Sarbat Da Bhala (Well-Being of Human Race)
Welfare of all; Peace and prosperity for all.
The Sikhs are men of prayer. They believe in goodness of humanity. They wish welfare of humanity as a whole during their prayer normally offered twice a day. They pray for universal peace, prosperity and protection of human beings over this universe.
“God’s glory ever increases; in His Will, Nanak prays for the good of everyone.”
ਨਾਨਕ ਨਾਮ ਚੜ੍ਹਦੀ ਕਲਾ, ਤੇਰੇ ਭਾਣੇ ਸਰਬੑਤ ਦਾ ਭਲਾ ॥
(Ardas-Sikh Prayer)
It is how the daily prayer of the Sikhs ends. The Sikhs believe in universal brotherhood and oneness of humanity. They work for welfare of every body irrespective of caste colour and creed like Bhai Kanahya who used to pour water in every body’s mouth in the battle field irrespective of the party or religion of the fighting soldier.
Guru Nanak Dev says,
“Within every one is the soul and the soul is God Himself who pervades all and everywhere.”
ਨਾਨਕ ਨਾਮ ਚੜ੍ਹਦੀ ਕਲਾ, ਤੇਰੇ ਭਾਣੇ ਸਰਬੑਤ ਦਾ ਭਲਾ ॥
(1273)
Guru Nanak Dev further says,
“Let universal brotherhood be the highest aspiration of your religious order.”
ਆਈ ਪੰਥੀ ਸਗਲ ਜਮਾਤੀ…
(6)
Guru Arjan Dev says,
“None is my enemy and I an enemy to none. No one is stranger to me and I am friend of all.”
ਨਾ ਕੋ ਬੈਰੀ ਨਹੀ ਬਿਗਾਨਾ ਸਗਲ ਸੰਗਿ ਹਮ ਕਉ ਬਨਿ ਆਈ ॥ (1299)
Guru Arjan Dev says,
“I have befriended all and unto everyone, I am a friend.”
ਸਭੁ ਕੋ ਮੀਤੁ ਹਮ ਆਪਨ ਕੀਨਾ ਹਮ ਸਭਨਾ ਕੇ ਸਾਜਨ ॥ (671)
The Sikhs pray by saying:
Supreme is the Word of God, May God bless every human being.
The importance that Sikhs attach to working and wishing well for others can be seen in the fact that Sikhs pray aloud at least twice a day:
“O God, in Your Name, shower Your blessings on everyone.”
In other words, Sikhs pray not only for themselves alone but also for all of humanity.
This belief in the oneness of humanity, and the insistence on working for the welfare of all people, whether Sikhs or not, at the cost of sacrificing one’s life, is what sets Sikhism apart from religions. In a world, which is torn by strife because of differing beliefs, Sikhism is unique. Sikhs treat all people with equal respect, irrespective of their faith. All people are offered free meals and other facilities in Gurudwaras. Sikhs do not harbour ill will against any person, including adversaries.
There are numerous examples of Sikhs helping foes in need. After battle, Bhai Kanahya, a water-carrier of Guru Gobind Singh at Anandpur Sahib, used to give water and first aid to ALL wounded persons, Sikhs and non-Sikh alike. Three centuries ago, Guru Gobind Singh made arrangements to take care of and help all the wounded after battle, whether they were his own men or his opponents.
It has been explained in the discussion of Nam Japna that Sikhs respect all persons. People may appear different because of their language, color, social habits but these variations are superficial and the result of different cultures and climates. Internally, we all have the same spirit. Just as gold can be made into ornaments of different designs but it remains gold, so people’s outward appearances can be different but still they remain human beings created by the same God.
SARBATT DA BHALA literally, Weal to all. . . Weal to everyone. This is the concluding line which marks the finale or ardas or supplicatory prayer, with which every Sikh service or ceremony concludes. The full couplet reads: Nanak nam chahrdi kala tere bhane sarbatt da bhala (May God’s Name, may the human spirit forever triumph, Nanak: And in Thy will may peace and prosperity come to one and all). Sarbatt (lit. all) here does not stand for members of a particular sect, community or nation, but for the whole humankind. Sarbatt da bhala is not a mere pious profession of goodwill for all beings; it is a living concept in the Sikh tradition central to the Gurus’ spiritual vision. A line in the Scripture reads, “eku pita ekas ke ham barik—the One Lord God is the father of all of us; of the One Lord are we the children” (GG, 611). Belief in One Absolute and Infinite Creator God is a fundamental postulate of the Sikh faith. God is the creator, the ultimate ground of all that exists. From God emanated man. Man, in Sikhism, is the creation of God, and he partakes of His Own Light. The “stainless soul” within the material body is a spark of the light He is. There can be no distinctions and divisions made among men for reasons of birth, race, colour, country or creed. “All men are God’s own creation,” declared Guru Nanak. “False is caste and false are worldly titles. One Supreme Lord sustains all” (GG, 83), “Manas ki jati sabhai ekai pahachanbo —recognize all of the human race as one,” said Guru Gobind Singh. This concept of a single humanity is basic to the Sikh world view. Out of this feeling of common fellowship arises the Sikh’s wish to be of use to others. For him religious faith will not be fully realized unless he filled his everyday life with deeds calculated to secure the welfare of the people as a whole.
