Sikhism

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While most scholars see Sikhism as having descended from both Hinduism and Islam, Sikhs consider their religion to be God’s own unique revelation to their prophet, Guru Nanak.[1] The first of ten Gurus, “the purest, the saintliest and the noblest of all,”[2] Nanak (1469-1539) was a mystery to both his family and the larger community. Raised a Hindu, Nanak studied those scriptures and also read the Quran at a young age.[3] As a boy he preferred meditating to playing with other boys his age. He asked teachers about the mystic meaning of their lessons (generally getting no answer) and once asked a doctor whether it was possible to cure disease of the soul.[4]

Born into a high-caste family in what was then the Indian state of Punjab, Nanak’s father was an accountant for the government. Nanak had one older sister, Bibi Nanki, who was his first disciple.[5] Always far more interested in the spiritual life than in worldly pursuits, he was quite a trial to his business-minded father. Given the chance to try his hand at buying and selling goods for profit, he gave away all the money. Later, after his marriage, he did successfully and efficiently manage a granary for a time. He left that position to embark on his divine mission. Like other prophets, he apparently disappeared into the wilderness for several days (in his case, into a river, although some believe he bathed and then went into a forest), where he had a vision in which God informed him of his life’s work.[6]

Sikh tradition states that Nanak was born a guru, since his first Divine message was given when he was only seven years old.[7] He traveled widely as an adult, drawing large crowds eager to hear him speak. He seems to have had a reputation for calling people out on their hypocrisy, in a way that not only caused them to change their ways but often decide to become his disciple.


Sikhism and the Theosophical Movement

Early leaders of the Theosophical Society, including Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, Henry Steel Olcott, and A. P. Sinnett, were well acquainted with Sikhs. Some practitioners of Sikhism may have been admitted as members of the TS, but their names are not known. However, Sikh Salig Ram became a subscriber of The Theosophist as early as 1882.[8] He was mentioned in Mahatma Letter No. 31,dated around November, 1881. Master Morya called Salig Ram "a truly good man" with tendencies toward mediumship and "misdirected mysticism."

In 1926, a Sikh Fellow of the Theosophical Society, Hukm Chand Kumar published a book, Guru Nanak as an Occultist through the Blavatsky Press in Hyderabad. He had been vice principal of the Sindh National College that was associated with the Theosophical Educational Trust. He dedicated the volume to Dr. Annie Besant.

Additional resources

Articles

  • Sikhism in Theosophy World.
  • Nesbitt, Eleanor. "Helena Blavatsky, Dorothy Field and Annie Besant: Theosophy’s role in introducing Sikhism to the West" Sikh Formations: Religion, Culture, Theory 16 no. 3 (2020): 227-243. Published online December 13,2019. Abstract at TandFonline.

Books

Videos

Websites

Notes

  1. Sikh Religion. Detroit, MI: Sikh Missionary Center, 1990, p. 15.
  2. Besant, Annie. Sikhism. A Convention Lecture. Adyar, Madras (Chennai), India: The Theosophical Publishing House, 1979 (first ed. 1920), p. 5
  3. https://www.theosophy.world/encyclopedia/sikhism
  4. Besant, Sikhism, pp. 11-12
  5. Sikh Religion, p. 14
  6. ibid., pp. 18-21
  7. ibid., p. 23
  8. Kurt Leland, Rainbow Body (Lake Worth FL: Ibis Press, 2016), 110.