Bhai Hema: Difference between revisions

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*'''Bhai Hema''', a devout  Sikh  of Khanpur, a village now known as Khan Chhapn, 8 km west of  Goindval  (30°22'N, 75"9'E) in  Amritsar  district of the  Punjab,  who would extend the hospitality of his humble thatched hut, chhapn'm  Punjabi,  to any  Sikh  or holy man. Once, during the winter season,  Guru Arjan, while travelling through the countryside with a few attendants, was suddenly caught in rain and storm near Khanpur. As records the author of the Gurbilds Pdtshdhi Chhevin, his attendants knocked at the doors of several wellbuilt mansions, but none opened to give them shelter. The  Guru  then took them to  Bhai  Hema's hut. It was an unexpected delight for Hema to receive and serve the Guru. He gave the  Guru the only blanket he had, and himself, exposed under the leaking roof, prepared a frugal fare which he adoringly served to the holy guest and his Sikhs.  Guru Arjan was very pleased and composed, extempore, the hymn beginning with the lines: "Handsome and prosperous is the thatched hut in which God's praises are recited; useless, utterly useless are the mansions where He is not remembered." (GG, 745).
*[[Bhai Hema (devotee of Guru Arjan Dev)]]


Bhai Hema was taken ill owing to his exposure during the cold night. Guru Arjan stayed with him during his sickness. But Hema did not survive and died, as had been his wish, in the Guru's arms. The Guru himself performed the obsequies.
*[[Bhai Hema (during Guru Tegh Bahadur's time]]
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*'''Bhai Hema''',  a devout  Sikh  of  Guru  Tegh Bahadur, along with his brother (Nagahia) and father (Lakkhi Shah) and another person by the name of Naik, son of Kahna, managed to take the Guru  Tegh Bahadur's headless body from the clutches of Aurangzeb's men who had been ordered to  quarter and  display the Guru's remains as a lesson to any who would dare to stand up to him. Bhai Hema used his home at Raislna (Delhi) to  cremate the Guru's body. Any cremation in the open would  have alerted the authorities, so the Gursikhs brought the Guru's body into Bhai Hema's home, to which they then set fire.
[[Category:Disambiguation]]
 
This happened on Maghar sudi 6, 1732 Bk/AD 1675.
 
==References==
1. Padam, Piara Singh, and Giani Garja Singh, eds. Guru kian Sakhian. Patiala, 1986
 
[[category:bhai]]

Revision as of 07:52, 7 June 2008