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Sikhs are much adored in Pakistan

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Sikhs are much adored in Pakistan

August 21, 2009 by Ajay Bharadwaj Source: India news, World news

Lahore: There is a curious liking for Sikhs in Lahore. The moment locals see a Sikh, they warmly greet him "Sat Sri Akaal Sardar Ji!" and go out of the way to enquire about his health. Shopkeepers even feel embarrassed taking money from Sikh customers.

In a city where there are just seven Sikh families, they stand out with their turbans and flowing beard. "It's their exotic look that perhaps attracts people here," says Zaheer Hussain, a research scholar. Hussain feels Sikhs also have a lot in common with local Muslims. There are more than a dozen sub-castes that the Sikhs share with the people here. "For instance, if you have Sidhus, Randhawas, Virks and Bhattis among the Sikhs, you have them among the Muslims as well. As a result, locals feel an immediate affinity," Hussain says.

Amritsar and Lahore were known as the twin cities before the Partition. If Lahore was the cultural capital of pre-Partition Punjab, Amritsar was its business capital.

Ashraf Ali, a businessman, however, feels Sikhs are liked here for a historic reason. "We feel that in India both the Sikhs and the Muslims were not being treated fairly. So, we tend to identify ourselves with them and give them love and affection when they come here," he says.

Many equated the 1984 Operation Bluestar with the demolition of Babri mosque in 1992. They feel persecution by the Hindus binds Muslims and Sikhs.

Meanwhile, the Pakistan Evacuee Trust Board announced that more than 25,000 acres of land had been acquired in Nankana Sahib for the proposed Guru Nanak Dev International University. Asam Hashmee, chairman of the board, said a governing body had been constituted to spearhead the project.
 
I dont know about other areas but we do adore then in Peshawar :)

They are part of our lives here in the land of pathans.
 
The largest Sikh population in Pakistan is found in Peshawar, in the Northwest Frontier Province. Sikhs are also found in sizable communities in Waziristan and Swat of the Northwest Frontier Province. (unfortuantly the recent terrorism in these areas have not only affected our Muslim Pakistanis but also our Sikh Pakistanis)

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:pakistan:
 
Islamic Pakistan Proceeds to Annex Sikh Gurdwaras


All previous protestations of friendship of the Sikh community ring hollow and it is becoming increasingly clear that Islamic fundamentalist elements, who control the Government in Pakistan, have decided to appropriate unto themselves Sikh gurdwaras in Pakistan and the properties attached to them.

The Archaeological Department of Pakistan had conducted a survey of the Sikh historical gurdwaras soon after the 1947 Partition. It had listed as many as 130 important historical gurdwaras. Detailed information about these gurdwaras was later incorporated in the book "Sikh Shrines in West Pakistan" by Khan Mohammed Waliullah Khan and published by the Department of Archaeology, Govt. of Pakistan in 1962. These shrines include 28 gurdwaras built in the sacred memory of Guru Nanak Devji - Gurdwara Janam Asthan, Nankana Sahib; Gurdwara Sachcha Sauda; Gurdwara Parija Sahib, Hassan Abdal; GUrdwara Chaki Sahib, Eminabad; Gurdwara Darbar Sahib, Kartarpur; Gurdwara Bairi Sahib; Sialkot, etc. One gurdwara, Janam Asthan Guru Ram Das, Lahore, marks the memory of the fourth Guru, Sri Ram Das. Eight gurdwaras, including Gurdwara Budhu Ka Awa, Lahore; Samadh of Guru Arjan Dev; and Gurdwara Haft Madar, Sheikhupura are in the sacred memory of the fifth Guru, Sri Arjan Devji. There are twelve gurdwaras in the memory of the sixth Guru, Guru Hargobind ji.

