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Sekolah Berasrama Penuh (SBP) or Fully Residential School is a school system established in Malaysia to nurture outstanding students to excel in academics and extracurricular activities. Since 2008, SBPs are directly administered by Fully Residential and Excellent Schools Management Division, Ministry of Education .
Below is a list of schools in the Southeast Asian country of Brunei.The list includes both government and private primary, secondary and tertiary schools. Muslim students below a certain age are also expected to attend classes in religious institutions after the normal schooling hours.
On 29 November 1958, the school was given a new name. The then Minister of Education, Mohamed Khir Johari, officially announced the school's new name as Sekolah Dato’ Abdul Razak, in honour of Dato’ Abdul Razak Hussein, who was the brainchild behind the school formation. Dato’ Abdul Razak himself, who was the Deputy Prime Minister at the ...
7 Guru Har Rai: 16 January 1630 3 March 1644 Kiratpur Sahib, Lahore Subah, Mughal Empire: Sodhi Khatri: Baba Gurditta: Mata Nihal Kaur: 6 October 1661 (aged 31) Natural causes Delhi, Delhi Subah, Mughal Empire: 8 Guru Har Krishan: 7 July 1656 7 October 1661 Kiratpur Sahib, Lahore Subah, Mughal Empire: Sodhi Khatri: Guru Har Rai Mata Krishan Kaur
Guru Har Rai (Gurmukhi: ਗੁਰੂ ਹਰਿ ਰਾਇ, pronunciation: [gʊɾuː ɦəɾ ɾaːɪ]; 16 January 1630 – 6 October 1661) [6] revered as the seventh Nanak, was the seventh of ten Gurus of the Sikh religion. [7] He became the Sikh leader at age 14, on 3 March 1644, after the death of his grandfather and the sixth Sikh leader Guru ...
Guru Hargobind was born in Gurū kī Waḍālī, on 19th June of 1595, in a Sodhi Khatri Family in a village 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) west of Amritsar, [1] [5] the only son of Guru Arjan, the fifth Sikh Guru. He suffered from smallpox as a child. [6]
[6] [7] The tradition of the guru is also found in Jainism, referring to a spiritual preceptor, a role typically served by a Jain ascetic. [8] [9] In Sikhism, the guru tradition has played a key role since its founding in the 15th century, its founder is referred to as Guru Nanak, and its scripture as Guru Granth Sahib.
The janamsakhis present accounts of the life of Guru Nanak and his early companions, with varying degrees of supernatural elements among them, typical for hagiographic biographies; more important was his message of equality before God, regardless of social classifications, also emphasizing friendships with those of other religions and the welfare of women. [6]