Eastern Eye (UK)

Prayer book for British Sikh soldiers launched

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A SPECIALLY DESIGNED waterproof prayer book filled with “tactical” hymns and prayers has been launched in London for British Sikhs to carry with them on duty.

The Nitnem Gutka Sahib, as the collection is known, is made of durable material with a camouflage design. Inspired by images of troops in the trenches of the First World War, it was handed over to military personnel recently at the Central Gurdwara Khalsa Jatha in Shepherd's Bush in west London.

“This is not something new, but a re-introducti­on of a tradition last seen over 100 years ago, during World War I,” said the Defence Sikh Network UK, behind the project. “Sikhs in UK defence now have a tactical water/tearproof Gutka to use wherever they serve, in whatever conditions.”

Major Daljinder Singh Virdee, chair of the Defence Sikh Network, said the idea

was inspired by an image of a Sikh soldier with a prayer book in the trenches of France in the first World War, when many Sikh soldiers fought with the Allied Forces. Sikhs also fought in the Second World War.

“The Army has been providing Christian religious texts for many years and I saw the opportunit­y there ... to provide Sikh texts,” Virdee told the BBC. “For Sikhs, our scriptures are not just words, they are the living embodiment of our Guru. We draw moral strength and physical strength from reading the scriptures every day, it gives us discipline and it grows us spirituall­y.”

The new multilingu­al prayer book is designed to keep Sikhs within the military close to their faith and has been made available across all forces. While the British Army Gutka has a camouflage cover, the Royal Navy and Royal Air Force Gutka has a navy blue cover.

“By providing a Nitnem Gutka for serving Sikhs... we hope to directly support Sikhs practice a key component of their faith wherever they travel,” a Ministry of Defence spokespers­on said.

 ?? ?? MORA GUID The Nitnem Gutka Sahib as nspired by images troops trenches of the irst orld
MORA GUID The Nitnem Gutka Sahib as nspired by images troops trenches of the irst orld

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