
of the
which he had learnt from mendicants, who professed the principles of the Sufi sect;
and he constantly
celebrated
writings of the
Kabir*,
who was a
admired
referred to the
Muhammedan
professed
and who
Stifi,
* This celebrated Sufi, or philosophical deist, lived in the time of the Ernperor
trade,
a weaver;
works.
They
are
but has written all
He
Shir Shah.
composed
philanthropy and benevolence
and, above
Muhammedans and Hindus, by both is
by
in a strain of universal ;
culcated religious toleration, particularly
memory
was,
several admired
all,
he
in-
between the
of
whom
his
held in the highest esteem and veneration.
L
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
146
inculcated the doctrine of the equality of the relation of
all
created beings to their
Nanac endeavoured, with
Creator.
power of
his
authorities,
the
all
own genius, aided by such both
impress
to
Muhammedans
Hindus and
with a love of toleration
and an abhorrence of war
;
and
He
as peaceable as his doctrine.
was
his life
appears,
indeed, to have adopted, from the hour in
which he abandoned pations
to
that
his
worldly
occu-
of his death, the habits
practised by that crowd of holy mendicants,
Sanyasis and
Fakirs,
with
swarms.
He conformed
and
extraordinary
his
whom
India
to their customs austerities*
are
a
constant theme of praise with his followers.
His works are
all in
praise of
God
;
but he
* Nanac was celebrated for the manner in which he
performed Tapasa, or austere devotion, which requires the mind to be so totally absorbed in the Divinity, as to
be abstracted from every worldly thought, and
for as
long a period as
sustaining.
human
strength
is
this
capable of
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
polytheism of the Hindus with
treats the
respect,
and even veneration.
shows a disposition
its
and
false
He
to destroy the
but only wishes to divest tinsel
147
of
it
its
never fabric,
useless
ornaments, and to establish
complete dependence upon the great
Creator of the universe.
He
where of Muhammed, and with moderation
;
speaks every
his successors,
but animadverts boldly
on what he conceives to be and, above
on
all,
their
their errors;
endeavours to pro-
pagate their faith by the sword.
As Nanac made no
material invasion of
either the civil or religious usages of the
Hindus, and as store a nation their original
he
may
his
only desire was to re-
who had degenerated from pure worship* into idolatry,
be considered more in the light of a
reformer than of a subverter of the Hindu
* The most ancient Hindus do not appear
to
have
paid adoration to idols; but, though they adored God,
they worshipped the sun and elements.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
!48
and those Sikhs who adhere
religion
;
tenets,
without admitting those of
to his
Guru
Govind, are hardly to be distinguished from the great
whom
mass of Hindu population are
there
much more than
many
who
sects
that of
among
;
differ,
Nanac, from the
general and orthodox worship
at
present
established in India.
The
first
successors of
Nanac appear
have taught exactly the same leader;
their
armed
all
and
though
his followers,
ciple of self-defence, in justified,
It
character
lowers
;
Har
Govind
was on a
prin-
which he was
fully
even by the usage of the Hindus.
was reserved
new
it
to
doctrine as
for
Guru Govind
to give a
the religion of his
to
not by making any material
tion in the tenets of
blishing institutions
only separated
fol-
altera-
Nanac, but by
esta-
and usages, which not
them from other Hindus,
but which, by the complete abolition of distinction of casts, destroyed, at
a system of
civil
polity, that,
all
one blow,
from being
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
149
interwoven with the religion of a weak and bigoted race,
upon a
fixed the rule of
had withstood the shock
basis that
of ages.
Though
commu-
a vast
and obedience
nity in tranquillity rulers, it
Hindus
the code of the
to preserve
was calculated
priests
its
had the natural
the country, in which
it
its
of making
effect
was
to
established, an
easy conquest to every powerful foreign invader; and
appears to have been the
it
contemplation of
Govind
resolve
this effect that
made Guru
on the abolition of cast, as
a necessary and indispensable prelude to
any attempt
to
arm
the
original
native
population of India against their foreign tyrants.
He
called
break those chains bigotry
in
upon
all
Hindus
to
which prejudice and
had bound them, and
to
devote
themselves to arms, as the only means by
which they could free themselves from the oppressive government of the
Muhamme-
dans; against whom, a sense of
his
own
wrongs, and those of his tribe, led him to
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
150
preach eternal warfare.
was meant
trine
and
be popular,
to
The
promised equality. lations of
His religious doc-
invidious appel-
Brahmen, Cshatriya, Vaisya, and
Sudra, were abolished.
The
pride of descent
might remain, and keep up some tions
but, in the religious code of
;
it
every Khalsa Singh
(for
Govind,
such he termed his
was equal, and had a
followers)
distinc-
like title to
the good things of this world, and to the blessings of a future
life.
Though Guru Govind mixes, even more than Nanac, the mythology of the Hindus with
own
his
though
tenets;
desire
his
them, in opposition to the
to conciliate
Muhammedans,
against
whom
he always
breathed war and destruction, led him to
worship
at
though
the
among
Hindu peculiar
sacred
shrines
customs
and
his followers, are stated to
and
;
dress
have been
adopted from veneration to the Hindu goddess of courage,
impossible
to
Durga Bhavani
reconcile
the
;
yet
religion
it is
and
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. usages, which
established, with
G6vind has
It does not, like
the belief of the Hindus. that
of Nanac,
dogmas of the
some
question disciples
151
favourite
of Brahma-, and
attack that worship of idols, which few of
upon the ground of
these defend, except
these figures, before which they bend, being
symbolical representations of the attributes of an all-powerful Divinity at once to subvert the
;
but
Guru Govind
prevails,
Brahma must
fall.
proceeds
foundation of the
Wherever the
whole system.
it
religion
the institutions of
The admission of
pro-
selytes, the abolition of the distinctions cast, the eating
of
all
of
kinds of
flesh,
of
except
that of cows, the form of religious worship,
and the general devotion of
all
Singhs to
arms, are ordinances altogether irreconcilable with
Hindu mythology, and have
dered the religion of the Sikhs as to the
Brahmens, and higher
Hindus, as
it
orders of that
is
ren-
obnoxious
tribes
of the
popular with the lower
numerous
class of
mankind.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
152
character of the religion shall take
of the
Sikhs,
a more detailed view of
progress, tenets,
A
general
rapid sketch of the
After this
I
origin,
its
and forms.
