Saroop of Adi Granth Sahib ji dictated by Guru Arjan Dev Ji to Bhai Gurdas at Kartarpur

Guru Arjun then set to compile the Shabads into a single volume, the Adi Granth. He sifted through the Shabads which had been passed down from the first four Gurus, and filtered out those which had been added by imposters. Bhai Gurdas was the scribe who recorded the words of Guru Arjun. When he asked […]

Guru Arjun then set to compile the Shabads into a single volume, the Adi Granth. He sifted through the Shabads which had been passed down from the first four Gurus, and filtered out those which had been added by imposters. Bhai Gurdas was the scribe who recorded the words of Guru Arjun. When he asked Guru Arjun how he could distinguish between the true and the false Shabads, Guru Arjun replied, “Even in a great herd of cows and calves, the mother cow will recognize the cry of her calf, above all others. Just so, the True Shabad resonates truly, and is easily distinguished from the false.”

Guru Arjun added a great many of his own Shabads to those of Guru Nanak, Guru Angad, Guru Amar Das and Guru Ram Das. He also added Shabads of thirty-six Hindu and Muslim Saints, among them Kabir, Ravi Das, Naam Dev, Trilochan and Sheikh Farid. This was the first time any religion incorporated the works of sincere devotees of other religions into its own scripture; this reflects the universality of thought which underlies the Sikh belief in One God, and the one family of humanity as children of God.

Guru Arjun left some blank pages in the Granth. When Bhai Gur Das asked the purpose of this, he answered that one of the Gurus to follow him would add the Shabads in their proper place at the proper time. In time the shabads of Guru Teg Bahadur, the ninth Manifestation of the Guru’s Light, were added by Guru Gobind Singh and thus the Siri Guru Granth Sahib was complete.

The Adi Granth was completed in 1604, and installed in the Golden Temple; Baba Buddha was appointed Guru’s Granthi. Guru Arjun told his Sikhs that the Adi Granth was the embodiment of the Guru, and should be treated in the same fashion as they respect him. When Guru Arjun first completed the Adi Granth, he placed it upon his own bed and slept on the floor. Its words were written without any spaces or breaks, which nowadays is hard for most people to follow.

Share & Spread the divinity!

The Rich Sikh Heritage Gurdwaras of Potohar, Pakistan!

A majority of the buildings which once belonged to the Sikhs and Hindus were given to immigrants from India. These families still live in these buildings, but surprisingly the structures and the artwork on the walls are still intact. Several Hindu and Sikh monuments; temples and Gurdwaras have been discovered gracing the landscape of this […]

A majority of the buildings which once belonged to the Sikhs and Hindus were given to immigrants from India. These families still live in these buildings, but surprisingly the structures and the artwork on the walls are still intact.

Several Hindu and Sikh monuments; temples and Gurdwaras have been discovered gracing the landscape of this region. Three of the Gurdwaras are located at Kanoha, Doberan Kalan and Mohara Bhatta, and are especially noted for their elegance and paintings. Of these, the Sikh Gurdwara located 10 kilometres from Kallar Syedan at Kanoha is the most prominent.

Historically, the Gurdwara has been used to meet the religious and social needs of the Sikh community here. Guru Hargobind, the sixth guru of Sikhs (1606-1644), was believed to have first used the word ‘Gurdwara’.

Before that, the name used for such structures was ‘dhramsala’, which means a rest house for travellers in its normal Indian context, but was used in the early days of Sikhism to denote a room or building used for devotional singing (kirtan) and prayers.

The gurdwara of Kanoha is a very large three-storied structure crowned with canopy – a distinctive feature of the Potohari style of gurdwara. Built on a square plain, it formerly housed Sikh families who would visit here to recite the Guru Granth Sahib and performing various religious rituals. Apart from the Kanoha Gurdwara, there is another Gurdwara located in the Doberan Kallan town.

The connection of Sant Attar Singh ji to Dhan Potohar

In 1892 Sant ji got his name struck off from the role of army and devoted himself solely to the propagation of the Guru’s message. He toured extensively in Jammu­ Kashmir, Sindh and North Western Frontier Province.

