KHAN CHHAPRI (locally known as simply Chhapri), a small village 8 km west of Goindval (31°22`N, 75°9`E) in Amritsar district of the Punjab, was visited successively by Guru Arigad, Guru Amar Das, Guru Arjan and Guru Hargobind. Originally named Khanpur, the habitation had once been reduced to a ruined mound. During the time of Guru An gad`s stay at Khadur Sahib, as records Sarup Das Bhalla, Mahimd Prakdsh, once a severe drought hit the place. A yogi claiming supernatural powers and jealous of the Guru`s popularity, incited the peasants against him saying, "You honour him [Guru Arigad], a Khatri householder, as guru in preference to an ascetic like me. Now go to him for rain, or expel him from the place and I shall get you rain." As the peasants went to the Guru, he spoke to them, "Rain and drought are by God`s Will. It cannot rain simply by my saying so." Guru Arigad thereupon left Khadur accompanied by Bhai Buddha and made his temporary abode on the mound of Khanpur. Yet there was no rain at Khadur and the people were becoming critical of the yogi. Meanwhile, Baba (later Guru) Amar Das, who was at Goindval came to Khadur and, learning about what had happened, rebuked the peasants for their ill treatment oftlie Guru. It so happened that as the yogi was being chastised by the villagers, it began raining. Baba Amar Das and the repentant peasants came to Khanpur and escorted the Guru back to Khadur Sahib. Once during the winter season, Guru Arjan (15631606), while travelling in these parts with a few attendants, was suddenly caught in rain and storm. Bhai Hcma, poor inhabitant of Khanpur, extended the hospitality of his humble thatched hut, chhapn in Punjabi, to them. The chhapn was consecrated and Khanpur became Khan Chhapn. Guru Hargobind also visited the place on his way to the Malva. The present building of Gurdwara Chhapri Sahib, raised during the 1970`s, comprises a marblefloored liall, with the sanctum in the middle. The dome above the sanctum is lined with porcelain chips and topped with a goldplated pinnacle. In front of the hall is a spacious, marbled terrace and a small octagonal sarovar. The Gurdwara is administered by a local committee under the auspices of the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee.
KHADUR SAHIB, an old village 19 km cast ofTarnTaran (31°27`N, 74"56`E) in Amrilsar district of the Punjab, is sacred to the first three Gurus. Guru Nanak is said to have visited Khadiir once to meet his disciple, Bhai Jodha, a Khaihra Jatt. It was through Bhai Jodha`s example that Bhai Lahina (later, Guru Angad) was led to seek Guru Nanak`s precept. Guru Angad`s father, Baba Pheru, liaving left his ancestral place, MaltcdiSarai, and the temporary abode at Harikc, had made Khadur his home. Baba Pheru`s sister Mai BharaT was already married in Khadur; his son, Bhai Lahina, was now married here in 1519. After the anointment of Bhai Lahina as Guru Angad in 1539, he, following Guru Nanak`s instructions, returned to Khadur, which became the centre of the Sikh faith. He stayed here till his death in 1552. It was at Khadur thai Amar Das served him as a disciple and was in turn himself anointed Guru. Khadur Sahib has several gurudwaras commemorating the holy Gurus. GURDWARA TAPIANA SAHIB, 200 metres north of the village, marks the site where Guru Nanak, accompanied, according to local tradition, by Bhai Bala and Bhai Mardana, preached to a gathering of devotees. It was here again that the events of Guru Nanak`s life arc said to have been recorded, in the form of aJanam SakhT, as narrated by Bhai Bala. A small platform near the Gurdwara marks the spot where Bhai Bala`s mortal remains were cremated. The Gurdwara comprises a square hall on a high plinth. The Guru Granth Sahib is seated on a canopied throne of white marble. A lotus dome with an ornamental goldplated pinnacle and an umbrellashaped finial tops the hall, which also has a squareshaped domed kiosk above each of its corners. In front of the hall, in the middle of a oneacre brickpaved compound, is the sarovar. GURDWARA TAP ASTIIAN SRI GURU ANGAD DEV Ji, opposite Gurdwara Tapiana Sahib, marks the site where Guru Arigad used to sit in meditation. It is a square domed hall with domed cubicles at top corners. The central dome has a goldplated pinnacle, an umbrellashaped finial and a khandd at the apex. GURDWARA DARBAR SAHIB ANGITHA SAHIB, within a highwalled compound entered through an old twostoreyed gateway, comprises a square domed sanctum with a circumambulatory passage and a hall in the front. The sanctum marks the site where Guru Angad`s body was cremated. Close by is a square domed marble pavilion called Killa Sahib or Khaddi Sahib. This was a weaver`s pit, khaddi in Punjabi, where Baba (later Guru) Amar Das, carrying a pitcher of water for Guru Arigad during a pitch dark night, stumbled against a killa or peg. An old well near the gateway, is called Bibi AmaroJi da Khuh, or the Well of Bibi Amaro, Guru Angad`s daughter, whose hymnsinging had inspired Baba Amar Das to seek spiritual solace at the feet of Guru Angad. GURDWARA