Introduction / Testimonials - WhyGuru Course

Basics of Sikhi
10 Oct 201219:15

Summary

TLDRDer WhyGuru Kurs ist eine umfassende 12-Wochen-Einführung in das Sikhische, das auf Erwachsene ausgerichtet ist und komplett auf Englisch unterrichtet wird. Ziel ist es, das Wissen über das Sikhische zu erweitern und diskutieren, indem es die Lebensgeschichten, die Schriften und die soziale Revolution der Gurus erkundet. Der Kurs deckt Themen wie den Guru Granth Sahib, die mystischen Lehren und die Bedeutung der Gurus heute ab. Es wird erwartet, dass Teilnehmer offen für Diskussionen sind und ein Verständnis für die Grundprinzipien des Sikhismus entwickeln, um informierte und unabhängige Denker zu werden.

Takeaways

  • 🔍 Sikhi ist die fünftgrößte Religion der Welt, aber es gibt nach Ansicht vieler Menschen ein ernstes Wissensmangel über Sikhi.
  • 🌐 Es mangelt an systematischen Einführungskursen, die das gesamte Spektrum von Sikhi abdecken.
  • 🤔 Der Kurs WhyGuru soll nachdenken lassen, warum Sikhi gegründet wurde und was die Gurus getan haben.
  • 🎓 Der Kurs richtet sich an Studierende, Absolventen und Erwachsene, die meist Englisch als Hauptsprache sprechen und wenig Gelegenheiten haben, Sikhi systematisch zu lernen.
  • 📚 Der Kurs wird komplett auf Englisch gelehrt und setzt keine Vorkenntnisse von Sikhi oder Gurbani voraus.
  • 📅 Es ist ein 12-wöchiger Kurs, der eine Thematik pro Woche behandelt und eine Veranstaltung pro Woche an einem Abend vorsieht.
  • 👥 Der Kurs zielt darauf ab, eine interaktive Lernumgebung zu schaffen, in der Teilnehmer ihre Gedanken und Fragen teilen können.
  • 📈 Der Kurs wurde als Pilotprojekt durchgeführt und erhielt positive Rückmeldungen, die eine weitere Ausrollung in ganz UK und möglicherweise weltweit nahelegen.
  • 📖 Die Kursinhalte umfassen das Leben und die Schriften der Gurus, die mystischen Lehren, die Guru Granth Sahib Ji, die Geschichte der Khalsa und die Relevanz der Gurus für die heutige Welt.
  • 🌐 Die Online-Ausführung des Kurses folgt einem flipped classroom-Ansatz, wobei Teilnehmer die Inhalte online über YouTube-Videos lernen können und dann in interaktiven Diskussionsgruppen zusammenkommen.
  • 🙌 Die Initiative sucht nach Freiwilligen, die Kursleiter werden und das Material in verschiedenen Gurdwara und Universitäten vermitteln möchten.

Q & A

  • Was ist das WhyGuru-Kurs?

    -Der WhyGuru-Kurs ist ein 12-wöchiger Online-Kurs, der darauf abzielt, das Wissen über Sikhismus für erwachsene Menschen in der englischsprachigen Welt zu vermitteln, die möglicherweise keine Gelegenheit hatten, systematisch über Sikhismus zu lernen.

  • Welche Zielgruppe richtet sich der Kurs an?

    -Der Kurs richtet sich an Studenten, Absolventen, Erwachsene, die ihre Universitätszeit abgeschlossen haben oder die nie hingegangen sind, aber jetzt Vollzeit arbeiten, Kinder haben und Englisch als Hauptsprache sprechen.

  • Was sind die Hauptziele des WhyGuru-Kurses?

    -Die Hauptziele sind es, das Leben und die Schriften der Gurus zu erforschen, die soziale Revolution, die sie geführt haben, die mystischen Lehren über die Einheit mit dem Göttlichen zu verstehen und die Bedeutung der Gurus für die heutige Welt zu diskutieren.

  • Wie wird der Kurs strukturiert?

    -Der Kurs ist in 12 Wochen unterteilt, jede Woche konzentriert sich auf ein Thema, und es wird eine Veranstaltung pro Woche an einem Abend durchgeführt, um Gedanken und Fragen zu den diskutierten Themen zu teilen und zu besprechen.