In Pothohar region, such places as Shah Di Dheri, Thamali, Kanoha, Dera Khalsa, Sagri, Malakpurj, Rawalpindi, Haripur, Kahuta, Dhan Mangwal, Chakwal, Gujjarkhan, Loom and Bhaun were the main venues of Sant Attar Singh Ji’s activities. His religious tours were a remarkable success. Quite a large number of people imbibed Sikh ethos.

Needless to say, the Punjab tourism department, should chalk out a viable strategy to promote religious tourism in the Kallar Syedan Tehsil. These wondrous and historically rich Gurdwaras can be a great tourist attraction; Sikhs who visit Gurdwara Panja Sahib at Hassan Abdal should also be able to come to here.

~ Source – dawn.com

Sikh Students get in ACTION & start an Anti – Bullying Campaign for Victimized Youth in US!

Japjee Singh, a 17-year-old Sikh student in Georgia, who had been bullied because of his religion since the second grade. The issue escalated once he began middle school and continued into high school. Students would call him names, refer to his turban as a “bomb,” or suggest he was a terrorist. A group of students […]

Japjee Singh, a 17-year-old Sikh student in Georgia, who had been bullied because of his religion since the second grade. The issue escalated once he began middle school and continued into high school.

Students would call him names, refer to his turban as a “bomb,” or suggest he was a terrorist. A group of students once beat Japjee multiple times, leaving him with a broken nose, fractured chin, and bruised body.

“This is something we haven’t been able to forget,” Aasees Kaur, Japjee’s 20-year-old sister, told ThinkProgress in a phone interview. “He was sitting there with blood all over him and an ice pack in his hand and kids were telling him ‘go back to your country.’ When kids are saying such harsh things, it really broke my family.”

Japjee required two surgeries after the beating, his sister recalled. And when he eventually came back to school, the bullying didn’t stop. One student reportedly threatened to go after Japjee and his family with “a 9-millimeter and a blade.”

Aasees said that the school never took action. Japjee lost his entire sense of belonging.

Aasees said. “These were kids that he grew up with. He went to school with them for years and now all of a sudden, he didn’t know who his friends were. They didn’t quite get the line between harassment and joking around.”

Between May 2013 and November 2014, the U.S. Department of Justice entered two settlements with the DeKalb County School District near Atlanta, Georgia on behalf of Japjee. The first agreement reached in May required DeKalb County to create a safety plan for Japjee and to train students and staff on post-9/11 backlash and discrimination. The second agreement reached in November required DeKalb County to “engage in comprehensive measures” to stop “peer-to-peer bullying” among the district’s 100,000 students, including Sikh students, according to a press release from the Sikh Coalition.

Though things have gotten better for Japjee, discrimination still hasn’t ended for their family. Aasees’ cousin is still being bullied, according to a recent interview with The Huffington Post.

But Japjee and Aasees are taking action. Two years ago, Japjee testified before Congress as part of a larger advocacy effort to end bullying against Sikh American school children. And now, the family is hoping to get their story out.

Japjee’s case is part of a larger issue that the White House Initiative on Asian American and Pacific Islanders (WHIAAPI) is trying to address through its launch of an anti-bullying campaign this week to combat bullying against Asians and to empower students to report, stop, and prevent bullying. The Sikh Coalition and the Coalition of Asian Pacifics in Entertainment (CAPE) are campaign partners.

WHIAAPI’s Act to Change public awareness website includes YouTube videos of Asian celebrities like Charlotte Hornets basketball player Jeremy Lin and actor Maulik Pancholy talking about being bullied. It also provides resources in Chinese, Hindi, Korean, Punjabi, Urdu, and Vietnamese. The campaign calls on the public to take a pledge to end bullying or to help someone who has been bullied.

“Bullying is a major civil rights issue for the Asian American and Pacific Islander community in particular,” Initiative Executive Director Kiran Ahuja said in a press statement. “We’ve seen too often AAPI groups, including Sikh, Muslim, Micronesian, LGBT, and limited English proficient youth, targeted for bullying and harassment.”

Aasees believes that the campaign could help people like her brother and other bystanders raise their voices against bullying. She said that the multilingual resources would be important for some parents who may not read English fluently so that they would be able to know what to do with when their children are bullied. But the presence of the campaign would also let students know that they’re not alone.

