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"The Palace of the Lord God is
so beautiful. Within it, there are gems, rubies, pearls and flawless diamonds. A
fortress of gold surrounds this Source of Nectar. How can I climb up to the
Fortress without a ladder? By meditating on the Lord, through the Guru,
Guru
Gobind Singh Sahib
The tenth and the last Guru or
Prophet-teacher of the Sikh faith, was born Gobind Rai Sodhi on Poh Sudi
7th, 23rd Poh 1723 Bikrami Samvat (22 December 1666) at Patna, in Bihar.
His father, Guru Tegh Bahadur, the Ninth Guru, was then travelling across
Bengal and Assam. Returning to Patna in 1670, he directed his family to
return to the Punjab. On the site of the house at Patna in which Gobind
Rai was born and where he spent his early childhood now stands a sacred
shrine, Takht Sri Harimandar Sahib, one of the five most honoured seats of
religious authority (takht, lit. throne) for the Sikhs. Gobind Rai was
escorted to Anandpur (then known as Chakk Nanaki) at the foothills of the
Sivaliks where he reached in March 1672 and there his early education
included reading and writing of Punjabi, Braj, Sanskrit and Persian
languages. He was barely nine years of age when a sudden turn came in his
life as well as in the life of entire Sikh community, he was destined to
lead. Early in 1675, a group Kashmiri Brahmans, driven to desperation by
the religious fanaticism of the Mughal General Iftikar Khan, visited
Anandpur to seek Guru Tegh Bahadur's intercession. As the Guru sat
reflecting what to do, young Gobind Rai, arriving there in company with
his playmates, asked "Why he looked so preoccupied". The father,
as records Koer Singh in his Gurbilas Patshahi 10, replied, "Grave
are the burdens the earth bears. She will be redeemed only if a truly
worthy person comes forward to lay down his head. Distress will then be
expunged and happiness ushered in." "None could be worthier than
yourself to make such a sacrifice," remarked Gobind Rai in his
innocent manner. Guru Tegh Bahadur soon aftenwards proceedcd to the
imperial capital, Delhi, and courted death on 11 November 1675.
Guru Gobind Singh was formally installed Guru on Maghar Sudi 5th (11
Maghar), 1732 Samvat (11th Nov, 1675). In the midst of his engagement with
the concerns of the community, he gave attention to the mastery of
physical skills and literary accomplishment. He had grown into a
energectic youth. He had a natural genius for poetic composition and his
early years were assiduously given to this pursuit. The Var Sri Bhagauti
Ji Ki, popularly called Chandi di Var. written in 1684, was his first
composition. The poem depicted the legendary contest between the gods and
the demons as described in the Markandeya Purana . The choice of a warlike
theme for this and a number of his later compositions such as the two
Chandi Charitras, mostly in Braj, was made to infuse martial spirit among
his followers to prepare them to stand up against injustice and tyranny.
Much of Guru Gobind Singh's creative literary work was done at Paonta, he
had founded on the banks of the River Yamuna and to which site he had
temporarily shifted in April 1685. Poetry as such was, however, not his
aim. For him it was a means of revealing the divine principle and
concretizing a personal vision of the Supreme Being that had been
vouchsafed to him. His Japu and the composition known as Akal Ustati are
in this tenor. Through his poetry he preached love and equality and a
strictly ethical and moral code of conduct. He preached the worship of the
One Supreme Being, deprecating idolatry and superstitious beliefs and
observances. The glorification of the sword itself which he eulogized as
Bhaguati was to secure fulfilment of God'sjustice. The sword was never
meant as a symbol of aggression, and it was never to be used for
self-aggrandizement. It was the emblem of manliness and self-respect and
was to be used only in self-defence, as a last resort. For Guru Gobind
Singh said in a Persian couplet in his Zafarnamah:
When all other means have failed,
It is but lawful to take to the sword.
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