Each of these gurdwaras has its own property in the form of agricultural land and buildings. Such land had been donated by the Sikh devotees from time to time for the maintenance and upkeep of these historical qurdwaras. Some of these gurdwaras thus have thousands of acres of land. The property of these gurdwaras is worth hundreds of crores of Rupees. This property went under the control of the Waqf Board after Partition and has since then been systematically misused and misappropriated. Except very few gurdwaras, where Sikh pilgrims from India are allowed to visit in the form of Jathas on religious/historical occasions, not a Rupee has been spent on the maintenance and upkeep of other gurdwaras by the Waqf Board. Sikh devotees, who have acquired foreign nationalities and could visit some of the gurdwaras (beyond access to Indian Sikhs), have come back with horrifying accounts These gurdwaras are not only in a bad state of disrepair but have been systematically desecrated by local residents who use them as shelter for domestic animals and as ground for Sun drying dung cakes, Shops have been set up in gurdwara premises and the essential routine of prayers is not being followed. These grand sites marking significant events in Sikh history are today hut lifeless and decrepit buildings.

Knowledge of the Sad state Of gurdwaras in Pakistan has been common place among Sikhs worldwide., There has been an intense desire among them to gain access to all the gurdwaras in Pakistan so that they can they can be surveyed before repair work is undertaken and moves are initiated with the administrntion for eviction of encroachers and for restoration of alienated kind. On its part, the Shiromani Gurdwara Prabandhak Committee (SGPC) has been demanding that the gurdwaras in Pakistan, which were part of its domain between 1929 and 1947 (when Partition took place) should be restored to it. The SGPC has made several appeals to the Pakistan Government in this regard. The intensity of the desire of Sikhs to accomplish this is amply reflected in the fact that, in prayers said twice a day, every Sikh beseeches God to bless him with free access to the gurdwaras in Pakistan so that they can be maintained as well as the gurdwaras in India.

It is worth recalling that the Sikhs had to wage a prolonged struggle to recover control of gurdwaras from corrupt Mahants, who were using the resources Of gurdwaras for personal aggrandisement. The Mahants, had taken care to keep the British on their right side. The patience and persistence of Sikhs involved in the struggle to liberate the gurdwaras was rewarded as the SGPC was formed as an elected body to run the gurdwaras. In the wake of the Partition, the Waqf Board took over charge of the gurdwaras in Pakistan and the results are for all to see. The Waqf Board has been no better than the Mahants. The resultant pain in the hearts of Sikhs is so intense that it cannot be imagined.

Three centuries have passed since the 10th Guru, Guru Gobind Singh, ordained the Khalsa. In commemorating this event recently, the entire Sikh community paid tribute to the vision of the great Guru, resolved to abide by his ministerations and undertook not to spare any effort for the preservation and advancement of Sikhism. Many world leaders, including heads of State and the governments of India, UK and Canada, have felicitated the Sikhs and made complimentary references to the honesty and integrity exhibited consistently by members of the Sikh community. At this great juncture, as all Sikhs celebrate and re-dedicate themselves to the ideals cherished by their Gurus, Pakistan has delivered a body blow to the entire Sikh Community. The Pakistan Gurdwara Prabandhak Committee (PGPC) was formed through a recent notification. Its autocratic chief, Lt. Gen. (Retd) Javed Nasir was quick to unveil his real colours as he prevented the SGPC from maintaining its traditional right to collection of offerings made by pilgrims on important religious occasions, when Jathas from India visit three gurdwaras in Pakistan.

If the Pakistan Government was sincere in its protestations of concern for the Sikh community and if it wanted to make a symbolic gesture on the occasion of the tercentenary of Khalsa, it need not have wasted its time to set up the PGPC. Without even giving up the stranglehold that it has maintained over the gurdwaras in Pakistan, it could have announced a phased programme for their restoration and repair, and for the restoration of alienated lands

Instead, it proceeded to appoint puppets from amongst Pakistani Sikhs to the PGPC, so that it could project that the Sikh Community was being allowed to run its own affairs in Pakistan. It does not need any effort to understand that neither Gyan Singh of Baluchistan, nor Ram Singh of Peshawar, nor Satnam Singh of Sindh and their three other Sikh colleagues have religious credentials and that they are but instruments in the hands of Gen. Javed Nasir. One fails to understand as to why another three Muslims have been appointed on to the PGPC. Is there an intention to Islamise the Sikhs in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, which is inexorably sliding towards obscurantism? Clearly, no discerning Sikh would regard the creation of the PGPC as a step in the right direction.

