
Sword in
Sikhism
Very many people question the need of Kirpan or the sword in the
atomic age. Others require an explanation for the wearing of the
sword. How can sword he reconciled with spirituality ? Even before
Guru Gobind Singh Sahib, his grand father Guru Hargobind had donned
the sword as a twin-symbol of temporal and spiritual power(Miri &
Piri). He had maintained an army and taken part in military operations
against the Mughal forces.
Guru Gobind Singh Sahib justified the use of the sword as a duty and
as a means of protecting the weak and the oppressed. With human
brutes, non-violence is meaningless. Guru Gobind Singh Sahib says:
When the affairs are past other remedies,
It is justifiable to unsheath the sword.
Tyrants are like mad dogs and wolves. They should be opposed in the
interests of the good of humanity as a whole. The sword is neither to
be used for conquest nor for wrecking vengeance. The sword is meant
only for self-defence or for the good of the people. In cases of
injustice and intolerance, the refusal to use the sword may do more
harm than good. The Sikh's sword is not an instrument of offence but a
symbol of independence, self-respect and power. Guru Gobind Singh
Sahib called it Durga or Bhagwati and praises it thus :
Sword that smites in a flash,
That scatters the armies of the wicked
In the great battle-field,
0 symbol of the brave.
Your arm is irresistible, your brightness shines forth
The splendour of the black dazzles like the sun.
Sword, you are the scourge of saints,
You are the scourge of the wicked ;
Scatterer of sinners, I take refuge with you.
Hail to the Creator. Saviour and sustainer,
Hail to you : Sword supreme !