  • Wie wird der Online-Kurs WhyGuru durchgeführt?

    -Der Online-Kurs folgt dem Konzept des flipped classroom, wobei die Teilnehmer die Videos auf YouTube ansehen können, um sich selbst zu lernen, und dann in der Veranstaltung Fragen stellen und Diskussionen führen.

  • Was ist der Fokus des WhyGuru-Kurses auf die Guru Granth Sahib Ji?

    -Der Kurs legt besonderen Wert auf die Struktur des Guru Granth Sahib Ji, die gängigen Gebete und die Musiktraditionen wie Raag und Taal, um ein grundlegendes Verständnis dafür zu vermitteln.

  • Wie wurde der WhyGuru-Kurs entwickelt?

    -Der Kurs wurde von dem Sprecher und einigen anderen Personen über zehn Jahre lang entwickelt, schließlich wurde er geschrieben, geforscht und als Pilotkurs im Jahr 2023 von Mai bis Juli in Shepherds Bush Gurudwara durchgeführt.

  • Was ist die Rolle eines Kursleiters im WhyGuru-Kurs?

    -Ein Kursleiter ist verantwortlich für die Organisation des Kurses, die Moderation der Diskussionen und die Schaffung einer entspannten und informellen Umgebung, um den Teilnehmern das Lernen und das Aufbauen einer Gemeinschaft zu ermöglichen.

  • Wie kann ich an dem WhyGuru-Kurs teilnehmen oder als Kursleiter mitwirken?

    -Wenn man an dem Kurs teilnehmen oder als Kursleiter mitwirken möchte, sollte man sich mit den Organisatoren in Verbindung setzen, um Interesse zu bekunden und über die nächsten Schritte informiert zu werden.

  • Was sind die nächsten Schritte nach Abschluss des WhyGuru-Kurses?

    -Nach dem WhyGuru-Kurs wird ein weiterer Kurs namens WhyKhalsa WhyFateh geplant, der sich auf fortgeschrittenes Wissen und verschiedene Lernströme konzentrieren wird, einschließlich der Theorie von Raag Kirtan, Taals, Gurbani-Vokabular und der Geschichte der Sikhs.

Outlines

00:00

😀 Einführung in den WhyGuru Kurs

Der WhyGuru Kurs ist eine Einführung in das Sikhi, das weltweit als fünftgrößte Religion angesehen wird. Der Kurs zielt darauf ab, das Wissen über Sikhi zu erweitern und bietet systematische Einführungskursle in verschiedenen Bereichen des Sikhismus, die normalerweise nicht leicht zugänglich sind. Der Kurs richtet sich an erwachsene Studierende, Absolventen und Berufstätigen, die Englisch als Hauptsprache verwenden und selten Gelegenheiten haben, Sikhi systematisch zu lernen. Der Kurs wird komplett auf Englisch gelehrt und setzt keine Vorkenntnisse über Sikhi oder Gurbani voraus. Es ist ein 12-wöchiger Kurs, der jeden Abend ein Thema behandelt und diskutiert, um Teilnehmer dazu zu ermutigen, ihre Gedanken und Fragen zu teilen und in einer Gemeinschaft zusammenzusprechen.

05:00

📚 Inhaltsverzeichnis und historischer Kontext des Kurses

Der Kurs umfasst Themen wie das Kommen von Guru Nanak, das Konzept der Verschmelzung mit dem Göttlichen, die Biografien und das Martyrium der Gurus, die Bedeutung des Guru Granth Sahib Ji und die Geschichte des Khalsa. Von der Gründung des Khalsa durch Guru Gobind Singh bis hin zur Geschichte des Sikhismus unter der britischen Herrschaft und in der modernen Zeit bis 1984 wird ein umfassendes Bild der Geschichte und Bedeutung des Sikhismus gegeben. Der Kurs schließt mit einer Diskussion über die gegenwärtige Situation in Punjab und im Sikhismus sowie über mögliche Zukunftsperspektiven ab.

10:00

🎓 Kursfeedback und Empfehlungen von Teilnehmern

Teilnehmer des Pilot-Kurses haben das hohe Niveau des WhyGuru Kurses anerkannt und lobten seine informativen, unterhaltsamen und lehrreichen Inhalte. Sie haben ihre Zufriedenheit mit dem Kurs und die tiefgreifenden Erkenntnisse über die Geschichte und die spirituellen Aspekte des Sikhismus zum Ausdruck gebracht. Die Teilnehmer haben auch die Bedeutung der Diskussionen und des Austauschs von unterschiedlichen Perspektiven hervorgehoben, die ihnen halfen, ein tieferes Verständnis für das Sikhi zu entwickeln.