Gen. Nasir has already given away his real intentions. In an interview (April 23, 1999) to "Jung", the largest circulated Urdu daily in Pakistan, Gen. Nasir did not so much as outline any plan for the restoration of gurdwaras in Pakistan to their original glory but proceeded to suggest that the creation of the PGPC would provide a fillip to the "separatist movement" in Punjab, which, in due course, would threaten the very integrity of the Indian nation. One wonders why an experienced General should believe the myth that there is a separatist movement in Punjab and why he should lay store by a non-existent phenomenon to achieve what might be regarded as a military objective. Clearly, he is not equipped in any way to handle the affairs of gurdwaras, as he remains burdened primarily by military prooccupations.

All previous protestations of friendship of the Sikh community ring hollow and it is becoming increasingly clear that Islamic fundamentalist elements, who control the Government in Pakistan, have decided to appropriate unto themselves Sikh gurdwaras in Pakistan and the properties attached to them, so that all traces of the Sikh faith are removed from the firmament in Pakistan. Sikhs have combated such challenges in the past and will do so now. Let the Government of Pakistan and its operatives not forget that the raisom d'etre of the Sikh religion was its ability to protect the meek from oppression by Muslim rulers. The Sikh Gurus made several sacrifices in the course of their such campaign. Two of them, the 5th Guru and the 9th Guru, were martyred in the process and the four sons of the 10th Guru were brutally killed. Many other loyal adherents of the Gurus gave up their lives in the Struggle to liberate this land from the clutches of ruthless and avaricious Muslim rulers. The Sikhs maintain the spirit even today and will not hesitate to shed blood, if that should be necessary, to protect their religion and all elements of their heritage, no matter what the locale.
 
Stopped Reading right there...So much bullshit..JI is not part of the coliation and did not win any elections so far.

Well Sir, with all due respect, I find the response of stopped reading after fairly pathetic specially for the mentioned reason you did not read the report. Anyways maybe you'd like this better:

Mosque and gurdwara face off at Naulakha

* Mosque, gurdwara merely 25 feet apart
* Auqaf rules say worship places should be at least 200 feet apart
* Naulakha Bazaar president threatens to burn down gurdwara if mosque closed

By Abdul Manan

LAHORE: A shopkeeper at Naulakha Bazaar set up a mosque on the roof of his shop about a month ago, right opposite Gurdwara Shaheed Singh Singhrian without permission or a No Objection Certificate (NOC) from authorities concerned, neighbouring shopkeepers told Daily Times on Monday.

The mosque has been established on the roof of Shop 37 at Chowk Shaheed Gunj, Naulakha Bazaar. The building is owned by the Jammu and Kashmir State Property Pakistan (JKSPP). The gurdwara, on the other hand, is also a disputed property since it was constructed in 2000 on the site of the Shaheed Gunj Masjid, which had been demolished after a court order in 1935. A gurdwara had also been built on a mosque in 1762 at the site.

Distance to be kept: The recent mosque and the gurdwara are merely 25 feet apart though the Auqaf Department rules mention that all religious places should be at least 200 feet from each other.

Residents of the area, talking to Daily Times, expressed the fear that the presence of the mosque and gurdwara at such close proximity could ignite interfaith clashes. They alleged that the mosque management intended to demolish the gurdwara as their next step.

Talking to Daily Times, Haji Ejaz Hussain, who has built the mosque on the shop he leased from the JKSPP, said that his father had built the mosque eight years ago. He said the mosque did not require a NOC and that nobody had the right to object to its presence.