“There are thousands of Japjees out there who haven’t spoken out yet,” Aasees said. “There are thousands of Japjees out there who don’t know what to do. This campaign will really let them know that they have a tremendous amount of support behind them and could be a guide for what they should do if they’re being bullied.”

In a 2014 Sikh Coalition survey of 500 Sikh students and focus groups with over 700 students, researchers found that over 50 percent of Sikh children endured school bullying, with 67 percent of turbaned Sikh children saying that they are bullied in school. Nationally, about 32 percent of all children ages 12 and 18 reported that they were bullied in school. What’s more, 50 percent of Asian American students in New York City public schools reported biased-based harassment, a statistic that could be under-reported.

Over the past 15 years, public consciousness has been raised about bullying and multiple states have moved to pass legislation to address the issue. According to a recent study published by JAMA Pediatrics, students living in states that have passed anti-bullying laws reported lower levels of bullying.

“School systems and community outreach programs and parents really need to partner up strongly with under-represented communities to make sure that our children are better protected, that their needs are being met,”

Aasees said. “Parents have a responsibility too, so it’s a matter of education in both the home and the school to teach about bullying. Kids like Japjee only have one childhood. When you see kids that withdrawn, it breaks you.”

A Campaign which will inspire them NOT TO LOOSE their Sense of Belongingness!

~ Source: thinkprogress.org

First Sikhs Remembrance Visit to Helles Memorial in Gallipoli, Turkey!

By early 1915, the war on the Western Front had reached a stalemate. The Gallipoli campaign was intended to break the deadlock. In the spring of 1915, Allied warships bombarded the peninsula’s costal forts and attempted to force their way through the narrow Dardanelles Straits, controlled by the forces of the Ottoman Empire. On 18th […]

By early 1915, the war on the Western Front had reached a stalemate. The Gallipoli campaign was intended to break the deadlock. In the spring of 1915, Allied warships bombarded the peninsula’s costal forts and attempted to force their way through the narrow Dardanelles Straits, controlled by the forces of the Ottoman Empire. On 18th March, three Allied battleships were lost to mines and naval attack was abandoned.

A 70,000 strong Mediterranean Expeditionary Force was assembled, comprising British, Canadian, Indian and French troops, along with the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC).

Its mission was to seize the peninsula, opening the Straits for Allied warships which could attack Constantinople (now Istanbul), taking the Ottoman Empire out of the war, and opening up a route to provide Russia with much needed supplies.

The Allies landed on the peninsula on 25-26 April 1915; the 29th Division at Cape Helles in the south and the Australian and New Zealand Corps north of Gaba Tepe on the west coast, an area known as Anzac.

On 6 August, further landings were made at Suvla, just north of Anzac, and the climax of the campaign came in early August when simultaneous assaults were launched on all three fronts. However, the difficult terrain and stiff Turkish resistance soon led to the stalemate of trench warfare. From the end of August, no further serious action was fought and the lines remained unchanged.

Despite a major offensive in August 1915, the Allies were unable to break the deadlock. An evacuation began in December and on 9th January 1916, the last Commonwealth soldier left the peninsula.

The United Kingdom and Indian forces named on the Helles memorial died in operations throughout the peninsula, the Australians at Helles. There are also panels for those who died or were buried at sea in Gallipoli waters. The memorial bears more than 21,000 names.

Few of us are aware of the role Sikh soldiers played in the Gallipoli campaign that ran from April 25, 1915 to January 9, 1916.

Being subjects of the Crown under British rule in India, Sikhs and Indians had no choice but to participate in WW1, a war that was certainly not of their making and a war that they were sent to fight in simply because they were recruits of the British Indian Army.

The Gallipoli campaign cost the lives of some 36,000 Commonwealth, 10,000 French and at least 86,000 Turkish troops. 1,358 Indians died and some 3,421 were injured in the Gallipoli campaign.

Records tell us that 371 who died fighting at Gallipoli on June 3 and 4, 1915, were from the battalion of the 14th Sikh regiment. General Sir Ian Hamilton was in charge of the troops against the Turks during that operation and he wrote glowingly of this regiment that fought valiantly.

