Gurdwara Banda Ghat: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:Bandaghat.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Gurudwara Shri Banda Ghat Sahib, Nanded]]
[[Image:Bandaghat.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Gurudwara Shri Banda Ghat Sahib, Nanded]]


'''BANDA GHAT''', NANDED  Gurudwara Banda Ghat Sahib , about two furlongs upstream from Nagina Ghat is the spot where  Madho  Das, a hot heated and headstrong Bairagi Sadhu,had his abode.  Guru  Gobind Singh  had heard about him from  Mahant  Jait Ram of  Singh Dadu Dwara. His original name was Lachhman Das. He was native of Rajauri in Jammu and Kashmir. A Rajput by birth he had been trained in the martial arts and had been fond of hunting. A chance killing of a pregnant doe at his hands transformed him first into a remorseful sinner in search of redemption, and later, after having acquired some occult powers through austerities and single minded devotion to learning of such arts, into an arrogant recluse impatient with lesser mortals,  Guru  Gobind Singh,  within a few days of his arrival at  Nanded  came to see him here, according to Bhatt Vahi sources on 3rd September 1708.  Madho  Das was not in his hermitage then, and the  Guru  decided to wait for him. It is said that in order to test the
'''BANDA GHAT''', NANDED  Gurudwara Banda Ghat Sahib , about two furlongs upstream from Nagina Ghat is the spot where  Madho  Das, a hot heated and headstrong Bairagi Sadhu, had his abode.  Guru  Gobind Singh  had heard about him from  Mahant  Jait Ram of  Singh Dadu Dwara. His original name was Lachhman Das. He was a native of Rajauri in Jammu and Kashmir. A Rajput by birth he had been trained in the martial arts and had been fond of hunting. A chance killing of a pregnant doe at his hands transformed him first into a remorseful sinner in search of redemption, and later, after having acquired some occult powers through austerities and single minded devotion to learning of such arts, into an arrogant recluse impatient with lesser mortals,  Guru  Gobind Singh,  within a few days of his arrival at  Nanded  came to see him here, according to Bhatt Vahi sources on 3rd September 1708.  Madho  Das was not in his hermitage then, and the  Guru  decided to wait for him.  


Bairagi’s mettle, the  Guru  deliberatly provoked him by having some of the former’s goats slaughtered by the Sikhs. This naturally put  Madho Das besides himself with anger as he returned to his hermitage and found the trespass and he sacrillege, and he at once involed his occult powers to bring the trespasser to his knees, but finding them ineffective, he himself took little time to realise and acknowledge the spiritual superiority of the  Guru,  at whose feet he at once surrendered himself. The chroniclers narrate their brief introductory conversaton thus:
It is said that in order to test the Bairagi’s mettle, the  Guru  deliberatly provoked him by having some of the former’s goats slaughtered and cooked by the Sikhs. This naturally put  Madho Das besides himself with anger as he returned to his hermitage and found the trespass and the sacrillege, and he at once attemptedto better the Guru and bring him to his knees, but finding he could not mentaly overpower the Guru, he took little a time to realise and acknowledge the spiritual superiority of the  Guru,  at whose feet he at once surrendered himself. The chroniclers narrate their brief introductory conversaton after this as:


The Guru : \"Who are you\"
The Guru : \"Who are you\"
Madho Das : \"I am a banda (lit man as well as a slave)\"
Madho Das : \"I am a banda (lit. a man as well as a slave)\"
The Guru : \"Whose Banda\"
The Guru : \"Whose Banda\"
Madho Das : \"Yours my Lord\"
Madho Das : \"Yours my Lord\"


The guru blessed him and raised him to his feet. He later administered Khande di pahul to Madho Das and renamed him Banda Singh (Gurbakhsh Singh according to some sources, but the name Banda stuck and he is known to historians by his popular name as Banda Bahadur or Banda Singh Bahadur). During the next four weeks, the Guru instructed him in the essentials of Sikh faith, assessed his potential as a leader and briefed him about impending mission; and a few days before the stabbing incident, Banda Singh was on his way to Punjab accompanied by five Singhs whose counsel, the Guru commanded he was to heed, although he would be the supreme commander in the impending campaign. Gurudwara Banda Ghat for short, is housed in a single square room with a covered circumabulatory passage around it (Rebuilt since)
The guru blessed him and raised him to his feet. He later administered Khande di pahul to Madho Das and renamed him Banda Singh (Gurbakhsh Singh--according to some sources, but the name Banda stuck and he is known to historians by his popular name as Banda Bahadur or Banda Singh Bahadur). During the next four weeks, the Guru instructed him in the essentials of Sikh faith, assessed his potential as a leader and briefed him about impending mission; and a few days before the attack on Guruji, Banda Singh was on his way to Punjab accompanied by five Singhs whose counsel, the Guru commanded he was to heed, although he would be the supreme commander in the impending campaign. Gurudwara Banda Ghat for short, is housed in a single square room with a covered circumabulatory passage around it (Rebuilt since)


[[Category:Gurdwaras In Maharashtra]]
[[Category:Gurdwaras In Maharashtra]]

Revision as of 16:58, 21 March 2008

Gurudwara Shri Banda Ghat Sahib, Nanded

BANDA GHAT, NANDED Gurudwara Banda Ghat Sahib , about two furlongs upstream from Nagina Ghat is the spot where Madho Das, a hot heated and headstrong Bairagi Sadhu, had his abode. Guru Gobind Singh had heard about him from Mahant Jait Ram of Singh Dadu Dwara. His original name was Lachhman Das. He was a native of Rajauri in Jammu and Kashmir. A Rajput by birth he had been trained in the martial arts and had been fond of hunting. A chance killing of a pregnant doe at his hands transformed him first into a remorseful sinner in search of redemption, and later, after having acquired some occult powers through austerities and single minded devotion to learning of such arts, into an arrogant recluse impatient with lesser mortals, Guru Gobind Singh, within a few days of his arrival at Nanded came to see him here, according to Bhatt Vahi sources on 3rd September 1708. Madho Das was not in his hermitage then, and the Guru decided to wait for him.

It is said that in order to test the Bairagi’s mettle, the Guru deliberatly provoked him by having some of the former’s goats slaughtered and cooked by the Sikhs. This naturally put Madho Das besides himself with anger as he returned to his hermitage and found the trespass and the sacrillege, and he at once attemptedto better the Guru and bring him to his knees, but finding he could not mentaly overpower the Guru, he took little a time to realise and acknowledge the spiritual superiority of the Guru, at whose feet he at once surrendered himself. The chroniclers narrate their brief introductory conversaton after this as:

The Guru : \"Who are you\" Madho Das : \"I am a banda (lit. a man as well as a slave)\" The Guru : \"Whose Banda\" Madho Das : \"Yours my Lord\"

The guru blessed him and raised him to his feet. He later administered Khande di pahul to Madho Das and renamed him Banda Singh (Gurbakhsh Singh--according to some sources, but the name Banda stuck and he is known to historians by his popular name as Banda Bahadur or Banda Singh Bahadur). During the next four weeks, the Guru instructed him in the essentials of Sikh faith, assessed his potential as a leader and briefed him about impending mission; and a few days before the attack on Guruji, Banda Singh was on his way to Punjab accompanied by five Singhs whose counsel, the Guru commanded he was to heed, although he would be the supreme commander in the impending campaign. Gurudwara Banda Ghat for short, is housed in a single square room with a covered circumabulatory passage around it (Rebuilt since)