
Gurudwara Guru Nanak Bagichi, Mathura
Gurudwara Guru Nanak Bagichi, Mathura Gurudwara Guru Nanak Bagichi (lit. Guru Nanak’s small garden) lies

Gurudwara Guru Nanak Bagichi, Mathura Gurudwara Guru Nanak Bagichi (lit. Guru Nanak’s small garden) lies

Gurudwara Charan Paduka Patshahi Pehli te Nauvin – Nizamabad Gurudwara Charan Paduka Patshahi Pehli te

Gurudwara Sri Nankana Sahib holds great significance as it is closely associated with Guru Nanak Dev Ji, the first Guru. He visited this place after traveling to Nanak Mata and Nanak Puri.

Gurudwara Nanakpuri Sahib, Tanda is a historic Sikh shrine linked to Guru Nanak Dev Ji’s visit during his 1514 Uttarakhand Udasi. The site is associated with powerful miracles performed by Guru Ji to end the evil practice of child trafficking among Rohilla Pathans. Today, the Gurudwara commemorates major Gurpurabs and offers comfortable accommodation with a 35-room sarai for devotees.

Gurudwara Dudh Wala Khuh Sahib Village Nanakmata Gurudwara Dudh Wala Khuh Sahib is associated with

Gurudwara Bhandara Sahib is associated with the first Guru, Guru Nanak Dev ji who came here during his Third Udasi or travel in 1514 A.D.

Gurudwara Shree Nanakmatta Sahib The first Guru Sri Nanak Dev, on his way to Kailash

Sikh Temple Makindu – Kenya Set in forest off the main road, the Makindu Gurdwara is the only convenient rest stop for weary motorists on this busy and long road to and from Mombasa. So the Sikh community of Kenya has done something special by building such a beautiful edifice and campus where anyone of any religion or of no religion can withdraw from the mundane and reflect on the spiritual. This large complex houses a huge dining facility which provides free langar 24 hours a day as determined by their founder Guru, Guru Nanak. Rooms with beds – several with attached bathrooms – are available for tourists to stay for up to two nights. Everyone in Kenya seems to know of it and most tourists stay to rest and eat. Most are non-Sikhs. There is no charge for this service, but most people donate to the Gurdwara. Apparently it is run by a consortium of the Nairobi Gurdwaras. The aura at Makindu would calm the most tormented mind; one automatically drifts away from the mundane and towards the spiritual and peaceful. History Although the Sikh Temple Makindu was built in 1926, its roots are believed to have been present way before then. When the Uganda Railway was completed in 1902 at Port Florence (which is now Kisumu, Kenya), Makindu played a prominent role as a service point on the railway’s advance from Mombasa. Dozens of artisans and train drivers were Sikhs and the station at Makindu became a place of religious fervour. Sikhs, Hindus and Muslims would gather together in the evenings and sing the praises of God. They did so under a tree, the spot where the current Gurdwara now stands. It is also believed that the Gurdwara was funded by non-Sikhs along with Sikhs. In the years before 1926, the Gurdwara was a tin-roof little hut where the Sikhs used to pray everyday, and the Guru Guru Granth Sahib was housed there. But when the Railway moved on from Makindu, the service point went into disuse and became unimportant. The Sikhs naturally moved along too, leaving the tiny Gurdwara behind, under the watchful eye of an African servant who would clean the Gurdwara. Sikh devotees who passed along the Gurdwara would leave offerings of money by dropping it through the locked Gurdwara’s window. Now the Makindu Sikh Temple is the first and the second biggest after Kericho Sikh Temple and the most famous in East Africa. meta des and excerpt

Central Sikh Temple Central Sikh Temple is the first and oldest Sikh Gurudwara in Singapore,
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