Shastar Vidya

Traditional martial art system of the northern Indian subcontinent

Shastar Vidya
ਸ਼ਸਤਰ-ਵਿੱਦਿਆ
Also known asSanatan Shastar Vidiya
FocusSwordsmanship
Country of originIndia
Famous practitionersNidar Singh Nihang (real name Surjit Singh Bains)
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Shastar Vidya (Punjabi: ਸ਼ਸਤਰ-ਵਿੱਦਿਆ, romanized: shastarvidiā, meaning "science of weapons" or "art of weapons"[1][2]), also known as Sanatan Shastar Vidya (Punjabi: ਸਨਾਤਨ ਸ਼ਸਤਰ ਵਿੱਦਿਆ), is a Sikh martial art form dating back to the 17th century.[note 1][1][3][4][5][6]

Terminology

Whilst the word gatka is commonly employed to refer to the modern Sikh martial art system as a whole, the correct historical term is shastar vidya.[6] Gatka is actually part of just one branch (known as an aṅg) of the wider Shastar Vidya martial art system.[6]

Utility

According to Gurbachan Singh Bhindranwale, the former Jathedar of the Damdami Taksal, there are two different kinds of the vidya (science/art), the first is performative (meant for exhibition) and the second is authentic and bona fide (which is lethal).[6] According to Bhindranwale, the second type is meant for the warrior who is ready to kill his enemy or become a martyr himself.[6] The form of gatka which is authentic and lethal is termed as jhaṭkā-gatkā but very few masters of the genuine martial art exist in the present-day as the martial art has become dominated by the performative expression of it.[6]

Branches

There are various components or branches of Shastar Vidya.[6] These branches are traditionally called ang, they are as follows:[6]

  • Bāhu yudh - unarmed combat[6]
  • Loh mustī - iron fist fighting[6]
  • Mal yudh - wrestling[6]
  • Gadā yudh - stick/club fighting, containing a particular style of stick-fighting called Gatkabazi (referred to simply as Gatka in the present-day)[6]
  • Shastar yudh - weapon fighting[6]
  • Astra yudh - missile fighting[6]

Training

The bare necessities required for mastery of Shastar Vidya is a healthy diet and physical fitness, which is reached through exercises such as sūraj namaskār (sun salutations), bhujaṅg-dand (Indian press-ups), and ūtak-baiṭakh (Indian squats).[6] A master and teacher of Shastar Vidya is called an ustad.[6] Students and disciples are called shagirad.[6]

Weapons are usually taught through sparring with a sword and shield but usually non-lethal forms of weapons are used for beginners, such as wooden sticks.[6] Once a student has reached an advanced level, sparring with actual lethal weapons can occur but it requires stringent discipline and focus.[6] People sparring are referred to as khidārīs.[6]

In-order to produce a capable warrior that is ever reminded of death even while living, the martial art stresses upon both spiritual (meditation and prayer) and temporal strengths (awareness, healthy diet, exercise, and fighting techniques) of humanity.[6] Practitioners are to follow a strict Rehat (code of conduct).[6]

The martial art combines and stresses upon the Sikh religious concepts of tyar bar tyar (a state of being "ready upon ready"), sevā (selfless voluntary service), and Degh Tegh Fateh (victory of charity and arms).[6]

Fundamentals

Footwork

Footwork forms are referred to as Paiṅtarā or asanas, they are used to coordinate the entire body in unison with whatever weapons are being wielded.[6]

Some of the different footwork styles are as follows (each may incorporate different kinds of weapons):[6]

  • mūl paiṅtarā - the most basic form that the others are based upon. It is a simple four-step pattern and an exercise of both balance and coordination of the body that is regularly practiced.[6]
  • tiger paiṅtarā[6]
  • monkey paiṅtarā[6]
  • bull paiṅtarā[6]
  • snake paiṅtarā[6]
  • eagle paiṅtarā[6]

Movements

Working upon the footwork, there are various movements that "dictates the strategy of engagement".[6] The different kinds of movements or actions are termed pāitā.[6] Membranophone instruments like the nagara or dhol drums are used to aid the rhythms of the various movements so the practitioners can internalize them to muscle-memory.[6]

Some pāitā forms are as follows:[6]

  • īta-ūta - forward-and-backward, side-to-side movements[6]