In a letter to his Commander-in-Chief back in India, he wrote: “In spite of the tremendous losses there was not a sign of wavering all day. Not an inch of ground was given up and not a single straggler came back.

“The ends of the enemy’s trenches were found to be blocked with the bodies of Sikhs and of the enemy who died fighting at close quarters, and the glacis slope was thickly dotted with the bodies of these fine soldiers all lying on their faces as they fell in their steady advance on the enemy.

“The history of Sikhs affords many instances of their value as soldiers, but it may be safely asserted that nothing finer than the grim valour and steady discipline displayed by them on the 4th of June has ever been done by soldiers of the Khalsa.

“Their devotion to duty and their splendid loyalty to their orders and to their leaders make a record their nation should look upon with pride for many generations.”

The names of the 14 K.G.O. Ferozepore Sikhs, 15th Ludhiana Sikhs, 51st ,53rd 54th Sikhs and others are on the panels at the Helles memorial. 56th Punjabi rifles, 90th, 92nd ,66th, 69th,89th Punjabies, 28th Mountain Battery, 23rd Peshawar MTN.BTY, 26th Jacob’s MTN.BTY, 27th Mountain Battery, Indian Army Res of offrs and 21st Kohat MTN BTY are some panels in which Sikh names are engraved.

The Ferozepur Sikhs fought true to their reputation. In the Battle of Krithia, they led frenzied charges on Terkish trenches. A Times of India (newspaper) detailed how the Sikhs, despite facing heavy losses in face of heavy machinegun and rifle fire, led a bayonet charge on the Turkish trenches facing them and killed the defenders. But this bravery cost them dear: the battalion lost 82% of its strength and had to be attached to a Gurkha battalion until they were reinforced by Patiala state troops.

We must make special efforts to perpetuate the memory of all the valiant soldiers who laid down their lives including the Sikh regiments that fought alongside the Australian and New Zealanders at Gallipoli.

Remembering and honouring the fallen is the greatest tribute we can give to all those who gave their lives for our tomorrow.

The purpose of the remembrance gathering is also to raise awareness.

We need to know that the Sikh soldiers also made a contribution, similar to other nations of the world, to help bring peace and freedom for people in Europe by sacrificing their lives in large numbers, especially in Gallipoli.

~ Source: Facebook.com

GurSIKH Candidates FINALLY made a Historic entry into the Canadian Parliament!

With the spectacular win of Liberal Party in the federal elections, several turbaned Sikh MPs and five South Asian women have made a historic entry into Canadian parliament. They are among 15 South Asian Liberal MPs elected in the 42nd parliamentary election. Among the turbaned Sikh MPs are Navdeep Singh Bains and Raj Grewal from […]

With the spectacular win of Liberal Party in the federal elections, several turbaned Sikh MPs and five South Asian women have made a historic entry into Canadian parliament. They are among 15 South Asian Liberal MPs elected in the 42nd parliamentary election.

Among the turbaned Sikh MPs are Navdeep Singh Bains and Raj Grewal from Ontario. Bains has served as MP in the past.

Likewise, two turbaned Sikh MPs Harjit Singh Sajjan and Randeep Singh Sarai have been elected from BC.

In Alberta Darshan Singh Kang was elected, while the first turbaned Sikh minister in the previous Conservative government Tim Uppal has been defeated by Amarjit Sohi of the Liberal Party. Uppal was also from Alberta which is considered as Conservative hotbed.

Interestingly, the previous government’s decision to ban niqab during citizenship oath ceremonies did not sit well with the minorities. If the victories of five turbaned Sikh Liberal MPs is any indication, it was a clear mandate against ban on religious symbols.

~ Source: Hindustan Times

“Sikh Lives Matter” has now been used more than 40,000 times – BBC!

After the deaths of two protesters in India, Sikhs around the world have been using online protest tactics to highlight what they say is injustice – and one supporter went off-topic on a BBC TV programme to make his case. “Sikh Lives Matter” has now been used more than 40,000 times, has spread to other […]

After the deaths of two protesters in India, Sikhs around the world have been using online protest tactics to highlight what they say is injustice – and one supporter went off-topic on a BBC TV programme to make his case.