MAT BHARAl, about 100 metres to the west of Gurdwara Darbar Sahib, constructed where Mai Bharai`s house once stood, marks another site consecrated by Guru Angad. According to Sikh chronicles, Guru Angad, as he arrived at Khadur, from Kartarpur where Guru Nanak had anointed him his successor, decided to go into undisturbed meditation for some time. He did not go to his own house, but shut himself up in a small room in Mai Bharai`s house and locked the door from inside. Sangats that went to Kartarpur to sec the new Guru were led to Khadur by BhaT Buddha who, risking the Guru`s displeasure, tore a hole into one of the walls of the room in Mai Bharai`s house. He bowed at the Guru`s feet and announced how the Sikhs waited outside for a sight of him. Guru Angad came out of his temporary seclusion to meet the disciples. The new building of Gurdwara Mai Bharal, constructed during the 1980`s, is a highccilinged hall with a gallery at midheight. Its walls are lined with streaked marble slabs. The sanctum at the far end of the hall is topped by three storeys of square pavilions and a dome all covered with white gla`/ed tiles. GURDWARA MALL AKHARA, at the northern edge of the village, marks the site where wrestling bouts for the youth were held in the time of Guru Arigad. Mallakhdrd literally means wrestlers` pit. Here the Guru also taught children Gurmukhi letters. Even now young scholars are trained here in reciting the Guru Granth Sahib. The present building is a square domed hall within a lowwalled compound. GURDWARA THARA SAHIB GURU AMAR DAS, a small domed room, is built on a high plinth in the middle of a marblefloored platform. The Thara, platform in Punjabi, marks the spot where Baba (Guru) Amar Das used to sit in meditation when he was not physically engaged in serving Guru Arigad or his Sikhs. All these gurudwaras arc managed by the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee through a local committee.
PHERU MALL, BABA (d. 1526), father of Guru Arigad, was the third son of Bhai Gchnu Mall, a Trchan Khairi of Marigoval village in the present Gujrat district of Pakistan. He was born in his ancestral village, but was brought up in the family of his mother`s parents, who lived at Matte di Sarai, a village now known as Sarai Nariga, 16 km northeast of Muktsar, in the Punjab. He gained proficiency in Persian and, as he grew up, he was employed as an accountant by the local landlord, Chaudhari Takht Mall. He was married in the same village (the bride`s name has been recorded differently by chroniclers as Sabhrai, Ramo and Daya Kaur).
TUR, village 9 km southwest of Khadur Sahib (31"26`N, 75`6`E) in Amritsar district of the Punjab, claims a historical shrine, Gurdwara Patshahi Dusari, dedicated to Guru Ahgad (1506-52) who, according to local tradition, first came here from Khadur Sahib at the insistence of local peasants misguided by an ascetic. From here the Guru went on to Khan Chhapri.
ANGAD DEV, GURU, (1504-1552), the second of the ten Gurus or prophet teachers of the Sikh faith was born Lahina on Baisakh vadi 1, Sammat 1561 Bikrami, corresponding with 31 March 1504. His father, Bhai Pheru, was a Trehan Khatri and a trader of humble means, whose ancestral home was located near the village of Matte di Sarai, now known as Sarai Nanga, 16 km from Muktsar, in present day district of Faridkot in the Punjab. His mother\'s name is variously given as Sabhirai, Ramo, Daya Kaur and Mansa Devi. In Magh 1576 Bk/January 1520, he was married to Khivi, daughter of Devi Chand, a Marvah Khatri from the village of Sanghar, near Khadur, in Amritsar district.
BHIRAI, MAI, spelt by some chroniclers also as Bharai and Virai, who belonged to Matte di Sarai, the birthplace of Guru Arigad (1504-52), was married to Bhai Mahima, a Khahira Jatt of Khadur (Sahib) in Amritsar district of the Punjab. She was like a sister to Bhai Pheru Mall, the Guru`s father, who too had made Khadur his home. According to Sarup Das Bhalla, Mahima Prakash, after Arigad (formerly Lahina) had been nominated by Guru Nanak to be his spiritual successor at Kartarpur in 1539 and advised to return to Khadur, the former instead of going back to his own home went to Mai Bhirai`s and stayed there for some time in seclusion, immersed in deep meditation.
DASU, BABA (b. 1524), eldest son of Guru Arigad and Mata Khivi, was born on 9 Bhadon 1581 Bk / 7 August 1524 at Khadur Sahib in present day Amritsar district of the Punjab. He was ambitious to succeed his father in the spiritual line, but the latter, as records Kesar Singh Chhibbar, Bansavalinama, spoke: "He [Amar Das] is my brother and to him I am entrusting the responsibility .... Him I have reckoned as capable of bearing the burden." Dasu kept quiet at the time, but, after the passing away of Guru Angad, as his duly anointed successor, Guru Amar Das shifted to Goindval, he proclaimed himself Guru at Khadur even against the remonstrances of his mother. Later he recanted and apologized to his mother who took him to Goindval. He made obeisance to Guru Amar Das whose true disciple he remained thereafter.