Saving Punjab
A Sikh architect is helping to preserve cultural sites in the north Indian state still haunted by 1947’s heart-wrenching Partition
- By Geoffrey C. Ward
- Photographs by Raghu Rai
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
No city in the Indian Punjab has witnessed more history or is home to more historic sites than Amritsar. Its name combines the Sanskrit words for the sacred nectar of life (amrita) and for lake (sarovar), a reference to the pool within the precincts of the Golden Temple of the Sikhs that is believed to wash away sins. But at first glance, there's nothing celestial about it. The narrow streets are clamorous, dusty, claustrophobic. Home to more than a million people, Amritsar has long since spilled beyond the walls that once defined its borders, and even in the city's oldest sections, most buildings are drab, run-down and recent.
The Golden Temple, however, is a revelation. Sikh men are identifiable by the turbans and beards their faith requires the orthodox to wear, but their distinctive theology and remarkable history remain little known beyond India's borders. Their most sacred shrine embodies both. We joined a stream of chattering pilgrims and, with covered heads and bare feet, stepped through the main gateway—and into another world. The cacophony of the city fell away. The waters of the broad sacred pool mirrored a brilliant sky. The sun gleamed on the white marble cloister that surrounds the pool and burned so brightly on the temple built on the island in its center that it seemed almost aflame.
The pilgrims around us fell silent. Some shut their eyes and folded their hands. Others fell to their knees and touched their foreheads to the ground. The complex is built at a level lower than the surrounding streets so that poor and high-born worshipers alike are forced to humble themselves by climbing down into it. Gateways on all four sides are meant to welcome people of all castes and creeds. Volunteers cook and serve thousands of free meals for pilgrims each day and insist that those who eat them do so side by side. "There are no foes nor strangers," says Sikh scripture, "for we are all fellow beings."
No one gawks here. No one demands money. Everyone seems content simply to be present in this holiest of places. The pilgrims make their slow, reverent clockwise way around the marble platform that edges the pool, past an old man with a white beard reaching nearly to his waist who gently lifts his infant grandson in and out of the sacred waters; a young mother on her knees patiently teaching her little girl the proper way to prostrate herself; a cleanshaven American Sikh, his head covered with a stars-and-stripes handkerchief, praying alongside his brand-new bride, her wrists hidden by bright red bridal bangles.
The goal of every visitor is to follow the causeway that leads out to the gilded sanctum sanctorum and pay respects to the Guru Granth Sahib, the sacred book that is the sole object of Sikh veneration and was first installed there in 1604. Nanak, the first of the Sikh gurus (or "great teachers") whose thoughts are contained within its pages, was a 15th-century mystic with a simple message: "There is but One God. He is all that is." In the search for salvation, the only thing that matters is meditation on his name. "There is no Hindu," he said, "there is no Mussulman."
Whether or not Nanak ever meant to found a religion, Sikhs believe he did. And this place, where his teachings and those of four of his nine successors were brought together by the fifth guru, has special meaning for them. "It is, quite simply, the core of their...being," the Sikh historian Patwant Singh has written. "It represents so many things they are immensely proud of: the vision of their gurus who gave it form and wrote the scriptures on the banks of the sacred waters; the courage of their forebears who died defending it; and the devotion with which others laid their abundant wealth before it in gratitude for the inspiration it has provided...over the centuries."
That inspiration has been sorely needed. Always outnumbered, even in their Punjabi stronghold, the Sikhs have frequently found themselves under attack. They've never failed to fight back, against the Moguls who tried to exterminate them in the 17th century, the Afghans who razed the Golden Temple three times between 1748 and 1768 and the British who by 1849 had destroyed the sprawling 19th-century empire carved out by their ablest chieftain, Ranjit Singh. Later, Sikhs served out of all proportion to their numbers in the armed forces of independent India.
But the issue of Sikh autonomy has never fully been resolved. During the 1980s, bitter, sometimes bloody quarrels between the Indian government and elements of the Sikh community led to something like a civil war. In June of 1984, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi ordered a military assault against armed militants holed up within the Golden Temple complex. It killed several hundred Sikhs, many of them innocent pilgrims, and left the sacred structure badly damaged. Just five months later, two of Mrs. Gandhi's own Sikh bodyguards avenged that assault by assassinating her as she walked through her garden in New Delhi. Hindu mobs, egged on by politicians belonging to the late prime minister's Congress Party, then avenged that killing by butchering some 3,000 Sikhs in the streets of Delhi. More than a decade of sporadic violence followed before relative peace returned to the Punjabi countryside. But resentments remain: calendars featuring romanticized depictions of Sikhs killed during the conflict are for sale in every bazaar, and as we drove away from the temple, a cycle rickshaw crossed in front of us with flattering portraits of Mrs. Gandhi's assassins stenciled on its back.
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Comments (12)
The beautiful cultural and religious site of Golden Temple is the most sacred place for Sikhs. It is enthralling and great experience to visit Punjab and golden temple just for once. if you want some more information then you may visit this website for more info http://www.mytravelindiaguide.com/north-india/travel-punjab-a-travel-tour-to-granary-land-of-india/ This website also has some useful info but if you want to have some more information about India then you can bookmark it on http://www.mytravelindiaguide.com/feed/
Posted by travelindiaguide on June 21,2010 | 11:24 PM
Great opening par. Enthralling angle, and beguiling vision of the real India.