Sikh author*,
whom
I
have followed
in several parts of this sketch,
very par-
is
ticular in stating the causes of the origin of
the religion of different
Yugas, or ages of the world, stated
is
the present,
written that the
is
human
completely depraved author,
"
he describes the
:
The
Hindu mythology.
in the
which
Nanac
:
that in which
race would
Yug, it
become
speaking of the Cali Yug, "
rise in the
world,
" tend with cast friction,
;
was
" Discord," says the
sin
prevail,
" universe become wicked
"
Cali
;
will
and the
cast will con-
and, like bamboos in
consume each other
to embers.
" The Vedas, or scriptures," he adds, "
will
" be held in disrepute, for they shall not
" be understood, and the darkness of igno-
*
B'hai
Gdr6 Das
B'hale.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. " ranee this
will prevail
Such
every where f
is
author's record of a divine prophecy
regarding this degenerate age. to state
what has ensued
" lowed
own
his
" separated
" prayed
:
path,
He
;
and
some Surya
to the earth, to
sects
" others worshipped " judge of the dead)
fol-
were
Chandra
(the sun)
;
some
the sky, and the
and the water, and the
air,
proceeds
" Every one
some worshipped
;
" (the moon)
"
153
fire,
while
D'herma Raja ;
and
(the
in the fallacy of
" the sects nothing was to he found but " error.
In short, pride prevailed in the
" world, and the four casts* established a
" system of ascetic devotion.
From
these,
" the ten sects of Sanyasis, and the twelve " sects of Yogis, originated. " the
Srivira,
Thejangam,
and the Deva Digambar,
" entered into mutual contests.
The Brah-
" mens divided into different classes
;
# Brahmen, Cshatriya, Vaisya, and Sudra.
and
.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
154
" the Sastras, Vedas, and Puranas*, con-
" tradicted each other. " (philosophical
sects)
The
six
Dersans
exhibited
enmity,
" and the thirty-six Pashands (heterodox " sects) arose, with hundreds of thousands " of chimerical and magical
" sects
:
and
thus,
mantra)
from one form, many
" good and
many
" and
prevailed
error
(t antra
forms originated,
evil
in
the
Yug,
Cali
" or age of general depravity."
The Sikh author pursues
this
account
of the errors into which the Hindus
fell,
regarding
the
passage
with
a
origin
and progress of the Muhammedan
curious
religion
" The world," he writes, " went on with " these numerous divisions, when
"
med Yara-f
appeared,
Muham-
who gave
origin
* Different sacred books of the Hindus.
t Yar titles,
among
of God.
and one of the prophet's
signifies friend;
his followers,
is
Yar-i-Khuda, or the friend
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
155
" to the seventy-two sects*, and widely
He
" disseminated discord and war. " blished the Rozeh o Aid
"
vals),
"
made
and
and
festi-
(prayer),
and
(fast
Namaz
the
esta-
his practice of devotional acts pre-
" valent
a multitude of
in the world, with
" distinctions, of Pir
" (prophet),
Ulema
(saint),
Paighamber
order of priest-
(the
" hood), and Kitab (the Koran).
He
de-
" molished the temples, and on their ruins
" built
mosques,
the
slaughtering
cows
" and helpless persons, and spreading trans-
" gression " Cafirs
and wide, holding
far
Mulhids
(infidels),
in hostility
(idolaters), Ir-
" menis (Armenians), Rumis (the Turks), " and
Zingis
(Ethiopians).
" greatly diffused " Then," " two races
" the other
*
this
Thus
vice
the universe."
itself in
author adds, " there were
in the
world
;
Muhammedan
The Muhammedan
into seventy-two sects.
religion
the one Hindu, ;
and both were
is
said to
be divided
;:
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS,
156
" alike excited by pride, enmity, and ava-
"
rice, to viotence.
" heart on "
The Hindus
Ganga and Benares
hammedans on Mecca and
;
set their
Mu-
the
the Caaba:
" the Hindus clung to their mark on the
" forehead
and brahminical
" Moslemans to
" the
their
Ram
" one cried other
(the
Rahim
circumcision
name (the
the
string; :
merciful)
one
;
" name, but two ways of pronouncing " forgetting
" Koran "
:
equally the
Vedas and
it
the
and through the deceptions of
lust, avarice,
" swerved
the
of an Avatar),
the world, and Satan, they
equally
from the true
path
" while Brahmens and Moulavis destroyed " each other by their quarrels, and the " vicissitudes of
life
and death hung always
" suspended over their heads. "
When
the world was in this distracted
" state, and vice prevailed," says this writer, " the complaint of virtue, whose dominion " was extinct,
reached the throne of the
" Almighty, who created Niinac,
to en-
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
157
w lighten and improve a degenerate and
" corrupt age "
God
:
and that holy man made
Supreme known
the
to
all,
giving
" the nectareous water that washed his feet
He
" to his disciples to drink.
" Virtue her strength,
restored to
blended the four
" casts * into one, established one
mode
of
" salutation, changed the childish play of
" bending the head at the
feet of idols,
" taught the worship of the true God, and " reformed a depraved world/'
Nanac
appears, by the account of this
have established
author, to
by the usual modes
sanctity
mendicants. living
He
for
of religious
upon sand and swallow- wort, and
* There
is
no ground
altogether abolished by
to
and unite
all in
;
and, after attain-
conclude that casts were
Nanac; though
and writings had a tendency
A
fame
performed severe Tapasaf*,
sleeping on sharp pebbles
"t*
his
his doctrines
to equalize the
Hindus,
the worship of one God.
kind of ascetic devotion, which has been before
explained.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
158
ing fame by this
commenced
his
of penance,
kind
he
with the view of
travels,
spreading his doctrine over the earth.
Nanac had completed
After trial
he
travels,
cended
Sidd'his*,
supposed to have
is
Sumeru,
to
all
his terres-
seated
where he a
in
as-
saw the These,
circle.
from a knowledge of that eminence for
which he was predestined, wished to make
him assume
the characteristic devotion of
their sect, to
which they thought he would
While means were used
be an ornament. to effect
this
purpose, a divine voice was
heard to exclaim ««
own
" and
:
"
Nanac from
sect, distinct
all
and
his
" joyful to the
Cali
Yug."
gods.
who
The name
(saints) are is
form
his
the Yatis-f-
name
Sidd'his;
* The Sidd'his
shall
shall
After
be
this,
the attendants of the
most generally applied
to those
wait on Gauesa.
