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Punjab
Punjab, a region in Northern India and the east
side of Pakistan, has a long history and rich cultural heritage.
The people of the Punjab are called Punjabis and they speak a language
called Punjabi. The three main religions in the area are Sikhism,
Hinduism, and Islam. The region has been invaded and ruled by many
different empires and races, including the Aryans, Persians, Greeks,
Egyptians, Afghans, and Mongols. Around the time of the 15th Century,
Guru Nanak Dev founded the Sikh religion, which quickly came to
p rominence in the region,
and shortly afterwards, Maharaja Ranjit Singh reformed the Punjab
into a secular and powerful state. The 19th Century saw the beginning
of British rule, which led to the emergence of several heroic Punjabi
freedom fighters. In 1947, at the end of British rule, the Punjab
was split between Pakistan and India .
Many races of people and religions made up the
cultural heritage of the Punjab. Punjab is the land where spiritual
aspirations arose. This heroic land bore numerous invasions, and
after all its suffering, did not entirely lose its glory and its
strength. Here it was that the gentle Nanak preached his marvellous
love for the world. Here it was that his broad heart opened and
his arms outstretched to embrace the whole world.
One of the earliest stone age cultures of South
Asia nourished in the Punjab. People generally accept that about
eight centuries before Christ, the Punjab was the most enlightened
and the prosperous region in the world. The Harappa civilization
developed in Punjab and its culture spread to Iran, Afghanistan,
Balochistan, and north-western parts of South Asia.
The Vedic and Epic period of the Punjab was socially
and culturally very prolific as during this glorious period, the
people accelerated in the fields of philosophy and culture. Here
the people composed the Rig Veda and the Upanishads. Further, tradition
maintains that Valmiki composed the Ramayana near the present Amritsar
city and Kaikyee belonged to this region. Lord Krishna gave the
divine message of the Gita at Kurukshetra. It was here that people
wrote eighteen principal Puranas. The authors of Vishnu Purana and
the Shiv Purano belonged to the central Punjab.
Right from the invasion of Alexander in 326 B.C.,
the Punjab bore the brunt of incursions and the aggressive assaults
of the hordes from the north. During the gruesome period great kings
like Porus, Chandragupta Maurya, Ashoka and host of other heroes
emerged to defend Punjab from the onslaughts.
During Mughal rule, there was lots of conflict,
chaos, and political upheavals in the Punjab. Appearance of Guru
Nanak (1469-1538) was an event significant not only for the region
but for the whole country. He was the founder of a powerful popular
movement which has left a lasting impression on the history and
culture of all of South Asia. Born in the district of Sheikhupura,
he rejected the division of mankind into rigid compartments of orthodox
religions and preached the oneness of humanity, and oneness of God,
thus aiming at creating a new order which embraced the all pervasive
spirit in man. He condemned and ridiculed the false and unnatural
notions of high and low in society, He denounced idolatory and la id stress on meditation for
the realization of the Universal self.
British intrution had political, cultural, philosophical
and literary consequences in the Punjab. The opening of a new system
of education introduced a new spirit in the life of the Punjabis.
More people realized the greatness of Punjabi culture. During the
freedom movement, Punjab played a role worthy of its name. Many
heroes emerged from the Punjab such as Lajpat Rai, Ajit Singh, Bhagat
Singh, Uddham Singh, Bhal Parmanand and a host of others.
Since independence, life in the Punjab proves to
be tragic and traumatic. The partition resulted in riots and terror
which tore up millions of homes and destroyed many lives. The massive
exodus resulting from the newly formed state of Pakistan created
problems of uncontrollable dimensions. The Punjabis trekked in blood
and shreds.
However, the Punjabi spirit of tenacity and toughness
sustained the uprooted people. The disillusioned people set to work
with no self pity to plough fresh fields. They built new industries
and became prominent in sports. Punjabis attained an eminent place
in cultural, aesthetic, and literary work, and revived folk art,
song, dance and drama. All of this has created a sense of pride
and climate of involvement in the heritage of the Punjab.
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