Prem Sumarag Granth: Difference between revisions

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So far the oldest copy of Prem Sumdrag so far discovered is dated 1801.
So far the oldest copy of Prem Sumdrag so far discovered is dated 1801.
==Alexander the Great==
Earlier the Macedonian conqueror had defeated King Poris and put him back incharge of his Kingdom. Wherever he went he was tolerant of faiths other than his own, treating those he conquered with respect. Arabs lauded him as Iskandar also calling him Dhu’lquarnein (two horned Alexander). They even  included him among the  prophets. While his conquests were not spoken of in most of India his march through Punjab and Sindh must have left oral traditions of his rule.
The name the Muslim invaders used Iskanda was quickly reduced to Iskanda and finally Skanda in the same way that the Punjabi language has always simplified words. Did his trip through the land of the five rivers (six?) lend any thoughts or serve as a guideline to the author of the Prem Sumarag Granth or the Maharaja?

Revision as of 15:09, 30 May 2008

Prem Sumarag, lit. the true way to love is an anonymous work written in old Punjabi which suggests a model for the Sikh way of life and Sikh society. It can be regarded as the Sikh version of the 'Ten Commandments' of the Bible, 'Mosaic Law' and Shari'at (Islamic Religious Law). But in contrast this book is almost unknown and hasn't had any official recognisation by Sikh organisations or Gianis (Sikh scholars). Hardly any scholarship has been done on this book.

Written probably in the eighteenth century, it is a kind of rahitndmd attempting to prescribe norms of behaviour, religious as well as social, private as well as public, for members of the Khalsa Panth. It also provides a comprehensive model of Sikh polity with details concerning civil and military administration. Although known to earlier Sikh scholars, it was published for the first time in 1953 by the Sikh History Society, Amritsar, edited with an elaborate introduction by Bhai Randhir Singh, who accidentally in 1940 came by a partly mutilated manuscript, which he revised with the help of another manuscript preserved in the Punjab Public Library, Lahore. A second edition was brought out by New Book Company, Jalandhar, in 1965.

The granth is divided into ten dhidos (chapters) and each dhidois subdivided into several bachans (utterances or topics).

  • Chapter I opens with what may be called a prologue. It is in the form of an artistic device recalling the beginning of Guru Gobind Singh's Bachitra Natak where God addresses the Guru on the purpose for which he was being sent into the world of the mortals. That was to expunge evil and promote virtue. Following this mode, the author of Prem Sumdrag invests the code of conduct he is enunciating with divine sanction and intimates how important it was for the Sikhs to abide by it to realize the object for which the Khalsa was created by Guru Gobind Singh. The daily routine prescribed for a Sikh consists in getting up early in the morning, taking a bath, reciting Japu and Jap five times in the morning, Japu and Jap at noon, Sodar, Japu, and Jap in the evening and readings from the Bachitra Natak and Kirtan Sohild before going to bed.

The stress is on constant remembrance of God, on honest work, mutual help and love. The book stresses that a Sikh must shun flirtation and adultery, greed, anger, theft, egocentricity, speaking ill of others, falsehood and even the telling of something true, if the telling would cause harm to others. Sikhs are advised to be prepared to keep weapons for their defense ever ready, work for their living, be hospitable, address fellow Sikhs as 'Singh ji,' and resign himself, in all situations, to the Will of the Almighty. The book also details the method of Khalsa initiation and principles of social behaviour (3); rituals to be observed at childbirth (4); rules regarding the selection of lifepartners, the age for marriage, permitting a widow to remarry (5); the kind of food a Sikh should partake of and the kind, especially intoxicants, that he must avoided, laying special emphasis on cleanliness (6); the dress and ornaments a Sikh should wear, the occupations he should pursue and those he must forbear from (7).

Truth

Truthtelling is prized most. For the book states, "…he who perjures his oath shall be cast into the dark pit of hell." It goes on to state, he who renders false witness, sins and that even kings cannot claim exemption from these moral norms. (Maharaja Ranjit Singh was once called to task for a discretion, but because he accepted the punisment from th Akal Takht as correct, he was 'pardoned'.)

  • Chapter VII describes death rites. The seventh bachan of this chapter says: "Do not cry; do not lament, do not abjure sleeping on beds; accept (His) hukam as true and be resigned. Do not attend the funeral of a masand or of the followers of masandr, do not mix with them or with those Sikhs who observe tonsure. Feel not so restrained in respect of others, be they Hindu or Musalman...."

Was this Granth the Pattern followed or Patterned After…

Here the Granth differs from the idea of Shariat as it is stressed that the religion of the ruler of the ideal Sikh state should have absolute authority and even stresses that his decisions must be impartial and independent of any considerations of his beliefs or religion.


  • Chapter VIII contains the author's views regarding Sikh polity. According to him, the ideal form of Sikh state is a monarchy. Power was to be vested not in the Panth as a whole, but in a single ruler assisted by a sagacious minister. There were to be other pious and learned advisory councillors. The King, however, enjoyed absolute authority, without any check or restraint except for the voice of his own conscience. The foremost duty of the ruler was in fact to safeguard his own authority and to be always prepared to smother any challenge to it. The whole scheme of administration was drawn up on the model of medieval feudalism with its mansabadri and jdgirdan systems.

The king, however, was personally to supervise the administration of justice. He must be accessible to all his subjects, and his decisions must be impartial and independent of any considerations of belief or religion. At the same time, he was to remember that he owed special responsibility to the Khalsa Panth. Gurmukhi (Punjabi) was to be the official language of the State and all Sikh children were to be given instruction in the Khalsa rahit or code of conduct.

  • Chapter IX deals with miscellaneous matters such as rules of inheritance and distribution of property, debts and interest rate, slaves, animals, gardens and agricultural land. The last chapter may be regarded as an epilogue. It propounds the realization of sahaj jog (state of equipoise and contentment) as the ideal of human life. The path of sahaj is the most easy and at the same time the most difficult one. The seeker of sahaj must equip. himself with dayd (compassion), sevd (service) , bhdo (love) and bhagati (fervent devotion to God). In sum, complete submission to God's Will and indifference to both pain and pleasure was the essence of the "way of love."

For the author, the ideal Sikh State is an absolute, but benevolent, monarch with absolute authority. Since a wazir (chief minister) and a council of pious and learned advisers are suggested the work was most likely written after Maharaja Ranjit Singh's coming into power in 1799. Or could it have been the model on which he patterned his Kingdom.

So far the oldest copy of Prem Sumdrag so far discovered is dated 1801.

Alexander the Great

Earlier the Macedonian conqueror had defeated King Poris and put him back incharge of his Kingdom. Wherever he went he was tolerant of faiths other than his own, treating those he conquered with respect. Arabs lauded him as Iskandar also calling him Dhu’lquarnein (two horned Alexander). They even included him among the prophets. While his conquests were not spoken of in most of India his march through Punjab and Sindh must have left oral traditions of his rule.

The name the Muslim invaders used Iskanda was quickly reduced to Iskanda and finally Skanda in the same way that the Punjabi language has always simplified words. Did his trip through the land of the five rivers (six?) lend any thoughts or serve as a guideline to the author of the Prem Sumarag Granth or the Maharaja?