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Sikhs in Ayodhya to hold 3-day ‘Akhand Path’ ahead of Ram Mandir ‘Pran Pratishtha’

The Sikh community in Ayodhya is set to hold a three-day 'Akhand Path' beginning January 19, just before the 'Pran Pratishtha' (consecration) of the Ram Temple.

The Sikh people group is set to sort out a three-day ‘Akhand Path‘ in Gurdwara Brahm Kund Sahib in Ayodhya from January 19 till January 21, a day before the ‘Pran Pratishtha‘ (sanctification) of the Ram Mandir.

“Sikhs from different pieces of the nation will partake in the ‘Akhand Path‘. It will be held for the ‘Pran Pratishtha’ so it goes off without a hitch,” BJP public representative RP Singh said.

“There is an extraordinary history of association between Sikhs, Lord Ram, and Ayodhya, The vital proof on which even the High Court depended was Guru Nanak Dev Ji‘s visit to the Smash sanctuary in 1510. Nihangs likewise went inside the Ram Mandir in 1858 where they performed havan and composed ‘Ram’ on the wall inside the premises,” he added.

The ‘Akhand Path‘, a principal custom in Sikhism, conveys with it significant otherworldly importance. It includes a solid, consistent recitation of the Guru Granth Sahib, the heavenly book of the Sikhs.

This recitation, which endures north of 48 hours, is achieved by a group of perusers who guarantee the expressions of heavenly sacred writing keep on reverberating without interference until the function’s decision.
RP Singh said that ‘Akhand Path‘ and different projects have been coordinated under the steady gaze of the High Court’s milestone decision in the Ram Janmabhoomi-Babri Masjid case in 2019.

“Under the steady gaze of the High Court decision on Ram Mandir, we coordinated ‘Akhand Path‘ at a similar Gurdwara in Ayodhya. Sikhs from Kanpur, Hyderabad, Amritsar, and different pieces of the nation partook and petitioned God for the development of Ram Mandir. This ‘Akhand Path‘ is for ‘Pran Pratishtha’, and the word ‘Ram’ has been involved multiple times in the Guru Granth Sahib,” he said.

By coordinating the ‘Akhand Path‘, the Sikh people group points to exhibiting interfaith fortitude, in addition to praising the victory of confidence and otherworldliness that rises above the limits of the religion.

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