MEHRAJ, also spoken as Mahiraj or Marhaj, is a village 6 km northwest of Rampura Phul (30°16`N, 75°14`E) in Bathinda district founded in 1627 by Bhai Mohan (d. 1630), aJatt of the Siddhu clan, with the blessings and help of Guru Hargobind. According to Sikh tradition, Mohan with his tribe wanted to settle down in this area but the Bhullars, the local dominating tribe, resisted. Mohan sought Guru Hargobind`s blessing and succeeded in founding a village which he called Mehraj after the name of his greatgrandfather. The Bhullars tried to dislodge him, but were driven away with Guru Hargobind`s help. In the battle Guru Hargobind had to fight here against an imperial force led by Lalla Beg on 16 December 1634, he took up position around a pool of water about 3 km south of Mehraj. Sikhs, though vastly outnumbered, defeated the attacking force. Lalla Beg and several of his officers and men were killed. Guru Hargobind had them buried according to Muslim rites while he had the Sikhs fallen in action cremated. A tower subsequently raised indicates the sites where cremation and burial took place. GURDWARA CHHOTA GURUSAR TAMBU SAHIB, one kilometre southwest of the village, marks the site where Guru Hargobind had his tent (tambu, in Punjabi) set up at the time of his first visit to this place. It is a modestlooking shrine built on a low mound and managed by the village sangat. GURDWARA GURUSAR MEHRAJ marks the site Of Guru Hargobind`s camp during the battle of Mehraj. According to Cur Bilds Chhevm Pdtshdhi, Guru Hargobind had himself named this place Gurusar and declared it a place of pilgrimage, appointing a Ravidasi Sikh to look after it. The old building constructed by Maharaja Hira Singh of Nabha (18431911) was replaced during the 1980`s by the successors of Sam Gurmukh Singh Scvavale. Tlie new building, inside a walled compound, comprises a highccilingcd assembly hall, with the sanctum in the middle marked off by massive square columns and wide arches. Above the sanctum is a domed pavilion lined with glazed tiles and topped by a goldplated pinnacle and an umbrellashaped finial with a khandd at the apex. Domed kiosks adorn the hall corners. The Gurdwara, endowed with 250 acres of land, is affiliated to the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee. People from the surrounding villages throng for a dip in the holy sarovar on every Monday.
KIRATPUR SAHIB (76°35`E, SPll`N), a small town in Sivalak foothills in Rupnagar (Ropar) district of the Punjab, was founded by Baba Gurditta under instructions from his father, Guru Hargobind. According to the BhattVahis, the foundation was laid by Baba Sri Ghand, the aged son of Guru Nanak, on Baisakh Puranmashi 1683 Bk/1 May 1626 by ceremonially planting a twig on a tract of land acquired by the Guru from Raja Tara Chand of Kahlur, a small hill state. Guru Hargobind settled in Kiratpur after the battles of Kartarpur and Phagwara in 1635. It remained the seat of the Sikh Gurus until Guru Tegh Bahadur founded in 1665 the new village of Chakk Nanaki (present Anandpur Sahib), 8 km further north. The town has a number of shrines of historical importance. GURDWARA CHARAN KAVAL PATSHAHI PAHILI. Guru Nanak stayed on this site when he visited this part of the country during one of his extensive travels. Here he held religious discourse with a Muslim divine, Pir Buddhan Shah. The Pir lived on goat`s milk which he also offered to the Guru. As the tradition goes, the Guru drank half of it and returned the other half to Buddhan Shah, telling him to keep it till a Sikh of his came to take it. This, it is believed, was an allusion to Baba Gurditta until whose arrival over a hundred years later Pir Buddhan Shah was still alive (His mazar, i.e. grave, is located on a hilltop, about 200 metres to the east of Dchra Baba Gurdittaji and is also visited by Sikh pilgrims to Kiratpur). Gurdwara Charan Kaval stands on a high base. The heavy stone walls riveting the base and the dented parapet at the top give it the appearance of a fortress. The main building was constructed by Raja Bhup Singh ofRopar during the earlier half of the nineteenth century. GURDWARA SHISH MAHAL is one of a complex of six shrines which together mark the site of the buildings used by the Gurus. Shish Mahal, standing in the midst of this complex, was the house in which the holy family resided after Guru Hargobind had shifted to Kiratpur. Guru Har Rai and Guru Har Krishan were born and brought up here. The old building has since been demolished and replaced by a tall and magnificient edifice. To