+ The name Yati priests of the Jainas;
yasis,
is
most usually applied
but
and other penitents.
it is
to the
also applicable to San-
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. Nanac preached
God
to
the adoration of the true
Hindus; and then went
the
instruct the
Muhammedans,
temples at Mecca. the holy
159
men
are
to
in their sacred
When
that place,
at
said to have
gathered
round him, and demanded, Whether
their
of the Hindus, was the best
faith, or that
?
" Without the practice of true piety, both/' said
Nanac, " are erroneous, and neither
" Hindus nor Moslems " before the throne of
" tinge of
God
scarlet, that
be acceptable
will
for the
;
faded
has been soiled by
" water, will never return.
You
both de-
Ram
" ceive yourselves, pronouncing aloud
" and Rahim, and the way of Satan pre"
vails in the universe."
The courageous independence with which
Nanac announced hammedans, biographers.
is
his religion
Mu-
to the
a favourite topic with
He was one day
even struck, as one of these
his
abused, and relates,
by a
Moullah, for lying on the ground with feet in the direction of the sacred
his
temple of
—
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
160
How
"
Mecca.
darest thou, infidel!" said
Muhammedan
the offended
priest,
" thy feet towards the house of
" Turn them,
you can,"
if
" turn
God
s
V
—
said the pious
but indignant Nanac, " in a direction where " the house of
Nanac
is
not."
Mu-
" That prophet was sent," he
hammed. said,
God
did not deny the mission of
" by God, to
this
world, to do good,
" and to disseminate the knowledge of one "
God
through means of the K6ran
" he, acting on the principle of " which
all
human
;
but
free-will,
beings exercise, intro-
" duced oppression, and cruelty, and the
" slaughter of cows*, for which he died.
"
lam now sent,"
he added, " from heaven,
" to publish unto mankind a book, which "
shall
"
God
"
who *
to
reduce to
all
the
names given unto
one name, which
calls
him by any
Nanac appears on
this,
is
God
of the Hindus.
and he
and every other occasion,
have preserved his attachment to
dogma
;
other, shall fall into
this
favourite
:
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. " the path of the **
bound
**
You
and have
chains
the
in
devil,
i6'l
his feet
of wretchedness.
Muhamme-
have/' said he to the
dans, " despoiled the temples, and burnt
"
and
the sacred Vedas, of the Hindus;
" you have dressed yourselves
in dresses
of
" blue, and you delight to have your u praises sung from house to house but I, :
" who have seen " that
" your jarring
"
to
faiths,
is
and
sent to reconcile I
implore you to
no
man
taught;
for
will
What
has
The Al-
not ask to what tribe or
" persuasion he belongs. " ask,
God
shall be saved except he
" has performed good works.
" mighty
your own
useless without obedience
doctrine
the
said,
am
I
their scriptures, as well as
" but reading "
you,
tell
the Hindus equally hate you and
" your mosques. u read
the world,
all
He
will
only
has he done ? Therefore those
"
violent
and continued disputes,
"
subsist
between the Hindus and Mosle-
" mans, are
as
which
impious as they are unjust."
M
;:
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
162
Such were the
according to
doctrines,
which Nanac taught to both
his disciples,
He
Hindus and Muhammedans.
professed
veneration and respect, but refused adoration to the founders of both their religions
had great " of
"
tolerance.
Muhammeds,"
A hundred
said
;
he
for which, as for those of all other tribes,
thousand
Nanac, " a million
u of Brahmas, Vishnus, and a hundred " thousand Ramas, stand at the gate of the "
Most High. These
"
is
immortal.
" the
" of
praise
" whose
all.
heart
good
God
;
alone
Yet men, who unite
of God,
proves
subdued
" a
perish
not
are
living in contention with
" which *<
all
that
He is
the
alone just:
ashamed
each other
evil is
in
spirit
has
a true Hindu
and
he only
Muhammedan whose
life
is
is
" pure."
Nanac
whom
is
stated,
by the Sikh author from
the above account of his religion
is
taken, to have had an interview with the
supreme God, which he thus describes
— ;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. " One
day Nanac
163
heard a voice from
He
" above exclaim, N&nac, approach!" replied, "
Oh God
what power have
!
" stand in thy presence?"
" Close thine eyes."
and advanced
:
The
Nanac
shut his eyes,
Wa !
did so, and heard the word
Guruji, or
God
said,
voice said,
he was told to look up
done, pronounced five times well done
:
he
or well
and then
;
I to
Wa !
After this
teacher.
" Nanac! I have sent thee into
Yug (or depraved my name/' Nanac
" the world, in the Cali " age)
go and bear
Oh God how can I bear the mighty burthen? If my age was extended to
said,
"
;
"
!
" tens of millions of years,
" immortality, aud
my
if
I
drank of
eyes were formed of
" the sun and moon, and were never closed,
" *'
still,
oh God!
I
could not presume to
take charge of thy wondrous name."
" I
will
be thy
Guru
(teacher)," said
" and thou shalt be a
M and thy sect
shall
"
is
their
word
Guru
to all
God,
mankind,
be great in the world
Puri
Puri.
The word
! ;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
164
" of the Bairasi 4C
Ram Ram that of the Om Nama Narayen and the
Sanyasi,
is
!
!
!
!
!
" word of the Yogis, Ades
Ades
!
and the
!
" salutation of the Muhainmedans " Alikam "
Ram
!
and that of the Hindus,
;
but the word of thy sect
" Guru, and I
will forgive
" thy disciples. " the Bairagis
Mat
;
is
called
the crimes of
Ramsala; that of
Dherma
Thou must teach unto thy
my name
;
be
that of the Sanyasis,
;
" lowers three lessons "
Ram
shall
that of thy tribe shall be
" Sala.
Salam
The place of worship of
" the Yogis, Asan "
is
:
the
to worship
first,
the second, charity
fol-
;
the third,
" ablution. They must not abandon the " world, and they must do ill to no being; " for into every being have I infused breath
" and whatever I am, thou
" us there
is
no
difference.
art, for
It is
betwixt
a blessing
" that thou art sent into the Cali Yug." After
this,
" teacher
!
