Introduction to Sikhism
The Word of God
In the early 16th century a community of disciples, called Sikhs, gathered around Guru Nanak who presented strong monotheistic teachings after receiving direct revelations from God. The Sikh community, centered in Punjab, grew under ten generations of...
Guru Nanak
When Guru Nanak was approximately 30 years old, he had what he described as a direct encounter with God. Following this experience, Nanak began preaching about the oneness of God through hymns called shabads . Nanak eventually established a village where...
Guru Nanak’s Message
Guru Nanak taught that there is one God who dwells within the human heart and can be known by the grace of the guru . Guru Nanak espoused a vision of equality across caste and religion, and he called for Sikhs to be fully socially engaged. Download (PDF)...
The Sikh Scripture
After Guru Nanak, many successive gurus worked to compile and to prepare the collection of hymns seen as the divinely inspired word of God. The tenth guru made the final revisions to the collection before naming the scripture itself as the final guru...
The Development of the Sikh Community
The Sikh community developed during Mughal reign under the ten gurus . The first four gurus led the Sikh community during a period of peace with the Mughals. During the time of the fifth guru , the Sikh community entered a period of militarized resistance...
The Khalsa
The tenth guru , Guru Gobind Singh, created a new Sikh order, the Khalsa . The members of the Khalsa were given the names Singh (for men) and Kaur (for women), wore five distinctive symbols marking them as members of the Khalsa , and were instructed to...
The Struggle for Survival
From the death of the tenth guru in 1708 until the British annexation of Punjab in 1849, the Sikhs maintained control over various parts of Punjab. At their height, the Sikhs established a kingdom which included Lahore, Amritsar, and various smaller Sikh...
Sikh Renewal and Identity
Under British rule, a number of Sikh reform movements rose in Punjab. Notably, the Sikh Gurdwaras Act of 1925 placed the management of gurdwaras under a central Sikh authority, precipitating the standardization of codes of Sikh conduct. In 1947, after...