15:03

🌟 Zukunftspläne und Aufruf zur Teilnahme

Der Kursorganisator appelliert an die Teilnehmer, das Wissen über den WhyGuru Kurs weiter zu verbreiten und sich für die Rolle von Kursleiter oder Teilnehmer zu interessieren. Es wird betont, dass das Wissen über Sikhi in jeder bedeutenden Universität und in jedem großen Gurdwara verfügbar sein sollte. Es wird auch auf die Bedeutung von Ehrengeldern für das Projekt hingewiesen, das darauf abzielt, das Wissen über Sikhi zu verbreiten. Geplant ist auch ein weiterer Kurs namens WhyKhalsa WhyFateh, der sich auf eine vertiefte Kenntnis des Sikhismus konzentrieren wird.

Mindmap

Keywords

💡Sikhi

Sikhi ist die Weltreligion, die im Video als das fünftgrößte Religionssystem erwähnt wird. Es ist der Hauptthema des WhyGuru-Kurses, der in dem Video vorgestellt wird. Sikhi umfasst eine Reihe von Glaubensprinzipien, Gebeten, Geschichten und Lehren, die von den zehn Gurus geprägt sind. Im Kontext des Videos bezieht sich der Begriff auf die religiösen Lehren und Praktiken, die im Kurs erkundet werden sollen.

💡Guru

Ein Guru ist ein religiöser Lehrer oder Führer in der Sikh-Religion. Im Video wird darauf hingewiesen, dass der Kurs die Lebensgeschichten und die Schriften der Gurus erforschen wird, um zu verstehen, warum sie ihre Handlungen unternommen haben. Die Gurus, von Guru Nanak Dev Ji bis Guru Gobind Singh Ji, sind zentrale Figuren in der Sikhi und ihre Lehren bilden die Grundlage des WhyGuru-Kurses.

💡Guru Granth Sahib Ji

Das Guru Granth Sahib Ji ist der heilige Schrifttum der Sikhs und gilt als der elfte Guru. Im Video wird erwähnt, dass der Kurs sich speziell mit der Struktur des Guru Granth Sahib Ji, den gängigen Gebeten und der Musiktradition von Raag und Taal auseinandersetzt. Es ist ein zentrales Element der Sikh-Religion und ein Schwerpunkt des WhyGuru-Kurses.

💡Khalsa

Die Khalsa ist eine Gemeinschaft der Sikhs, die von Guru Gobind Singh Ji im Jahr 1699 gegründet wurde. Im Video wird die Khalsa-Gemeinschaft und ihre Rolle in der Geschichte der Sikhs thematisiert. Der Kurs will ein tieferes Verständnis dafür vermitteln, was die Khalsa ist und wie sie die Gurus fortgesetzt hat.

💡Raag

Raag ist ein indischer Musikmodus, der in der Gurbani-Musik verwendet wird. Im Video wird erwähnt, dass der Kurs die Musiktradition von Raag und Taal im Zusammenhang mit dem Guru Granth Sahib Ji erkunden wird. Raag ist ein wichtiger Aspekt der spirituellen Praxis der Sikhs und ein Element, das im Kurs vertieft wird.

💡Taal

Taal bezieht sich auf die Rhythmen oder Taktarten in der indischen Musik, die in der Gurbani-Musik und dem Sikhismus verwendet werden. Im Video wird darauf hingewiesen, dass der Kurs die Taal-Musiktradition im Guru Granth Sahib Ji untersuchen wird, um ein grundlegendes Verständnis dafür zu vermitteln.

💡Sangat

Sangat ist die Gemeinschaft der Gläubigen in der Sikh-Religion, die zusammenkommt, um zu beten und zu lernen. Im Video wird betont, wie wichtig es ist, eine Sangat zu schaffen, um die Teilnehmer des Kurses zusammenzubringen, um über die Lehren zu sprechen und ihre Gedanken auszutauschen.

