During a recent visit to California visited Gurudwaras at Yuba City,
Freemont and San Jose.
The Yuba City Gurudwara was made in 1969, Freemont in 1978 and San Jose
renovated in 2004. The first two are relatively simpler structures whilst the
third, built at a cost of $ 32 million, is probably one of the best gurudwaras
worldwide, definitely a must see.
To see pictures of the San Jose Gurudwara
The purpose of this article is to share key observations made during
visit to each Gurudwara and briefly state how the British created a Hindu Sikh
divide in Punjab.
San Jose Gurudwara
The Freemont and San Jose gurudwaras display photos of Bhindrawale
prominently. Freemont
has pictures of Martyrs on wall of the entire langar hall. At entrance a banner showed 29th April 1986 as 'Khalistan Liberation Day'. A sign said gurudwara 'Dedicated in the memory of the Martyrs of Khalistan'.
Langar Hall, Freemont gurudwara
When I spoke about some Sikhs demanding Khalistan the 92 year old Dr Gulzar Singh Johl of Yuba City said, 'If these NRI Sikhs are so concerned about the people of Punjab why do they not go and live there. If Sikhs cannot manage their gurudwaras peacefully how will they run a country'.
Like in India Gurudwara politics does
get violent. According to a 2012
media report, "Two men were arrested in connection with stabbings during a large brawl outside the Yuba City, California, gurdwara that emerged from an election dispute."
The very scenic and beautifully designed San Jose gurudwara is an oasis
of peace. Walls on langar hall display boards which expound the tenets of
Sikhism from a cultural and religious standpoint for e.g. titles are Kirtan,
The Khanda, Sikh Women, Sikh Marriage, Heaven and Hell, 3 Pillars of Sikhism. Matter
is essentially drawn from Sanatana Dharma tradition though there was no
reference to it.
Yogini Jyoti Subramaniam has reviewed what was written on four boards
referred to above and given a corresponding
Hindu viewpoint in this article.
The deeper intent behind these boards is to tell the world that Sikhism
is different from Hinduism, it does not suffer from any of the social ills that
Hinduism allegedly does.
A senior Sikh expressed anguish that people of other dharams, meaning me
Hindu, had come to photograph the Sikh Temple at Yuba City whilst Sikhs did not!
Another told me there was no caste system in Sikhism, gurudwaras were open
to all.
My
pointer on the well known animosity between Jat and Khatri Sikhs or treatment
of Mazhabi (Scheduled Caste) Sikhs went unanswered. A third said that
Sikhism and Islam, as monotheistic religions and religions of the book, had
more in common than Sikhism and Hinduism. I asked if he was ok with Sikh girls
marrying Punjabi Muslims. Silence!
When Sikhism was spoken about there was no reference to its origin and close association with Sanatana Dharma. That is when I remembered Khushwant Singh's writings, "The Adi Granth echoes the Vedanta through most of its nearly 6,000 hymns. There is a new breed of Sikh scholars who bend backwards to prove Sikhism has taken little or nothing from Hinduism. All they need to be told is that of the 15,028 names of God that appear in the Adi Granth, Hari occurs over 8,000 times, Ram 2,533 times." Source
If indeed Sanatana and Sikh Dharma have no relation would Khushwant Singh have written, "the roti-beti ka rishta (relationship) between Hindus and Sikhs (breaking bread in common and giving daughters in marriage)".
Yet I was happy to see, like at Hari Mandir (Golden Temple), many Hindus
in San Jose gurudwara.
Notwithstanding the fact that an Akali leader
(1940-1960 period), Master Tara Singh was a co founder of the Vishwa Hindu
Parishad in 1964, the process of dividing Punjabis into Sikhs and Hindus, that the British set in motion around 1850,
seemed complete atleast in California.
During a subsequent email dialogue on Sanatana Dharma with some
California based was Sikhs surprised with their animosity towards Hindus and
Hinduism. A friend who interacts with Sikhs in the U.K. has expressed a similar
sentiment. Given
the strong cultural links between the two communities wonder what is the reason
for such animosity amongst NRI Sikhs.
