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This committee was a by-product of the Akali campaign for the reformation
of the management of gurdwaras in the Punjab. To wrest control of
the holy shrines from the hands of a corrupt and effete priestly order,
the Sikhs had set up on 15 November 1920 a body called the Shiromani
Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC), Amritsar.
In 1923, the SGPC took charge of all the historical
gurdwaras in Delhi as well, and formed a committee of 11 members
known as the Delhi Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (DGPC) to manage
them. The SGPC, however, continued to exercise powers of control
and supervision over the affairs of DGPC. With the influx into Delhi
after the partition of India in 1947 of a large number of Sikh immigrants
from West Punjab, the situation changed and the authority of DGPC
began to be challenged. Attempts were made to dispossess the committee
functioning under the auspices of the SGPC. Litigation and use of
physical force from both sides were tried. In 1971, the Government
of India entrusted the management, through an ordinance, to a five-member
Gurdwara Board. The ordinance was replaced by the Delhi Sikh Gurdwaras
Act, 1971, passed by Parliament, providing for a committee to be
elected by Sikh vote. Elections took place under the supervision
of government authority and the new body called Delhi Sikh Gurdwaras
Management Committee (DSGMC) carne into existence in 1974.
Under the provisions of the Act, the elections
must take place every four years. The DSGMC controls nine historic
and five other gurdwaras in Delhi. The historic shrines are Gurdwara
Sis Ganj, Gurdwara Rikabganj, Gurdwara Bangla Sahib, Gurdwara Mata
Sundari, Gurdwara Damdama Sahib, Gurdwara Bala Sahib, Gurdwara Moti
Bagh, Gurdwara Majnu Tilla and Gurdwara Nanak Piao, and the others
are Gurdwara Karol Bagh, Gurdwara Darya Ganj, Gurdwara Pahari Dhiraj,
Gurdwara Pipal Mahddev, and Gurdwara Dhakka Dhirpur. It also runs
four degree colleges, eleven schools, a technical training institute
(electronics) and a hospital.
The purpose of the 1971 Act, according to its
preamble, is to provide for the proper management of the Sikh Gurdwaras
and Gurdwara property in Delhi and for matters connected therewith.
The main aims and objects of the Delhi Sikh Gurdwaras Management
Committee established under the Act are:
(a) To manage the historic and other gurdwaras of Delhi in such
a way as to make them inspiring centres of the Sikh tradition; Sikh
culture and Sikh religion;
(b) To spread education, especially the knowledge of Punjabi language
in Gurmukhi script; to maintain free kitchen (langar); to open free
dispensaries and to perform other religious and charitable work;
(c) To render all help in the cause of the uplift and welfare of
the Sikh community.
The Committee consists of 55 members, 46 of
whom are elected by the Sikhs of Delhi and 9 are co-opted. Out of
the nine co-opted members, two represent the Singh Sabhas of Delhi,
one the SGPC (Amritsar), four the Takhts at Amritsar, Anandpur,
Patna and Nanded, and two those Sikhs of Delhi who do not want to
or cannot contest elections but whose services can be of value to
the Committee.
The term of the office of a member of the Committee
is four years from the date on which the first meeting of the Committee
is held. The Executive Board, which is elected by the Committee,
consists of five office-bearers-president, senior vice president,
junior vice-president, general secretary and joint secretary - and
ten members. To be elected a member of the Committee, one should
have attained the age of twenty-five years, should be an amritdhari
or baptized Sikh, should not trim his beard or shave his kes (hair),
should not take alcoholic drinks, and should be able to read and
write Gurmukhi.
The sources of income of the DSGMC are charhat
(offerings to the Guru Granth Sahib), karahprasad (sacramental offering),
donations for langar (free kitchen), paths (readings of Guru Granth
Sahib), rent from property, and occasional individual donations.
The principal sources of course are charhat and prasad which constitute
nearly 80 per cent of the total income. Between 1956 and 1986, the
income of the DSGMC increased from Rs 13lakhs to about Rs 3.5 crores
an year.
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