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Second in the hierarchy of the Nirankari sect,
was the eldest of the three sons of Baba Dayal, the founder of the
sect. He was born at Rawalpindi on 1 Baisakh 1871 B1c / 11 April
1814 and succeeded to his father's seat on 30 January 1855.
From among the creed of religious and social
reform preached by his father, he gave his utmost attention to one
item - marriage by Anand ceremony. He summoned an assembly of his
followers and admirers at the Nirankari Darbar at Rawalpindi on
13 March 1855, and married a Sikh couple in the presence of Guru
Granth Sahib, without inviting Brahman priests and dispensing with
the rite of circumnambulations around a fire. This kind of simple
ceremony had in fact been reintroduced by his father himself as
far back as his (Baba Dayal's) own marriage in 1808. Baba Darbara
Singh aimed at demonstrating the Anand rite at a large gathering
with a view to popularizing it.
Baba Dayal's marriage, it is said, was solemnized
by reciting the Lava and Anand hymns from the Guru Granth Sahib
as the couple sat reverently in front of it and by sealing the union
with ardas. Baba Darbara Singh had four circumambulations of the
Guru Granth Sahib performed by the couple, each accompanied by melodious
singing of a stanza from the four-part hymn, Lava, by Guru Ram Das.
He undertook an extensive tour of Dhanni-Pothohar
and Chhachh areas in northwestern Punjab promoting this Anand form
of conjugal rite and making many converts to the Nirankari sect
in the process. He is also said to. have performed one such marriage
at Amritsar on Monday, 15 April 1861, witnessed by a large congregation.
In order to organize the expanding community he established several
dioceses called birs, and appointed diocesan heads known as biradars.
A significant contribution of Baba Darbara Singh
to standardizing the form of Sikh ceremonies was the preparation
in 1856 of a hukamnama, setting forth a code of social conduct and
giving detailed description of the rites of passage. To quote a
few excerpts from the document:
If a child is born,
whether a son or a daughter, we sing the Guru's hymns, and offer
the Guru's, karahprasad (the Sikh sacrament). Brother, there is
no impurity (in child birth) as Guru Nanak cautions in Ass di Var
in the Roka: (the relevant sloka and the hymn follow) ....
Then after forty days the mother comes to Darbar Sahib along with
the child. We then offer karahprasad in the name of the Guru. The
child is given,a name from the Guru Granth Sahib ....
When God brings the
child to the age of understanding and when he is betrothed, we recite
the following hymn of the Fifth Guru in the measure Ramkali: (the
hymn follows)....
The Guru's wedding
hymns are chanted as the marriage ceremony is performed. Sikh men
and women recite the Anand by the Third Guru in the measure Ramkali....
Brother, we do not display the dowry as this is prohibited by the
Guru.
And when, by the grace of the Formless One, a Sikh has completed
his life, and the call comes, and the Sikh departs, we cover the
body with a white shroud and, singing hymns, carry it for cremation
or for releasing it into a flowing stream. We do not mourn... when
we cremate a Sikh, we recite Anand and Kirtan Sohila and then distribute
karahprasad, if we can afford to do so. After that we come before
the Guru Granth Sahib, reciting hymns and inaugurate an end-to-end
reading of the Guru Granth Sahib....
The hukamnama lays special emphasis upon cultivating
the Divine Name, reciting the sacred hymns, and shunning of Brahmanical
rites and rituals. For instance, it says, "We
should not seek advice from the Brahmans who in their pride spread
superstition.... The Brahman claims that it is disgraceful to eat
at one's daughter's house, but he himself performs marriages for
a fee...."
Brother, all years, months and days
created by the Guru are auspicious. In the words of Guru Gobind
Singh Ji, the Tenth Master, the Guru's Sikh sets about his task
remembering the Guru's name, regardless of all ill omens... Moreover,
brother, the opportunity for union (with God) comes only during
this life. So let us repeat the Name now, no one will be able to
do it later..." The various injunctions are supported
by quotations from the Guru Granth Sahib.
Baba Darbara Singh died at Rawalpindi on 13
February 1870. He was succeeded by his younger brother, Baba Ratan
Chand, affectionately called Sahib Rata Ji.
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