- In Sikhism, the Five Ks (Punjabi: ਪੰਜ ਕਕਾਰ, Pañj Kakār,
Punjabi pronunciation: [ˈpənd͡ʒ.ˈkəˌka:ɾ]) are five
items that Guru
Gobind Singh, in 1699, commanded...
-
those are "Origin of Chandigarh", "Gurudwara", "Tradition of Langar", "Punj
Kakaar", "Ma Boli", "Chhaju Da Chaubara", "Dhabas on GT Road", "Making of Gur"...
- The
Akhand Kirtani Jatha,
alternatively romanized as the
Akhand Keertanee Jathaa and
abbreviated as AKJ, is a
jatha (collective group) and sect of Sikhism...
- dae arth
samajhane –
Learn the
meanings of
Gurbani from Gursikhs. 7. Panj
Kakaar dee
rehit drirh rukhnee –
Follow the
discipline of The Five Ks strictly...
-
teachings of the temple. Sikhism. One of the five
articles of
faith (panj
kakaar) worn by Sikh men and
women is a
certain style of
underpants similar to...
- guru pani pita..."
before sleeping.[citation needed] The five Ks (panj
kakaar) are five
articles of
faith which all
initiated (Amritdhari)
Sikhs are obliged...
- hair to grow
naturally without cutting. The
practice is one of The Five
Kakaars, the
outward symbols ordered by Guru
Gobind Singh in 1699 as a
means to...
- in the song "Saure Ghar". A
kirpan is one of the five
sacred symbols (
kakaars) that
every baptised Sikh
carries on his person.
According to the Sikh...
- at the
Tercentennial Celebration of
Khalsa in 1999. The Five Ks, or panj
kakaar/kakke, are the five
items of
faith that all
initiated Sikhs (Amritdhari)...
-
religious concept in Sikhism. However, the five Sikh symbols,
known as
Kakaars or Five Ks (in
Punjabi known as pañj kakkē or pañj kakār), are sometimes...