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Ashram Life at Kartarpur (1521-1539)



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Ashram Life at Kartarpur (1521-1539)

He occupied himself largely with vigorous work in the fields, a rich convert having founded there a new village with a Sikh “temple”, to which disciples gradually began to gravitate from wherever he had preached his message. He also wrote down many of the hymns he had already sung elsewhere and which no doubt Mardana had committed to memory. Thus the Malar and Majh Vars were written out while Mardana still lived, and the Japji and Asa di Var soon after them; when Mardana died, in 1522, he was succeeded as chief minstrel by his son Shahzada.

The Guru now put off his weird costumes and dressed himself as an ordinary householder of the day. He regularly preached to the great crowd who came out daily to see him, teaching all to live in the world and work, while at the same time thinking of God always and praying for nothing but His grace. His strong personal attractiveness, his loveable ways and playful sense of humour, his persuasive words and simplicity which came out of the heart of his own all-embracing love went straight to the heart of all his hearers; he seemed to draw the poor and sorrowing especially to his arms. He taught all to drop meaningless outer forms and complications, to cling to the very simple essential Truth, to abandon caste and all other forms of egoistic pride, and to seek refuge only in the Name. His great courage in so boldly speaking out open criticism of Islam and Hinduism wherever he went shows us that he was no milk-and-water moonbaby but a true predecessor of that great hero Guru Gobind Singh. Yet his lively speech “radiated love and faith and attracted men as light gathers mothers”; says Puran Singh: “Wherever he went the hearts of the people were gladdened and they began singing his Song of Silence, which is not written on paper but on the hearts of his disciples, and there it still sings as of old.” Yet in his own person he was the very essence of humility, though always so quietly firm for the truth. He never claimed any extraordinary greatness for himself in spite of his vast influence, deeming himself a mere man among men, mortal and sinful as they were, though conscious of his union with the almighty Lover of all souls. Nor would he hold anything for himself even after settling down to “worldly life” again; whatever came to him he at once spent away on building almshouses or providing food for the poor.

A shopkeeper convert lived three years with him in those days, and then sold his goods away, took his Guru’s blessing, and went to Ceylon, where he converted that same Raja Sivanabha who had been the Guru’s host long before. To this man, as he left, Guru Nanak promised: “Whoever bathes in cold water and for three hours before dawn repeats God’s Name with love and devotion shall receive nectar at God’s door and be blended with Him who is unborn and self-existent.”

One morning the Guru noticed a little boy of seven who came daily for the dawn prayers and quietly slipped away immediately afterwards. Nanak asked the lad why he came and was delighted by his wise and pious answer. This was Bhai Budha, who until his death installed the first five of the guru’s successors. In those days early each morning the Sikhs repeated the Japji and Asa di Var in the Guru’s presence, following these with more hymns, the Guru freely explaining and answering questions on points in them until about 9:30. Then followed the drati-prayer taught at Puri, and after that came breakfast, all the Sikhs taking food together as one family. More singing and preaching followed, with manual labours, and after the Rahiras at sunset they had dinner together, followed by more songs; at about 10 they sang the Sohila and then all slept, though a few rose for prayer also in the night.

Somewhere about the end of 1531 the Guru wrote his exquisite mystic poem on the Twelve Months, its theme being the loving union of the soul with God. One day in 1532 Lehna, the priest of Durga in Khadur, was led to the Guru, and he saw the goddess whom he worshipped adoring Nanak’s feet. He surrendered to Nanak at once and became his favourite and most faithful disciple. Once when his friends congratulated the Guru on having so many converts he replied that he had in fact few real disciples; he then assumed a terrible form and many ran away from him at once, others only stopped to pick up some money and run; only one yogi, two other Sikhs and Lehna remained. The Guru asked these to eat of a stinking corpse, and only Lehna was ready for this; he found himself chosen as the Guru’s eventual successor and the carrion turned to sweetest prasad; Nanak’s own two sons had already proved themselves to be not perfectly obedient. On Lehna’s intercession all the deserters were forgiven and recalled to their Guru’s side.

Early in 1539 the Guru attended the Sivaratri festival at Achal Batala, where he wrote the Sidha Goshti, which is believed to be a report of a discussion held there with certain yogis who followed Forakhnath; huge crowds saluted him with deep reverence. He proceeded further to Pakapattan and called again on Sheikh Ibrahim; the old man rose to receive his great visitor with deepest reverence, the two embraced, and spoke of God to each other in verse all that night; they were most loving to each other and each was thrilled by the sayings of the other. He visited Dipalpur and went as far as Multan on this his last journey, and then returned home through Lahore. He did not again leave his Ashram while in that body. On 2nd September he had Bhai Budha formally install Lehna, later Guru Angad, as his successor, laying before him five paisa and a coconut as offerings; the crowds there began to sing and for five days festival was maintained, a sweet feast of song. Nanak fell into an ecstatic trance; his gaddi had given to Lehna, the Name as heritage to his two sons.

They sang the Sohila and the last sloka of the Japji; the Guru covered himself with a sheet, uttered the Divine Name of Vahiguru once, and passed into the Being of the Beloved Lord, his light being transferred to Guru Angad (Lehna). It was the 7th September 1539, and next day when the Hindus and Muslims disputed the right to dispose of the holy body they found only flowers beneath the sheet. The two samadhis, Hindu and Muslim, were later washed away by the River Ravi, so that men could not make them into idols and so betray the teacher they adored.




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