“Sikh Lives Matter” has now been used more than 40,000 times, has spread to other social networks such as YouTube and Facebook, and was surging again on Monday.

When pages of the Guru Granth Sahib, Sikhism’s central text, were found ripped up, protests spread across the Indian state of Punjab. Police used water cannons, batons and live rounds to disperse the crowds, and at one protest last week police opened fire, leaving at least two dead and more than 50 injured, according to reports. One of those shot, 27-year-old Gurjit Singh, had reportedly gone to give food to the protesters, according to an interview with his father by the Indian Express newspaper. Online and in the streets, a movement quickly sprang up. Tweets showing his body, and photos of other injured protesters were shared widely along with the hashtag “Sikh Lives Matter” on Twitter.

In the UK the campaign got another shot of notoriety when Jagmeet Singh – representing a Sikh point of view and from the educational charity Basics of Sikhi – appeared on BBC One’s Sunday Morning Live programme. After a studio debate about interfaith marriage, Singh went off-topic, stood up in front of the camera and interrupted presenter Sian Williams, saying: “Sikhs are being killed in Punjab and nobody is reporting it, please report it.”

Online, protest messages are coming not only from India but from large Sikh communities abroad – especially the UK. One of the first people to re-ignite the hashtag’s popularity was Bally Singh, based in Wolverhampton, who tweeted: “Police violence towards our peaceful Sikh protestors should not go unnoticed.”

“Sikh Lives Matter”, which borrows its language from US protest movements such as “Black Lives Matter” and “Muslim Lives Matter,” actually began in the US too – where it originally was used to highlight the bullying of Sikh children who are sometimes confused with Muslims. But it’s been used in recent days to highlight the events in India and rail against Western media reporting, a big theme of the protests. A petition to the BBC on Change.org has received more than 70,000 signatures. It calls for more coverage of the story and for coverage of India’s treatment of its Sikh citizens.

“The BBC is covering this story online and on radio and it has been discussed on the BBC Asian Network,” the BBC press office said in a statement. The story has also been covered by the BBC’s Hindi language service.

~ Source- bbc.com

How Heroic Tales of SIKH GURUS are helping Christians to FIGHT FORCED CONVERSIONS!

Sikh Guru’s are revered by people from many faiths and in Pakistan, they are the inspirational force for the minority Christian community which is being forced to embrace Islam by fundamentalists. Recently an incident took place in which a Christian family of Gujjranwala district in Pakistan’ Punjab province blatantly refused to accept Islam stating that […]

Sikh Guru’s are revered by people from many faiths and in Pakistan, they are the inspirational force for the minority Christian community which is being forced to embrace Islam by fundamentalists.

Recently an incident took place in which a Christian family of Gujjranwala district in Pakistan’ Punjab province blatantly refused to accept Islam stating that they would not bow to their dictates, quoting examples of Sikh Guru’s.

President of British Pakistani Christian Association, Wilson Chaudhary, told TOI over the phone from UK on Monday that forced conversions are unfair. “You failed to convert Sikh Guru’s to embrace Islam, so why try converting us? This is what Christians reply to fundamentalists who force them to embrace Islam,” he said.

Quoting a recent incident, he informed that Akash and Adnan, both sons of Aftab Gill, 40, resident of Railway Colony in Wazirabad in Gujaranwala district refused to bow down to the threats of local fundamentalists by giving examples of Sikh Gurus. The family was forced to embrace Islam since they fetched water for household use from a nearby mosque’s tap.

“The exploits of first Sikh master Guru Nanak who was born in Pakistan’s Punjab province are commonly quoted. In a time of socio-political turmoil, he bravely shared his message of hope, peace and love, travelling into dangerous territory at the time when Babar was conquering India. He even found himself imprisoned for a short time and other Sikh Gurus bravely opposed forced conversions, ” he said adding that their volunteers inspire Christian community with the inspiring and heroic tales of Sikh Gurus.

He said following Christians rising against their persecution and giving example of Sikh Gurus, the fundamentalists didn’t turn up again but a local Muslim cleric advised Aftab to leave the village for safety.

