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Sikhs are a minority
community in their homeland in western India and a minority worldwide. It
is estimated that there are approximately 20 million Sikhs in the world,
most of them living in different parts of India with particular
concentrations in Punjab and in Delhi. There are substantial groups in
England, namely in West and East London, Leeds and the Midlands; other
groups can be found in Canada and the USA.
The history of Sikhs has
been one human rights violations. Guru Nanak, the First Guru, was
imprisoned by Babar, the first Mughal to invade India. Guru Nanak writes
about the barbarity of the invasion in which innocent civilians were
tortured, women raped and disgraced, their hair cut off; whole families
were starved and their homes razed to the ground. The terror was so great
that Guru Nanak complained to God in this way:
There was such terror
and countless cruel beatings
Did you not feel pain O Lord?
The Fifth Guru, Arjan,
and the Ninth Guru, Tegh Bahadur, were subjected to grievous violation of
their human rights when they tried to safeguard their own religious
freedom and that of others. The Ninth Guru gave up his life so that the
Hindu community could maintain its religious practices in a state that
through terrorism tried to convert non-Muslims to Islam. Guru Tegh Bahadur
is described in Sikh and Hindu writings as the protective sheet or wrap of
India. His wife also suffered and his two grandsons aged seven and nine
(the two younger sons of Guru Gobind Singh) were bricked up alive by the
Mughal administrator. All these events took place in the seventeenth
century.
In the eighteenth century
there were over a dozen invasions of Punjab by Afghans and Persians, the
main invaders being Nadir Shah and Ahmed Shah Abdali. There were two major
holocausts, referred to as Ghalugharas in Sikh history. Mir Mannu, the
area administrator, was cruel and tyrannical. During his period, even
babies and toddlers were killed, their bodies chopped to pieces and
garlands of the dismembered bodies put around their mothers' necks. These
mothers were denied food and forced to grind about one hundred pounds of
corn on hand-held grinding stones. District officers offered rewards to
those who captured male Sikhs alive or brought their severed heads .The
Sikhs kept their spirits up by singing:
Mannu is the scythe and
we are his weeds
The more he mows us the more we grow.
By the end of the
eighteenth century the Sikhs were able to carve out their own kingdoms in
the Punjab; the most famous kingdom was the one in Lahore under Maharaja
Ranjit Singh, the Lion of Punjab. His successors lost out to the British
Colonial Rule in India in 1849 and his young son was taken away to be
converted to the Christian faith and later brought to England. There were
many abuses of Sikhs' human rights under the rule of the British. Sikhs
were sent into exile, blown off in a canon, participants in peaceful
processions, undertaken to demand emancipation for the Gurdwaras and the
right to Akhand Path, were beaten up.
Most people are
conversant with the invasion in 1984 of the most sacred shrine of the
Sikhs, when many were killed. Families in Punjab, Delhi and other parts of
India had much to suffer in its aftermath, particularly after Indira
Gandhi's assassination. Many men, especially the young ones, were
imprisoned or lost their lives (their bodies have never been found) and
young women were raped. Many families are still grieving and there are
numerous widows with traumatized children.
Sikh belief in human
rights is very profound. It begins with Guru Nanak's teaching that we are
all children of one parent (God) (Ek Pita Ekas ke hum barik). God's
light, God's spirit, is in all of us and we should endeavor to find it
within us. Therefore, it is vital to affirm the integrity of the human
person. Everybody has the right to practice their own faith. The Ninth
Guru's sacrifice is a continuous reminder that practicing one's faith is a
sacred right and there should be no conversions by force and no atrocities
in the name of religion.
God has put human beings
in charge of the earth and has given them a responsibility to care for
other forms of life. We are not to mistreat other creatures nor squander
the earth's riches; we are but God's trustees of the diversity of
creation. |