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This is the article that can throw some light on the questions raised by Jodhvir veer
An article on the importance of kes and dastaar by
Subject: Dignity in Identity
Dignity in Identity
"Sabat Soorat Dastar Sira"
Brig. Hardit Singh (Retd.)*
* 1380 Sector 33-C, Chandigarh. 160047.
Till about a century ago, most of the people in India
and the Middle
East countries wore turban in different styles. One
could, generally,
make out the religious denomination and nationality of
the wearer by the
way his turban was tied. Even now some Rajputs, Jats
and Brahmins of
India, apart from the Sikhs and some Muslims, wear
turbans.
Guru Arjun Dev, the fifth Nanak, in one of his hymns
(SGGS Page 1084),
addressed to a Muslim priest, advises him about the
physical appearance
and spiritual conduct required of the religious
person. The Persian
term "Sabat Soorat Dastar Sira" is a part of this
hymn.
"Sabat" means that which is whole, complete and
unaltered, in its
original form. "Soorat" is face or appearance,
"Dastar" is turban and "Sira"
is head. Collectively, it means a person replete with
full physical
features, inclusive of hair as granted to him by God,
with a turban to
adorn his head. Hair and turban remian the crowning
glory of a male and
this had been the traditional bearing and dress of our
prophets, rishis,
gurus, saints and bhagats.
Every part of the human frame, including the hair, has
a vital role in
the efficient functioning of the body. If it were not
so, God or nature
would not have provided these. Since hair is a part
and parcel of the
human body, the Gurus had thought it redundant to lay
any particular
stress for their preservation. However, there are
several references in
the Holy Scriptures regarding nature of the Cosmic Man
and sacred utility
by human hair:-
The Cosmic Man:
(a) "Tere banke loain, dant raseela, sohne nuk jin
lumbre vala?
(SGGS-500)
- Your attractive eyes, brilliant teeth beautiful nose
and long hair.
(b) In another hymn (SGGS-1082), Guru Arjun Dev has
called God by
different names. Amongst these are - ?Rikhikesh?,
?Narain dara? and ?Kesava?
which point out of the Formless One having long hair
and beard. The
words ?Kesav? and ?Kesva? also appear in many other
hymns.
Sacred Utility:
(a) "Kes Sang das pug jhahro, eha manorath mera" (SGGS
- 500)
My life long desire is to dust the feet of your
devotees with my hair.
(b) (i) "Kesa kar beejna, sant chaur dholavo"
(ii) "Kesa ka kar chawar dholavan charan dhur mukh
lai"
(SGGS - 745 & 749)
Make whisk of hair, fan it over the saints and smear
dust of their feet
on my face.
(c) "Se darhian sachian, jo gur charni lagan" (SGGS -
12119)
Holy are the beards that fall over guru's feet.
Bhai Gurdas is the scribe of the Adi Granth and a
devotee of its author
Guru Arjun Dev. In his two copious works "Varan" and
"Swaiye" he
portrays the Sikh way of life wherein he uses terms
such as "Amritvela sir
nawandhe" - Sikhs wash their hair early in the
morning.
Although the Sikhs were enjoined to maintain their
hair from Guru
Nanak?s time, it was left to Guru Gobind Singh to give
it a final seal. On
the Baisakhi day in 1699, he ordained that keeping of
unshorn hair is
obligatory for a Sikh for a dual purpose. Firstly, it
is to abide by the
altruist Will of God and, secondly, to give the Sikhs
a distinctive
personality to distinguish them from others. The site
from where this
declaration was made was thereafter called "Keshgarh"
- Citadel of Hair"
situated at Anandpur Sahib. The Guru at this time also
gave out code of
conduct (Rahit Maryada) for the Sikhs to follow which
he stated as more
endearing to him than the person :-
(a) "Rehit piyari mujh ko, sikh piyara nahen"
(b) "Rehni rahe soi sikh mera......." (Dasam Granth)
He also warned that ostentatious wearing of symbols
and dress without
inner involvement is like gambling away of one?s
precious life:
"Jioh maile, bahroh nirmal
Bahro nirmal, jioh ta maile,
Jinh janam jooe hariya" (SGGS 719)
Bhai Nand Lal Goya, the devotee and poet of Guru
Gobind Singh court has
said in his ?Rehat-Nama? that a person without long
hair cannot call
himself a Sikh and his identity cannot be divorced
from his personal
appearance. Bhai Nand Lal?s composition has been
blessed by the Guru and
enjoys the status of gurbani.