Would Maharaja Ranjit Sikh have donated gold for the shikhar of the
Kashi Vishwanath Mandir (like he did for Hari Mandir) if such animosity existed
between followers of Sikh and Sanatana Dharma.
Some said but many left unsaid that killings of innocent Sikhs post Mrs Indira Gandhi's assassination had left deep scars. Absolutely! But that was the
Congress party at work, not the Hindu community.
Yet none was willing to talk about the killing of innocents, Hindus and
Sikhs, during the Khalistani Movement. Note that app 21,000
people died in that violent movement. For Details of killings provided by South Asia Terrorism Portal
Like cow
slaughter is of British origin so also Hindu Sikh divide is a British
construct. Find below excerpts from my 2007 article published by Hindustan
Times.
"Having experienced the strength of Sikh
opposition during the Anglo-Sikh wars and grateful for the assistance received
from Sikh princes during the Mutiny of 1857, the British realized that Sikhs
could be an effective buffer between Afghanistan and India.
Therefore, British reduced the number of Bengali soldiers (involved in 1857 Mutiny) to be replaced by loyal Sikhs & Punjabi Muslims. As Veena Talwar wrote: "To prevent the sort of mutiny they experienced from sepoys in 1857, the British organized religiously segregated regimental units from the alleged martial races, Sikhs, Pathans, Rajputs etc. This severely restricted Hindus of other castes particularly Khatris (Punjabi form of Kshatriya), who had served in Maharaja Ranjit Singh's forces. Khatris (all Sikh Gurus were Khatris) were arbitrarily lumped together by the British as trading castes. Many families
got around this artificially imposed caste barrier by raising one or more son
as Sikhs, chiefly by having them adopt the name Singh and grow hair/beard to match". (Dowry Murder, the Imperial origins of a
Cultural Crime).
Thus, the enlistment of Sikhs increased
steeply. Joining the army was remunerative. Soldiers were well paid, given
agricultural land and pension.
Around this time there was a fall in Sikh
morale, stemmed by the Singh Sabha movement. Founded in 1873 it soon split into
two. One, were Sanatani Sikhs who regarded the Panth as a special form of Hindu
tradition. Two, were Tat (true) Khalsa, who believed that Sikhism was a
different religion.
The British supported the Tat Khalsa movement by insisting only Khalsa Sikhs (those who sported the 5 Ks) could join the Army. A move to say Sikhs were not Hindus received an impetus in 1898 with Khan Singh Nabha’s book ‘Ham Hindu Nahin’, the passing of the Anand Marriage Act in 1909 as the only approved order for Sikh marriage and the insistence on the five Ks to distinguish Sikhs from Hindus.
After several decades, the Tat Khalsa emerged
victorious. It ensured that in 1905 idols were removed from the Hari Mandir, according
to W. H. Mcleod author of 'Historical Dictionary of Sikhism'. Modern
day Sikhism is a creation of this movement.
By about 1920, the movement was overtaken by the Akali Dal, a new political party that gave expression to the revived sense of Sikh identity. The Akalis entered into a dispute with the British for the control of Sikh Gurudwaras. Passing of the Sikh Gurudwaras Act in 1925 signalled their complete victory. The Act’s definition of a Sikh leant strongly towards the exclusivists Khalsa view.
By
effecting changes in who could own land, the
British supported Jat Sikhs who were the prime movers behind the Tat Khalsa
movement.
The
birth of Akali Dal and its control over
Gurudwaras heralded the tradition of mixing religion and politics. Control of
the Shiromani Gurdwara Prabandhak Committee is key to political power in Punjab."
Jat
Sikhs dominate Punjab politics to this day. Whenever
their supremacy is threatened, there could be violence.
The division of Punjab into Hindu and Sikh is one more reason why Indians
must remember and thank the British!!!
Article was first published here
Also read
1 How the British divided Punjab into Hindu and Sikh
2 How British created the Dowry System in Punjab
3 Hindu Sikh: Unbreakable Bond