However, a neighbouring shopkeeper told Daily Times that Hussain had set up the mosque a month ago after constructing a large hall on the roof of his shop and a bamboo shop behind it. The other shop is also a property leased from the JKSPP. The shopkeeper said that Hussain had approached then JKSPP administrator Col (r) Sultan for permission to build the mosque three years ago, but was refused.

City Government Senior Admin Officer (SAO) Mudassir Waheed, who is head of the committee that issues NOCs for building mosques, said that no NOC had been issued from his office to Hussain or anyone in Naulakha Bazaar since 2001. He said the process for acquiring NOCs was complicated and involved clearance reports from the director general of the Lahore Development Authority (LDA), Auqaf’s district khateeb, the union council nazim concerned, the tehsil municipal officer, deputy district officer (DDO-Revenue), the district coordination officer (DCO) and the police station concerned. He said that no NOC was given for the construction of a mosque if the site posed a threat of igniting sectarianism or interfaith clashes.

Ikram Shah, technical member of the SAO’s committee that issues NOCs, said that the construction of any mosque was banned in front of any temple of gurdwara to avoid interfaith clashes.

Auqaf Religious Affairs Director General Dr Tahir Raza Bokhari said that the distance between the worship places of different religions was mentioned in the Auqaf rules. He said the Auqaf had not had any case of the sort earlier. He added that such cases should be discouraged to promote interfaith harmony.

Auqaf District Khateeb Ghulam Mustafa Saqib, who is also a member of the SAO’s committee, said that no NOC would be issued if it posed a threat of interfaith clashes.

JKSPP Administrator Muhammad Ali said that he had called Hussain, the shopkeeper, to his (the administrator’s) office within two days. He said JKSPP did not allow the tenants of its buildings to modify the structure of the building in any shape. He said that Hussain had violated JKSPP laws by constructing the mosque on the JKSPP shop.

We will burn the gurdwara: Raja Ashfaq, president of Naulakha Bazaar, said, “We did not object to the construction of Gurdwara Shaheed Singh Singhrian and no one has the right to object to our mosque now.” He said, “We will burn down the gurdwara if our mosque is closed down.”

Sikhs at the gurdwara, requesting anonymity, said that they could not object to the mosque’s presence in public because the ‘opposite party’ would pressure them to announce a rebuttal within a few days. They said that they were living ‘carefully and patiently’.

Not very rosy is it?
 
Well Sir, with all due respect, I find the response of stopped reading after fairly pathetic specially for the mentioned reason you did not read the report. Anyways maybe you'd like this better:

Mosque and gurdwara face off at Naulakha

* Mosque, gurdwara merely 25 feet apart
* Auqaf rules say worship places should be at least 200 feet apart
* Naulakha Bazaar president threatens to burn down gurdwara if mosque closed

We will burn the gurdwara: Raja Ashfaq, president of Naulakha Bazaar, said, “We did not object to the construction of Gurdwara Shaheed Singh Singhrian and no one has the right to object to our mosque now.” He said, “We will burn down the gurdwara if our mosque is closed down.”

Sikhs at the gurdwara, requesting anonymity, said that they could not object to the mosque’s presence in public because the ‘opposite party’ would pressure them to announce a rebuttal within a few days. They said that they were living ‘carefully and patiently’.

Not very rosy is it?

Who is Raja Ashfaq.....a govt minister...the president....no his just one guy with a few shops under his control and you think the sikhs are doomed.:rofl:

the article is from May 27, 2008.......have they burned down the gudwara or anything of the sort since then.....they have a full year to carry out the threat and nothing happened unlike india where by now they would have demolished the place like babri masjid.
 