"
Wa Guru I
or
zvell
done,
was pronounced from the mouth
u of the most high
Guru
or teacher (God),
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. " and
"
Nanac came
dom
to give light
165
and
free-
to the universe."
The above
a sufficient view of
will give
the ideas which the Sikhs entertain regarding the divine origin of their faith as
;
which,
taught by Nanac, might justly be
first
deemed
the religion of peace.
" Put on armour," says Nanac, " that
"
harm no one
will
" be
;
let
thy coat of mail
that of understanding,
" thy enemies to friends.
and convert
Fight with va-
" lour, but with no weapon except the " word of God."
Nanac
All the principles
which
inculcated, were those of pure deism
but moderated, in order to meet the deeprooted usages of that portion of
mankind
which he wished to reclaim from
Thou
the lives and habits
Muhammedans, he approved
Koran-, * This fact
He is
error.
of the
admitted the truth of the
admitted by Sikh authors.
It
is,
how-
ever, probable, that Nanac was but imperfectly ac-
quainted with the doctrines of that volume.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
166 ancient
Hindu
Vedas, religion
contended
but
that
the
had been corrupted, by the
introduction of a plurality of gods, with the
worship of images
;
which led
their
minds astray from that great and eternal Being, to
whom
adoration should alone be
He, however, followed the forms of
paid.
the Hindus, and adopted most of their doctrines
which did not
and leading
tenet.
to veneration, of the
interfere with his great
He
admitted the claim
numerous catalogue of
Hindu Devas, and Devatas, deities
held
it
;
or
inferior
but he refused them adoration.
impious to slaughter the cow
;
He
and he
directed his votaries, as has been seen, to
consider ablution as one of their primary religious duties.
Nanac,
according to
Penjabi authors,
admitted the Hindu doctrine of metempsychosis.
He
believed, that really
would enjoy Paradise
;
good men
that those,
who had
no claim to the name of good, but yet were not bad, would undergo another probation,
:
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. by
revisiting the
and
that the
world in the
167
human form
bad would animate the bodies
of animals, particularly dogs and cats it
appears, from the same authorities, that
Nanac was acquainted with medan
state
;
to his followers
Muham-
the
doctrine regarding the
and a future it
but
:
of man,
fall
and that he represented system, in which
as a
God, by showing a heaven and a hell, had, his great
goodness, held out future rewards
and punishments had
man, whose
to
him
left free, to incite
and deter him from bad. reward and punishment in
the
in
Hindu and
gion, that
it
is
in the
was not
reconcile his followers
to
good
The
same
Muhammedan this
reli-
Nanac
point
:
to
but
he seems to have
bent to the doctrine of Brahma. writings, however,
principle of
difficult for
in this, as in all others,
actions,
so nearly the
upon
he
will
In
all his
he borrowed indifferently
from the Koran and the Hindu Sastras
and
his
cessors
;
example was followed by
;
his suc-
and quotations from the scriptures
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
168
of the Hindus, and from the book of
hammed, into
all
are
indiscriminately
Mu-
introduced
their sacred writings, to elucidate
those points on which
it
was
their object to
reconcile these jarring religions.
With the exact mode instructed his
followers
in
which Nanac
to
address
prayers to that supreme Being
taught them to adore, I
am
their
whom
he
not acquainted.
Their D'herma Sala, or temples of worship, are,
in
are,
of course, banished.
general,
plain
buildings.
Images
Their prescribed
forms of prayer are, I believe, few and simple.
Part of the writings of Nanac,
which have since been incorporated with those of his successors, in the Adi Grant'h, are
read,
or rather recited,
solemn occasion.
These are
upon every
all in
praise of
the Deity, of religion, and of virtue against impiety
and immorality.
Grant'h, the whole of the is
ascribed to Nanac,
rest
of the
is
first
;
and
The Adi
part of which
written, like the
books of the Sikhs, in the
!
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. Gurumuk'h*
character.
169
can only judge
I
very imperfectly of the value of this work
but some extracts, translated from
it,
ap-
pear worthy of that admiration which
bestowed upon
by the
it
The Adi-Grant'h
is
in verse;
termed Pidi, which means,
by which a man
;
is
Sikhs.
and many
Nanac, are
of the chapters, written by
or flight of steps
:
literally,
a ladder
and, metaphorically, that
ascends.
In the following fragment,
literally trans^
lated from the Sodar rag asa mahilla pehla
of Nanac, he displays the supremacy of the
God, and the
true
vatas,
and
of the
De-
other created beings, to the uni-
Creator;
versal
inferiority
however they
been elevated into
deities
may have
by ignorance or
superstition.
Thy
portals,
how wonderful
thy palace, where thou
Numberless and
they are, sittest
infinite are the
how wonderful
and governest
claim thy praises.
*
A
all
sounds which pro-
modified species of the Nagari character.
;
!
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
17 q
How
numerous are thy
Peris, skilful in
music and
song
Pavan (air), water, and Vasan tar (fire), celebrate thee
D'herma Raja
Hindu Rhadamanthus)
(the
cele-
brates thy praises, at thy gates.
Chitragupta (Secretary to D'herma Raja) celebrates thy praises
;
who,
skilful in writing, writes
and
administers final justice. Iswara, Brahma, and Devi, celebrate thy praises
they declare in
fit
;
terms thy majesty, at thy
gates.
Indra celebrates thy praises, sitting on the Indraic throne amid the Devatas.
The
just celebrate thy praises in profound meditation, the
pious declare thy glory.
The Yaris and The
the Satis joyfully celebrate thy might.
Pandits, skilled in reading, and the Rishiswaras,
who, age by age, read the Vedas,
recite thy
praises.
The Mohinis
(celestial courtezans), heart alluring,
inhabiting Swarga, Mritya, and Patala, celebrate thy praises.
The Ratnas
(gems), with the thirty-eight Tirt'has
(sacred springs), celebrate thy praises.
Heroes of great might celebrate thy name; beings of the four kinds of production celebrate thy praises.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. The
continents, and regions of the world, celebrate
thy
praises
mundane All
171
Brahmanda
(the
which thou hast established
firm.
the
;
egg),
who know thee
universal
praise thee, all
who
are desirous
of thy worship.