“Life for Christians in Pakistan is now worse than ever. They are attacked daily and treated worse than rats. At this time, examples of Sikh Gurus have been helping Christians to voice their concerns bravely,” he said.

Source- Times Of India

Sikhs share LANGAR with Thousands at The Parliament of World’s Religion, USA!

The scent of curry wafted from a conference hall in Salt Lake City, Utah, Saturday as thousands lined up for LANGAR at the Parliament of the World’s Religions, an international gathering that, every five years, brings together thousands of people from different religious and spiritual traditions. Nishkam Centre, a U.K.-based Sikh organization, hosted the free […]

The scent of curry wafted from a conference hall in Salt Lake City, Utah, Saturday as thousands lined up for LANGAR at the Parliament of the World’s Religions, an international gathering that, every five years, brings together thousands of people from different religious and spiritual traditions.

Nishkam Centre, a U.K.-based Sikh organization, hosted the free lunch with the help of dozens of volunteers.

Orderly queues, barefoot, heads covered, sitting in Pangat; the diverse world enjoys Guru Nanak’s Free Kitchen ie. Langar.

People from other faiths remarked that this it was the perfect message of Inter-Faith and Oneness.

“You are about to eat food that has been blessed, and so we cover our heads out of respect,” one volunteer told The Huffington Post.

Geetika Kaur, another volunteer, stood at the front of the line offering a quick explanation of the langar tradition to those about to partake in the feast.

“The gurus started this tradition to say, ‘Regardless of who you are, where you come from, what your background is, you’re welcome into this space,'” Kaur told HuffPost. People are encouraged to break bread together, she added, and “share that common humanity that binds all of us together.”

Langar meals were offered every day of the five-day conference. Amrick Singh Ubhi, the director of Nishkam Centre, estimated that up to 6,000 people had been fed on Saturday alone.

Thousands partook of a free langar meal on Saturday, Oct. 17, 2015, during the Parliament of the World’s Religions.

“In modern day terms it is simply a case of equality,” he continued. “It doesn’t matter if you arrived in your private jet outside or whether you had to scrounge money together to get bus fare to get here. We’re all equal before God.”

Once diners got to the front of the line they were invited to sit on the ground and were offered a plate, spoon and cup. One by one, volunteers came by dispensing spoonfuls of vegetable curry, raita, rice and salad from giant buckets. They handed out naan, apple and banana slices and poured generous cups of water and mango lassi. Anyone who desired another helping of food needed only to ask to receive it.

The langar meal included two types of curries, rice, raita (a side dish made from yogurt), salad, naan (an Indian flatbread) and mango lassi.

“We sit on the floor in order to sit amongst equals,” Singh Ubhi said. “It is about keeping good company.”

For William Hwang, an educator who lives in San Diego, the langar was more than a shared meal. It was a form of spiritual fellowship that “feeds your body and feeds your soul.”

Source- huffingtonpost.com

The Way to Establish Permanent Peace – Baru Sahib

When sins soil the soul,

Prayer alone shall make it whole,

Words do not the saint or sinner make,

Action alone is written in the book of fate.

The way to permanent peace.

It was the beginning of the 20th century and India’s struggle for freedom was at its peak. There was suffering all around and not a ray of hope was at hand to eliminate the avalanche of pain. In the year 1906, the legendary saint of his time, Sant Attar Singh Ji, envisioned the creation of a higher humanity through the blend of moral and modern scientific education. To establish permanent peace and bring solace to all beings, he conceptualized this mission statement:

To establish permanent peace in the world through value-based education and spiritual rejuvenation creating good global citizens.

To translate Sant Attar Singh Ji’svision into reality, his Harvard educated devotee Sant Teja Singh Ji, in 1956, revealed the hither to unknown Tapo Bhumi, a meditation site, ensconced in the midst of seven mountains in the pristine environment of Himachal Pradesh.

This was Baru Sahib, the valley of Divine Peace.