💡Seva

Seva ist der Dienst oder die Wohltätigkeit, die in der Sikh-Religion als eines der fünf Hauptpfeiler (Panj Kakaar) betrachtet wird. Im Video wird die Idee der Seva thematisiert, als Beitrag zur Community und zur Verbreitung des Wissens, insbesondere in Bezug auf die Rolle von Freiwilligen, die Kurse leiten und organisieren.

💡Daswand

Daswand ist die traditionelle Gabe, die Sikhs an den Guru machen, um zu zeigen, dass alles, was sie haben, dem Guru gehört. Im Video wird auf das Konzept des Gurus Daswand eingegangen, um die Finanzierung und Unterstützung der Kurse und des Wissenstransfers zu fördern.

💡WhyGuru

WhyGuru ist der Name des Kurses, der im Video vorgestellt wird. Der Name spiegelt die philosophische und nachfragende Natur des Kurses wider, der darauf abzielt, die Teilnehmer dazu zu bringen, über die 'Warum'-Fragen der Sikh-Religion nachzudenken. Es ist ein Schlüsselkonzept, das die Reise der Teilnehmer durch die Geschichte, die Lehren und die Bedeutung der Sikhi für heute und die Zukunft thematisiert.

Highlights

Sikhi ist die fünftgrößte Religion der Welt.

Es gibt ein ernsthaftes Fehlen grundlegender und umfassender Kenntnisse über Sikhi.

Es mangelt an systematischen Einführungskursen für Sikhi.

Der Kurs will den Teilnehmern helfen, über die Gründungsprinzipien von Sikhi nachzudenken.

Der Kurs konzentriert sich auf Studierende, Absolventen und Erwachsene, die meist Englisch als Hauptsprache verwenden.

Es wird kein vorheriges Wissen über Sikhi oder Gurbani vorausgesetzt.

Es ist ein 12-wöchiger Kurs, der eine Veranstaltung pro Woche in der Abendzeit fordert.

Der Kurs wurde im Mai-Juli in Shepherds Bush Gurudwara als Pilotphase durchgeführt.

Die Kursziele umfassen die Erforschung des Lebens und der Schriften der Gurus sowie der von ihnen geführten sozialen Revolution.

Es wird die mystische Lehre über die Einheit mit dem Göttlichen thematisiert.

Der Kurs widmet sich ausführlich der Guru Granth Sahib Ji, ihrer Struktur und den gängigen Gebeten.

Es wird die Geschichte der Khalsa-Gemeinschaft ab 1700 untersucht.

Der Kurs thematisiert auch die Bedeutung der Gurus für die heutige Welt und nicht nur für die Sikhs.

Die Kursinhalte umfassen von der Gründung von Sikhi durch Guru Nanak Dev Ji bis hin zur Gegenwart.

Der Online-Kurs soll den Klassenraum umkehren und die Lerninhalte über YouTube-Videos bereitstellen.

Es wird ein Facilitator-Programm ins Leben gerufen, um die Kurse an verschiedenen Orten durchzuführen.

Teilnehmer des Pilotkurses haben das hohe Niveau des Kurses und die informativen Diskussionen positiv bewertet.

Das Kursteam sucht nach Freiwilligen, die den Kurs in ihrer Region anbieten möchten.

Das WhyGuru-Kursteam plant die Entwicklung weiterer Kurse zur Vertiefung des Wissens.

Transcripts

play00:31

Vaheguru Ji ka Khalsa, Vaheguru Ji ki Fateh.

play00:34

Welcome to the WhyGuru course. This is the promo for the entire course.

play00:37

Sikhi is the world's fifth largest religion.

play00:41

And there is, in my opinion, and many other people's opinion

play00:45

a serious lack of basic and broad

play00:48

knowledge across all parts of Sikhi.

play00:50

Alongside that lack of knowledge is also a lack of systematic introductory courses.

play00:54

So if you want to learn about Sikhi somewhere

play00:57

you may learn about some parts from, say a camp

play01:00

or from people that you know in the Gurdwara

play01:02

but covering the whole area and the basics for all the areas specifically for discussion, is not readily available.

play01:08

What we're trying to do here

play01:10

is get people to think about why was Sikhi made

play01:14

and why did the gurus come here, and then why did they do what they did.

play01:17

And then we'll focus on the how and the what.

play01:20

Once you understand the why of it, then everything else just follows.