Some Famous Sikh Shrines



By Maj. Gurmukh Singh

Sikh history originates from Nankana Sahib. Guru Nanak Dev, the founder of Sikh faith, was born here in 1469. The name of the place at that time was "Rai Bhoi di Talvandi". The landlord contemporary of Guru Nanak Dev was Rai Bular, who himself became a devotee of the Guru. It was renamed Nankana after the Guru. It is located in what is called Nilanwali Bar (forest where nilgais abound), and is about 75 kilometres west-south-west of Lahore. Nankana Sahib is in Sheikhupura district of Pakistan and is connected to the district town by rail and road. There are several shrines connected with the memory of Guru Nanak Dev's childhood and early youth here. Later Guru Arjan Dev and Guru Hargobind also visited Nankana Sahib and a Gurdwara was also raised subsequently in their honour.

During the Sikh rule, these Gurdwaras were richly endowed with liberal land grants (over 7,000 hectares). The management was in the hands of Udasi and Nirmala priests until the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee took over during the Gurdwara Reform Movement of 1920-25. The Gurdwaras had to be abandoned in the aftermath of the partition in 1947. They are now looked after by the Government of Pakistan. Nankana Sahib is one of the three places which can be visited periodically by bands of Sikh pilgrims with the approval of the Government of Pakistan, the other two being Panja Sahib near Hasan Abdal and Lahore. Since 1947 the traditional Sikh ardas (supplicatory prayer) has been supplemented by a single sentence:

"O Merciful and Bounteous God, ever helpful to your panth, do grant to your Khalsa ji the boon of seeing, serving and protecting Gurdwaras at Nankana Sahib and other places from which the Panth has been separated.". In these simple words the community, a minute minority in the populous Indian subcontinent, expresses its loss, its grief, its pangs of separation from its venerable, sacred, historical shrines left behind when they left their homes and hearths in circumstances beyond their control. Also, at the same time, by these words the Sikhs reaffirm their allegiance in other tenets of their faith expressed in Guru Nanak Dev's words:

"Union and separation have been created by my Lord, who having created Universe gave it pain and pleasure; but the Guru-oriented ones wearing the armour of faith are indifferent to pleasure and pain." (Adi Granth 1032)

Among the historical Sikh shrines in Pakistan, Gurudwara Panja Sahib at Hasan Abdal has an importance of its own. Hasan Abdal is a small town and a railway station along the main Lahore-Peshawar railway line in Campbelpore (or Attock) district. Close to it is a spring of cool, clean water which according to tradition was created by Guru Nanak Dev. It is said that the Guru arrived here at the end of his tour of West Asia. At that time the only source of water near this place was a reservoir at the top of the nearby hill where lived a Muslim divine Wali Kandhari. The Guru sent Mardana thrice to the Wali in order to drink and fetch some water, but every time the latter refused to oblige saying that he would not help a Muslim (Mardana was a Muslim) who followed a 'Hindu' Guru. Guru Nanak then asked Mardana to remove a stone nearby from where water sprang forth. At the same time water in Wali Kandhari's reservoir began to ebb until it was completely dry. Wali Kandhari, infuriated by the 'Hindu's' miracle, rolled down a rock towards the latter. Guru Nanak Dev, sitting unruffled, merely extended this right arm towards the rolling rock and not only the rock stopped dead, but his open palm made an imprint on it as if it was made of molten wax. Wali Kandhari, impressed by the miracle came down and bowed to the Guru asking his pardon and blessing.

Gurdwara Panja (Palm) Sahib was established during the reign of Maharaja Ranjit Singh. The foundation of the beautiful three-storey building, designed after the samadh of Maharaja Ranjit Singh in Lahore, was laid on 14th October, 1932, by five eminent holy men, Panj Piyare. Built with grey sandstone, its exterior is spotted with protruding domed bay windows. The central fluted dome is surrounded by several symmetrically placed big and small domes. Unlike the Maharaja's samadh in Lahore, it has porches covering entrances to the sanctum which stands within the sarovar that receives water gushing forth from around the rock bearing the sacred Panja Sahib or the palm-imprint of the Guru. Several other buildings for staff and pilgrims and other ancillaries were added subsequently. Guru Ka Langar at Panja Sahib was famous for the quality of food and service at all hours of day and night. Congregational fair used to be held on Baisakhi (mid-April) and on 30th October until 1947. Now only organised bands of pilgrims occasionally visit Panja Sahib with the permission of the Pakistan government. One of such regular visits coincides with the Baisakhi festival.