Maneuvers

The various offensive (attacking) and defensive (blocking) maneuvers of Shastar Vidya are based upon the positioning of the limbs (such as feet and hands) but also weapons during the footwork movements.[6] All these fundamentals together are the repertoire of the practitioner and are termed as baṅdish.[6]

Some offensive and defensive maneuvers are as follows:[6]

  • hujh - direct strike[6]
  • rokhaṇā - blocking[6]
  • lapeṭaṇā - twisting[6]
  • phaiṅkaṇā - throwing[6]
  • chhīni - snatching[6]
  • bandesh - locking or holding[6]
  • maroṛā - swinging[6]
  • chuṅgī - leaping[6]

When the student has reached an advanced level, they are then taught about chambers (such as feints) and other misalignment methods.[6]

Striking points

Various locations of the human body have traditionally been identified as striking points or maram within the martial art.[6] There are thirty-three striking points (marams) located on the human anatomy, of which, eight of them are considered to be major maram points.[6] There are nine different kinds of strikes and each strike has a counter (called a vār).[6]

Weaponry

Within the martial art, weapons are called shastars.[6] There is a different training regimen assigned to each weapon, with some weapons even having their own dedicated footworking (paiṅtarā).[6] Before individuals are training in any particular weapon, they must first have a ground basis in the basic footworking and open-handed combat (bāhu yudh) style.[6] The first weapon that is taught is called a marahaṭī, which is a usually a bamboo stick, and it used to teach all of the basic bodily movements.[6] A common basic weapon combination which is coached is the gātka (wooden stick) and pharī (dry leather shield), which after its mastery, the next combination taught is the kirpān (sword) and ḍhal (shield).[6] Projectile weapons or missiles are classified as astra.[6]

Other weapons traditionally taught and employed by the martial art includes:[6]

  • tabar - axe[6]
  • guraj - mace[6]
  • barchhā - spear[6]
  • nejī bāzī - lance[6]
  • khaṇḍā - double-edged sword[6]
  • tīr kamān - bow and arrow[6]
  • chakkar - quoit (spun and flung from the index finger or tajanī)[6]

Weapons are categorized in various groups based upon the nature of how they are utilized, released, or wielded, some categories namely being:

  • mukatā shastras - weapons released either by hand or from machines, examples being the catapult or bow[6]
  • amukatā - weapons wielded by hand[6]
  • mukatāmukat - weapons that are both projectiles and also wielded by hand[6]

Many weapons used within Shastar Vidya are described within the secondary Sikh canon, known as the Dasam Granth.[6] One verse by Guru Gobind Singh is an invocation of the divine by evoking the names of weapons and terming them as a master and it is often recited by practitioners of the martial art, it is as follows:[6][7]

asi kripān khaṇḍo khaṛag tupak tabar aru tīr.
saiph sarohī saithī yahai hamārai pīr

As, Kripan (sword), Khanda, Khadag (sword), Tupak (gun), Tabar (hatched),
Teer (arrow), Saif (sword), Sarohi and Saihathi, all these are our adorable seniors.

—Dasam Granth, page 717

Weapons are often venerated, as a form and agent of the divine, within the martial art.[8][6] Within the martial art, weaponry is seen as the power (bhagautī) of Akal Purakh(God).[6] The Sikh gurus revered weapons and passed down the practice of deeply respecting weapons to Sikhs.[6] The practice of venerating weapons is known as shastar puja.[8][6] Any class or performance of the martial art involves certain rituals taking place, such as the customary offering of jot and dhūp.[6] An ardas prayer is performed beforehand and then the practitioner respectfully salutes and bows to the weapon out of reverence.[6] Weapons can be directly approached or circumambulated around.[6] This manner of paying obeisance to the weaponry through rituals is called salamī or shastar namaskār (weapon salutation).[6] It is common for particular hymns from the Dasam Granth to be recited as an incantation, such as excerpts from the Shastar Nām Mālā, Tribhaṅgī Chhand, Bhagautī Astotra, and Chaṇḍī dī Vār compositions.[6] Jaikaras (war cries) are also exclaimed during the process, such as Sat Sri Akal or gurbār akāl.[6]

Before any sparring session is to occur, both practitioners must salute one another (known as fatehnāmā) by ritually crossing and hitting each other's weapons, which is done two times.[6]