play01:24

There's a great video I'm going to put in the link below

play01:27

about focusing on why, rather than how and what.

play01:31

This course is focused on students, graduates, it's focused on adults.

play01:35

People who effectively had now finished university

play01:38

or didn't go to university but are now full-time working.

play01:41

They have kids, and their main language is English.

play01:45

And actually they find very few opportunities to learn Sikhi.

play01:48

They may go to the Gurdwara, they may not connect as much.

play01:51

They may really want to learn things systematically

play01:54

and discuss, but these things are not available. This is not a kid's course.

play01:59

Now, in terms of what it is

play02:01

this is a course which is taught completely in English, and also we're assuming no prior

play02:05

knowledge of Sikhi or Gurbani.

play02:07

It's a 12-week course. What that means is one evening a week

play02:10

is all we ask for. Now, you may say, well it's online

play02:14

and I'll go into that later on, how it's set up to be delivered online.

play02:17

But this is how it was done, 12 weeks, one topic each week, one evening a week.

play02:23

It's to get people to share their thoughts on the topics that were discussed or taught.

play02:27

Any questions they have, to address them

play02:29

and really just get people to talk together. For us, really, that's Sangat.

play02:34

And this course was something that I and a few other people dreamed up many, many years ago.

play02:40

I'm thinking about 10 years ago now.

play02:43

And actually, only recently did I write it up.

play02:47

And we got people to, we hired people to do some research.

play02:51

And then, this year in May to July

play02:55

delivered it at Shepherds Bush Gurudwara.

play02:58

Now, this is a trial, a pilot course.

play03:01

It was very positive. The people that attended it, their testimonials are going to be at the end of the video.

play03:06

And so the idea is that, now that it's done

play03:08

is to roll it out across the UK, and hopefully globally.

play03:11

The objectives are to explore the lives and the writings

play03:14

and the social revolution led by the Gurus.

play03:17

So, what was it that they did, what they wrote, their lives

play03:21

and what did they want to actually achieve.

play03:24

We will understand the mystical teachings, for the Oneness with the divine.

play03:28

This is very key, because obviously the Guru has come to enlighten us.

play03:31

Part of the course specifically focuses on the Guru Granth Sahib Ji in much more detail

play03:35

the structure of the Guru Granth Sahib Ji, the common prayers

play03:38

and looks specifically at the raag and the taal musical tradition, to give a basic understanding of that.

play03:43

And, from Guru Gobind Singh Ji passing on the Guruship to the Khalsa Panth in the Guru Granth.

play03:48

To look at the Khalsa collective, from 1700 onwards, and what happened.

play03:52

And I'll go into the topics in more detail in a second.

play03:55

And also to explore a discussion of the relevance of the Gurus to us now

play03:59

and the world in general, not just the Sikhs.

play04:02

The course topics then.

play04:04

The first to start off with is why did Guru Nanak Ji come.

play04:07

Obviously, some of these videos have been made on the YouTube channel already

play04:10

but this is in much more detail. Why meditate? What's the concept of merging with the divine?

play04:15

That's week two.

play04:15

Week three, we look at Guru Angad Dev Ji, the second Guru

play04:18

all the way to Guru Guru Arjan Dev Ji, the fifth Guru.

play04:21

And then, in week four, we look at Guru Angad Dev Ji shaheedi, the martyrdom

play04:25

and how the Guruship then went to their son, the sixth Guru, Guru Har Gobind Sahib.

play04:30

And then, week five, we look at the Guru Granth Sahib Ji itself.

play04:33

because obviously the Guru Arjan Dev Ji was the main compiler of the Adi Granth.

play04:37

And we look at what it was, how they structured it

play04:40

whose writings are inside, and how amazing it is really.

play04:44

So, the sixth week , we cover from Guru Har Gobind Sahib Ji

play04:48

through to Guru Tegh Bahadur, through to shaheedi

play04:51

and the life of Guru Gobind Rai, the young Guru Gobind Singh Ji

play04:55

and up to the point of the formation of the Khalsa.

play04:57

The seventh week we cover just the Khalsa itself.

play05:00

How was it formed? What was the concept behind it?

play05:03

Week eight, we look at from 1699, the formation of the Khalsa

play05:06

to 1708, when Guru Gobind Singh Ji gave the guruship to Guru Granth Sahib Ji.

