"The modern world is the product of Sikhism - in terms of power and in terms of ideas. If you take a straw poll of people around the world today and ask them their beliefs about the universe they might say: One God, equality between races, sexes, and religions, rituals of no meaning - it's a person's conduct which really matters, traditions of no meaning - it's the Spirit that really matters. What percentage of people would say this, whether they call themselves agnostics, Christians, Muslims, Jews, Hindus, Buddhists, Jains, animists, Taoists, humanists, whatever? About sixty percent of people in the world? Now, ask a Sikh to summarise the essential teachings of Gurmat. Would she come up with the same list? Yes. Would that be true of any other religion? No. So are sixty percent of the people in the world Sikh? Yes, they believe the Sikh doctrines, but do not follow the Sikh discipline or feel part of a Sikh identity.
Return to the beginning. In 1500 one person (Guru Nanak Dev Ji) declared this vision to the world. No one else had it then, only his followers hold it consistently now. Yet sixty percent of the world actually believe it.
How did this come about? The modern world in the West is based on the writings of the French Enlightenment. Two thinkers stand out - Rousseau and Voltaire. Both were Deists. They believed in God and human emancipation, though this was NOT to be widened to include people of colour and women, perhaps about ninety percent of the world. They based their argument on the basis of Natural Religion and natural law which they claimed were used in other parts of the world. In the Courts of the Gurus there were French travellers and, indeed, the first European descriptions of the Sikhs is as "Oriental Deists."
In 1699 Waheguru ordered SatGuru Gobind Singh Ji to reveal the Khalsa. Based on a Book (Granth) containing Divine Natural Light (Guru), the people - all races, female and male, who sought the Ever-Present Natural Light (Waheguru) would gather to open the Book to dispel the shadow of hau-mai - unnatural "I am" in the houses of their bodies. Siri Guru Granth Sahib Ji would focus them to the Light. They (Siri Khalsa Panth Sahib Ji) would agree on a lifestyle to embody such Light (meeri-peeri) which might find some codification (Sikh Rehat Maryada). If people broke these rules they should admit their falling into darkness and seek the help of their fellows to travel into Light.
Rousseau wrote his classic "The Social Contract" many years later. He argued that people could only be free if:
1/ they obeyed rules they had made;
2/ these rules embodied Natural law.
For, if they embodied people's particular wills (hau-mai) they would inevitably lead to dominance and oppression. They must embody the general will (Gurmata) which could only be decided upon by the people together, following the cult of the Supreme Being - Nature Itself. A guide - the Legislator, might be needed to put the people in tune with their real selves - the higher will (Gurmat). Rousseau is often called the "father of democracy", and the inspiration for the ideals of the French Revolution.
In 1675, Siri Guru Tegh Bahadur Ji became the first martyr for freedom of conscience. He died to preserve the right of people to practise beliefs he thought mistaken. Years later, Voltaire said, "I may disagree with you till the death, but I will die to preserve your right to believe what you do." Voltaire is critical in western thought because his anti-clerical writings led to the growing disenchantment with established religion in the name of humanity. His writings also influenced the French revolution. But just think. At the time the French revolutionaries were guillotining thousands in the first ideological massacres of the post-religious age, in 1801, the Sarkare-e-Khalsa of Ranjit Singh, became the first state to abolish the death penalty.
Enough about ideology, what about power? In 1500 arguably the greatest power in the world was that of Islam. Moghul-Sikh relations have two periods. The first culminated in the rule of Akbar the Great who went to pay homage to Siri Guru Amardas Ji. His son was tutored by Mian Mir, the friend of Siri Guru Arjun Ji. In Akbar's court Siri Sukhmani Sahib Ji was recited each morning by a Wazir, Mohammed Khan. In other words, belief in Islam was being replaced by belief in Natural Religion, Sikhism. Fundamentalist Muslims led by Sheikh Sirhendi supported a coup which brought Prince Salim to the throne. Their price was the support for fundamentalism and the martydom of Siri Guru Arjun Dev Ji.
After the coup of the fundamentalists, Islam became deeply embedded, culminating in the suppression of the sufis and forcible conversion of the Hindus seventy years later. Then from 1699 to 1799 there was open war between the Sikhs and Moghuls. The coup of fundamentalist Islam in India was crucial. Fundamentalists everywhere were supported through the Islamic economy and came to power. When the Sikhs, through Divine Will, seized control of Punjab, a crucial link in the Muslim world economy was broken and Islam began to economically decline. Ideologically, too, it suffered. The fundamentalists, bitten by the experience of Natural Religion, maintained a strict adherence to the letter of Islam, killing the Spirit of religion. All reformers of Islam in the twentieth century point to this as the main reason for the decline of Islamic civilisation, yet fail to see that if you take out the rigidities of Islamic law and doctrine, then what you are left with is Natural Religion, Sikhism. This is what had happened four hundred years ago and what would happen today. This is the bitter lesson the Islamic fundamentalists have learned.
After the decline of Islam, the Europeans took over. The British were the main power, but only after 1849, when they conquered the Sarkare-e-Khalsa, was British power in India secure, and Queen Victora declared Empress of India. If India was the `Jewel of the Crown' of the British Empire, it was symbolised by the physical Jewel, the Koh-i-Noor, worn by Ranjit Singh. As Hindus from Uttar Pradesh tried to weaken Sikhism in Punjab, the Sikhs joined the British in turning the revolt of 1857. Without their help, the British Empire in India may have ended. The Sikhs were rewarded for this action and became the sword arm of the British Empire. When the British forgot their debt to them, and carried out atrocities such as the Kamagata Maru and Jallianwala Bagh massacres the Sikhs were at the forefront of the Independence movement which destroyed the Raj in India, culminating in the end of the British Empire. Of the 113 people hanged in the Independence movement, 93 were Sikh.
As the British lost world hegemony the United States took over. The modern American Empire is often likened to the Roman Empire - cosmopolitan and economical. Through the loss of state in 1849, its carving up in 1947, and the troubles in it since 1984, the Sikhs have spread to all corners of the new Roman Empire. This is by Divine Will to spread the Light. They will be 300 years old in 1999. Like the Christians in the old Roman Empire they are often mistaken for a small offshoot cult by others, often portrayed as a small, strange group by apologists. But by those who know Love and love the world, they declare themselves as the servants of Eternal Light (Name), the High Way of Faith - the dust of the feet of all saints and mystics, the Light of the modern world. The Sikhs must unite under one banner, the Akaal Takht, to take the new Roman Empire by storm, just as the Christians united under the Roman Church took the old. "Waheguru, all is achieved by Your will, what can a person say or do."
Bhul chuk maaf karni ji
Kanwar Ranvir Singh