Sant Teja Singh Ji traveled around the world and broadened the context of the vision. In the early 60’s, he laid the foundation of The Kalgidhar Society.Taking the lead further, Baba Iqbal Singh Ji, in 1986, settled down in Baru Sahib after completing a distinguished innings as the Director of Agriculture of Himachal Pradesh. Thus began the brick by brick building of this glorious organization, from mere 6 students in 1987 to 60,000 today. In 1987, he started the first educational institute, the Akal Academy, a residential, co-educational school, under the aegis of The Kalgidhar Society. Today, The Kalgidhar Society is a charitable organization that supports education, healthcare, social welfare and relief and rehabilitation by building schools, hospitals and welfare centers in rural India. The Society annually benefits the lives of more than 500,000 people of rural, backward and underprivileged in remote areas of Northern India.

The Akal Academy has evolved into a network of 129 Akal Academies, where around 60,000 students are being imparted quality education. The Society is focused on rural areas, where it is difficult to find quality educational institutes. Moreover, parents can hardly support the education of their wards. So, it is the Society that has to motivate and even sponsor the child’s learning. All the Akal Academies are run on subsidies provided by The Kalgidhar Society, where the facilities of E-Classrooms have been provided in the rural areas. The recent establishment of IB School at Baru Sahib is the first IB School in Northern India apart from National Capital Region, Delhi.

The education of the girl child is high on the organization’s agenda. The Society not only sponsors the education of underprivileged rural girls but also takes care of their boarding, lodging and even higher education, addressing the burning social issues such a female feticide and infanticide. Besides the Elementary Teacher Training, these girls are also given training in stitching and tailoring. The entire program is FREE of cost and The Kalgidhar Society bears expenses of boarding, lodging and training, which comes to about Rs. 60,000/- per student per year.

The Society emphasizes on imparting moral and value-based education, blending it with modern scientific knowledge, because scientific study in isolation, the society believes, becomes the root cause of mass destruction.
Music, culture and tradition have always been a part of eternal play. The Society started the divine college of music, resurrecting ancient musical instruments, which were devised and used by the Gurus. Today, the Society is home to a 32-member string or chestra. Students, with their sincerity and dedication, play soul-stirring and vibrating music to give us a true spiritual experience.

The focus of The Kalgidhar Society today is Punjab.As the food basket of India is going through another unproductive phase. The Society, through its various initiatives, is helping Punjabis to acquire knowledge to distinguish between right from wrong.Under the project NVLV, that is ‘no village left behind’, The Kalgidhar Society aims to take value-based quality education to 12763 villages in Punjab. Donors approach the Society and donate land foropening branches of Akal Academy in their respective villages, so that they can have their share of education and prosperity. Almost invariably, the district topperin the CBSE examination is anAkal Academian. Our alumni from villages have gone to CASA to become astronaut, cleared IIT with All India ranks of even 65 and placed in MNCs. Each student of Akal Academy is a role model, who influences the life of 35 to 40 people around him. They help in building a drug-free society by organizing anti-drug rallies and influencing their families. More than 8150 alumni of Akal Academies studying in various countries are today messengersof peace.

The free education scheme of The Kalgidhar Society is benefitting hundreds of rural poor students, especially the children of Granthis.

About one-third of people of India, particularly those living in tribal areas, have a critical health status. Long distances have to be covered to avail even the most basic medicine facilities. The Kalgidhar Society has established Akal Charitable Hospital, a 280-bed hospital in the remote rural hilly areas of Himachal Pradesh, to provide integrated health services to neglected communities.In addition to the routine services, the hospital organizes free medical camps five times a year. More than 6927 patients benefit from each of these camps, in which specialists from different parts of India and abroad, volunteer their services virtually at their door steps.
Under the green initiative, solar plants have been installed at Baru Sahib and other branches of Akal Academy. In future, Baru Sahib is to be transformed into a solar valley. The tree-plantation drive on a large scale has been taken up by the students in all Akal Academies.

Baba Iqbal Singh Ji and his team are well aware of the growing epidemic of drug abuse in Punjab. Through de-addiction centers at Cheema and Jharon, the Society is trying its best to counter it. These centers have a success rate of 70% because of the inherent spiritual component. This makes thesede-addiction centre the most sought after by the affected rural folk of Punjab. Till date, the centers have successfully treated 2400 patients. It has helped in controlling vices among the rural folks and is bringing down the crime rate, conflicts, mitigations, marital discord and exploitation of women.