In eulogizing Guru Gobind Singh?s personality, he has
said that the
value of one tress of his beloved hair is priceless
compared to the
splendour of both the worlds :-
"Har do alam qimat-e-yuk-tar mooe yaar ma".
(Guzal 2)
Bhai Daya Singh, the first ?Piara? to be baptised,
Bhai Chaupa Singh
and poet Sainapati, all contemporaries of the Guru
categorically state
that unshorn hair symbolise Sikhism.
The numerous martyrs whose deeds are narrated in the
daily Sikh ?Ardas?
lived true to their tenets of faith of retaining
unshorn hair till
their last breath. Bhai Taru Singh?s plea to his
executioner to remove his
scalp- rather than his hair - bears testimony to this
conviction. The
foremost prayer of a Sikh is to live with his hair
intact till his end ?
"Sikhi kesan swasan naal nibhai" and "Sikhi daan, kesh
daan".
Prof. Puran Singh in his book ?Spirit of the Sikh,?
Part-II, Page 56
writes - "The Guru?s commandment in asking the
disciples to preserve
their hair unshorn has in it an abiding depth of
truth, giving men some
deeper concerns of the soul, for thereby he has
precluded men and women
living only for the futile foppishness of sartorial
arts or the
barber-made civilization. The hair seems redundant to
the modern man, but to
Guru Gobind Singh, the hair was essential.... for
bringing on of a greater
moral and religious civilization". He further writes
that "if the Sikhs
are left free to cut or shave the hair, how foolish it
would be to
preach a religion and to demand whole herds on
compromised principles....
Taking away the Sikh?s hair is to cut him off from his
intensely
reactive inspiration and source of strength".
In his book The Spirit Born People, page 38, Prof.
Puran Singh further
says that wearing of the ?the Master?s knot of sacred
tresses" is "a
token of spiritual isolation from the herd. So did
Guru Gobind Singh
command. An obedience to him is life. There is no life
outside that Great
Love."
Sikhism is a path of discipleship. Hair are gift of
God and grown by
His Will. In abiding by His Will, our relationship
with Him and the Guru
is strengthened. Let us not try tobe wise ourselves
but do what the
Guru commands.
"Gursikh meet chalo har chali,
Jo gur kahe soi bhal, mano...." (SGGS 667)
"The turbaned Sikh looks like a lion, the rest of us
look like sheep
and goats, afraid to be identified".
An article on the importance of kes and dastaar by
Subject: Dignity in Identity
Dignity in Identity
"Sabat Soorat Dastar Sira"
Brig. Hardit Singh (Retd.)*
* 1380 Sector 33-C, Chandigarh. 160047.
Till about a century ago, most of the people in India
and the Middle
East countries wore turban in different styles. One
could, generally,
make out the religious denomination and nationality of
the wearer by the
way his turban was tied. Even now some Rajputs, Jats
and Brahmins of
India, apart from the Sikhs and some Muslims, wear
turbans.
Guru Arjun Dev, the fifth Nanak, in one of his hymns
(SGGS Page 1084),
addressed to a Muslim priest, advises him about the
physical appearance
and spiritual conduct required of the religious
person. The Persian
term "Sabat Soorat Dastar Sira" is a part of this
hymn.
"Sabat" means that which is whole, complete and
unaltered, in its
original form. "Soorat" is face or appearance,
"Dastar" is turban and "Sira"
is head. Collectively, it means a person replete with
full physical
features, inclusive of hair as granted to him by God,
with a turban to
adorn his head. Hair and turban remian the crowning
glory of a male and
this had been the traditional bearing and dress of our
prophets, rishis,
gurus, saints and bhagats.
Every part of the human frame, including the hair, has
a vital role in
the efficient functioning of the body. If it were not
so, God or nature
would not have provided these. Since hair is a part
and parcel of the
human body, the Gurus had thought it redundant to lay
any particular
stress for their preservation. However, there are
several references in
the Holy Scriptures regarding nature of the Cosmic Man
and sacred utility
by human hair:-
The Cosmic Man:
(a) "Tere banke loain, dant raseela, sohne nuk jin
lumbre vala?
(SGGS-500)
- Your attractive eyes, brilliant teeth beautiful nose
and long hair.
(b) In another hymn (SGGS-1082), Guru Arjun Dev has
called God by
different names. Amongst these are - ?Rikhikesh?,
?Narain dara? and ?Kesava?
which point out of the Formless One having long hair
and beard. The
words ?Kesav? and ?Kesva? also appear in many other
hymns.
Sacred Utility:
(a) "Kes Sang das pug jhahro, eha manorath mera" (SGGS
- 500)
My life long desire is to dust the feet of your
devotees with my hair.
