Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Hindu-Sikh Unity: Children of a Common Mother, Writes Dr. Shinder Purewal

Dr. Shinder Purewal, 19 Nov, 2019 07:29 PM

    This year marked 550th year of Guru Nanak’s birth anniversary. Born in a Punjabi Hindu Khatri family, the founder of Sikhism created a new identity of his followers with a progressive message of attaining salvation by earning honest living, sharing it with the less fortunate and always remembering the Creator.


    He also preached against rites and rituals, the caste hierarchy, and gender inequality. In other words, he created a following among his disciples based on a new philosophy of enlightenment, and started a tradition of appointing successors, which ended with the call of the tenth Guru Gobind Singh’s message to his Sikhs to follow Guru Granth Sahib as the Living Guru.

     

    Notwithstanding the emergence of a new identity, the relationship of a common bond between Hindu community and Sikh community has remained cordial and peaceful despite some testing times. In one of the worst periods for Sikhs during Mughal Emperor Farrukhsiyar’s call to kill all Sikhs in 1713, the Punjabi Hindu mothers started raising their eldest son as a Sikh, a Sardar and a Khalsa to fight against Mughal tyranny and invading hordes.

     

    The elder son fought against the genocide order of the Mughals and invading Afghan forces to protect the motherland, and its customs and traditions.


    When martyred, the Hindu mother would ask her second son to join the Khalsa Panth. Just like the elder son, she would bless the second son with a quote from Gurbani: Soora So Pehchaanea, Jo Lare Deen Ke Het, Purja Kat Mare, Kabooh Na Chhode Khet (He alone is a brave who fights under religious command, and would rather be cut into pieces than leaving the battlefield).


    This determined force of the brave not only put an end to Mughal rule in Punjab but also stopped the invading hordes of Afghans. As a result, this new force of the Khalsa created the mighty empire of Maharaja Ranjit Singh.

    However, the region again came under the rule of foreigners- the British. Their departure created one of the worst humanitarian crisis in 1947. The largest migration of humans in the 20th century took the lives of a million people.


    During this madness, the neighbours killed neighbours, women were raped and children lost their childhood. The provocation was created by the British colonialists without any system to process the migration of communities from both sides of the newly created India-Pakistan border.


    During this disaster, both Hindu and Sikh communities joined hands to leave their ancestral homes, lands and possessions in West Punjab. Children of a common mother came back to live as neighbours in Eastern Punjab and many other parts of India.

    Despite this common history, culture and family bonds, the divisive forces have never given up to divide blood brothers. In independent India, the worst decade and half (1978-1993) for both communities witnessed horrible violence, which includes army action against the Golden Temple and the Delhi massacres of 1984.


    Individuals were targeted by terrorists, and group shootings in buses, trains and common places became the norm. However, even during this period of lawlessness, there was not a single incident of spontaneous violence between the two communities in Punjab: Hindus and Sikhs.

     

    The tradition of Hindu families having the elder son adopting Khalsa Rehat has continued in many Punjabi families to date despite provocations from both sides with vested political interests; for example, the former Chief Minister of Delhi, Late Madan Lal Khurana’s elder brother is a Khalsa Sikh.


    Both Hindus and Sikhs of Punjab have experienced many common challenges in their history, but they have always risen to the occasion to face them as a united front. Based on their shared history, values and beliefs, they are likely to stay united like a granite stone because they are children of a common mother.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Auditor Says Tighter Expense Rules, Oversight Needed At B.C. Legislature

    VICTORIA - British Columbia's auditor general says the province's legislature must set higher standards for expense reporting by top administrative officials following allegations of spending abuses made by Speaker Darryl Plecas.    

    B.C. Auditor Says Tighter Expense Rules, Oversight Needed At B.C. Legislature

    B.C. Premier John Horgan To Discuss State Of Logging Road Bus Took Before Deadly Crash

    VICTORIA - British Columbia Premier John Horgan is expected to meet with Indigenous leaders on Vancouver Island next week to discuss the state of a treacherous logging road where two students died in a bus crash.

    B.C. Premier John Horgan To Discuss State Of Logging Road Bus Took Before Deadly Crash

    Electronic Ticketing Comes To The Abbotsford Police Department

    Electronic Ticketing Comes To The Abbotsford Police Department
    This week, the Abbotsford Police Department’s Traffic Enforcement Unit will be using new technology to issue violation tickets.    

    Electronic Ticketing Comes To The Abbotsford Police Department

    Defence Lawyer Awaiting Information From Crown In RCMP Secrets Case

    Defence Lawyer Awaiting Information From Crown In RCMP Secrets Case
    OTTAWA - A lawyer for an RCMP employee charged with breaching the official-secrets law says he is awaiting details of the allegations from the Crown.    

    Defence Lawyer Awaiting Information From Crown In RCMP Secrets Case

    Saskatchewan Hospitals To Watch For Vaping-Related Illnesses: Health Minister

    The government of Saskatchewan is going to watch for any vaping-related illnesses in the province.

    Saskatchewan Hospitals To Watch For Vaping-Related Illnesses: Health Minister

    Canadian Cities Respond To Drive-Thru Woes

    At a transportation committee meeting this week, councillors approved the plan to construct a "traffic circle" at the end of the street and introduce a bylaw banning left turns into the restaurant's drive-thru.    

    Canadian Cities Respond To Drive-Thru Woes