play05:11

And following that, we look at 1708 to 1801.

play05:14

This is a key area actually, not a lot of people know about.

play05:17

The Misl period. What happened during the time of Banda Singh Bahadur.

play05:21

And what happened after that, up until 1801

play05:24

Where Ranjeet Singh was crowned emperor of Punjab.

play05:27

In week nine, we look at kirtan itself. Why do we sing Kirtan?

play05:31

Raag, Kirtan, taal. What are all these things?

play05:34

And we're going to have some live music, to understand how amazing Kirtan is.

play05:39

Week 10, we look at from the time of Ranjeet Singh's kingdom

play05:42

to it basically collapsing under the British onslaught.

play05:46

And then, following on from that

play05:49

the Sikhs under the British. So all there up to 1925.

play05:52

Then we look at 1925 up to 1947. The British leave

play05:56

and India as a country gets its independence

play05:59

and Pakistan is formed.

play06:01

And then we look at 1947 to 1984. The Punjabi Suba movement, and then the build up to 1984 itself.

play06:08

And then, week 12, we look at what happened post 1984.

play06:11

We look at the current situation in Punjab, and also the current situation in the panth.

play06:16

And then, obviously, just to discuss, having looked at everything

play06:19

through all of these weeks, we'll then look forward as to what kind of things

play06:24

are facing the panth right now, and what might be some bright lights that we can focus upon.

play06:28

It's quite comprehensive, as you can tell.

play06:31

Well, recently, as I said, we delivered this over 12 weeks in Shepherds Bush.

play06:35

The idea of the online course is to flip the classroom.

play06:38

So, therefore, you will learn online by watching these YouTube videos.

play06:42

The benefit of that is that it's in your own time, you can, you know, do it

play06:45

at your own convenience, in the evening, when you can fit it in.

play06:48

The key thing is, you can pause, you can rewind, you can research online at the same time

play06:52

to back up what we've said.

play06:54

Finally, once that course is online

play06:56

and the material is available

play06:58

the idea is that volunteers will come forward to be facilitators

play07:02

and they would run this course, at different Gurdware, at different universities.

play07:06

The material is online, and what the facilitor would do

play07:09

would be to advertise the course, to enroll students, get the room.

play07:13

Maybe get some pakore in, and all these things, logistics.

play07:16

And then basically, on the week that they're discussing that topic, they would have a short summary

play07:21

of what was discussed in the topic

play07:24

and then basically go straight into questions from people.

play07:27

And then just discuss some of the points that, you know, would give them discussion points.

play07:32

And we would actually run that facilitators course.

play07:35

We would train people, whether in person or online

play07:37

to be the deliverer. And finally, they would

play07:39

obviously be trained to create a very relaxed

play07:43

and informal environment. So for people to learn, and also for them to have some sangat

play07:47

and build a bit of community for the next 12 weeks.

play07:49

Now you might be asking yourself this question right now: should I go on this course?

play07:54

Well, for the student, the key thing they want to know is

play07:57

why was Sikhi made, and what is Sikhi?

play08:00

They're interested in exploring Sikhi

play08:02

and having a foundation knowledge across most areas.

play08:04

As you've seen, it's quite comprehensive, but it is still foundation knowledge.

play08:08

And the key thing is, they are open-minded and willing to engage in discussion

play08:11

If they've got questions, they should be able to bring them out.

play08:14

The facilitators, obviously these are the people that are going to make this work.

play08:18

We need these people to be the kind or guys, or girls

play08:22

Kaurs and Singhs, who wish to learn, and also transfer that knowledge.

play08:26

Ideally, they'd be following the Guru's path already.

play08:29

What I mean by that is we don't people to be preaching something, but not actually practicing.

play08:33

And for them, the ideal would be that they actually want people, the students

play08:37

to become informed and independent thinkers

play08:41

Not just to take their line, but to arm themselves with knowledge.

play08:44

So we call it the sword of knowledge.

play08:46

And they need to be able to mediate discussions

play08:49

and differing viewpoints, and avoid arguments.

play08:52

Very easy to let a discussion go on too far.

play08:55

Okay, so here are some of the testimonials from the pilot course.

play08:58

I immensely enjoyed the WhyGuru course. I found it informative, entertaining, loads of information.

play09:06

I've learned loads of interesting facts.

