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Mathuras bond with Sikhs for 300 year
celebrations
WSN Network
ADILABAD:
Mathuras from Bhutai, a tiny village in Bazarhatnoor mandal of
Adilabad district, are getting ready to participate in the year-long
Sikh celebrations to commemorate 300 years of consecration of Guru
Granth Sahib as the eternal Sikh Guru at Nanded in Maharashtra. The
Mathura herdsmen, reports India's The Hindu newspaper, had close
ties with Sikhs since the advent of Sikhism. Bhutai’s Kalu Baba
temple, with its set of 300-year-old eight ‘Gutka’ manuscripts that
are chapter-wise extracts from the Guru Granth Sahib, indicates the
strong ties the two communities enjoy.
The manuscripts were written by Kalu Baba, a saintly person from
Mathura community and a contemporary of Guru Gobind Singh. Nanded,
where the tenth Sikh Guru had consecrated the Guru Granth Sahib,
also has the Kalu Baba temple close to the Nagina Ghat gurudwara
where the Gutkas were believed to have been written.
“We inherited the Gutkas from our fore fathers. We hold these
extracts of the Guru Granth sacred because Kalu Baba’s devotion of
Guru Gobind Singh made him script the Gutkas,” says Bal Singh Ajhade,
custodian of the Kalu Baba temple considered to be the regional
headquarters of Mathura community.
The Mathuras were considered part of the Banjara community. “The
Banjaras or Mathuras were in charge of supplies to Sikh armies that
were constantly at war with the Mughals. When Guru Gobind Singh came
to Nanded in June 1708 (some believe it to be June 1707), the
Mathuras followed him. The Banjaras had retrieved much of the lost
Sikh literature from flooding of Sirsa river in Punjab while Guru
Gobind Singh and his army were crossing it. Guruji appreciated this
effort.
He maintained ‘Rang rete, Guru ke bete’", (Banjaras were called Rang
rete by Guru Gobind Singh) said Ravinder Singh Modi, journalist at
Nanded.The Mathuras who had settled down at Bhutai long back also
observed the Simran Diwas on November 15.
21 November 2007
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