Guru Ka Langar and Daswand
The institution of "free kitchen" or the "temple of bread",
as Prof. Puran Singh called it, was started by Guru Nanak. He desired that every Sikh should share his food with others -
Wand Chhakna - and that his kitchen should be open to all. Subsequently the Langar took on an institutional form and became
a part of the Sikh temple. This community kitchen is meant to provide food to all devotees and pilgrims. Every Sikh is expected
to contribute to it either by donating food stuff or by participating in the cooking and distribution of the food. Guru
Nanak set up a Langar at Kartarpur where people brought corn and fuel, and worked together to prepare a common meal for the
whole community. Guru Angad extended the Langar and personally served in it. Guru Amardas turned it into an institution and
ordered that all who came to see him must first eat in Langar: food first, congregation next - pahley pangat, pachhey sangat.
Even Emperor Akbar and the Raja of Haripur had to sit on the floor with the common people and take a meal with them. Apart
from promoting social equality, the Langar eliminated taboos about chaunka - the preparation of food in a special enclosure,
etc. The scope of "Langar" was widened by Guru Ramdas who ordered that water and meals be also served to travelers and squatters.
Guru Arjan and his wife personally served water to the Sangat. Many of the Sikhs started their own Langars at Anandpur.
One day, Guru Gobind Singh went out incognito on an inspection of Langars. He found out that Bhai Nand Lal maintained the
Langar well, while others were indifferent to the needs of poor Sikhs. He warned them and remarked, "The mouths of the poor
are Guru's receptacles of gifts." According to Prof. Puran Singh, "What is a home but a hospitable feasting of children
with bread, love and faith?" What is spiritual life in a temple of flesh without a full meal first? The very first temple
made by Guru Nanak therefore, was the Temple of Bread or Guru's Langar.
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