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Sikhi parchar among Hindu Jaats


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4 hours ago, MisterrSingh said:

This site needs more topics such as this one. The gay and tranny black-pills are demoralising. ?

Lmao. Have you taken the black pill yet fella. I m seeing you haven't yet consumed it ??

Come on take your black pill ,the liberals don't have whole day for you. ?

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On 11/20/2020 at 6:15 PM, proactive said:

This is quite an informative video from Akaal  channel. This Hindu Jaat from Haryana converted to Sikhism after he was imprisoned during the Jat reservation agitation a few years ago. There are a few more of his videos on youtube where he feels the future of the Hindu Jaats of Haryana, UP and Rajasthan lies in their becoming Sikhs. 

In his othe videos he outlines that the Hindu Jaats after 1870s became Arya Samajis instead of going towards Sikhism which was their natural home. He make many interesting points. 

I remember chatting to a Hindu Jaat many years ago in London who was a student. He has a sense of pride in his Jaat caste and looked on the Khalsa army of Maharaja Ranjit Singh (wrongly) as the 'Jat' army. He hated the local Hindu Rajputs of his region (Hissar district) and wanted the Sikh Jats to help his people 'defeat' the Rajputs.  He also wasn't very fond of the Bahmans and Banias of his area. 

I also remember that during the 1980s even though Punjab and Haryana were at logger heads over the SYL canal but in the late 1980s the Hindu Jaat youths were in many ways copying the ways and manner of the Sikh youth in such basic things as honouring speakers at their conferences with a lathi instead of a Kirpan and a chaddar instead of a siropa. It shows how the influence of Punjab was still there in Haryana. 

Sikhism has always had an attraction for the rural farming population. The Jats in Punjab even in districts where they were less than the Hindu Jats, through Singh Sabha parchar become the majority of Jats. Could something similar happen in the Hindu Jaat areas? 

It would double or even triple the number of Sikhs in India. 

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Its interesting how as a non Sikh he noticed that the government is against Sikhi, which only made him want to know more about it. Even your average Sikh probably doesn't believe that kind of stuff and thinks its all conspiracy. 

The interview could of been more interesting but I guess 30 mins is a bit short anyway. 

The Jaat community seems to be all over the place and needs a unifying identity which Sikhi can give them, which will help them socially and politically as well. Take the Ravidassias for example with Bhagat Ravidas ji.

Building a Gurdwara in Rotak after Bhagat Dhanna ji is a great idea, Bhagat Dhanna ji can be like their saint and through him they will have a link with Sikhi. 

Having a unifying religious figurehead or saint can do a lot for a community in India. 

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