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Founder of the Nirankar-i
sect of the Sikhs, was born at Peshawar on Baisakh sudi 15, 1840
Bk / 17 May 1783. He was the only son of Ram Sahai, a banker, and
his wife Ladikki, daughter of Bhai Vasakha Singh of Rohtas. He lost
his father while he was still an infant. He learnt Gurmukhi from
his mother and Persian and Pushto at a maktab (elementary school
kept by a Muslim maulawi).
His mother, a devout Sikh, nurtured him in the
best traditions of the faith and took him out daily to make obeisance
at the local Gurdwara Bhai Joga Singh. After the death of his mother
in 1802, Dayal migrated to Rawalpindi where he opened a grocer's
shop and also started preaching a message of simple living, commonly
addressing congregations at Gurdwara Peshaurian and Gurdwara Bhai
Ram Singh. A recurring theme he developed was criticism of the rituals
and practices which, rejected by the Gurus, were creeping into Sikh
society.
His main target was worship of the images against
which he launched a vigorous campaign. He re-emphasized the Sikh
belief in Nirankar, the Formless One. From this the movement which
grew out of the protest he voiced with such sincere concern came
to be known as Nirankari.
For solemnizing his own marriage in 1808 (bride:
Mul Devi, daughter of Charan Das Kapur of Bhera), Dayal, refusing
to invite the traditional Brahman priest, had Lava and Anand hymns
recited from the Guru Granth Sahib. This is cited as the first instance
of a wedding performed by anand ceremony in the modern period of
Sikh history. The simple anand form of marrying rite became a cardinal
point in the Nirankari scheme of religious and social reform. Baba
Dayal was averse to ostentation and cavilled at the rich style of
the Sikh aristocracy of the day. He enjoined honest living, respect
for parents and abstinence from liquor and drugs. Idolatrous worship
and extravagant religious ceremonial were his principal rejections.
Although Baba Dayal's preaching was confined
to the northwestern corner of the Punjab, its intimations spread
to distant parts. It is said that the reigning Sikh monarch in Lahore,
Ranjit Singh, once visited him in Rawalpindi in 1820. From across
the Sikh frontier came emissaries of the American Presbytarian Mission
at Ludhiana "to ascertain the true nature of the movement."
It struck the Mission that by overruling image worship and Brahmanical
ritual the reformer of Rawalpindi was preparing ground favourable
to the reception of the Gospel. Observations of the emissaries were
published in the Annual Report of the Lodiana [Ludhiana] Mission
for 1953. This is how the Report described the sect forming around
Baba Dayal's teaching:
On investigation... it was found that the
whole movement was the result of the efforts of an individual to
establish a new panth (religious sect) of which he should be the
instructor and guide. The sect has been in existence eight or nine
years, but during the Sikh reign, fear kept them quiet; since the
extension of the Company's Government over the country, they have
become more bold, and with the assistance of our religious publications
to furnish them with arguments against idolatry, they have attacked
the faith of the Hindus most fiercely. They professedly reject idolatry,
and all reverence and respect for whatever is held sacred by Sikhs
or Hindus, except Nanak and his Granth.... The Hindus complain that
they even give abuse to the cow. This climax of impiety could not
be endured, and it was followed by some street disturbances, which
brought the parties into the civil courts.. They are called Nirankaris,
from their belief in God, as a spirit without bodily form. The next
great fundamental principle of their religion is that salvation
is to be obtained by meditation on God. They regard Nanak as their
saviour, in as much as he taught them the way of salvation. Of their
peculiar practices only two things are learned. First, they assemble
every morning for worship, which consists of bowing the head to
the ground before the Granth, making offerings, and in hearing the
Granth read by one of their numbers, and explained also if their
leader be present. Secondly, they do not burn their dead, because
that would assimilate them to the Hindus; nor bury them, because
that would make them too much like Christians and Musulmans, but
throw them into the river.
For what were understood as his heterodox views,
Baba Dayal was debarred from Gurdwara Peshaurian . He thereupon
acquired, on 3 November 1851, a plot of land and erected a small
room, thus laying the foundation of the Nirankari Darbar which became
the central religious seat of the new sect.
Baba Dayal died on 30 January 1855, and was
succeeded by his eldest son, Darbara Singh (1814-70).
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