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(New page: {{Aowh|Panj Piare}} thumb|200px|left|{{cs|The Panj Pyare lead a procession in India}} '''Panj Piare''' (literally the '''five beloved ones''') is the name gi...)
 
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{{Aowh|[[Panj Piare]]}}
{{Aow|Guru Nanak Medical Centre, Secunderabad}}
{{pm|File:Guru Nanak Medical Centre 2.png|[[Guru Nanak Medical Centre]]}}


[[Image:Panj Pyare.jpg|thumb|200px|left|{{cs|The Panj Pyare lead a procession in India}}]]
'''[[Guru Nanak Medical Centre]]''' is a charitable hospital based at Secunderabad in [[Andhra Pradesh]], [[India]]


'''Panj Piare''' (literally the '''five beloved ones''') is the name given to the five [[Sikh]]s, [[Bhai Daya Singh]], [[Bhai Dharam Singh]], [[Bhai Himmat Singh]], [[Bhai Mukham Singh]] and [[Bhai Sahib Singh]], who were so designated by [[Guru Gobind Singh]] at the historic divan at [[Anandpur Sahib]] on 30 March 1699. These five formed the nucleus of the [[Khalsa]] as the first batch to receive from the Gurus hands the [[Amrit]] or [[khanda di Pahul]], i.e. rites of the two-edged sword. On January 18 every year, the Sikhs celebrate the birthday of [[Bhai Himmat Singh]].
The Gurdwara Sahib, Secunderabad, and [[Guru Nanak Charitable Trust]] opened this medical centre on the premises of Gurdwara sahib on Sunday, October 07, 2007.  


According to the Prabhandak Committee president,  S. Baldev Singh Bagga and convener R.S. Saluja, this state-of-the-art polyclinic and diagnostic centre will provide free and low-cost medical treatment for the poor and needy of all religions and communities.


In [[Sikh]] theology, as in the [[India]]n classical tradition generally, [[panj]] or [[panch]], the numeral five, has a special significance. [[Guru Nanak]] in [[Japji]] refers to five [[khand]]s, i.e. stages or steps in spiritual development, and calls a spiritually awakened person a ''panch''. The ancient [[India]]n socio-political institution panchayat meant a council of five elders. Something like an inner council of five existed even in the time of the earlier Gurus: five Sikhs accompanied [[Guru Arjan]] on his last journey to [[Lahore]]; the five were each given 100 armed Sikhs to command by his successor, [[Guru Hargobind]]; [[Guru Tegh Bahadur]], set out on his journey to [[Delhi]] to court execution attended by five Sikhs.
[[Shiromani Gurdwara Prabhandak Committee]] president S. Avtar Singh Makwar, who was visiting the state of [[Andhra Pradesh]] for the first time, inaugurated the centre. It was said by the local people that this day care medical centre had become necessary to meet the demand of people in Secunderabad and surrounding localities when the Gandhi General Hospital moved to Musheerabad. <!----


{{Aowf|Panj Piare}}
The Guru Nanak Medical Centre is a true companion for family health; it is highly subsidised Medical Centre and provides health care at affordable cost. Apart from day care, general medicines, surgery, eye, dental, orthopaedics, ENT, skin, homeopathy, X-RAY, CT-Scan, Colour Doppler, Sonography, 2D-Echo, TMT, PFT, ECG, EEG, Pathology, Hormone assays, Heath checks are done here. It is a complete medical care centre for all kinds of tests and treatment.---> {{Aowf|Guru Nanak Medical Centre, Secunderabad}}

Latest revision as of 03:36, 29 February 2012

Guru Nanak Medical Centre is a charitable hospital based at Secunderabad in Andhra Pradesh, India.

The Gurdwara Sahib, Secunderabad, and Guru Nanak Charitable Trust opened this medical centre on the premises of Gurdwara sahib on Sunday, October 07, 2007.

According to the Prabhandak Committee president, S. Baldev Singh Bagga and convener R.S. Saluja, this state-of-the-art polyclinic and diagnostic centre will provide free and low-cost medical treatment for the poor and needy of all religions and communities.

Shiromani Gurdwara Prabhandak Committee president S. Avtar Singh Makwar, who was visiting the state of Andhra Pradesh for the first time, inaugurated the centre. It was said by the local people that this day care medical centre had become necessary to meet the demand of people in Secunderabad and surrounding localities when the Gandhi General Hospital moved to Musheerabad. .....More