Baba Nanak Shrine, a Sikh Gurdwara in Baghdad, Iraq, which was rediscovered by Sikh soldiers during World War I and was repaired and rebuilt during World War II, by Sikh soldiers again, existed till 2003 in somewhat good shape.

Baba Nanak Shrine
Photograph of the front face of Baba Nanak Shrine in Baghdad, Iraq, circa 1920's
Religion
AffiliationSikhism
Location
LocationBaghdad
CountryIraq
Baba Nanak Shrine is located in Baghdad
Baba Nanak Shrine
Shown within Baghdad
Baba Nanak Shrine is located in Iraq
Baba Nanak Shrine
Baba Nanak Shrine (Iraq)
Baba Nanak Shrine is located in Asia
Baba Nanak Shrine
Baba Nanak Shrine (Asia)
Geographic coordinates33°20′10.2768″N 44°21′50.1732″E / 33.336188000°N 44.363937000°E / 33.336188000; 44.363937000

The founder of the Sikh religion, Guru Nanak, who is traditionally locally referred to Nanak Peer as in the area,[1] came to Baghdad in the early sixteenth century, around 1511 AD [2][3] after visiting the holy Muslim cities of Mecca and Medina.[4] He was initially not allowed to enter the city of Baghdad, which made him spend the night in the cemetery outside the city. The shrine was originally constructed by the local people in the cemetery area in Guru Nanak's holy memory.

Historical significances edit

The radiance on Guru Nanak's face was reported to be so profound that word spread that a saint had arrived. Consequently, Guru Nanak ji exchanged spiritual and metaphysical ideas with religious authorities, especially Pir Dastgir and Pir Bahlol, both of whom then became disciples of Guru Nanak and bowed to him. This led to formation of a group of his followers in Baghdad who remembered the Guru as Baba Nanak. There was only loose contact between this place and Sikhs of the Punjab until the First World War when Sikh soldiers rediscovered the shrine.[5]

Dr. Kirpal Singh, a captain in the Indian Medical Service of the British Indian army during World War I, located this gurudwara in the west of Baghdad town between an old graveyard to the north and the present Baghdad Samara railway line to the south. To the Arabs, this place is well known as the Tomb of Bahlol. Further, the book titled "Taajudin’s Diary" with foreword by Dr. Harbans Lal, which is an account of a Muslim author who accompanied Guru Nanak from Mecca to Baghdad, explains in detail the conversations Baba Nanak had with Pir Dastgir and Pir Bahlol.

A former Engineer-in-Chief of the Indian army, Major General Harkirat Singh—who was instrumental in the design and construction of the present-day Hemkund gurudwara and the technical and management brain behind it [6]—visited Baghdad in 1982, with a mission to encourage the local Sikh community to pitch in to make the Baba Nanak Shrine into a major gurudwara, which task was later undertaken after he died in 1983. Major General Harkirat Singh was the nephew of Capt. (Dr.) Kirpal Singh and the son of Sardar Sewaram Singh, a Sessions Judge, who wrote the first biography of Guru Nanak in the English Language. In that book, titled "Divine Master," Sardar Sewaram Singh writes about the Baba Nanak Shrine and the inscription on a stone tablet. In its revised edition, the book gives the layout of the shrine as drawn by Capt. (Dr.) Kirpal Singh.[7]

Historic relics such as an old plaque with text inscribed in Arabic [8][9] existed at the Shrine till the Iraq war in 2003, but were looted by miscreants after the war. In 2007, the Iraqi Government expressed a desire to rebuild the shrine. According to a news report, Abu Yusuf was caretaker of the shrine in 2011.[10][11] Prior to the Iraq war, a few Sikh pilgrims used to visit the shrine. Reports of regular congregations by Indian workers in Iraq, and cooking and sharing langar by them at the shrine are also there.

Present status edit

The position till 2018 was that the Gurudwara had been completely damaged. Only parts of an outer wall could be seen next to the Tomb of Bahlol. Only one Mehrab remained in one of the walls. Since 2018, a gate protects the space of the former gurudwara.

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ Baker, Janet (2 October 2019). "Guru Nanak: 550th birth anniversary of Sikhism's founder: Phoenix Art Museum, The Khanuja Family Sikh Art Gallery, 17 August 2019–29 March 2020". Sikh Formations. 15 (3–4): 499. doi:10.1080/17448727.2019.1685641. ISSN 1744-8727.
  2. ^ Inderjit Singh Jhajj. Guru Nanak At Mecca. pp. 3-4. While doing research at a University in Medina, Mushtaq Hussein came across a handwritten manuscript Siyahto Baba Nanak Fakir, in a library. This manuscript was written by an Arabic and Persian writer named Taajudin's Naqashabandi......he kept a diary - Siyahto Baba Nanak Fakir manuscript, which he submitted to a library in Medina in around 1512 AD. This suggests Guru Nanak Dev Ji was in Mecca and Baghdad for roughly one and a half to two years 1511 to 1513 AD.
  3. ^ "BAGHDĀD (33º-20'N, 44º-30'E)". eos.learnpunjabi.org. Retrieved 16 March 2020.
  4. ^ Inderjit Singh Jhajj. Guru Nanak At Mecca.
  5. ^ Sevdeen, Nayar Mustafa; Schmidinger, Thomas (2019). Beyond ISIS:History and Future of Religious Minorities in Iraq. London: Transnational Press London.
  6. ^ Gurdwara in the Himalayas: Sri Hemkunt Sahib by Suparna Rajguru and M. S. Siali, Hemkunt Publishers, New Delhi, 2001.
  7. ^ The Divine Master: Life and Teachings of Guru Nanak Dev by Sewaram Singh, original version in 1904, Rawalpindi; reprinted by Gian Publishing House, New Delhi, 1989, with foreword by Dr. Gopal Singh, Governor of Goa and author of the book titled "History of the Sikh People (1469-1978) and also translator of the entire Sri Guru Granth Sahib into English.
  8. ^ www.DiscoverSikhism.com. Sources On The Life Teachings Of Guru Nanak.
  9. ^ "SikhSpectrum.com Monthly. Guru Nanak, first Sikh prophet, visited Baghdad". 30 April 2012. Archived from the original on 30 April 2012. Retrieved 27 July 2019.
  10. ^ "AFP: Sikh shrine in Baghdad lives on in memories". 5 December 2011. Archived from the original on 5 December 2011. Retrieved 27 July 2019.
  11. ^ AFP (27 January 2011). "Sikh shrine in Baghdad lives on in memories". DAWN.COM. Retrieved 2 January 2022.

External links edit