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  • ...mb|300px|Guru Ka Bagh, Gurdwara related to the visit of Guru Arjan Dev Ji, In 1585]] ...the many struggles by the [[Sikh]]s in the early 1920s, to seek justice, in regaining control of their own houses of worship.
    14 KB (2,486 words) - 16:19, 7 January 2013
  • ...t of [[Guru Nanak]] in 1506-1507. This Gurdwara is said to have been built in 1830. Besides, the founder Guru, [[Sri Guru Tegh Bahadur]], the ninth [[Gur ...a is second perhaps only to the Gurdwaras of [[Nankana Sahib]] and [[Panja Sahib]].
    26 KB (4,342 words) - 17:41, 21 December 2014
  • ...dasi|second]] and [[Fourth Udasi|fourth missionary]] journeys ([[Udasis]]) in 1506-1513 AD and 1519-1521 AD respectively. ...kh day]] on 15 April 1469. Nankana town is part of Nankana Sahib District in the [[Punjab]] province of [[Pakistan]]
    31 KB (5,045 words) - 21:09, 4 February 2012
  • 1748: 10,000 Sikhs were massacared in the Small Holocaust.. ...500 GurSikhs started their march from Takhat Sri Kaesgadh Sahib, Anandpur Sahib to Jaito, under the leadership of Sardar Pratap Singh Khurdpuri.
    22 KB (3,377 words) - 20:46, 1 June 2009
  • ...k / [[9 September]] [[1494]] at [[Sultanpur Lodhi]], now in [[Kapurthala]] district of the [[Punjab]]. This type of arrangement where the child is born at the ...d written verses) from which [[Guru Arjun Dev]] compiled the [[Guru Granth Sahib]] also became a renunciate, possibly influenced by Sri Chand.
    20 KB (3,490 words) - 17:00, 4 September 2020
  • ...' ([[6 June]] [[1868]] - [[6 October]] [[1963]]) was born at Sialkot (now in [[Pakistan]]). He was a [[Sikh]] political leader and virtually the first ...e Law College at Allahabad, but the death of his father and elder brother in quick succession, interrupted his studies as he had to return to Sialkot to
    17 KB (2,855 words) - 13:18, 29 July 2018
  • <center>THE SIKH GURDWARAS ACT, 1925.<br> RELATING TO GURDWARAS</center>
    162 KB (25,705 words) - 20:18, 6 July 2009
  • As published in, '''The Review of Religions''', March 1993 ...adiyya headquarters had been located before moving to its current location in London. The Ahmadiyya Movement’s emphasis on proselytization has led to t
    36 KB (6,262 words) - 08:06, 20 June 2009
  • ...urday]] [[15 April]], [[1469]] at Rai Bhoeki Talwandi, Pakistan ([[Nankana Sahib]]) |Bani in GGS = 974 Shabads in 19 Ragas, [[Gurbani]] Includes [[Japji]], [[Sidh Gohst]], Sohilaa, [[Dakhni
    50 KB (7,515 words) - 04:44, 27 November 2023
  • [[Image:Bhai-saahib.jpg|thumb|300px|right|Bhai Sahib, Bhai Sahib Randhir Singh ji]] '''BHAI SAHIB RANDHIR SINGH JI (1878-1961)<br>Freedom Fighter, Reformer, Theologian, and
    55 KB (9,847 words) - 10:10, 2 April 2024
  • ...Muslim is its population that its western and more important portion had, in the course of a few months of its establishment, been almost completely rid ...of faraway East Bengal, now the sole portion of Pakistan in which Hindus, in any appreciable numbers, are still to be found.
    46 KB (7,795 words) - 22:09, 15 January 2012
  • ...horses; they even otherwise regarded Sikhism as no different from Hinduism in its social milieu. ...for the whole of Punjab including the cis-Sutlej princely states. Sikhism, in the words of Census Commissioner, Denzil Ibbetson, was “on the decline”
    319 KB (52,256 words) - 00:19, 29 May 2012
  • '''''"In the Punjab in the sub- mountainous region the community came to be known as 'Saini'. It m ..., [London] Oxford University press, 1928</ref>[https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.237903]
    251 KB (39,509 words) - 23:24, 7 May 2024
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