Baghdad, capital of Iraq, was visited by Guru Nanak Dev on his way back from Mecca and Madina. He stayed outside the city to the west of Dajala (Tigris) River, about two kilometres north of Baghdad West railway station. He held discourses with Sajjadanashins (caretaker) of the mausoleums of Abdul Qadir Gilani and Bahlol the Wise, who were greatly imp,ressed by his views on God and religion. After the Guru's departure, they raised a memorial in the form of a platform where the Guru had sat and discoursed. After some time when a room was constructed over the platform, a stone slab with the following inscription in Turki was installed in it.

"Lo! The Great God hath fulfilled the wish. A new building for Baba Nanak Darvesh has been constructed. Seven holy men extended their help in the construction. Its date as reckoned comes to 927. The lucky disciple caused a new current of water from the earth."

The last sentence is the customary phrase to work out the date according to alphabetical key. The date is 927 A.H. which corresponds to A.D. 1520.

This inscription was first noticed by Swami Anandacharya who mentioned it in his book Snow Birds. Sikh soldiers who went to Iraq during the First World War, 1914-18, raised a Gurdwara here, but now only the room exists which is visited by Sikh and non-Sikh Punjabis who work in Iraq. However, as it is located within the graveyard, visitors are banned from staying overnight, cooking meals or holding Langar and Kirtan.

Guru Nanak Dev on his way back from Mecca travelled through Afghanistan. At Kabul, the capital city, he held discourse with several Muslim holy-men. They cautioned him to be careful because he was travelling in a predominantly Muslim land. The Guru told them that God's light shines alike in all; even their bodies He made alike. A Gurdwara dedicated to Guru Nanak Dev was established in Kabul but it was demolished during the reconstruction of the city because it stood in the way of a new road.

In Jalalabad too (northeast of Kabul on the road to Peshwar), Guru Nanak Dev stayed on his return from his western udasi. Gurdwara Choha Sahib, also called Chashma Sahib Patshahi Pahili commemorates that visit.

Guru Nanak Dev and Guru Tegh Bahadur had travelled extensively through Bangladesh. Following the footprints of the first Guru, Udasi priests had established a number of Sikh shrines notably at Dacca, Sylhet and Chittagong. But only a few exist now.


Google Image Result for http://www.panjabilok.net/faith/gurudwara/images/gdw_pt.jpg

---------- Post added at 12:47 AM ---------- Previous post was at 12:46 AM ----------

Who is Raja Ashfaq.....a govt minister...the president....no his just one guy with a few shops under his control and you think the sikhs are doomed.:rofl:

Let him do what he intends. dont you know he is just trying to spoil the thread. :) let him.
 
Who is Raja Ashfaq.....a govt minister...the president....no his just one guy with a few shops under his control and you think the sikhs are doomed.:rofl:

the article is from May 27, 2008.......have they burned down the gudwara or anything of the sort since then.....they have a full year to carry out the threat and nothing happened unlike india where by now they would have demolished the place like babri masjid.

Oh, Since you find India so irresistable, you can continue with your rants. If my idea was to instigate a millionth Indo Pak debates, there are several better thready. I was simply showing the other side of coin, else what is to discuss in the thread?

Anyways, I wont bother anymoe continue your shower of love...
 
We repsect our nations sikh alot GOD bless all the people of Pakistan!
 
This is Harmandir Sahib in India. Uff. Atleast check before you post my holy places.

Gurdwara Darbar Sahab Lahore
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I am very flattered by all this love, but its quite apparent that you Pakistanis have very cynical reasons for "adoring" Indian "minorities".

Thanks, but no thanks. We are richest, most powerful community in India, and we love our homeland.
 
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