Sikhism enjoins active participation in life. This participation must be morally based. The religious man, according to Sikhism, has to be an engage. In the Sikh way of life, the end of spiritual endeavour is not a state of consciousness passively experienced; it is the attainment to a cognitive, affective, conative condition of being which is characterized as much by active goodwill for all beings as by the discovery of the true essence of things and the attendant joy and equipoise. Truth, as says Guru Nanak in his Japu, is attained by subjecting oneself to a multidimensional discipline which comprises not only the willing direction of one’s mind to the pursuit of spiritual enlightenment, intellectual discernment through knowledge, the cultivation of an aesthetic sensibility and harmony with Divine will, but also persistent effort to promote the general good. Habitual pursuit of the common good marks the peak of spiritual ascent; it is through consistent striving for the welfare of others that the process of devotion is brought to perfection. “Without doing good to others, devotion remains imperfect—vinu gun kite bhagati na hoi” (GG, 4)
The end of learning is that it should impel one to serve others—vidia vichari ta parupkari (GG, 356). Man has, according to Sikhism, come from the Divine and his travails will end when he merges back into the Divine. What stands n the way of man’s union with the Divine is his haumai, his finite ego, his divisive concern with the self with its penumbra of base feelings and impulses. This merger into the Divine—liberation, i.e. the goal of Sikh spiritual quest—is attained through the obliteration of haumai. Freedom from the bondage of haumai is achieved negatively by restraining concern with the self and positively, and more fruitfully, by expanding one’s affection to embrace the entire, creation. Involvement in the welfare of others is an essential element of the Sikh spiritual and moral ideal. It is a conscious and consistent pursuit—a deliberately chosen principle of action rather than a momentary response to the phenomenon of misery, want or suffering. It is not just an act of benevolence, but a natural disposition. A Sikh always prays for the welfare of all. This precept of sarbatt da bhala, predicated on the belief in the brotherhood of man and in all men being equal heirs to God’s grace, permeates the entire Sikh tradition. It was exemplified in deeds of seva, humble, self-abnegating service in the common cause and in the Guru ka Langar, the community refectory where all sat together to share the meal, overruling distinctions of caste, creed or clime.
The value epitomized by sarbatt da bhala has been a potent factor in the tradition and sensibility of the Sikhs. Even when they became a militant force to fight oppression, they had not forsworn the principle. Guru Gobind Singh, who fought several actions against the Hindu hill chiefs and the Mughals, especially applauded Bhai Kanhaiya, one of his Sikhs who served water to the wounded on the battlefield regardless of whether they were Sikhs or Muslims. Qazi Nur Muhammad, a chronicler who accompanied Ahmad Shah Durrani on his seventh invasion of India in 1764 and celebrated his exploits in the masnavi entitled Jang Namah, uses imprecatory language about the Sikhs and yet pays them a handsome tribute saying that they never chased the fleeing enemy, did not harm a soldier who had surrendered and did not loot a woman’s valuables. Another Muslim, Ghulam Muhayy ud-Din, who had earlier taken part in a battle against Banda Singh Bahadur wrote in his Fatuhat Namah-i-Samadi that Sikhs did not look upon a woman except as their mother.
In the Sikh system, group ethics and individual morality harmonize and are not fragmented. Sarbatt da bhala is, therefore, as much a common human objective as it is a personal ideal. It must lead to the individual’s ethical and spiritual perfection as also to a better world order. Both these goals are enshrined in the daily-repeated maxim sarbatt da bhala. Singly and in groups, in their homes and in congregations in their places of worship, the Sikhs conclude their morning and evening prayers, or prayer said at any other time as part of personal piety or of a ceremony with the words—Nanak nam charhdi kala tere bhane sarbatt da bhala. This prayer for the welfare of all mankind has thus been institutionalized in Sikhism. For the Sikhs this is not a mere mystical quest, but a firm religious and social goal. Towards its realization a Sikh must constantly endeavour.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
1. Avtar Singh, Ethics of the Sikhs. Patiala, 1970
2. Nripinder Singh, The Sikh Moral Tradition. Delhi, 1990
3. Kapur Singh, Parasarprasna [Reprint]. Amritsar, 1989
Article taken from these book.
Encyclopedia of Sikhism edited by Harbans Singh ji.
(Kulraj Singh)