How numerous they are who praise thee my comprehension: how, then, describe
He, even he,
He
is,
of
them is
shall
Nanac
?
the Lord of truth, true, and truly just.
he was, he passes, he passes not, the preserver all
that
Of numerous
is
preserved.
hues, sorts and kinds, he
author of
Maya
Having formed the
pleases
is
the original
(deception). creation,
Avork, the display of his
What
they exceed
!
him he
he surveys his
own
own
greatness.
does, and no order of
any
other being can reach him.
He
is
the Padshah and the Fudsaheb of Shahs;
Nanac
resides in his favour.
These few verses to show, that
it
are, perhaps, sufficient
was on a principle of pure
deism that Nanac entirely grounded religion.
It
was not
that the minds of
possible,
his
however,
any large portion of man-
kind could remain long fixed in a belief
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
172
which presented them only with general
and those of a nature too vast
truths,
their contemplation or
followers of
for
comprehension. The
Nanac, since
his death,
paid an adoration to his name, which
have is
at
variance with the lessons which he taught
they have clothed him in of a
saint:
all
him
they consider
lected instrument of
God
the true faith to fallen
the attributes
to
man
;
as the se-
make known and, as such, not only
they give him divine honours;
performing pilgrimage to his tomb,
but
addressing him, in their prayers, as their saviour and mediator.
The
religious
tenets
and usages of the
Sikhs continued, as they had been esta-
by Nanac*,
blished
till
the time of
Guru
* Certainly no material alteration was made, cither in
the belief or forms of the Sikhs, by any of his suc-
cessors
armed
before
Guru Govind.
liar
G6vind, who
his followers to repel aggression,
appear to
have made a temporary
effort to
would only
oppose
his
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
173
Govind; who, though he did not
alter the
fundamental principles of the established
made
faith,
so complete a change in the
sacred usages and
character
them an
entirely
and though the Sikhs
:
their veneration for
Govind
habits of his fol-
civil
lowers, that he gave
new
retain
all
Nanac, they deem Guru
have been equally exalted, by
to
the immediate favour and protection of the
Divinity
and the Dasama Padshah ka
;
Gran th,
or
book of the tenth king, which
was written by Guru Govind,
is
in every respect, as holy as the of I
Nanac, and cannot
better
his
considered,
Adi Grant'h
immediate successors.
explain
the
which Guru Govind has made
pretensions to the
rank
of a prophet, than by exhibiting his
own
account of
from
his mission in
his Vichitra
a
literal
version
Natac.
enemies, without an endeavour to effect any serious
change
in the religious belief or
which he belonged.
customs of the sect to
:
SKETCH OF THE
174 " I
now
my own
declare
" the multifarious
SIKHS.
austerities
and
history,
which
I
have
" performed. " Where the seven peaks
rise
beautiful
" on the mountain Hemacuta,
and the
" place takes the
name
of Sapta Sringa,
" greater penance have I performed than " was ever endured by
" tating constantly on " "
till
diversity
My
father
Pandu
Raja, medi-
Maha Cal and
was changed
into
Calica,
one form.
and mother meditated on the
" Divinity, and performed the Yoga, "
Guru Deva approved
"
Then
the
Supreme
till
of their devotions.
issued his order,
and
" I was born, in the Call Yug, though
my
" inclination
the
" world,
was not
my
mind being
" of the Supreme.
" Being
" addressed
—
I
come fixed
When
made known
" into the world.
"
to
The
into
on the foot
the
supreme
his will, I
was sent
eternal Being thus
this feeble insect
have manifested thee as
my own
M son, and appointed thee to establish a
—
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. " perfect Pant'h
Go
(sect).
175
into the world,
" establish virtue and expel vice/' "
"
—I
my
stand with joined hands, bending
head
at thy
word
" prevail in the world, " thine
" world
the Pant'h shall
when thou
was
lendest
sent into
the
thus I received mortal birth.
As
aid. :
—Then
:
I
" the Supreme spoke to me, so do
I speak,
" and to none do I bear enmity.. Whoever " shall
call
me Parameswara,
" into the pit of hell
:
he
shall sink
know, that
I
am
only
" the servant of the Supreme, and con" cerning
this entertain
As God
no doubt.
" spoke, I announce unto the world, and
" remain not " As
God
silent in the
world of men.
spoke, so do I declare, and
" regard no person's word.
I
wear
I
my
" dress in nobody's fashion, but follow that
" appointed by the Supreme.
I
perform
" no worship to stones, nor imitate the " ceremonies of any one.
" the
infinite
I
pronounce
name, and have attained
" the supreme Being.
I
wear no
to
bristling
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
176
H locks on
my
" ear-rings.
"
my
ears
;
head, nor adorn myself with
I receive
no person's words
but as the Lord speaks,
in
I act.
" I meditate on the sole name, and attain "
my
To no
object.
other do I perform
" the Jap, in no other do " meditate on the
" the supreme " meditate;
infinite
light.
the
confide
I
:
I
name, and attain
On no
name of no
other do I
do I
other
" pronounce. " For
this sole reason, to establish virtue,
" was I sent into the world by Gur(i Deva. "
'
Every where/
said he,
'
establish virtue,
" and exterminate the wicked and vitious/ " For
this
" birth
;
purpose have I received mortal
and
this let all the virtuous
under-
" stand. To establish
virtue, to exalt piety,
" and
the
to
extirpate
vitious
utterly.
" Every former Avatar established his
own
" Jap
;
" no
one established both the principles
but no one punished the
" and practice of virtue,
" Every holy
man
irreligious,
(Dherm Carm).
(Gh6us), and prophet
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
177
" (Ambia), attempted only to establish his
" own reputation
in the
world
but no one
;
" comprehended the supreme Being,
or
" understood the true principles or practice " of virtue.
" any
avail
" There
"
The
is
".
doctrine
no benefit
this fix in
"
this
;
doctrine of no other
in
fix in
is
of
your minds.
any other
doctrine,
your minds.
Whoever reads the Koran, whoever
reads the Puran, neither of them shall
" escape death, and nothing but virtue
"
Millions of
shall avail at last.
" read the Koran, they " merable Purans;
" avail in the
but
life to
may it
men may
read innu-
shall
be of no
come, and the power
" of destiny shall prevail over them."
Guru Govind, origin of
after this
his mission, gives
account of the a short account
of his birth and succession to the spiritual duties at his father's death.
" At the f
f
command
of
God
I received
mortal birth, and came into the world.
