
Guru Hargobind was born at
Wadali village in June 1595 and was the only child of Guru Arjan Dev. He
was invested with the Guruship on May 25, 1606 just days before his
fathers martyrdom. From a young age he was educated in the sciences,
sports and religion as his father had insisted. Baba Buddha was
responsible for overseeing the Guru's religious teachings.
During the Guruship
ceremony Guru Hargobind respectfully declined to wear the Seli (woolen
cord worn on the head) which had been passed down on each successive Guru
since Guru Nanak. Instead the Guru asked for a sword. Baba Buddha, never
having handled a sword before, placed it on the wrong side of the Guru.
Guru Hargobind noticing this, asked for another sword saying "I'll wear
two swords, a sword of shakti (power) and a sword of bhakti (meditation)."
Henceforth the Guru would always carry two swords to symbolize his dual
role of holding secular power (Miri) and spiritual authority
(Piri).
Soon after his
ascension to Guruship in 1606, Guru Hargobind laid the foundation of a new
temple at Amritsar; the Akal Takht. The Akal Takht was built facing
Harmandir Sahib (the Golden Temple). Guru Hargobind had a throne built,
and would administer Sikh affairs from here. The temporal nature of the
Akal Takht balanced the spiritual nature of the Golden Temple, emphasizing
the dual concepts of Miri and Piri introduced by the Guru. Guru Hargobind
donned the royal regalia of a King and was known by the Sikhs as Sacha
Padshah (The True King).
Guru Hargobind knew
that the Sikh's would no longer take their freedom for granted, he
undertook to steel his Sikhs against tyranny and oppression. The Guru now
gave instructions to the Masands and to all the other Sikhs that they
should make offerings in the future of horses and weapons rather than just
money. The Hindus had become so weak that they could not contemplate any
kind of resistance to the rulers of the date. The Sikhs did not believe in
self-denial alone; they grew increasingly aware of the need for assertion
also. They wielded arms and lived an active life, reared horses, rode on
them, and racing and hunting became their pastimes. Guru Hargobind
encouraged Sikhs in physical activity and weapons training as well as
prayers. Soon an army of one thousand horses was raised. The spiritual
side was not neglected. Guru Hargobind would rise long before the day
dawned and after his bath in the holy tank, would go into meditation. The
Guru would then join his Sikhs for prayers both in the mornings and
evenings. Guru Hargobind did not want his emphasis on the temporal caused
by the necessity for a war like posture to detract his followers from the
spiritual ideals of Sikhism.