play09:09

I really enjoyed the presentation and I've enjoyed coming every week.

play09:12

I would highly, highly recommend it.

play09:15

I have a background in Kundalini yoga, so I had

play09:19

some knowledge of some of the terms, some of the mantras, some of the names of the Gurus.

play09:25

But I felt I had a lot of gaps in my knowledge, and wanted to find out more.

play09:29

And it's far exceeded my expectations.

play09:33

I think, coming from a background where I've been born into a Sikh family

play09:38

much like a number of other people, we have a lot of information on Sikhi

play09:41

that's been derived from books, from the Gurdwara.

play09:45

And what the WhyGuru course has delivered is to bring a lot of that information together

play09:49

but most importantly the facts, bringing it all together and actually illustrating the timeline

play09:53

of what the gurus did and, most importantly, why they did it.

play09:55

I think that has been probably the most enlightening part of the course for myself.

play10:00

Via the discussions, understanding what issues other Sikhs are going through as well

play10:05

and for myself a deeper understanding of what a Sikh actually is, is something I've gained.

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I've particularly enjoyed the latter part of the course

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which is about Sikh history after the gurus.

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It's not kind of very well compiled, the history

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following the gurus, so it's been enlightening

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to know about the relationships with the British

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and even with the Indian government.

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Particularly, how figures like Indira Gandhi, Mahatma Gandhi, and their relationships with the Sikhs

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as well as particularly the British. I've been introduced to information that I'd previously just never encountered

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and it's kind of, it has had an impact.

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Knowing now how the media works in India

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and their kind of negative idea of Sikhs.

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Of course it's very upsetting, and not being able to do anything about it.

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It is something to think about for the future

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how this can be overcome.

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I would really recommend you join and attend the WhyGuru course

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because there is a great amount of information

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to be taken on, and it's a great introduction to something so complex.

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So, the WhyGuru course for me has been very good.

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Because I didn't necessarily intend to go on it in the beginning, but I kind of arrived here

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and I'm so grateful that I did, because it's

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really brought back the basics and the essence

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of what Sikhi is, to the forefront of my mind.

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And that's something that can so easily get lost.

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With the history, we've not only covered that

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but we've gone into why the gurus did what they did

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and why, you know, what the messages were.

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And it's really, kind of, struck back what Sikhi has become today. And we can then kind of understand

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why it is in the state that it is.

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I'm not saying that it's in a bad state, but it just puts things in context.

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I think the format's been really good.

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Having to be there in person, so you can ask questions.

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Yeah, I highly recommend it because, you know, you understand things to a very good level

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and across so many different aspects to Sikhi.

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the format of the course is excellent

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so I think people will really get something out of it.

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You know, in any of these areas, not just Kirtan.

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In any of these areas, you can go as deep as you want.

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So it's a question of just trying to give people something

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which they can then take on board and move forward with.

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And I think the course has done that

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across all the different aspects really well.

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I found the course very inspiring.

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There's just so much to take from it.

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Coming from a background as a Punjabi Sikh, there's just so many questions that we have

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and I found the course answered those questions before I actually asked them.

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This course, for me, was sort of like the missing piece in the jigsaw.

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The stories that we know, but we don't necessarily know the whole story

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And there's parts that have been amazing. Because that's the inspiring part.

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That's the part that we want to know. That's what I've been able to gain from it.

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The most inspiring part is to understand the Naam Japna part.

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I think, when we think of the three pillars, we all try to do that I think, to earn an honest living: Wandke Shakna.

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We give to the Gurdwara, we give to charities.

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We understand that's important.

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But the Naam Japna, I don't think I've ever put such an importance on that

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and that's arguably the most important part.

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That part has been the difference in all of this for me.

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What I really liked about the course was the structure that it was done in.

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So, it followed a chronological order, but in the middle of that we discussed other issues

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such as spirituality, music, given the role of Sikhs in society, and the challenges they face.

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So it was a good mix of different topics and ended up being a very rich discussion.

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What was also really good were the Q&A sessions

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that enabled us to dwell on what had been discussed

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and engage in a lively discussion.

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My family's not particularly religious.

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I've done reasonable amounts of reading about Sikhism, so I wanted to plug in the gaps

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and see if I was missing anything.

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And the course definitely enabled me to achieve that.

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The main thing for me was like, well it is in the name, it's the why element.

