The Institution of Langar
The institution of
Langar in Sikhism is commonly known as Guru-Ka-Langar which means langar of the
Guru, langar in the name of the Guru or langar attached to Gurdwara. Langar is
Persian word meaning: 'an alms house', 'an asylum for the poor and the
destitute', 'a public kitchen kept by a great man for his followers and
dependents, the holy men and the needy.' Guru-Ka-Langar conveys more the last
meaning then other meanings as it was 'run by the Guru' and is being 'run in the
name of the Guru'. Bhai Kahan Singh and Kapur Singh are of the opinion that the
word langar is from Sanskrit analgrah, meaning 'the cooking place'. Kapur Singh
says Guru-ka-langar was an Aryan institution which was revived by the Sikh
Gurus. He writes that this institution was used by the Gurus as powerful lever
for equalitarian uplift of the people, by demolishing caste barriers and the
economic apartheid of Varan-asram-dharma is a pristine Aryan institution, non-Brahmic,
but having Vedic sanction. A reference to the Community Kitchen or the Guru-ka-langar
occurs in the Artharva Veda, which says, "Identical shall be your drink, in
common shall be your share of food".
In all Persian and
Urdu dictionaries langar has been mentioned as a Persian word. Not only the word
langar as it is but also the institution of langar can be traced in Persian
literature. The langar of the Sufi saints were very common in the 12th and 13th
centuries; and still some Langars of the Sufis are knows for their feasts and
generosity, like the langar at the tomb of Khawaja Muin-ud-din Chisti at Ajmer.
The Sikh Gurdwaras are not only places of worship but also the training centre
of service. Such services as sweeping the precincts, serving drinking water to
the thirsty, fanning the congregation in hot weather and serving food to the
hungry have always formed an integral part of the functions in a Sikh shrine. Of
these, langar is perhaps the most important. A Sikh Gurdwara without a free
kitchen is inconceivable.
In its very
inception, a protest against the inequities of the caste system, the Sikh langar
is a 'common refectory' attached to every Gurdwara. Guru Nanak had started a
crusade against the tyrannies of the high born over the people of humble origin;
and the Guru's langar was an institution which was promulgated in this holy
campaign. A practical step to root out the evil which was eating into the very
vitals of the Indian people, the free kitchen became the foundation of equality
and fraternity, among the followers of the Guru. If one studies aright the
ideals of Sikhism, one would be simply impressed by a really unique feature: the
secularization of service. And this ideal is most vividly practiced in the
Guru's free kitchen, which is open to all. Those who profess other faiths are as
freely allowed to partake of and help in the running of the kitchen as the
followers of the Sikh faith themselves. No distinction is made between man and
man, between the Sikhs and the non-Sikhs, between the high caste and the low
caste, in the seating or serving food in the Guru's kitchen. 'Men of God,
wherever they are, of whatever race or creed, belong to one community, the
community of man, free from the chains of birth, creed and race.'
The Sikh Gurus
exhorted their followers to regard everyone as their own brother. We are
brothers born of the same father. 'Our Father is one and we are all his
children.' We are members of one family. All the Gurus showed in actual life how
this percept of the 'Brotherhood of Man' was to be lived out; the free kitchen
is perhaps the best demonstration of the same Love and active sympathy for the
downtrodden to lift and hug the fallen, and to share our earnings with the needy
and the poor are some of the factors of a true religion. And the free kitchen is
an institution where these noble ideals can be practiced. A Sikh Gurdwara is a
central place of worship and langar is a place for serving each other. In a
langar a mingling of all classes is provided and in dining together realization
of the truth 'all food is gift of God and that prejudices about it are entirely
invalid'. A Sikh repeats these words every day in his prayer:
Utter WaheGuru and Meditate on the deeds of those who worshipped the Name. And
shared their food with others.
'Bread and water
belong to the Lord - and the desire to serve, the pleasure of Sikhs' - is the
common utterance of the Guru's disciples when serving in the free kitchen.
Langar, in short, helps in teaching service, spreading equality, removing
untouched ability and such other evils and prejudices as spring from social and
racial distinctions. The institution of langar is as old as Sikhism. It was
started by Guru Nanak and carried on by his successors. Guru Nanak declared that
every Sikh-house should be Sach-Dharmsal (a place of open hearted charity, truth
and devotion). In the words of Bhai Gurdas, 'Wherever the holy feet of Guru
Nanak touched, Dharamsals were erected', which were at once the houses of
charity as well as devotion. In a way the kitchen in every Sikh's house is a
Guru-ka-langar, as he is enjoined to share his food with others. Puran Singh
rightly observes: 'Today no Sikh with a grain of faith in him, can possibly
think that he owns the bread.'
Langar in a Sikh
Gurdwara is the community kitchen. Every Sikh is expected to take part in the
running of the kitchen. He may pay for the expenses, bring provisions or
personally contribute labor of love, by cleaning utensils, fetching water or
fuel, or taking a hand in cooking and distributing food. Puran Singh calls
Guru's langar 'Temple of Bread' and says: 'What is a home, but a hospitable
feasting of children with bread and love and faith? What is spiritual life in
the temple of flesh, without a full meal first? The very first temple made by
Guru Nanak, therefore, was the Temple of Bread, or Guru's Langar. In one common
Temple of Bread, the bread of God was made free to the children of man. Let none
be hungry where the spirit of God prevails. The Guru's people and the Guru were
one home and one family, but it was no utopian idea, as of the modern socialism
or the democracy of labor, it was the democracy of soul, so gloriously invoked
in the temple of the human heart by the genius of the Guru'.