Search

Sikhism - An Introduction: Khalsa

by Owen Cole

At Baisakhi (New Year’s Day) 1699 Guru Gobind Singh summoned his Sikhs to meet him at a village near the present day town of Anandpur Sahib. There he announced his intention of installing a new order of Sikhs, the Khalsa. He perceived that in the troubled times that lay ahead an identifiable militant form of Sikh was needed. The power of the masands, leaders who had been appointed by Gurus to assist them in administering the Panth, had become corrupt and as almost rivals to the Guru needed to be checked. They were disestablished and sole authority became vested in the Guru who called on his followers to swear allegiance only to him and adopt a distinctive dress and code of discipline. It is said that some twenty thousand men obeyed his demand on that one day. (Only later did women become Khalsa members, probably in the nineteenth century). Five men were initiated in a special rite and they in turn initiated the Guru. Besides accepting a code of discipline they each took the name Singh to replace their caste name and signify membership of one family. Later, women took the name Kaur for the same reason. Perhaps only 20 per cent of the Panth are Khalsa members but their influence greatly exceeds their numbers.

<< Back to home
No books are available for this article.

Related Articles