Week 8 · Living it together · Day 50

Vaisakhi — the festival of new beginnings

Vaisakhi falls every April and is one of the most joyful days in the Sikh year. It is both a harvest thanksgiving — farmers celebrating the ripening wheat fields of Punjab — and the anniversary of the day in 1699 when Guru Gobind Singh Ji called the Sangat together at Anandpur Sahib and created the Khalsa Panth. On that day five brave souls stepped forward, received Amrit, and became the Panj Pyare. Today, Sikhs around the world mark Vaisakhi with Nagar Kirtan, akhand path, langar and joy — grateful for both the gifts of the earth and the gift of a community shaped by courage and seva.

Today's idea

Vaisakhi is the harvest festival and the birthday of the Khalsa — a day Sikhs celebrate with Nagar Kirtan, langar and gratitude.

Pick two or three — there's no wrong way to do a day.

Read a Sakhi or story Vaisakhi / Khalsa Sajna Diwas Make & colour Colour the Nishan Sahib Play Vaisakhi & Khalsa quiz Watch together Birth of Khalsa — Vaisakhi Story
Go & do it Look up when Vaisakhi falls next year. Plan one thing your family could do to celebrate it — a shared meal, a visit to the Gurdwara, or a walk in a Nagar Kirtan procession.
Today's Gurbani

ਮਾਹ ਦਿਵਸ ਮੂਰਤ ਭਲੇ; ਜਿਸ ਕਉ ਨਦਰਿ ਕਰੇ ॥

Maah divas moorat bhale; jis ka-o nadar kare.

“The months, days and moments are all auspicious for the one upon whom the Lord casts His merciful glance.”

— Guru Arjan Dev Ji · Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji · Ang 136
Talk together

Ask: 'Vaisakhi is a harvest festival AND the birthday of the Khalsa. What does it mean to celebrate both at once?'

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