There are also particular prescribed patterns for arranging the weapons for display, which is referred to as shastar prakāsh, with one specific layout that is recorded in an early rehat (code of conduct) being the gul shastar.[6] There also exists a favoured arrangement meant to represent the lotus flower.[6] The weapons can be adorned or placed on different parts of the body or clothing, such as kamarkasā (cummerbund) or around the dastār (turban).[6]

Once the practitioner has mastered both the movement and wielding of weapons, they can perform the fluid motions and flowing movements of the martial art, which is called kāl nach (the dance of death).[6]

Battle tactics and formations

Mobile warfare is called chakkar-bazi.[6] Fighting in close-quarters is termed saf-jang ('battle in the line').[6] Fighting with swords and spears is known as ahan-i-sard ('cold iron').[6] The Sikhs employed a particular type of "hit-and-run" tactic on horseback known as Dhaī Phaṭ ('two and a half injuries') that was observed by contemporary writers (both native and foreign): first the Sikhs advance and then retreat, then rally and return to the fight again.[6]

History

Origin

The ultimate origin for the martial art is unknown and disputed but it originates from Hinduism.[2] A theory claims it ultimately traces its origin to Indo-European migrations into the Indian subcontinent whilst an opposing hypothesis is that it evolved indigenously in the Indian subcontinent prior to the arrival of the Indo-Aryans.[2] Nidar Singh, one of the sole remaining practitioners of the martial art, claims the battle art has existed in the subcontinent for thousands of years and been preserved by people from many different cultures and religions.[9]

Adoption by Sikhs

Since the 17th century, the Sikh tribes of the Punjab adopted the martial art and became the chief custodians and masters of this fighting system.[10][5] Popular 18th century Sikh tradition based upon hagiographies and oral history claims that Guru Nanak had reached mastery of fourteen different subjects, one of which was martial in-nature.[6] Some of the subjects Guru Nanak is said to have mastered include swimming, medicine, yoga, horsemanship, and martial arts.[6] Guru Angad is remembered for promoting the art of wrestling among the Sikhs.[6] He established an akhara (Indic martial training centre and arena) in Khadur Sahib, named Gurdwara Mal Akhara.[6]

Furthermore, there is metaphorical martial imagery presented in the Guru Granth Sahib, an example is as follows:[6]

ਭੈ ਨਿਰਭਉ ਹਰਿ ਅਟਲੁ ਮਨਿ ਸਬਦਿ ਗੁਰ ਨੇਜਾ ਗਡਿਓ ॥

He is fearless in the love of the Eternal Hari; he has thrust the spear of the Guru’s shabad into the mind

—Guru Granth Sahib, page 1396, Savaiye praising of Guru Amar Das by Bhatt Salh

Guru Arjan had discussed his feats when engaged in wrestling bouts in the akhara of Guru Ram Das.[6] Guru Arjan also showcased his skills in horsemanship by pegging using a lance on horseback when his future in-laws impugned him.[6] Guru Arjan also kept valorous warriors in his entourage but was eventually executed by the Mughal Empire.[6]

Due to his father's execution by the state, Guru Hargobind enacted militarization reforms of the Sikh community to raise an army of devotees to protect the faith if needed.[6] Baba Buddha, who is believe to have learnt the martial art from Guru Nanak himself, taught Guru Hargobind and precursory Sikh gurus the martial art of shastar vidya, was now ordained to pass on the knowledge of the martial art to the new recruits of the first Sikh army, the Akal Sena.[6] Guru Hargobind adopted the martial art for his Sikh army as the standard battle technique, in-order to prepare his Sikh warriors for conflict against the Mughal Empire.[2][6] He combined the martial art with the religious concept of miri and piri, which taught the importance of spiritual but also temporal power and the value of balancing them.[2] Sikh warriors were thus taught to only engage in battle only for defensive means and only ever as a last-resort to resolution of a conflict.[2] Based on oral history passed down by the Nihang Sikhs, Guru Hargobind is believed to have developed a new form of the martial art and this new form was taught to Sikhs at the raṇjīt akhāṛā.[6] Guru Tegh Bahadur was a capable warrior in his own right and was named after the courageousness he displayed when wielding a sword.[6]

