The five centuries that have elapsed since the time that Guru Nanak walked on this earth are but a blink of an eye in the history of mankind. Contemporaneous events are well known; men who lived at that time are well remembered. If we speak of him in Delhi today, a few miles away lie the Lodhi tombs — still fresh reminders of the dynasty that ruled Hindustan when Baba Nanak was living.
Not far away from these tombs is the tomb of Humayun, who was struggling to save his fledgeling empire when Guru Nanak left his mortal confines. Humayun’s father, Babur, had usurped the power of the Lodhis during Nanak’s lifetime. In fact, if you look further south in Delhi, the Qutub Minar, which once dominated the skyline, predates Nanak’s birth by more than two centuries.
The point is that we are not here dealing with one of the ancients, lost in the mists of centuries and remembered only through hearsay and myth. Guru Nanak, one of the greatest spiritual teachers, philosopher and poet and the founder of India’s youngest major religion, is young in human memory.
His impact is recent; his message is fresh and relevant.
There are hardly any direct available records of events of his life, no exact itineraries of his incredible travels, no eyewitness accounts by those who met him. Nanak’s own writings contain virtually no biographical details with the possible exception of Babur’s invasion.
He saw himself only as a messenger, sent by an act of providence, transmitting the received divine word from the supreme reality to men. A detailed account of his own life would have belied this belief. Bhai Gurdas’s vars, written some decades after Nanak’s passing, do contain some biographical detail, including of his travels. For the rest, we have to depend on the janamsakhis, also written decades after his death — and there are several cycles of these with their own differences.
Nevertheless, the actual events about Guru Nanak’s lifetime and the debates of what happened and what did not, recede into the background when one understands and absorbs the message contained in his writings — nearly 1,000 hymns contained in the Guru Granth Sahib — superb poetry set to divine classical music. His writings bring us immediately close to a tremendous intellect, a deep philosopher, a phenomenal poet and a spiritual master.
To try and encapsulate the philosophy and legacy of Guru Nanak in one talk or article is an overly ambitious task and one that is bound to come short.
For my purpose, I would like to focus on two aspects of his life and teachings as defined by his extensive travels and his later years at Kartarpur as a householder.
Guru Nanak is said to have spent more than 20 years (historian Hari Ram Gupta puts this at 25 years, from 1496 to 1521) on the road, carrying out the mission that he was charged with — to spread the ultimate truth and put mankind on the path to salvation.
In the process, these travels gave him an opportunity to observe the workings of the religions of the day in actual practice and to debate and discuss these matters of the spirit with sages and seers. Also, it gave him an opportunity to be present on the spot and dispel ignorance and blind superstition of which there was no dearth in that age:
Bhai Gurdas wrote:
Dithe hindu turaki sabhi pir paikambari kaumi katele Andhi andhe khuhe thele
(I saw Hindus and Muslims, holy men of all kinds/ The blind were pushing the blind into a well)
In the days when there were no fast or sophisticated means of travel, Nanak undertook four long journeys, called udasis, signifying detachment. Scholars have laid out detailed routes, even maps, showing these journeys but these are, I believe, based not on any concrete evidence but on the janamsakhi references to various places and the commonly used routes of the day.
It is believed he travelled as far as Assam in the east, present-day Sri Lanka in the south, Mount Kailash in the north and Mecca-Medina in the west. Some accounts take Nanak even further afield, right up to Turkey, but there is no confirmation. His mission took him to snowy heights and across burning deserts, through little villages and mighty capitals, among the ordinary as well as learned, to fairs, festivals, to temples, mosques and khanqahs.
There is no geographical order in the janamsakhi accounts of Guru Nanak’s travels, nor is there any great uniformity in regard to the number of udasis or the places visited. But the immensity of the undertaking is confirmed by the poetic vision of Bhai Gurdas:
Babe tare char chak/nau khand prithvi sacha dhoa.
(The Baba traversed the nine regions of the earth, as far as the land stretched.)
Many are the stories contained in the janamsakhis about how Nanak brought home his message during these udasis. His purpose was to dispel the ignorance that he saw all around him. The constraints of time allow us only to touch on a few. I would choose these simply because they seem to best illustrate the nature of debate and discourse that Nanak had with the representatives of various religions and because they are my personal favourites.
Somewhere during their first udasi, Guru Nanak and Mardana reached the Jagganath temple in Puri in Odisha. This temple is known for its annual procession when the idol is mounted on a huge chariot and the multitudes that gather vie with each other for the privilege of pulling the chariot.
It is an inexorable sea of humanity that moves with this idol, a phenomenon that gave the word ‘juggernaut’ to the English language. Here is one version of what happened there: When Guru Nanak and Mardana camped near the temple, their hymns and music attracted several devotees on their way to them temple, annoying the priests. One day the chief priest came to Nanak and invited him to join the aarti or the evening prayer in the temple and Guru Nanak readily accompanied him.
It was a beautiful ceremony, conducted at dusk. The priest placed earthen lamps filled with ghee on a bejewelled salver decorated with flower petals and sweet incense. They lit the wicks and swung the salver pendulum in front of the image while the congregation sang hymns, blew conches and tolled the bells.
Nanak sat unmoved through the ceremony, and when the priests expressed their anger and surprise, he responded with a song now part of the Granth Sahib. The song describes the celestial aarti in which the sky, the sun, the moon, the stars, the wind, the forests, and the unstruck music pay obeisance to the great Creator. This, according to the Nanak, was the true aarti that could be offered to God:
The sky the salver, the sun and moon the lamps, The stars studding the heavens are the pearls The fragrance of sandal is the incense Fanned by the winds, all for thee The great forests are the flowers What a beautiful aarti is being performed For you, O destroyer of fear.
The third udasi of Guru Nanak was to the north. He travelled widely in the Himalayas and several scholars have constructed possible routes that he could have taken, based on the local traditions extant in the mountains and the gurudwaras founded down the centuries.