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Kirpan - The Sikh Sword
The Kirpan is an article of faith that was revealed to
the last Sikh prophet, Guru Gobind Singh, and made mandatory
by him for all initiated Sikhs on March 29, 1699. Attempts
to change the nature of the Kirpan or to restrict it from
the Sikh uniform have always been resisted by Sikhs in the
past, just as impositions against wearing of the Cross are
likely to be resisted by baptized Christians. A Sikh upon
his or her initiation into the Sikh faith agrees to follow
the Sikh Rehat Maryada, the Sikh code of conduct. The code
of conduct calls to wear a "strapped Kirpan" that
is suspended near one's waist. The original language of
this document is in Punjabi. An
English translation of the requirement in Article XXIV,
(d) states:
". . . The person to be baptized must have taken a bath and washed
his or her hair and must wear all five K's - Kesh (unshorn hair),
strapped Kirpan (sword), Kachhehra (prescribed shorts), Kanga (Comb
tucked in the tied up hair), Karha (Steel bracelet) . . ."
The original Punjabi version of this requirement is explicit.
It states that the Kirpan is to be worn using a gatra (a
strap that enables a kirpan to be suspended near one's waist
or tucked inside one's belt). The implication of this explicit
requirement is that the Kirpan cannot be worn as a symbol.
To neglect to wear one or more of the Five Ks represents
a serious lapse in the Sikh religion.
The nature or the definition of Kirpan cannot be changed
and The Sikh Coalition has successfully challenged all such
attempts.
Judge Painter in Ohio, concurring in a judicial
opinion in 1996 wrote, "To be a Sikh is to wear
a kirpan--it is that simple." (http://www.sikhcoalition.org/LegalUS6.asp)
Kirpan Related Resources
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