make it a Shish Mahal (Glass Palace) in the literal sense, panels of decorative reflecting glass have been fixed along the whole interior, white on the ceiling and gold on the walls. GURDWARA TAKHT KOT SAHIB. Like the Akal Takht at Amritsar, this was the seat at Kiratpur where Guru Hargobind held his court. Important functions such as the anointing ceremony for Guru Har Rai (8 March 1644) and for Guru Har Krishan (7 October 1661) were performed here. The Takht Sahib, a square room where the Guru Granth Sahib is seated, is on a high plinth at the northern end of a flatroofed hall. There is a domed pavilion with a gold pinnacle on top of the Takht Sahib. GURDWARA SRI HAR1MANDIR SAHIB PATSHAHI CHHEViN marks the site used by Guru Hargobind for meditation or rest in seclusion. There used to be a garden around the pavilion, called Naulakkha Bagh, with an eightcornered fountain in it. It was perhaps in this Naulakkha Garden that young Har Rai once brushed past a shrub with his longflowing loose gown causing a flower to drop from its stem. He felt very grieved to have thus damaged a beautiful flower. Guru Hargobind, his grandfather, saw him in tears. He consoled him and said: "You should always take care." The simple words stuck in the impressionable mind and when Guru Har Rai became Guru, he converted this garden into a small zoo in which he left off animals captured during the chase. The old Gurdwara building of Sirhindi bricks and limecast still stands. In the centre is a flatroofed room in which the Guru Granth Sahib is seated. GURDWARA DAMDAMA SAHIB is a single room, with a small domed pavilion in the centre of the roof, some 20 metres west of Gurdwara Shish Mahal. This was the site for daily gatherings in the time of Guru Har Rai. GURU KA KHUH is an old narrow well, about one metre in diameter, close to Gurdwara Shish Mahal. Still narrower steps lead down into the well to what was probably at one time its water level, although the water table is now much lower. This was the main source of water supply for the inmates of Shish Mahal during the times of the Gurus and later for the Sodhi families residing there. GURDWARA CHUBACHCHA SAHIB, to the SOUthwest of Damdarna Sahib, is a lowdomed building inside a small compound. Chubachcha, in Punjabi, means a circular rough of masonry work used for watering animals near wells or for feeding them with grain in the stables. Although peace had generally prevailed after Guru Hargobind had settled in Kiratpur, Guru Har Rai, obeying his grandfather`s injunction, had retained a contingent of 2,200 mounted soldiers. The bulk of this force was stationed near village Bunga, about 6 km south of Kiratpur, but a few of the animals intended for riding by the Guru were kept at the place marked by Gurdwara Chubachcha Sahib. Guru Har Rai himself came here at times to feed the horses with his own hands. The Gurdwara, like other shrines at Kiratpur, is under the management of the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee. GURDWARA MAN)! SAHIB marks the residence of Guru Har Rai`s daughter, Bib! Rup Kaur, and her descendants, and was taken over by the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee only in 1975. Bibi Rup Kaur was married on Maghar sudi 3, 1719 Bk/3 December 1662 to Bhai Khcm Karan, son of BhaT Per Mall, of Pasrur (now in Sialkot district in Pakistan), but soon after the marriage the couple came back and settled in Kiratpur itself. It was here that Guru Tcgh Bahadur came from Bakala on Bhadori sudi 10, 1721 Bk/21 August 1664 to condole with Bibi Rup Kaur upon the death of her brother, Guru Har Krishan. The building is a doublestoreyed complex of small rooms. The Guru Granth Sahib is placed in one of the rooms on the First floor. The shrine is especially important for its sacred relics. These include a handwritten pothi, a handfan, an embroidered handkerchief, and an anchorite`s cap. The cap is said to have been originally given by Baba Sri Chand to his spiritual successor, Baba Gurditta, and the pothi contains passages from the Guru Granth Sahib as well as some didactic stories. Both these were presented to Bibi Rup Kaur, along with her dowry, by her grandmother, Mata Bassi. The handfan and handkerchief belonged to Bibi Rup Kaur. GURDWARA BIBANGARH SAHIB. Biban, in Punjabi, means a decorated hearse. The severed head of Guru Tcgh Bahadur, executed in Delhi on 11 November 1675, was brought to Kiratpur by BhaTJaita (later Jivan Singh) on 16 November 1675. Guru Gobind Sihgh came from Chakk Nanaki (Anandpur) to Kiratpur to receive it. Gurdwara