178
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
" This I
now
attend to
declare briefly;
" what I speak. "
My father journeyed
" performing
" springs.
ablution
When
towards the East,
in
all
the sacred
he arrived at Triveni,
" he spent a day in acts of devotion and " charity. On that occasion was I mani" fested.
In the town of Patna I received
" a body.
Then
the
Madra Des
received
" me, and nurses nursed me tenderly, and " tended me with great care, instructing
"
me
attentively
every
" reached the age of
" parted to the Deva Loca. with
my father deWhen I was
the dignity
of Raja,
" established virtue to the utmost of " power.
"
cies
I
Dherm and Carm
" (principles and practice),
" invested
When
day.
I
my
I addicted myself to every spe-
of hunting in the forests, and daily
" killed the bear and the stag.
When
I
" had become acquainted with that coun-
"
try, I
proceeded to the city of Pavata,
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
179
" where I amused myself on the banks of " the Calindri, and viewed every kind of " spectacle.
There
number
I slew a great
" of tigers ; and, in various modes, hunted " the bear."
The above passages of that
gave
will
convey an idea
impression which
Guru G6vind
his followers of his divine mission.
shall shortly
made it
was
enumerate those
alterations
he
whom
in the usages of the Sikhs,
render, through the
his object to
means of
I
religious enthusiasm,
a warlike
race.
Though Guru Govind was brought up the religion
of Nanac, he appears, from
having been educated priests of
in
Mathura,
to
among
Hindu
the
have been deeply
tainted with their superstitious belief;
and
he was, perhaps, induced by considerations of policy, to lean
still
more strongly
prejudices, in order to induce
come
converts
to
to their
them
that religious
community, by means of which
to be-
military it
was
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
180
the
destroy
object to
his
Muhammedan
power.
The of
principal of the religious institutions
Guru Govind,
is
that of the Pahal,
ceremony by which a convert into the tribe of Sikhs
;
speaking, that of Singhs. this
institution
is
to
or,
initiated
is
more properly
The meaning of
make
the convert a
member
of the Khalsa, or Sikh
wealth,
which
he
—the
common-
can only become by
assenting to certain observances
the de-
;
voting himself to arms for the defence of the commonwealth, and the destruction of its
enemies
ting
*
the wearing his hair, and put-
;
on a blue dress*.
It]
been before
has
lowers of G6vind do not
but they gard of
all it
is
of them
that
wear their hair; and
chiefs
were
Three
one day
was a Khalsa Singh,
others of the Khalasa tribe of Sikhs.
ing and joking with the
the
all
fol-
the blue dress,
their jealous re-
not to be described.
agents of Sikh
one
stated,
now wear
and I
Khalsa Singh,
inferior
ray
in
the
tent;
two
was laugh-
who
said
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. The mode
which Guru Govind
in
initiated his converts,
writer;
and,
same
as that
state
it
is
as I believe
now
Govind, he says,
first
described by a Sikh nearly the
is
it
observed, I shall shortly
he has described
as
181
Guru
it.
Mak'-
after his arrival at
he had been ordered to attend
me
Among
to Calcutta.
other subjects of our mirth, I rallied him on trusting
himself so
much
in
my
power.
"
Why, what
" worst," said he, " that you can do
"
I
am
at such a distance
hand across
The man's and
my
from
the
me, when
to
?"
chin, imitating the act
I
passed
my
of shaving.
face was in an instant distorted with rage,
"
his sword half drawn.
he to me, " of the offence
"
home
is
strike you,
who
" master and the
You
are ignorant," said
you have given.
I
cannot
are above me, and the friend of state.
my
But no power," he added,
" shall save these fellows," alluding to the two Khalasa Sikhs, " from
my
revenge, for having dared to
« smile at your action." difficulty,
It
was with the greatest
and only by the good
chiefs, that I
of this Singh.
was able
offices of
to pacify the
some Sikh
wounded honour
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
182 haval,
them
initiated
how
instructions
The mode
is
and gave
converts,
five
to
others.
initiate
The convert
as follows.
is
told that
he must allow
He must
clothe himself from head to foot
He
in blue clothes.
weapons
the five
bow and those
"
Guru
then presented with
is
a sword, a
:
initiate
him then
is
first
and the
first
knife,
kings of
of
The
sugar and
round
or dagger, and
some
chapters of the Adi-Grant'h,
Dasama Pad-
chapters of the
The goddess of
sented in the
"
stirred
shah ka Grant'h, are read
*
Some
put into a cup, and
with a steel
of the
One
says,
a
thy holy teacher, and thou art
is
" his Sikh or disciple."
water
firelock,
and a pike*.
arrow,
who
his hair to grow.
;
courage, Bhavani Durga, repre-
Dasama Padshah ka
Guru Govind,
goddess of war, and
and those who
is
Grant'h, or book of
as the soul of arms, or tutelary
thus addressed
" edge of the sword, thou
:
"
Thou
art the
art the arrow, the sword,
" the knife, and the dagger."
;;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
183
perform the initiation exclaim, WaJ Guruji
ka Khdlsa! TVa! Guruji to the state of the
the
Guru
been repeated " sherbet
" drink
is
Victory attend
!
exclamation
this
five times,
water of life
disciple obeys
;
and some
prepared in a similar manner,
sherbet,
sprinkled over his
head and beard.
these ceremonies, the disciple
consents to be of the faith of
He
has
they say, " This
It is the
nectar.
The
it."
Guru
After
!)
Fateh! (Success
ki
is
is
After
asked
if
he
Guru Govind.
He
answers, " I do consent."
is
then
told, " If you do, you must abandon
all
" intercourse, and neither eat, drink, nor
sit
" in company with " I shall name.
" mal
;
men
The
of five sects which
first,
the
Mina
D'hir-
who, though of the race of Nanac,
" were tempted by avarice to give poison " to Arjun
;
and, though they did not suc-
" ceed, they ought to be expelled from
" society.
The second
are the
" a sect
who
"
and endeavour
priests,
call
Musandia
themselves Gurus,
or
to introduce he-
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
184 " terodox " Rayi,
The
doctrines*.
the
descendants
Ram
third,
Ram
of
Ray,
" whose intrigues were the great cause of " the destruction of the holy
ruler,
Tegh
" Singh.