(b) (i) "Kesa kar beejna, sant chaur dholavo"
(ii) "Kesa ka kar chawar dholavan charan dhur mukh
lai"
(SGGS - 745 & 749)
Make whisk of hair, fan it over the saints and smear
dust of their feet
on my face.
(c) "Se darhian sachian, jo gur charni lagan" (SGGS -
12119)
Holy are the beards that fall over guru's feet.
Bhai Gurdas is the scribe of the Adi Granth and a
devotee of its author
Guru Arjun Dev. In his two copious works "Varan" and
"Swaiye" he
portrays the Sikh way of life wherein he uses terms
such as "Amritvela sir
nawandhe" - Sikhs wash their hair early in the
morning.
Although the Sikhs were enjoined to maintain their
hair from Guru
Nanak?s time, it was left to Guru Gobind Singh to give
it a final seal. On
the Baisakhi day in 1699, he ordained that keeping of
unshorn hair is
obligatory for a Sikh for a dual purpose. Firstly, it
is to abide by the
altruist Will of God and, secondly, to give the Sikhs
a distinctive
personality to distinguish them from others. The site
from where this
declaration was made was thereafter called "Keshgarh"
- Citadel of Hair"
situated at Anandpur Sahib. The Guru at this time also
gave out code of
conduct (Rahit Maryada) for the Sikhs to follow which
he stated as more
endearing to him than the person :-
(a) "Rehit piyari mujh ko, sikh piyara nahen"
(b) "Rehni rahe soi sikh mera......." (Dasam Granth)
He also warned that ostentatious wearing of symbols
and dress without
inner involvement is like gambling away of one?s
precious life:
"Jioh maile, bahroh nirmal
Bahro nirmal, jioh ta maile,
Jinh janam jooe hariya" (SGGS 719)
Bhai Nand Lal Goya, the devotee and poet of Guru
Gobind Singh court has
said in his ?Rehat-Nama? that a person without long
hair cannot call
himself a Sikh and his identity cannot be divorced
from his personal
appearance. Bhai Nand Lal?s composition has been
blessed by the Guru and
enjoys the status of gurbani.
In eulogizing Guru Gobind Singh?s personality, he has
said that the
value of one tress of his beloved hair is priceless
compared to the
splendour of both the worlds :-
"Har do alam qimat-e-yuk-tar mooe yaar ma".
(Guzal 2)
Bhai Daya Singh, the first ?Piara? to be baptised,
Bhai Chaupa Singh
and poet Sainapati, all contemporaries of the Guru
categorically state
that unshorn hair symbolise Sikhism.
The numerous martyrs whose deeds are narrated in the
daily Sikh ?Ardas?
lived true to their tenets of faith of retaining
unshorn hair till
their last breath. Bhai Taru Singh?s plea to his
executioner to remove his
scalp- rather than his hair - bears testimony to this
conviction. The
foremost prayer of a Sikh is to live with his hair
intact till his end ?
"Sikhi kesan swasan naal nibhai" and "Sikhi daan, kesh
daan".
Prof. Puran Singh in his book ?Spirit of the Sikh,?
Part-II, Page 56
writes - "The Guru?s commandment in asking the
disciples to preserve
their hair unshorn has in it an abiding depth of
truth, giving men some
deeper concerns of the soul, for thereby he has
precluded men and women
living only for the futile foppishness of sartorial
arts or the
barber-made civilization. The hair seems redundant to
the modern man, but to
Guru Gobind Singh, the hair was essential.... for
bringing on of a greater
moral and religious civilization". He further writes
that "if the Sikhs
are left free to cut or shave the hair, how foolish it
would be to
preach a religion and to demand whole herds on
compromised principles....
Taking away the Sikh?s hair is to cut him off from his
intensely
reactive inspiration and source of strength".
In his book The Spirit Born People, page 38, Prof.
Puran Singh further
says that wearing of the ?the Master?s knot of sacred
tresses" is "a
token of spiritual isolation from the herd. So did
Guru Gobind Singh
command. An obedience to him is life. There is no life
outside that Great
Love."
Sikhism is a path of discipleship. Hair are gift of
God and grown by
His Will. In abiding by His Will, our relationship
with Him and the Guru
is strengthened. Let us not try tobe wise ourselves
but do what the
Guru commands.
"Gursikh meet chalo har chali,
Jo gur kahe soi bhal, mano...." (SGGS 667)
"The turbaned Sikh looks like a lion, the rest of us
look like sheep
and goats, afraid to be identified".