Guru Gobind Singh was a great patron of the martial art ever since he was a youth.[6] He mastered his martial abilities and understanding through listening to heroic ballads and the expositions of their contents.[6] He martially trained through engaging in hunts and practiced using a particular weapon which was a leopard-claw-shaped dagger, known as bāg nakkā.[6] Guru Gobind Singh envisioned the divine in the form of a sword.[6] According to the Sikhāṅ dī Bhagatmālā by Bhai Mani Singh, Guru Gobind Singh composed the Dasam Granth as a treatise to teach the Sikhs the art of warfare.[6] It further describes that the Guru Granth Sahib is for bhagatī (devotion), the Dasam Granth on the other hand is for shaktī (warfare), and that it contains contains yudh mai bāṇī (martial hymns) within it for this ordained purpose.[6] Furthermore, this overarching narrative of a need for warfare to defend Sikh sovereignty is further stated by Rattan Singh Bhangu in-response to inquiries by the British captain David Murray.[6]

The Jaap Sahib composition is said to have been recited by the tenth guru whenever he was instructing in or observing a group of Sikhs practicing the art of shastar vidya after a morning liturgical service.[6] The recitiation of this hymn served as a meditational component to the martial training regimen.[6]

Within the Shastar Nām Mālā Purāṇ ('Ancient Rosary of the Names of Weapons') composition found on pages 717–808 of the Dasam Granth, each section is dedicated to a particular weapon of importance.[6] The sword (Bhagautī) is given the first 27 verses, the quoit (Chakkar) is given verses 28–74, the bow (Bān) is described in verses 75–252, the noose (Pansh) in verses 253–460, and lastly the gun (Tupak) is given the largest section of all, comprising verses 461–1318.[6] The Bhagautī Astotra (often classified as an apocryphal composition) also describes martial concepts.[6]

In early Sikh literature, there are further references to the science and art of warfare, such as in the rahitnāmā of Bhai Chaupa Singh, which stresses upon the importance of a Sikh learning and practicing shastar vidya.[6] Another prescription for Sikhs to study shastar vidya can be found in the rahitnāmā of Bhai Daya Singh.[6] The rahitnāmā of Bhai Nand Lal also discusses the essentialness of a Sikh becoming acquainted with weaponry.[6] The Prem Sumārag Granth further discusses the duty of Sikhs to provide assistance in any martial cause.[6] Even Sikh women had knowledge in the art of warfare and used it to defend themselves in worst-case scenarios.[6]

After Guru Gobind Singh died, the principle ustad (teacher) lineage of shastar vidya then passed onto Baba Binod Singh and then after him to Akali Phula Singh.[6]

During the Anglo-Sikh wars, the martial art proved a lethal threat to the British, when Sikh swordsmen with their curved blades cut down many British soldiers, who instead were wielding swords that were "too straight and blunt".[6] An account of British soldiers being killed by Sikh warriors with their swords is described during a cavalry charge of the Battle of Ramnagar.[6]

Decline

The battle form was taught and practiced by masters and their students openly up until the arrival of the colonial British administration in the Punjab, after-which its practice went underground.[2][6] In the aftermath of the Anglo-Sikh wars and annexation of the Sikh Empire, the art was banned by the new British administrators of India in the mid-19th century.[10][9] Sikhs practicing the martial art were viewed with suspicion by the British overlords.[6] Due to its banning, many Shastar Vidya masters were either killed or exiled and thus knowledge of the martial art declined.[2] Due to the disbarment act of the Punjab, many teachers (ustads) of Shastar Vidya were executed by the British authorities.[6]

It was gradually was replaced by gatka, a performative martial art, during the colonial era.[10] The British allowed and actively promoted gatka in-replacement of shastar vidya because gatka was "ceremonial" and "toned-down" in-comparison.[10] Whilst Sikh martial arts were adopted by the Sikh regiments in the British Indian Army, it was only done so as a ritualized "defence or display art".[10]

According to Kamalroop Singh, it is too simplistic and reductionist to blame the decline of traditional Sikh martial art solely on the British administrators.[11] Rather, he also cites the changing nature of warfare brought on by technological development, seen with the surmounting of traditional martial arts by the adoption of modern firearms.[11] The formerly practical martial arts became increasingly ritualized and ceremonial affairs.[11] However, they also affirm that the British administration did persecute ustads (masters) of traditional Sikh martial arts by imprisoning and even hanging them.[11]

In 1878, the Akal Takht sent out a hukamnama that stressed upon the importance of Sikhs learning and maintaining the martial art of shastar vidya.[6] Writing in 1891, Giani Gian Singh describes the decline of the martial art:[6]

Before 1857, many types of weapons and armour were found in every house. The people learnt and taught shastarvidiā and became complete soldiers in their own homes. Now nobody even speaks of its techniques and the sons of brave warriors are becoming merchants. To those of us who have employed shastarvidiā, it is becoming like a dream. In another fifty years or so people will say it was all but lies.