Bibangarh Sahib marks the spot where the sacred head was received and placed on a biban to be carried for cremation to Anandpur in a procession chanting the sacred hymns. BAOLI SAHIB or GURU KT BAOLI is a large squareshaped well covered with a domed pavilion, with steep steps descending down to water level. The well was got sunk by Baba Gurditta when Kiratpur was founded, the digging having been ceremonially begun by Baba Sri Chand. GURDWARA DEHRA BABA GURDITTAJL atop a narrow plateau, marks the spot where Baba Gurdilta, eldest son of Guru Hargobind, laid down his life. It was Baba Gurditta who had established Kiratpur in compliance of his father`s wish. Sikh tradition credits Baba Gurditta with miraculous powers. It is said that once during a chase he accidentally killed a cow and then, out of remorse, revived the animal. When this news reached Guru Hargobind, he summoned him and admonished him for trying to interfere with the Divine order. Baba Gurditta, now overtaken by an even deeper remorse for causing annoyance to his fatherGuru by working a miracle, quietly left his father`s presence, came to this place near the grave of Pir Buddhan Shah and quit his earthly frame. The griefstricken family and the Sikhs came wailing. Guru Hargobind advised everyone to be calm and accept God`s will. He cremated the body on this spot. The incident took place on Chet sudi 10, 1695 Bk/15 March 1638. The present buildin
g of the Gurdwara and the steps leading to it were constructed by Raja Bhup Singh of Ropar. The outer compound is enclosed by high walls and is entered through a doublestoreyed gateway facing north. There arc domed turrets at the corners and decorative pavilions with elongated domes at midpoints of the walls. The sanctum, where the Guru Granth Sahib is seated, stands in the centre on a twometre high pedestal. It has wide arched doors and a low dome under an old mm tree. It is believed that this tree sprouted out of a stick Baba Gurditta had stuck into the ground near where he lay down for his eternal rest. GURDWARA TiR SAHIB is sacred to Guru Hargobind. As one ascends the stairs towards Gurdwara Dehra Baba Gurdittaji, there is a hillock on the right at the end of a spur, commanding the panoramic plain stretching towards the River Sutlej. Sitting on the hilltop, Guru Hargobind used to hold competitions in archery. There is a local tradition that once, towards the end of his days, the Guru shot an arrow from here which landed near the Sutlej bank. That was the place where he breathed his last. The spot is now marked by Gurdwara Patalpuri. Gurdwara Tir Sahib was until recently only a small Manji Sahib. But the hills of Kiratpur being of soft clay rock are highly susceptible to erosion, and the old building in danger of collapse was demolished. A new structure has since been raised on a stoneriveted base. GURDWARA PATALPURI SAHIB, on the left bank of the River Sutlej, marks the site where Guru Hargobind passed away. It is recorded that, when Guru Hargobind saw his end near, he had a hut constructed on this site which was called Patalpuri. Designating Guru Har Rai as his successor, he retired to this hut spending his time in meditation until he breathed his last on 3 March 1644. Here the body was cremated with due honours. Guru Har Rai, who passed away on 6 October 1661, was also cremated here. Although Guru Har Krishan died in Delhi on 30 March 1664, his ashes were, according to the Bhatt Vahis, brought to Patalpuri and immersed in the Sutlej on Bhadon sudi 11, 1721 Bk/22 August 1664. (It has now become customary for Sikhs to immerse the ashes of their dead in the River Sutlej at this point.) Separate shrines for the three Gurus were constructed. There were also several monuments in honour of the Gurus` relations and descendants. They have all been demolished and replaced by a new Gurdwara in a vast hall on a high plinth. Towards the river end of the hall is the prakash asthan for the Guru Granth Sahib. Another two storeys rise above the sanctum, with a dome on top. SANT NIVAS UDASI ASHRAM near Baoli Sahib commemorates the visit of Baba Sri Chand, founder of the UdasI sect. Here he is said to have given a cap and cord, emblems of the headship of the sect, to Baba Gurditta. According to the notice displayed at the Ashram, this visit took place on Har sudi Puranmashi, 1685 Bk/7 July 1628, but according to the Bliatt Vahis he visited Kiratpur on Baisakh sudi Puranmashi, 1683 Bk/1 May 1626, when he planted a sapling symbolizing the founding of Kiratpur and cut the ground for the baoli.
