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Guru Hargobind's eldest son, Baba Gurditta, was given to the Udasins at the behest of Baba Sri Chand and Baba Gurditta eventually replaced Baba Sri Chand as head of the Udasins after his death. [8] Baba Gurditta was the father of Guru Hari Rai, the grandfather of Guru Har Krishan, and the elder half-brother of Guru Tegh Bahadur. [19] [8]
Sri Chand Darbar or Baba Sri Chandar Temple is a 500 year old religious shrine dedicated to the Sri Chand, founder of Udasi sect and elder son of Guru Nanak. It is located in Faqir Jo Goth near Thatta city [ 1 ]
Guru Ram Singh considered independence as an element of religion. The task of non-cooperation campaigned vehemently by Mahatma Gandhi was propagated by Guru Ram Singh fifty years back among the Namdharis. - Rajendra Prasad, Indian freedom fighter The revered Baba Ram Singh Ji was truly a transformational personality of the century. - S.
Renamed Ram Das ("servant of God"), Bhai Jetha became the fourth Guru of Sikhism in 1574. [5] He faced hostility from the sons of Guru Amar Das, and shifted his official base to lands identified by Guru Amar Das as Guru-ka-Chak. [3] He founded the town of Ramdaspur, later renamed Amritsar and known as the holiest city of Sikhism.
Gurdwara Baba Gurditta at Kiratpur in the 19th century. Gurudwara Baba Gurditta Ji is a historical and holy place for Sikhism. Baba Gurditta Ji visited here with two associates, and their horse, staying one night. This Gurudwara has two Samadhis for two associates, held in main Gurudwara Sahib Ji. Herein Baba Ji traveled on horseback along with ...
Baba Gurditta was born on the full moon of the month of Katak in 1613 to Mata Damodari and Guru Hargobind. According to Pashaura Singh, Gurditta was born on the full-moon day of the month of Assū in sambat 1665, which corresponds to 13 October 1608 C.E. [2] Gurditta was born in the forests of Daroli located in the Malwa region of Punjab.
The Sodhis of Anandpur Sahib [12] are the descendants of Baba Suraj Mal Sodhi, one of Guru Hargobind's sons. [ 13 ] The Guru was a martial artist ( shastarvidyā ); he encouraged people to maintain physical fitness and keep their bodies ready for physical combat.
Guru Har Krishan (Gurmukhi: ਗੁਰੂ ਹਰਿ ਕ੍ਰਿਸ਼ਨ, pronunciation: [ɡʊruː həɾ kɾɪʃən]; 7 July 1656 – 30 March 1664 [1]) also known as Bal Guru (Child Guru), [2] or Hari Krishan Sahib, [3] [4] was the eighth of the ten Sikh Gurus.