— Giani Gian Singh, Twarikh Guru Khalsa, pages 36–37

However, many ustads simply passed on knowledge of the martial art in-secret and away from spying eyes, some notable masters who continued teaching the martial art to ensure its survive and passing down includes:[6]

  • Baba Gian Singh 'Rab' (also known as Gian Singh 'Sutandar'), trained many students in shastar vidya and a small pamphlet authored by him was posthumously published after his death.[6][12]
  • Baba Gian Singh (of Bhindran), a promoter and teacher of jhaṭkā gatkā or jaṅg vidiyā (war arts).[6] He was the last surviving student of Baba Gian Singh 'Rab'.[6]
  • Gurbax Singh (from the village of Langeri, Hoshiarpur district), also a student of Baba Gian Singh 'Rab'.[6]

Revival

Even though the martial art was heavily persecuted during the colonial period, a small group of ustads (masters) did manage to pass down knowledge of it to a select, small group of practitioners.[11] Many teachers of contemporary Shastar Vidya ultimately claim descent from the teacher-student (ustad-shagirad) lineage of Gian Singh 'Rab'.[6] One of Gian Singh's students was named Mohinder Singh, who himself was the teacher of the famous teacher Nidar Singh.[6] Many gurdwaras and Sikh organizations have begun to teach the martial art once again, where it is taught and practiced alongside gatka.[13] The revival of the martial art began in the United Kingdom amongst members of the local Sikh diaspora and spread out from there.[13] The Akali-Nihang sect of Sikhs claims to be the group that has preserved the martial art over the years as part of their traditions.[8] The digital age and Internet has led to increased awareness and discussion of the traditional martial art amongst the diasporic Sikh youth.[14][15]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Also spelt as Shastar Vidiya

