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A gurdwara in no mans land PDF Print E-mail
Written by CNN-IBN Live   
Thursday, 05 January 2006

THE LAST HUMAN ABODE: The Sikhs want to make the Lakhpat Gurudwara a pilgrimage centre. Kutch (Gujarat): A Gurdwara in no man's land has put worshippers and the government in a fix. It is the last human abode on the India-Pakistan border in Gujarat.

Located at Lakhpat in Kutch, the five-and-a-half-century-old Gurdwara is a protected monument.

The local Sikh community wants to develop it into a major pilgrimage center but they are finding it difficult to convince the government.

Once a thriving town, Lakhpat lost its maritime significance in 1851 AD, when River Sindhu changed its course. Today the town is almost deserted, with only a few families living here and instead has become home to a revered Gurdwara.

 

 

"The importance of this Gurdwara can be gauged from the fact that though there's not one sikh family living in the radius of 60 km, we still have langars (community meal sharing) all the year round. People travel for thousands of kilometers to visit the Gurdwara," says Jathedar Surinder Singh.

 

Legend has it that Guru Nanak Sahib, the founder of the Sikh religion, embarked for Haj (pilgrimage) to Mecca from Lakhpat. Bhai Shrichand, Guru Nanak's son, constructed the Gurdwara to commemorate this event.

 

Winner of a UNESCO Asia-Pacific Heritage Award in 2004, this Gurdwara houses relics like a carved wooden cradle, wooden sandals of Guru Nanak, ancient manuscripts and markings of two of the important heads of the Udasi sect.

 

Those managing the Gurdwara are however unhappy.

 

"Government instead of helping us is creating hurdles for us, telling us not to do this or not to do that. It does not even give permission, if they do give it to us we would get it built," says Jathedar Surinder Singh.

 

The Sikh community wants to develop this as a major religious center. They want to build a guesthouse and renovate the entire area.

 

However, with it being a protected monument and that too close to the border, the government is having a having a tough time balancing religious sentiments and strategic requirements.

 

(With Sunil Raghu in Lakhpat)


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sunny singh said: _

  make sikh web site in all indian language so all india know and read about sikh.
November 24, 2007 | url
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