Kud
i-niar,
The
fourth are the
" or destroyers -f of their " Fifth, the Bhadani,
own
who shave
" of their head and beards/' after this
the hair
The
disciple,
warning against intercourse with
sectaries, or rather schismatics,
in
daughters.
some general
is
instructed
precepts, the observance of
which regard the welfare of the community into
which he has entered.
be gentle and polite to
all
He
is
with
told to
whom
he
converses, to endeavour to attain wisdom,
and
to
emulate the persuasive eloquence of
He
Baba Nanac.
is
particularly enjoined,
whenever he approaches any of the Sikh temples, to do spect, *
and
to
it
go
Guru Govind put
with reverence and reto
Amritsar, to pay his
to death
t This barbarous custom Rajaputs
in
many
many
still
of this tribe.
prevails
parts of Hindustan.
among
the
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. devotions
of which he
interests
occasions,
consider
is
instructed
or
and
all
paramount
to
his
to labour
worship which he
he
visits
to in-
town of Arn-
at every
that
told,
the
;
on
crease the prosperity of the ritsar;
state
directed,
is
to
He
own.
Khalsa,
the
to
185
place of
will
be con-
ducted in the right path by the Guru (Guru
He
Govind).
is
the duty of
it is
Khalsa,
or
instructed to believe, that
all
who belong
those
commonwealth of
to the
the Sikhs,
neither to lament the sacrifice of property,
nor of
he
is
life,
in support of
each other
and
;
directed to read the Adi-Grant'h and
Dasama Padshah ka
Grant'h, every morn-
ing and every evening. received from
God, he
to share with others. ciple has heard
Whatever he has is
And
it is
similar precepts, he
duly
initiated.
Singh,
is
duty
his
after the dis-
and understood
and
Guru Govind
told
all
these
declared to be
agreeably to this
Sikh author, after initiating the
first
five
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
186
disciples in the
mode above
stated, order-
ed the principal persons among them* to initiate
him exactly on
which he
The author from whom
did.
above account
Govind was claimed,
similar occasions,
is
the
when
taken, states, that
at the point of death, he ex-
" Wherever five
Sikhs
are
as-
" sembled, there I also shall be present!"
and, in consequence of this expression, five
number necessary
Sikhs are the
a Singh,
or
institutions of
Guru
admitted from universe. at
The
any time of
Singhs
all
By
convert.
all
make
religious
Govind, proselytes are
tribes
initiation life,
the
to
and
may
casts in the
take place
but the children of the
go through
this rite at
a very early
age.
The
leading tenet of
Guru Govind's
• Agreeably to this author, tiated on Friday, the 8th of the
reli-
Guru Govind was month B'hadra,
ini-
in the
year 1753 of the sera of Vicramaditya; and on that
day his great work, the Dasama Padshah ka Grant'h, or
book of the tenth king, was completed.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. gious
187
which obliges
institutions,
his
fol-
devote themselves to arms,
lowers to
stated, in one of the chapters of the
is
Dasama
Padshah ka Grant'h, or book of the tenth king, written in praise of
Durga B'havani,
the goddess of courage
" Durga,"
says, "
G6vind
:
appeared to
" was asleep, arrayed in
me when
hand the
I
The
her glory.
all
my
" goddess put into
Guru
hilt
of
" a bright scimitar, which she had before " held in her own. "
Muhammedans/
'
The country of the
said the goddess,
'
shall
" be conquered by thee, and numbers of " that race shall be slain/
" heard
this, I
exclaimed,
" be the guard to
" because, in
its
'
After I had
This steel shall
me and my
lustre,
O
" thy countenance,
followers,
the splendour of
goddess!
is
always
« reflected*/"
*
An
Guru
author,
whom
I
have often quoted,
says,
Govind gave the following injunctions to his
followers
:
"
It is right to slay a
Muhammedan
wher-
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
188
The Dasama Padshah ka Grant'h of
Guru Govind which
I
appears, from the extracts
have seen of
passages.
Its
it,
to
abound
in fine
author has borrowed largely
from the Sastras of the Brahmens, and the
He
Koran.
accepted of like
God
of his
that
Sanscrit
and grounds
his faith,
upon the
God; whose power and
he however describes by so
appears often
from
Hindu mythology,
difficult to
that
their gross idolatry.
taken
from
it
separate his purer
He, how-
ever, rejects all worship of images,
opinion
many
names, and with such constant
allusions to the
belief
;
as a holy saint,
predecessors,
adoration of one attributes
Nanac
praises
on an
one of the ancient
Vedas, which declares, " that to worship
" ever you meet him.
" him and "
among
plunder
you.
If
him,
you meet a Hindu, beat and divide
Employ your constant
" the countries ruled by
his
effort to
Muhammedans.
" oppose you, defeat and slay them."
property destroy If they
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. " an idol
made
" as foolish as "
is
139
of wood, earth, or stone,
it is
impious
;
for
God
is
alone
deserving of adoration."
The
great points,
G6ru Govind
by which
however,
has separated his followers
from the Hindus, are those which
for ever
have been before stated
;
—
-the
destruction
of the distinction of casts, the admission of proselytes,
and the rendering the pursuit of
arms not only admissible, but the duty of the
all his
Hindus,
followers.
Whereas, among
agreeable
to
Sastra, (one of the
the
an occupation,
is
occa-
A
Brah-
allowed to obtain a livelihood by
is
arms,
all
their
only lawful to
the Cshatriya or military tribe.
men
Dherma
most revered of
sacred writings,) carrying arms on sions, as
religious
if
The
he can by no other mode.
Vaisya and Sudra are not allowed to make
arms
their profession,
them
in self-defence.
The
though they
sacred book of
may
Guru Govind
is
use
not
confined to religious subjects, or tales of
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
190
Hindu mythology,
related in his
but abounds in accounts
own way
of the battles
which he fought, and of the actions which were performed by the most valiant of followers.
Courage
is,
throughout
placed above every other virtue vind, like
;
work,
and G6-
Muhammed, makes martyrdom
for the faith
and most
this
his
which he taught, the shortest
certain road to
honour in
this
world, and eternal happiness in the future.
The opinion which Govind
will
the Sikhs entertain of
be best collected from
their
most esteemed authors. " Gurti Govind Singh/' one* of those writers
states,
" Avatar.