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It's easy to sort of, if you have a specific question, to find out knowledge.

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But to really actually have understanding, you need to cover so much ground in the way of knowledge

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that it's really, really helpful to have someone that's well versed in numerous different aspects of Sikhi

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and is also like, trying to cover as much ground as possible, to try and impart that meaning across to you

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in a very concise and understandable way.

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So that was the main thing I was looking for, and yeah, I felt that was fully met.

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I think anyone, regardless of how much knowledge you have, would benefit from coming on the course.

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I think it's very well structured, and there's no way that you could have the level of understanding

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that we get out of this 12 weeks if you were trying to do it in your own time.

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I think it cuts the learning curve in half, probably way more than that.

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So I definitely highly recommend it.

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I feel like it's a very useful platform to try and expand my knowledge.

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I would welcome further courses.

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As you can see, people really enjoyed that course.

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I think, given the right environment, it can be very successful.

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So what next? Well the first thing we'd like you to do

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if you're watching this, is to spread the word about this course.

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Get people to like on Facebook, get them to sign up to our Twitter, so they know what's coming up next.

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Obviously, if you wish to become a facilitator or a student, then let us know

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so that we know where the demand is, and we can hopefully find a facilitator in your area

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and then get the students to sign up to that.

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Obviously, we're a YouTube channel, so watch, learn and share. Spread this information.

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It's for everybody.

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And then support our mission if you can, with Guru's Daswand.

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Why we call it Guru's Daswand, is we know that Daswand is not our money, it's Guru's money.

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And this comes in line with our mission.

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We really want to take this to the next step.

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We really want this WhyGuru course to be a foundation level of knowledge in as many places

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as we can get it to. So, in every major university with lots of Sikhs

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and in every major Gurdwara.

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this course should be available and should be, you know, on an ongoing basis.

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You can sign up for this every, maybe every three months or every half a year.

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And really get it so that people get this knowledge

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and it's widespread. And for that, we need full-time tutors and coordinators.

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So please come forward.

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Offer your Seva, offer your Daswant.

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Everythings 13 is our charity. You can go on to look at that at everythings13.org

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The concept is sabha kujha tera. Everythings 13. Vaheguru Ji, everything is yours.

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And really, it's a charity designed to spread the Guru's knowledge.

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So you may think, well I've done this course, what's going to come next?

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Well, as you can tell, we like word plays, so WhyGuru, next part is WhyKhalsa WhyFateh.

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And that course will really be about developing knowledge further

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from basic to maybe intermediate.

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And that's going to be more on streams of learning.

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So one might be, your know, theory of raag Kirtan and dhunis in Guru Granth Sahib Ji.

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The theory of taals and the main instruments used for percussion, taking Gurmukhi, learning from scratch.

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All the way up to being able to understand vocabulary in Gurbani.

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A deeper historical study of those areas, and looking at other scriptures and texts that we can refer to.

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And also, look at the Gurmukh philosophy and spirituality.

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Looking at things like inspirational Sikh figures and inspirational books.

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How can I take myself further and learn more?

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And finally the panthic issues in the future.

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This is something that's not really discussed that much.

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We tend to look backwards quite a lot.

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But also, looking forward, what can we do?

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To make this WhyKhalsa WhyFateh happen, we really need people to be working full-time

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and preparing that material.

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And they need to be the right people, because obviously one person or two people can't do this.

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We need more people to get involved.

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We need people to actually fly out to India and interview

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the experts in these areas.

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So the quality of knowledge, once it's recorded and put online, stays consistent

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and deliver it to as many people as we can.

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So that's the WhyGuru course.

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We look forward to week one, about why Guru Nanak Dev Ji came to this earth.

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You know, this course, there's nowhere does it claim to be the perfect source of all foundation knowledge.

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It's just a few people's attempt to make sense of Sikhi

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from as many areas as we can think about.

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If we make mistakes in this course, please forgive us and please bless us with your knowledge.

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Share with us and let us learn from you as well. And share it as much as you can.

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And please help to make it a success.

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Vaheguru Ji ka Khalsa, Vaheguru ji ki Fateh.

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Related Tags
SikhismusWhyGuruGrundlagenKursGuru NanakSpiritualitätGurmukhiGuru Granth SahibKhalsaSikhi Geschichte
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