Bhagat Kabir Ji PDF
Bhagat Kabir Ji PDF
Bhagat Kabir Ji PDF
Using Technology, To Spread the message of Sikhism Gurmat | Education | Youth | Community Development & Welfare
GURMAT STUDY
Using Technology, To Spread the message of Sikhism Gurmat | Education | Youth | Community Development & Welfare
Website: www.GurmatStudy.com E-mail : [email protected] Bhakti movement mainly involved lower-caste Hindu saints while Sufi mysticism involved Muslim saints in medieval India (1200-1700). Kabir ji immensely contributed to the Bhakti Movement and is considered a pioneer of Bhakti along with other Bhagats like Bhagat Ravdas Ji (1376 1427), Bhagat (Shekh) Farid Ji (1173 1265) and Bhagat Namdev Ji (1270 1350). History indicates that Bhagat Ramanand Ji (1366 1446) was his preceptor in the initial days. In the fifteenth century, Banaras was the seat of Brahmin orthodoxy and their learning center. Brahmins had stronghold on all the spheres of life in the society. Thus, Kabir ji, belonging to a low caste of Julaha had to go through great difficulties in practicing his ideology. Kabir ji and his followers would gather at one place in the city and meditate. Brahmins ridiculed him for preaching to prostitutes and other low castes. Kabir ji dryly denounced Brahmins and thus won hearts of people around him. There is no doubt that the most famous person from the city of Banaras in history today is none other than Bhagat Kabir Ji. Kabir ji, through his couplets not only reformed the mindset of common villagers and low caste people, but gave them self confidence to question Brahmins. Kabir ji was in fact among the first person to go against Brahmins and did so successfully. Kabir ji also denounced Mullahs and their rituals of bowing towards Kaba five times a day. Because of open condemnation of established and popular religions, Kabir ji became an object of the wrath of both Hindus and Muslims in and around Banaras. Bhagat Kabir ji believed in total self-surrender and God's bhakti (meditation). The Kabir panthis (followers of Bhagat Kabir ji) follow a unique style of singing the praises of God, and lead a simple and pure life of devotion. Kabir ji recommends a ceaseless singing of God's praises. He preaches against withdrawal from the world. He was against all ritualistic and ascetic methods as means to salvation. It is true that Kabir ji refers to some yogic terms in describing the meditational and mystic methods of the yogis, but there is no ground to suggest that he himself recommends the yogic path. In fact, far from recommending yoga, Kabir Ji is quite strong in condemning ascetic or yogic methods, and says that yogis, in their meditations, fall prey to maya or materialism.
PAGE 2 OF 3
GURMAT STUDY
Using Technology, To Spread the message of Sikhism Gurmat | Education | Youth | Community Development & Welfare
The moral tone is quite strong in Kabir ji's hymns. Kabir, deck thyself with garments of love. Love them and give honour to those whose body and soul speak the truth. The ruby of goodness is greater than all the mines of rubies; all the wealth of three worlds resides in the goodness of heart. When the wealth of contentment is won, all other wealth is as dust. Where there is mercy, there is strength, where there i forgiveness, there is He." Kabir ji suggests inward worship and remembrance of God. For him, true worship is inwards. Put on the rosary inward. By counting beads, the world will be full of light. Bhagat Ji clearly suggests moral discrimination between good and bad deeds. What can the helpless road do, when the traveller does not walk understandingly. "What can one do, if, with lamp in hand, one falls in the well. Or goes astray with open eyes. Discern ye now between good and evil." It is not surprising that Kabir ji's satire was brought to bear not simply on the vices and weaknesses of men but reached through and beyond them to the very system itself. It was the authority of Vedas and Quran that more than the authority of Brahmin or Qazi which Kabir Ji attacked. Kabir Ji rebelled against the pretension of resolving by the means of books or by way of authority, the mystery of human conditions and the problem of liberation (Moksha). Bhagat Kabir Ji spent his last days living in a place Named Maghar, Town Basti (15 Miles towards West from Gorakhpur), where it was believed that if you die, you would be born as a donkey in next life, just to prove the falsehood of the myth. Bhagat Kabir ji composed no systematic treatise, rather his work consists of many short didactic poems, often expressed in a vigorous language in the form of Padas, Dohas, Slokas, etc. In addition to his work recorded in 1604 CE in Guru Granth Sahib by Guru Arjan Sahib - Fifth Nanak, and preserved inviolate since, two other collections exist - Kabir Granthavali, and Bijak. The authenticity of much of the writings outside Guru Granth Sahib is suspect because of many statements, which apparently contradict beliefs associated with Bhagat Kabir Ji. In his poems, Kabir Ji was quick to express the illustrations of moral and spiritual truth in the incidents of everyday life, and many of his similes and metaphors are very striking.
PAGE 3 OF 3