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{{aowhy|[[Template:Did you know|Did you know...]]}}<div style="background-color:#FFFFEC;"> | {{aowhy|[[Template:Did you know|Did you know...]]}}<div style="background-color:#FFFFEC;"> | ||
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* .... that '''[[ | {{pm|File:Matha tek.jpg|[[Matha taykna]]}} | ||
* .... that '''[[Matha taykna]]''' (past tense) is the act of bowing down and touching the floor with one’s forehead as a sign of respect for [[Gurbani]]. It terms of body languages, it is a position of extreme submission and humility. | |||
*.... that '''[[Baba Gurditta]]''' (1613 - 1638), was the eldest son of the sixth [[Sikh Guru]], [[Guru Hargobind]] and [[Mata Damodari]]; he was also an elder brother of [[Guru Tegh Bahadur]], the ninth [[Sikh Guru]] and that he and his wife [[Mata Nihal Kaur]] were the parents of [[Guru Har Rai]] and [[Dhir Mall]]. | *.... that '''[[Baba Gurditta]]''' (1613 - 1638), was the eldest son of the sixth [[Sikh Guru]], [[Guru Hargobind]] and [[Mata Damodari]]; he was also an elder brother of [[Guru Tegh Bahadur]], the ninth [[Sikh Guru]] and that he and his wife [[Mata Nihal Kaur]] were the parents of [[Guru Har Rai]] and [[Dhir Mall]]. | ||
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* that in [[Sikhi]], '''[[Guru Granth Sahib against cruelty|cruelty is not permitted]]'''; cruelty is an aspect of human understanding that has been addressed very clearly by the [[Sikh Gurus]]. {{srig-h|147|6107|Cruelty, material attachment, greed and anger are the four rivers of fire. Falling into them, one is burnt, O Nanak!}}. | * that in [[Sikhi]], '''[[Guru Granth Sahib against cruelty|cruelty is not permitted]]'''; cruelty is an aspect of human understanding that has been addressed very clearly by the [[Sikh Gurus]]. {{srig-h|147|6107|Cruelty, material attachment, greed and anger are the four rivers of fire. Falling into them, one is burnt, O Nanak!}}. | ||
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{{pm|File:Matha tek.jpg|[[Matha taykna]]}} | |||
* .... that '''[[Matha taykna]]''' (past tense) is the act of bowing down and touching the floor with one’s forehead as a sign of respect for [[Gurbani]]. It terms of body languages, it is a position of extreme submission and humility. | |||
* .... that [[Baba Gurditta]] (1613 - 1638), was the eldest son of the sixth [[Sikh Guru]], [[Guru Hargobind]] and [[Mata Damodari]]; he was also an elder brother of [[Guru Tegh Bahadur]], the ninth [[Sikh Guru]] and that he and his wife [[Mata Nihal Kaur]] were the parents of [[Guru Har Rai]] and [[Dhir Mall]]. | * .... that [[Baba Gurditta]] (1613 - 1638), was the eldest son of the sixth [[Sikh Guru]], [[Guru Hargobind]] and [[Mata Damodari]]; he was also an elder brother of [[Guru Tegh Bahadur]], the ninth [[Sikh Guru]] and that he and his wife [[Mata Nihal Kaur]] were the parents of [[Guru Har Rai]] and [[Dhir Mall]]. | ||
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* .... that '''[[Gurdwara Bangla Sahib]]''' is situated in the heart of [[Delhi|New Delhi's]] Connaught Place area and originally was the bungalow (haveli) of [[Mirza Raja Jai Singh]], hence the name Bangla Sahib. | * .... that '''[[Gurdwara Bangla Sahib]]''' is situated in the heart of [[Delhi|New Delhi's]] Connaught Place area and originally was the bungalow (haveli) of [[Mirza Raja Jai Singh]], hence the name Bangla Sahib. | ||
* .... that '''[[Bhai Jivan Singh]]''' (1649 - 1705) was the name given to Bhai Jaita after he had received the rites of initiation at the hands of [[Guru Gobind Singh]] in [[1699]]; it was he who had risked his life to recover and return the severed head of [[Guru Tegh Bahadur]] to [[Anandpur Sahib]] in 1675. | {{pm|File:Bhai Jaita and Guru Tegh Bahadur-sml-m1.jpg|[[Bhai Jivan Singh]] with the Guru's head}} | ||
* .... that '''[[Bhai Jivan Singh]]''' (1649 - 1705) was the name given to Bhai Jaita after he had received the rites of initiation at the hands of [[Guru Gobind Singh]] in [[1699]]; it was he who had risked his life to recover and return the severed head of [[Guru Tegh Bahadur]] to [[Anandpur Sahib]] in [[1675]]. | |||
* that in [[Sikhi]], '''[[Guru Granth Sahib against cruelty|cruelty is not permitted]]'''; cruelty is an aspect of human understanding that has been addressed very clearly by the [[Sikh Gurus]]. {{srig-h|147|6107|Cruelty, material attachment, greed and anger are the four rivers of fire. Falling into them, one is burnt, O Nanak!}}. | * that in [[Sikhi]], '''[[Guru Granth Sahib against cruelty|cruelty is not permitted]]'''; cruelty is an aspect of human understanding that has been addressed very clearly by the [[Sikh Gurus]]. {{srig-h|147|6107|Cruelty, material attachment, greed and anger are the four rivers of fire. Falling into them, one is burnt, O Nanak!}}. |
Revision as of 02:05, 5 December 2009
Did you know...
- .... that Matha taykna (past tense) is the act of bowing down and touching the floor with one’s forehead as a sign of respect for Gurbani. It terms of body languages, it is a position of extreme submission and humility.
- .... that Baba Gurditta (1613 - 1638), was the eldest son of the sixth Sikh Guru, Guru Hargobind and Mata Damodari; he was also an elder brother of Guru Tegh Bahadur, the ninth Sikh Guru and that he and his wife Mata Nihal Kaur were the parents of Guru Har Rai and Dhir Mall.
- .... that Maharaja Ranjit Singh (1780 - 1839) also called "Sher-e-Punjab" ("The Lion of Punjab") was the principle Sikh ruler of the sovereign country of Punjab and the Sikh Empire over period 1801 to 1839.
- that in Sikhi, cruelty is not permitted; cruelty is an aspect of human understanding that has been addressed very clearly by the Sikh Gurus. "Cruelty, material attachment, greed and anger are the four rivers of fire. Falling into them, one is burnt, O Nanak!" (SGGS p 147).