References

  1. ^ a b Goldberg, Elliott (2016). The Path of Modern Yoga: The History of an Embodied Spiritual Practice. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781620555682. But his real interest lay in studying shastar vidya ("the art of weapons"–a 17th-century Sikh martial art) from the master Rajratna Rajpriya Professor Manikrao.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Sagoo, Harjit Singh (June 2012). "Sikh Warrior Ways". Black Belt. 50 (6): 60–61. ISSN 0277-3066 – via ebscohost.
  3. ^ Hegarty, Stephanie (2011-10-30). "The only living master of a dying martial art". Retrieved 2019-04-11.
  4. ^ Myrvold, Kristina (2011). Sikhs in Europe: Migration, Identities, and Representations. Routledge. p. 241. ISBN 9781317055068.
  5. ^ a b Mukherjee, Priyanka; Taan, Griesham (26 October 2021). "Sanatan Shastar Vidya: The Ancient Indian Battlefield Art". BBC Reel.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy cz da db dc dd de df dg dh di dj dk dl dm dn do dp dq dr ds dt du dv dw dx dy dz ea eb ec ed Singh, Kamalroop (2014). "38. Sikh Martial Art (Gatkā)". In Singh, Pashaura; Fenech, Louis E. (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of Sikh Studies. Oxford Handbooks Online. Oxford University Press. pp. 459–470. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199699308.013.022.
  7. ^ Singh, Gobind. "Dasam Bani - Pannaa 717". SikhiToTheMax - Khalis Foundation. Retrieved 12 September 2023.
  8. ^ a b c Weigler, Elizabeth Ann (2019). The Lives We Tell: Sikh Identity and Collective Memories of the Great War in Britain (Thesis). UC Santa Barbara. p. 18. Some members of the UKPHA are closely aligned with Nihang Sikh tradition, which also saw resurgence in the British diaspora, primarily, if not exclusively, among young men. Keeping a form of Khalsic identity, Nihangs closely ally themselves to a Sikh history prior to colonization by the British and after the Khalsa was instated, a history that represents an authentic warrior lineage prior to the rupture of British colonial identity politics. The tradition is said to have been passed on via oral history and in embodied skills and ritual practices such as shastar vidya (weapons-based martial art) and shastar puja (weapons-veneration) (S. Singh 2015).
  9. ^ a b "British Sikhs revive deadly art banned by the Raj". Reuters. 2009-07-23. Retrieved 2019-04-11.
  10. ^ a b c d e "Ancient but deadly: the return of shastar vidiya". The Independent. 2009-05-05. Retrieved 2019-04-11.
  11. ^ a b c d e Singh, Pashaura; Fenech, Louis E.; Singh, Kamalroop (2014). "Sikh Martial Arts (Gatka)". The Oxford Handbook of Sikh Studies. Oxford University Press. pp. 468–69. ISBN 9780191004117.
  12. ^ Singh, Santa. Shastar Vidya (PDF) (in Punjabi). Budha Dal.
  13. ^ a b Singh, Pashaura (2018). "The millennial generation of Sikhs in North America". Sikh Formations. 14 (3–4): 260–279. doi:10.1080/17448727.2018.1485376. S2CID 149817532 – via Taylor & Francis. It is remarkable to acknowledge four emerging trends in the millennial generation of Sikhs in North America. ... Second, there is a resurgence of the training of gatka (literally, 'sword play') and martial arts (shastar vidya) among millennial Sikhs (K. Singh 2014). Both young boys and girls practice gatka after learning Punjabi language and Gurbani kirtan. As a result, they proudly wear traditional Nihang dress (bana) in blue, white, or saffron colors. It is no wonder that the Khalsa identity has come to the fore through this process of revitalization. This is a new phenomenon in North America. The revival of Sikh martial arts first took place in the United Kingdom and then it spread across the globe. Its popularity in the UK may be seen from a recent event in the Huddersfield gurdwara, covered live by BBC, in which a famous choreographer–Steve Elias at 'Our Dancing Town'–amazingly took part in a Sikh sword play (Elias 2017). One could actually observe the display of martial arts by young boys and girls at annual Sikh parades (Nagar Kirtan) at Vaisakhi Day or any other celebrations related the anniversaries of the Sikh Gurus.
  14. ^ Cobb, Mark; Puchalski, Christina; Rumbold, Bruce (2012). "14 - Sikhism". Oxford Textbook of Spirituality in Healthcare. Oxford Textbooks In Public Health. Oxford University Press. p. 93. ISBN 9780191502187. Sikhs are no longer restricted to their family and local congregations for guidance on personal (including medical) dilemmas. Instead, through countless websites and online forums, they can link with Sikhs worldwide. Increasingly, individuals are connecting with diverse groups of politically and/or spiritually bonded Sikhs. 'Tradition' is being shared and re-invented in ways unimaginable to parents and grandparents who struggled for stability and upward mobility as members of a minority in a western environment. Discussion of ethical issues, discovery of Sikhs' martial heritage--as demonstrated in swordplay (gatka and shastar vidya) - and involvement in devotional music are all facilitated by modern media. So too is access to yoga and alternative medicine via TV Asian networks.
  15. ^ Jacobsen, Knut A.; Myrvold, Kristina (2012). Sikhs Across Borders: Transnational Practices of European Sikhs. Bloomsbury Religious Studies. A&C Black. p. 128. ISBN 9781441113870. The discussions on Sikhawareness.com put a great deal of emphasis on the traditional arts of Sikhism, such as the martial traditions (shastar vidiya), classical music (rag vidiya), and early pre-reform Sikh literature such as Dasam Granth, Sarbloh Granth, Suraj Parkash Granth, Panth Parkash, as well as the works of the early Nirmala scholars. Great emphasis is also placed on "Hindu scriptures," such as the Bhagavad Gita and the Upanishads, in order to interpret the Sikh scripture from a broader Indian context of religious texts. texts. The members are thus approaching the Sikh religion from a scholarly perspective ...

Further reading

  • Sagoo, Harjit Singh (2017). Shastra Vidya: The Ancient Indian Martial Art of the Hindu Kshatriyas (1st ed.). CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. ISBN 9781541201682.
  • Nihang, Nidar Singh; Singh, Parmjit (2008). In the Master's Presence: The Sikhs of Hazoor Sahib. Vol. 1. Kashi House. ISBN 9780956016805.
  • Nihang, Nidar Singh (1998). The Fighting Traditions and Fighting Arts of the Traditional Sikh Warriors the Beloved of Guru Gobind Singh Ji the Akali Nihangs (2nd ed.).

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