Online Encyclopedia

SIKH

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 84 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SIKH  , a member of the Sikh

religion in India (see
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SIKHISM) . The word Sikh literally means " learner," "
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disciple," and was the name given by the first guru Nanak to his followers . The Sikhs are divided into two classes, Sahijdhari and Kesadhari . The former were so named from living at ease and the latter from wearing long hair . Both obey the general injunctions of the Sikh gurus, but the Sahijdhari Sikhs have not accepted the pahul or
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baptism of Guru Govind Singh, and do not
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wear the distinguishing habiliments of the Kesadhari, who are the baptized Sikhs, also called Singhs or lions . Their distinguishing habiliments are long hair wound round a small
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dagger and bearing a comb inserted in it, a steel bracelet and short drawers . Neither the Sahijdhari nor the Kesadhari Sikhs may smoke
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tobacco or drink wine . The prohibition of wine is, however, generally disregarded except by very orthodox Sikhs . In the census of 1901, the number of Sikhs in the
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Punjab and North-Western Provinces was returned as 2,130,987, showing an increase of 13.9°/o in the decade; but these figures are not altogether reliable owing to the difficulty of distinguishing the Sahijdhari from the Kesadhari Sikhs and both from the
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Hindus . A man is not born a Singh, but becomes so by baptism, the
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water of which is called amrit or
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nectar . It is possible that one
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brother may be a
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Hindu, while another is a true Sikh . The Sikhs are principally
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drawn from the Arora, Jat and Ramgarhia tribes, but any one may become a Sikh by accepting the Sikh baptism .

The Aroras are generally merchants or

petty dealers . The
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Jats are agriculturists variously described as Scythian immigrants and as descendants of Rajputs who immigrated to the Punjab from central India . They are of a tougher fibre than the Aroras; sturdy and self-reliant, slow to speak but
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quick to strike . The Ramgarhias are principally
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mechanics . To the temperament of the Jat, the Arora and the Ramgarhia Sikh add the stimulus of a militant religion . The Sikh is a fighting man, and his best qualities are shown in the army, which is his natural profession . Hardy, brave and slow-witted, obedient to discipline, attached to his
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officers, he makes the finest soldier of the East . In victory he retains his steadiness, and in defeat he will die at his
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post rather than yield . In peace time he shows a decided fondness for
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money, and will go whereverit is to be earned . There are some 30,000 Sikhs in the
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Indian army, and the
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sect is cherished by the military authorities, who insist on all recruits taking the pahul or Sikh baptism . Many Sikhs are also to be found in the native regiments of east and central Africa and of Hyderabad in the Deccan, and they compose a
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great
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part of the police force in the treaty ports of
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China . (M .

End of Article: SIKH
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