The only time I attended Guru Gobind Singh Jayanti (birthday) celebrations at Nankana Sahib was on January 10, 2011, a few days after the assassination of Salman Taseer, then governor of Punjab.
In an empty ground next to Guru Nanak Janamasthan Gurdwara, the city’s Sikh community had organised a cricket tournament.
Sikh boys, almost all of them of Pakhtun descent, sat near the edge of the ground, watching the final match.
Another group of boys sat on a raised platform, giving live commentary of the match over a loudspeaker.
An assortment of vendors, mostly Muslim, looked on, joined by other members of the local Muslim community.
There was a separate tent for women.
Traditionally, on Guru Gobind Jayanti, mock battles are enacted to honour the warrior spirit of the 10th and last Sikh guru. But in Nankana Sahib, they had organised a cricket tournament.
One of the organisers, a young Pakhtun Sikh, said they wanted to have tournaments for hockey, volleyball and other sports too, but there was not enough time.
Many of the Sikh boys lived in Gujranwala, Sialkot and Lahore, some studying and others engaged in business, and they had returned to Nankana Sahib for the festival.
A few days later was the winter festival of Lohri, after which they would go back.