With a population of about 400 million, Northern India is the most socially deprived region of India. The Kalgidhar Society lays a special focus on its welfare programs. The Society runs an orphanage at BaruSahib and a home for the elderly, where in more than 200 hundred underprivileged aged men and women are provided with their daily needs, food, clothing, medical services and lodging, so that they can spend their twilight years in safe, secure, comfortable and serene surroundings in this valley of divine peace.

The home for widows and destitute women imparts vocational training in various fields to make them self-dependent.

Eternal University

The Kalgidhar Society’s initiative for higher education, Eternal University, established at Baru Sahib in 2008 to impart value-based education in arts, sciences, nursing, engineering and technology, divine music, spiritualism and public health, is a world class multi-faculty university with 24 programs and schools spread over 8,00,000 sq. ft. The University is developing outstanding engineers, scientists, administrators, teachers and global citizens with high moral values to act as messengers of peace. Eternal University has proven itself as the safest campus for Girls, especially College of Nursing, where international conferences are organized annually.

Akal University Guru ki Kashi

The Kalgidhar Society’s second university, Akal University Guru ki Kashi at Damdama Sahib in Bathinda district of Punjab, is the new project of 500 crores. Akal University has been established as per the divine prediction of Guru kiKashi by Guru Gobind Singh Ji. Its first session is on after its inauguration in July 2015. The first phase of the project was completed in 24 months with 6,50,000 sqft of built-up space. Akal University offers Bachelors as well as Masters degrees in Economics, Commerce, Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, Botany, Zoology, English, Punjabi and Music. In a first, Akal University would also offer Bachelor with Honors in Sri Guru Granth Sahib Studies.

The sustenance of all philanthropic projects of The Kalgidhar Society depends on the support of selfless worldwide benefactors. Volunteers, sponsors, full-time employees and donors – all join handsto become an integral part of this noble task of bringing about the welfare of humanity.

The chanting at AmritVela in Darbar Sahib, is a major source of inspiration for the students as well as the staff. The Society, through its specially designed projects like Sehaj Paath, Anahad Bani, Dhur ki Bani, daily telecast of three and half hour on national channel, prays for peaceful coexistence of various faiths and for the well-being of the entire universe.

The Kalgidhar Society is an unassuming fountain-head that is exploring silently towards advancing all aspects of life – education, health, socio economic uplift and empowerment, particularly of the women, leading to the establishment of permanent peace in the world.

Eternal Global University

Eternal Global University is another initiative of The Kalgidhar Trust aimed at reaching out to the youth.

Incorporated in the American state of Maryland, the University undertakes a historic step to educate approximately 2 million Sikhs in North America and 30 million worldwide online. Eternal Global University offers courses in Sikh Scripture and Philosophy, Divine Music and Spirituality, Comparative Religion, Sikh Ministries and Management, Sikh Pastoral Care and Counseling as also Value-based Sikh Youth Education.

~ R. S. Chadha
~ Baru Sahib

DSP Gurmeet Singh jumped in the canal to save protesters from drowning!

The world is getting more unpleasant by the day. When we look around, we see increasing cases of road rage. And all we are left with is wondering whether the world will get better or worse. But in the midst of everything going wrong and our intolerance levels reaching a new high, there are people […]

The world is getting more unpleasant by the day. When we look around, we see increasing cases of road rage.

And all we are left with is wondering whether the world will get better or worse.

But in the midst of everything going wrong and our intolerance levels reaching a new high, there are people who are still doing good deeds in the hope that, somewhere, the world will make room for positivity and kindness.

Take a look at story of this Sikh Man that will help you believe that there is potential to make the world a better place.

About 400 teachers had assembled near Rose Garden to hold a dharna. Unfortunately, heated arguments broke out between the cops and the protesters. Things got worse when the cops asked the protesters to leave. Four protesters, including two women and two men jumped into a nearby canal. Fortunately, they were rescued by the cops. When asked about their act of bravery, the cops said it was their duty to save them. Two cops namely, Bhucho DSP Gurmeet Singh Kingra and ASI Kaul Singh certainly did an exemplary job.

~ Source: IndiaTimes

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