Bhat Jaita: Difference between revisions

From SikhiWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
 
No edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
Bhat Jaita, was a devout  Sikh  of the time of Guru Arjan. He had received initiation at the hands of the  Guru  at Amritsar. Returning home, he, along with his companions, Bhai   Nanda  and Bhai   Piraga,  had ceased  observing the caste rites and rituals. Their family priests chided them for their departing from the customs of their forefathers. They, in the words of Bhai Mani Singh, Sikhdn di Bhagat Maid, quipped: "You yourselves have been telling us that religious rites arc not to be performed in a house freshly defiled by a birth or a death. Since we have met our Guru, death has taken place in our household of ignorance and new knowledge has taken birth. Customary rituals have therefore become irrelevant."
Bhat Jaita, was a devout  Sikh  of the time of [[Guru Arjan]]. He had received initiation at the hands of the  Guru  at Amritsar. Returning home, he, along with his companions, Bhai Nanda  and Bhai Piraga,  had ceased  observing the caste rites and rituals. Their family priests chided them for their departing from the customs of their forefathers. They, in the words of [[Bhai Mani Singh]], Sikhdn di Bhagat Maid, quipped: "You yourselves have been telling us that religious rites arc not to be performed in a house freshly defiled by a birth or a death. Since we have met our Guru, death has taken place in our household of ignorance and new knowledge has taken birth. Customary rituals have therefore become irrelevant."
 
[[Category: Early Gursikh Personalities]]

Latest revision as of 23:01, 2 January 2007

Bhat Jaita, was a devout Sikh of the time of Guru Arjan. He had received initiation at the hands of the Guru at Amritsar. Returning home, he, along with his companions, Bhai Nanda and Bhai Piraga, had ceased observing the caste rites and rituals. Their family priests chided them for their departing from the customs of their forefathers. They, in the words of Bhai Mani Singh, Sikhdn di Bhagat Maid, quipped: "You yourselves have been telling us that religious rites arc not to be performed in a house freshly defiled by a birth or a death. Since we have met our Guru, death has taken place in our household of ignorance and new knowledge has taken birth. Customary rituals have therefore become irrelevant."