" himself,
He
own
appeared
sect,
He
eternal,
the
tenth
and incom-
established the Khalsa,
and, by exhibiting singular
" energy, leaving the hair on " seizing the
as
meditated on the Creator
invisible,
" prehensible. " his
"
scimitar,
he
his
head, and
smote
* B'hai Gtirvi Das Bhale.
every
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. " wicked person.
He bound
" of chastity round his
loins,
igi
the garment
grasped the
" sword of valour, and, passing the true " word of victory,
" the
became
" Devatas,
he
his foes,
" punishment
;
inflicted
on them
and, with great success,
" fused the sublime
in
and seizing the
of combat;
field
victorious
Guru
dif-
Jap (a mystical
" form of prayer composed by
" vind) through the world.
Guru G6As he was
" born a warlike Singh, he assumed the " blue dress
" Turks, " (God).
;
and, by destroying the wicked
he exalted
No
the
name
of Hari
Sirdar could stand in battle
" against him, but
all
of them fled
" whether Hindu Rajas, or
;
and,
Muhammedan
" lords, became like dust in his presence. "
The mountains,
hearing of him, were
" struck with terror
;
the whole world was
" affrighted, and the people fled from their
" habitations.
In short, such was
" that they were
all
his
fame,
thrown into conster-
" nation, and began to say,
'
Besides thee.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
192 "
O
Sat Guru!
" danger/ "
no
is
dispeller
of
and displayed
seized
no person could
sword,
his
there
— Having
his
resist
" might."
The same
author, in a subsequent pas-
a very characteristic account
gives
sage,
of that
of hostility which the religion
spirit
of Guru Govind breathed
hammedans it
against the
and of the manner
;
treated those sacred writings,
in
Mu-
which
upon which
most of the established usages of Hindus are grounded.
"
By
" great
" ledge.
command
the
of the Eternal, the
Guru disseminated Full of strength
the true
know-
and courage, he
" successfully established the Khalsa (or
"
Thus,
state).
at
founding
once
the
" sect of Singh, he struck the whole world
" with awe
:
overturning temples and sacred
" places, tombs and mosques, he levelled " them
all
with the plain
:
rejecting the
" Vedas, the Purans, the six Sastras, and " the
Koran
;
he
abolished
the
cry
of
;
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. "
Namaz (Muhammedan the Sultans lords
193
prayer),
and slew
reducing the Mirs and Pirs
;
priests of the
and
Muham-
*
(the
'
medans) to
1
their sects; the
'
the
'
and found no
<
The Brahmens,
'
Jotishis (or astrologers),
'
relish for
4
ped stones and temples, and forgot the
6
Supreme.
he overturned
silence,
Moullahs
from
benefit
their studies.
Pandits,
the
worldly things
these
and
the
had acquired a :
they worship-
two
the
sects,
8
Muhammedan
4
volved in delusion and ignorance,
and Hindu, remained
the third sect of the purity.
and
(professors),
were confounded,
Kazis (judges),
Thus
all
When,
at
in-
when
Khalsa originated in the
order of
Guru
Govind, the Singhs seized and displayed the
scimitar,
then
subduing
all
their
enemies, they meditated on the Eternal
and, as soon as the order of the
High was manifested
Most
in the world, cir-
cumcision ceased, and the Turks trembled,
when they saw
the ritual of
Mu-
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
194 "
hammed
destroyed
:
then the
Nakara
" (large drum) of victory sounded through-
" out the world, and fear and dread were " abolished.
Thus
" established,
and
the
third
was
sect
greatly
increased
in
" might."
These
extracts,
and what
stated, will sufficiently
have before
I
show the character
of the religious institutions of vind
;
Guru G6-
which were admirably calculated to
awaken, through the means of fanaticism, a
of
spirit
courage
and
independence,
among men who had been ages,
with to
society,
that
which
degraded they
believe themselves born.
Govind sought, could
content,
for
condition
in
were
taught
to
The end which
not, perhaps,
have
been attained by the employment of other Exhortations respecting their
means.
civil
rights,
and the wrongs which they
tained,
would have been wasted on minds
enslaved
by
superstition,
sus-
and who could
only be persuaded to assert themselves men.
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. by an impression
that
is
was the
it
Heaven they should do
195
so.
will of
His success
a strong elucidation of the general cha-
racter of the race,
Hindu
That
natives of India.
though in general mild and peaceable,
take the most savage and ferocious turn,
when roused
to
action
by the influence
of religious feeling. I
have mentioned,
in the narrative part
this
Sketch, the attempt of the Bairagi
Banda
to alter the religious institutions of
of
Guru Govind, and
its failure.
The
tribe
of
who have now assumed
Acalis (immortals),
a dictatorial sway in
all
the religious cere-
monies at Amritsar, and the Nirmala and Shahid,
who
read the sacred writings,
hereafter introduce
some changes
usages which the Sikhs revere
probable that the
spirit
:
may
in those
but
it
is
of equality, which
has been hitherto considered as the vital principle of the Khalsa or
and which makes
own
all
commonwealth,
Sikhs so reluctant to
either a temporal or spiritual leader,
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS.
196
tend greatly to preserve their
will
tutions from invasion
a
tradition
by the
which
is
and
Sikhs,
and
:
stated, in
is
it
believed
universally
been
indeed,
has,
serted in their sacred writings, that
Govind, when he was asked by
who surrounded
lowers,
whom he would
insti-
in-
Guru
his
fol-
his death-bed, to
leave his authority
?
replied,
have delivered over the Khalsa (com-
'
I
'
mon wealth)
'
have been your guide, and
'
serve
'
to
'
to the state,
you
its
to
God, who never
dies.
I
will still pre-
read the Grant'h, and attend
;
tenets
;
and whoever remains true
him
From
will I aid."
these
dying words of Guru Govind, the Sikhs believe themselves to have been placed, their last
and most revered prophet, under
the peculiar care of
ment
to
this
them
to
consider
monwealth)
God
:
mysterious
a
as
an impression serious
by
is
obstacle,
the
and
principle,
Khalsa
theocracy
likely to if
their attach-
not
;
leads
(or
com-
and
such
oppose a very an
insuperable
SKETCH OF THE SIKHS. to
barrier, chiefs,
the
designs
who may
establish
of any
hereafter
197 of their
endeavour to
an absolute power over the whole
nation.
THE END.
Printed by J. Moyeg, Greville Street, London.