KATANI KALAN, a village about 25 km from Ludhiana (30°54`N, 75052`E). is famous for the historical shrine Gurdwara Patshahi Chhevin Ate Dasvin, commonly known as Katana Sahib. Katani is believed to have been visited by Guru Hargobind during his journey through the Malva country in 163134. Guru Gobind Singh passed through this village on his way from Machhivara to DinaKangar in December 1705. A gurudwara was established to commemorate the Guru`s visit. The name of the Sixth Guru was associated with it only during the twentieth century, the Manji Sahib dedicated to Guru Hargobind having been constructed in 1933. The present building complex covers about two acres of land including some plots under cultivation. The central hall contains two domed sanctums. The one towards the canal end is dedicated to Guru Gobind Singh and it is this one which is now particularly referred to as Degsar, in the belief that Guru Gobind Singh had his first meal after Machhivara here ((^signifying sacred food). It is an open pavilion with a marble floor. The other sanctum, dedicated to Guru Hargobind, is a square room. The Gurdwara is administered by the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee through a local committee.
KARTARPUR (31°26`N, 75°30`E), municipal town famous for its furniture industry, 15 km northwest ofJalandhar along Sher Shah Sun Marg in the Punjab, was founded by Guru Arjan (15631606) in 1594 on land granted during the reign of Emperor Akhar (15561605). Guru Arjan`s successor. Guru Hargobind (15951644), resided here too for some time. Two of his sons, Suraj Mall and Tegh Bahadur, were married at Kartarpur. In April 1635, the faujddr or garrison commander ofJalandhar, at the instigation of Painda Khan, a former protege of Guru Hargobind turned hostile, attacked Kartarpur. After a threeday battle in which the Guru`s youngest son, Tcgh Bahadur, displayed feats of valour, Guru Hargobind left the town and retired with his family and attendants to the hill resort ofKIratpur. His young grandson, Dhir Mall (162777), however, would neither leave Kartarpur nor part with the Holy Book, the original recension of Guru Granth Sahib. He stayed behind and declared himself Guru forming a sect of his own appropriating to himself income from land as well as from offerings made by devotees to the Holy Gramh. It is his line called Sodhis of Kartarpur that became the owners of the place and high priests of the sacred shrines locatd there. The Dhirmallia sect was rejected by Guru Gobind Singh (16661708), who forbade the Sikhs to have any dealings with them. The Sodhis of Kartarpur later returned to the Sikh fold accepting vows of the Khalsa. In 1757, Ahmad Shah Durrani sacked Kartarpur, burnt down the sacred Thamm Sahib shrine and forced Sodhi Vadbhag Singh (d. 1762) to flee and find refuge in the hills of Una. The Sikhs soon avenged the desecration and reestablished the shrines when they came to power in the Punjab. There are now the following sacred places in Kartarpur. GURDWARA THAMMJl SAHIB (popularly called Thamm Sahib) is named after a massive wooden log (thamm, in Punjabi) used as central support for the first house that Guru Arjan got built for use as an assembly hall for the san^atAt the new habitation. The thamm was later treated by the Sikhs as a sacred relic. Some time after the building was destroyed in 1757 by Ahmad Shah Durrani, a simple structure was raised on the site, replaced by the present sevcnstoreycd edifice constructed through the munificence of Maharaja Ranjit Singh (17801839). Standing on a high plinth in the middle of a walled compound, it comprises a 15metre square doublestoreyed marblefloored hall encompassing the square sanctum at the ground floor. The six storeys rising above the sanctum are topped by a dome with a gilded pinnacle. The Gurdwara owns 100 acres of land and is administered by the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee through a local committee which also controls Gurdwaras Garigsar, Chubachcha Sahib, Viah Asthan, and Tahli Sahib. GURDWARA GANGSAR PATSHAHI PANJVIN TE CHHEViN, 200 metres east of the town is named after the well got sunk in 1599 by Guru Arjan