Posted by gordon david durich on February 4,2010 | 11:00 PM
I admire Geoff Ward's work - from providing the intellectual scaffolding on which Ken Burns builds his documentaries about America to writing about FDR to writing about India ... he covers a lot of ground with a clear-eyed affection for his subjects unlike, say, Theroux whom you also feature in this issue, and whose writing is pitiably ethnocentric unless his subject is Britain or the United States.
Still, Ward succumbs to the all-too American habit of seeing a "real" India outside Gobindgarh, disorderly and dusty, against his implicitly "unreal" India if Gobindgarh does become a sealed off and antiseptic, American-style spiritual Williamsburg.
Why a disorderly and dusty India should be the "real" India and why a planned area which offers creature comforts with spiritual solace should be the "unreal" India, escapes me.
They are all part of the Indian reality -- as they are of the reality in the U.S. or anywhere else. Or, should we begin to think of American strip malls as the "real" America and the beautifully-laid avenues of Washington D.C. as the "unreal" America?
Punjabis interested in revisiting the shrines of their faith without more than minimal contact with the real India.
Posted by Siddhartha Banerjee on November 6,2009 | 03:52 PM
i am really touched by the writer's emotional empathy .
yes , ido agree that our punjab has been on the forefront since[ the invader mohammed of ghazni ] long and the pepole are always the sufferer .
we have lost in all the ways . what really sadens me the approach of the central goverment towards the punjab policies .
pakistan is sending in so much of drugs and they cannot legally stop the bus service .
well leaders donot think about masses they just think about their SWISS accounts
indu
Posted by indu bajwa on November 6,2009 | 04:03 AM
It is so nice to read an article about India - and especially Punjab - written by someone who actually knows the area and does good research. This is sadly too rare in US publications and I hope to see more well-informed articles like this!
Posted by Jchemist on November 3,2009 | 09:42 AM
why did the writer did not mention the weapons found in the "golden temple" during the raid that occured when Indira Gandhi was ruler?
Posted by michael on October 2,2009 | 04:54 PM
God, or Allah, or Brahman, or whatever name the Supreme Being is known by, is supposed to be the universal unifying force in our lives, It's ironic that men would rend nations asunder, divide families, fight over relics and temples, and kill and maim one another in the name of this unifying Being, the one all mankind is born of. To echo the plaint of one Rodney King, purported victim of excessive police force and street philosopher by default, "Can't we all just get along?"
Posted by Armando Chavez on September 22,2009 | 01:24 PM
picture shown of Darbar sahib is incorrectly labeled as Mecca of the sikhs, Mecca of the sikhs is Gurudwara Sahib at Nankana beacause Guru Nank was born in Nankana not at Amritsar.
Mecca of muslims is Mecca for them beacause Mohammad sahib was born in Mecca not any city outside mecca
Posted by charanjit singh on September 20,2009 | 09:24 PM
What is remarkable about the work on architectural conservation being carried out by Rai's team is it's absolute professionalism. In an environment where political and economic environments eschew "short term fixes " in favour of pragmatic and long lasting solutions their work enjoys a reputation for thoroughness which others would do well to envy.
Posted by Harbinder Singh on August 31,2009 | 03:59 PM
To the editor:
- A minor correction
Photo # 16 in 'Photo Gallery' titled "Preservationist Gurmeet Rai at Golden Temple" is incorrectly labeled. That picture is taken at 'Durgiana Temple' in Amritsar
This temple is occasionally also referred as Golden temple but then author needs to make distinction between both the Sikh and Hindu Golden temples - Sikh golden temple which is AKA 'Harimandir Sahib' and the Hindu Golden temple which is AKA as 'Durgiana Temple'.
Posted by Mr Singh on August 28,2009 | 07:23 PM
Very well written article. Thank you The writer through his experience and research communicates Guru Nanak's view of God as well as a brief history of the sikhs. Thank you. However, I have one correction or comment. The writer on page 2 states "Sikh men are identifiable by the turbans and beards their faith requires the orthodox to wear, ........." This is not true. All Sikh (particularly men) are supposed to wear turbans. After Guru Gobind Singh baptised Khalsa, and since then some woman wear turban, too. In my view point, there are no orthodox or unorthodox sikhs. They are all sikhs. Of course, as Guru Nanak said there are no Hindus and no Muslims, any one can read and gain wisdom of the Guru Granth Sahibs.
Manjeet
Posted by Manjeet Kaur Tangri on August 27,2009 | 01:41 AM
very well written article
impressed by the work done by Gurmeet and her colleagues at the local level.
I have just come back from Dera Baba Nanak. I was driving my bus from Amritsar to the place. As our bus crossed through some village road close to army centre few km from Dera Baba Nanaki saw ancient temple domes. Coulnot see a clear view as there were cow dung piles around it and stack of grass. Someone could take a look. I have taken pictures from bus and could post to you, if there was an email id.
regards
madhvi
chandigarh
Posted by madhvi on August 27,2009 | 01:55 PM