Professor Darshan Singh Khalsa
Professor (Prof.) Darshan Singh Khalsa | |
Full Name : | Prof. Darshan Singh Khalsa |
Birth : | 1940 [1] |
Parents : | |
Spouse : | Bibi Manjit Kaur |
Children : | |
Death : | |
Other Info: | Presently living Toronto, Ontario, Canada. |
Prof. Darshan Singh Khalsa (also referred to as Singh Sahib - his title when in seva at Shri Akal Takhat) is a well known Sikh keertani and a prolific author. An ex-Jathedar of the Shri Akal Takhat Sahib, he is married to Bibi Manjit Kaur. He currently resides in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The Sangat usually refers to him as professor due to his teaching style of the Guru Granth Sahib ji.
Introduction
Prof. Darshan Singh Khalsa was born in November of 1940 in the village of Sur Singha, in undivided Punjab. He has been doing keertan and katha sewa for the past 40 years. He remained at seva of Shri Akal Takhat Sahib during one of the most turbulent times of the 20th century for Sikhs, from 1987 - 1990. [1]
During the partition of India when West Pakistan was carved out of the Punjab, the threat of violence forced thousands of Sikh and Hindu families to leave their ancestral homes. Prof. Darshan Singh Khalsa was forced to move to India when he was eight years old. His grandfather was a great scholar and ragi who served as bhai sahib's teacher and guide. As a young child he was taught by his grandfather to memorize a multitude of topics and writings; such as Gurbani kirtan, sakhi's and katha. [2]
By the time he was he was nine years old, he had done his first kirtan. Over time, as sangat began to enjoy his style of kirtan he became inspired to learn more. [2]
Kirtan Seva & Philosophy
At a very young age he began to memorize gurbani quickly. He seemed to know so much that one could hear a new shabad from him daily without him having to reference the Guru Granth Sahib ji. Eventually, based on his abilities and level of interest in Gurbani, kirtan and katha became his way of life. His goal, at this point in his life, became to fully comprehend the Guru Granth Sahib ji, not only to have memorized it.
During the period of 1984 he realized that Gurbani taught him to stand up for the panth. He was bestowed the seva of Jathedar of Shri Akal Takhat because he had a dynamic voice and only required the authoritative foundation for expressing the panth's needs. His priority during that period was to maintain the foundation of the Guru Granth Sahib ji and that of the panth. [2]
He eventually stepped down from that seva; his major reasons for leaving were the aggressive politics and unfair dealings that lurked within those committees. For three years of his seva, he did not ever leave the country as he knew the panth was in need. Today he believes that a conflict against panth or the Guru Granth is also his conflict. This explains why he spends half of his year in Canada and the rest in India. [2]
Guru Granth Sahib Academy
To continue his seva (to bring the message of the Guru to the panth), he realized that the use of online media would be an appropriate solution. Ggs Web Academy was created in 2004; Sukhmani Sahib and Kabir ji's Bani have been taught ever since, through the use of the website: ggsacademy.com. [2]
Having moved from Punjab to Canada he has busied himself by founding, in the first floor of the large home, the Guru Granth Sahib Academy ggsacademy.com. In a recent article featured on sikhchic.com, by the wordsmith T. Sher Singh, Singh describes his joy over finding out that the former Jathedar, raagi and Sikhi Pracharak, who he had admired for a long time, in his words, “for his spirituality and intellectual discourse has moved from Punjab, crossed the proverbial Seven Seas, and plunked himself down in a quiet rural community…”. [3] Besides teaching classes on the interpretation of bani in person and over the internet, he performs in a small hall on the first floor each friday night and saturday morning. More information can be found here. [1]
Words such as; Gem, source of inspiration, lighthouse of Sikhi, 'icon', Panth Ratan" are used to describe Prof. Darshan Singh Khalsa in the comments written in response to Singh's article. [3]
One person, who gives his name as Rajinder (from San Francisco, U.S.A.), reminds us that (after the invasion of the Harmandir Sahib in 1984) when every politician, intellectual and gyani decided to keep quiet to save themselves from persecution by the Goverment of India, Prof. Darshan Singh stood tall and sang a very emotional shabad, "Jab baan lagyo, tabe ros jagyo" , in New Delhi.
Featured Articles
- Prof. Darshan Singh Delivers Divine Discourses
- WSN-Politics News-‘Bhai Daljit Singh not part of it’
- WSN-Opinion-Internecine warfare turns ugly leaf in action against Prof Darshan Singh
- WSN-Core-Religion News-Darshan Singh not to appear before Takht Patna Sahib arshan Singh
- WSN-Core Religion-Guru Gobind Singh Foundation Honors Singh Sahib Prof. Darshan Singh
- WSN-Core Religion-Now a new Sikh shrinein the land of the Alps
- False Propaganda About Ragi Darshan Singh
Katha & Media
- ggsacademy.com – The website of the Guru Granth Sahib Academy, Ontario, Canada, which contains many recordings by Prof. Darshan Singh Khalsa
- sikhnet.com – Sikhnet has some recordings by Prof. Darshan Singh Khalsa
Pictures
References
More Topics
Readers are invited to add any info on the following:
- Parents
- Education
- Marriage
- Lifestyle
- Style of Narration and its Impact
- His Foreign Trips
- His books
- Achievements
- Other comments
Kirtan: | Raga · Taal · Ragmala · Classical Music · Sangeet · Dhuni · Divan · Asa di Var · Jatha · Simran · Shabad · Tuk · Rababi · Dhadhi |
Ragas: | Asa · Bairari · Basant · Bhairon · Bihagara · Bilaval · Devagandhari · Dhanasari · Gauri · Gond · Gujari · Jaijavanti · Jaitsri · Kalian · Kanara · Kedara · Maajh · Malaar · Mali Gaura · Maru · Nat Narain · Prabhati · Ramkali · Sarang · Sri · Sorath · Suhi · Tilang · Todi · Tukhari · Vadahans |
Ragis: | Harjinder Singh · Maninder Singh · Amolak Singh · Darshan Singh · Balwinder Singh · Harbans Singh · Anoop Singh · Niranjan Singh · Amrik Singh · Avtar Singh · Snatam Kaur ·Kamaljit Kaur · Dileep Kaur · Joginder Singh · SS Maskeen |
Saaj: | Harmonium · Tabla · · Tanpura · Taus · Rabab · Sarangi · Dilruba · · Saranda · Sarode · Sitar · Santoor · Pakhawaj · Dhadh · Dholak · Dool |
- See Wikipedia article on Professor Darshan Singh Khalsa for more information