who pronounced it to be as sacred as the River Gariga. The old Mariji Sahib near the well was replaced by the present fivestoreycd building raised by the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee in 1975. The sanctum is at one end of a square hall on the ground floor. The other four storeys with the dome on lop rise above the sanctum. Within the liall to the right side as one faces the sanctum is a platform dedicated to Guru Hargobind who, according to local tradition, sat here sometimes to address visiting sano.ats. GURDWARA VIAH ASTHAN GURU TEGH BAHADUR TE MATA GUJARfJi at the end of Rabablarivali Lane marks the house where Bhai Lal Chand Subhikkhi, father ofMata Gujari, stayed and where Maia Gujari`s marriage with Guru Tegh Bahadurwas solemnized on 4 February 1633. The fivestoreyed Gurdwara was built during the 1980`s under the supervision of Baba Uttam Singh ofKhadur Sahib. The sanctum is at the far end of a rectangular hall on the ground floor. A separate building to the north of the hall houses a library. GURDWARA CHUBACHCHA SAHIB PATSHAHI CHHEViN is located in a walled compound about 100 metres northwest of Gurdwara Thamm Sahib. The sanctum is at the far end of a flatroofed rectangular hall, built in 1940. GURDWARA TAHLI SAHIB PATSHAHI VII, about 2 km south of the main town, marks the site where GuruHarRai (163061), accompanied by his horse guard halted while on Ins way from Kiratpur to Goindval in 1658. The Gurdwara is named after a shisham tree (Dalbergia sissoo, ldhfi Punjabi), still extant, to which, according to local tradition, the Guru`s own horse was tied. The present buildings were constructed in 1949 under the supervision ofSant Ishar Singh ofRara. The central building is a flatroofed rectangular hall in which is located the sanctum. GURDWARA BABE Dl BER or simply Ber Sahib, about 1.5 km east of town is dedicated to Baba Gurditta (161338), eldest son of Guru Hargobind. It is here that Baba Sri Chand (14941629), son of Guru Nanak, held discourse with Baba Gurditta under a lierirce (Ziziphus mamtiana) before he chose him his successor as head of the Udasi sect. The her tree still stands as also the old well known as Khuh Malliari. According to tradition, BhaT Gurdas (d. 1636), poet and cxpoundcr of the holy writ, used to compose verses here attracted by the seclusion of the place. The present Gurdwara comprising a square room with a verandah in the front was constructed in 1961 by the local sangat. SHISH MAHAL (lit. palace of mirrors), originally the residence of Guru Arjan, and Guru Hargobind during their occasional visits to Kartarpur, is within a fortresslike house, the property of the Sodhi descendants of Baba Dhir Mall. A number of sacred relics arc preserved in the Shish Mahal. They include the original copy of the Holy Book prepared by Guru Arjan; a breviary of hymns used by Guru Arjan for his daily prayers; a heavy khandd or doubleedged sword believed to have been used by Guru Hargobind; another khandd associated with Guru Har Rai; the ceremonial cord and cap given by Baba Sri Chand to Baba Gurditta as emblems of headship of the Udasi sect; and a few garments belonging to Baba Gurditta. Other historical monuments at Kartarpur are the samddhi of Bibi Kaulari; Nanakiana Sahib, a shrine commemorating Mata Nanaki, the mother of Guru Tegh Bahadur; Damdama Sahib, a platform dedicated to Guru Hargobind; and Dera Bhai Bhagatu Ji marking the site where Bhai Bhagatu, a prominent Sikh contemporary of the Fifth, Sixth and the Seventh Gurus, was cremated in 1652 by Guru Har Rai.
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BHAI RUPA, village 18 km north of Rampura Phul (30° 16`N, 75° 14`E) in Bathinda district of the Punjab, celebrates the name of a prominent Sikh, Bhai Rupa(Rup Chand, 1614-1709), who laid the foundation of it in 1631 at the instance of Guru Hargobind. Next to Bhai Rupa`s house was built a gurdwara in Guru Hargobind`s honour. The present Gurdwara Sahib Patshahi Chhevin, a two storeyed domed building, marks that site inside the village. Guru ka Langar is across a narrow lane. In the same direction is the pavilion raised recently to accommodate larger divans.