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Answer in 100-150 words. Describe the major teachings of either Kabir or Baba Guru Nanak, and the ways in which these have been transmitted. - History

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प्रश्न

Answer in 100-150 words.

Describe the major teachings of either Kabir or Baba Guru Nanak, and the ways in which these have been transmitted. 

दीर्घउत्तर

उत्तर

Kabir is a great poet-cum-saint of Indian society. He has had appeal among Hindus and Muslims alike as it is believed that he was born as Hindu but was brought up by a Muslim couple. He wrote poems that exhorted both communities to take to social reforms.

The major teachings of Kabir were as follows:

  1. Kabir described God as nirankar (having no shape). He used terms drawn from Islamic tradition like Allah, Khuda, Hajrat, and Peer but also used words of Vedic traditions like Alakh (the unseen) and nirakar (the formless). Thus, he freely took to both traditions viz. Islamic and Vedantic.
  2. He repudiated idol worship and polytheism.
  3. He emphasized the oneness of God though there can be many names of His.
  4. He criticised religious rituals of Hindus and Muslims alike.
  5. He also preached against caste discrimination.
  6. He combined the Sufi traditions of love of God with the Hindi tradition of remembrance of God.
  7. He also emphasised the dignity of labour.

Thus, the essence of the teachings of Kabir was simple living based on love and respect for all. He wrote in simple language to be understood by the common man of the country.

Guru Nanak and his teachings: Guru Nanak was born in a Hindu family in 1469 at Nankana Saheb on the bank of the river Ravi. His birthplace is now in Pakistan. He learnt Persian, Arabic, Hindi, and Mathematics. He spent time in the company of Sufi saints and Bhaktas of various socio-religious movements.

The major teachings of Guru Nanak are as follows:

  1. He rejected the religious texts of both Hindus and Muslims.
  2. He preached God is Nirakar viz., without any shape.
  3. He criticised the religious practices like ceremonial baths, sacrifices, and idol worship and emphasised simplicity.
  4. He called upon his followers to connect to the divine by remembering and repeating the divine name.

Guru Nanak expressed himself in Punjabi, the language of the local people, in a lyrical form called Shabad. Shabad can be recited in various ragas. 

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पाठ 6: Bhakti –Sufi Traditions: Changes in Religious Beliefs and Devotional Texts - Exercises [पृष्ठ १६८]

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एनसीईआरटी History - Themes in Indian History [English] Class 12
पाठ 6 Bhakti –Sufi Traditions: Changes in Religious Beliefs and Devotional Texts
Exercises | Q 5 | पृष्ठ १६८

संबंधित प्रश्‍न

Consider the following statements regarding Kabir.

  1. Kabir organised his followers into a community and set up rules for congregational worship.
  2. Kabir described the Ultimate Reality using terms drawn from Islam, Vedantic traditions, and from yogic traditions.
  3. Verses ascribed to Kabir have been compiled in three distinct but overlapping traditions.

Which of the following statements is/are incorrect?


Which of the following statements is NOT correct about Baba Guru Nanak?


Which of these was the capital of Akbar?


Who compiled Adi Granth?


Consider the following statements regarding Kabir.

1. Verses of Kabir are compiled in three distinct traditions.

2. Kabir’s poems are available only in the Urdu language.

3. Kabir used many traditions to describe the ultimate reality.

4. Kabir called ultimate reality only Allah.

Which of the given statements is/are incorrect?


Who among the following Gurus of Sikhs compiled ‘Guru Adi Granth Sahib’?


Read the following information given in the box carefully:

  • She was a Rajput princess from Merta in Marwar.
  • She considered Lord Krishna as her lover.

Identify the name of the devotee of Saguna Bhakti from the following options.


Read the following source carefully and answer the following question by choosing the most appropriate option:

One Lord

Here is a composition attributed to Kabir:
Tell me, brother, how can there be
No one lord of the world but two?
Who led you so astray?
God is called by many names:
Names like Allah, Ram, Karim,
Keshav, Hari, and Hazrat.
Gold may be shaped into rings and bangles.
Isn’t it gold all the same?
Distinctions are only words we invent …
Kabir says they are both mistaken.
Neither can find the only Ram.
One kills the goat, the other cows.
They waste their lives in disputation

Identify the connotation of Kabir from the following options.


Read the following source carefully and answer the following question by choosing the most appropriate option:

One Lord

Here is a composition attributed to Kabir:
Tell me, brother, how can there be
No one lord of the world but two?
Who led you so astray?
God is called by many names:
Names like Allah, Ram, Karim,
Keshav, Hari, and Hazrat.
Gold may be shaped into rings and bangles.
Isn’t it gold all the same?
Distinctions are only words we invent …
Kabir says they are both mistaken.
Neither can find the only Ram.
One kills the goat, the other cows.
They waste their lives in disputation

How has Kabir’s compositions promote communal harmony at large?


Read the following source carefully and answer the following question by choosing the most appropriate option:

One Lord

Here is a composition attributed to Kabir:
Tell me, brother, how can there be
No one lord of the world but two?
Who led you so astray?
God is called by many names:
Names like Allah, Ram, Karim,
Keshav, Hari, and Hazrat.
Gold may be shaped into rings and bangles.
Isn’t it gold all the same?
Distinctions are only words we invent …
Kabir says they are both mistaken.
Neither can find the only Ram.
One kills the goat, the other cows.
They waste their lives in disputation

Which of the following is the part of Kabir’s philosophy?


Read the following source carefully and answer the following question by choosing the most appropriate option:

One Lord

Here is a composition attributed to Kabir:
Tell me, brother, how can there be
No one lord of the world but two?
Who led you so astray?
God is called by many names:
Names like Allah, Ram, Karim,
Keshav, Hari, and Hazrat.
Gold may be shaped into rings and bangles.
Isn’t it gold all the same?
Distinctions are only words we invent …
Kabir says they are both mistaken.
Neither can find the only Ram.
One kills the goat, the other cows.
They waste their lives in disputation

Kabir’s poetry has a literary as well as a philosophical significance.
Select the most appropriate option from the following that describes this essence.


Read the following source carefully and answer the following question by choosing the most appropriate option:

One Lord

Here is a composition attributed to Kabir:
Tell me, brother, how can there be
No one lord of the world but two?
Who led you so astray?
God is called by many names:
Names like Allah, Ram, Karim,
Keshav, Hari, and Hazrat.
Gold may be shaped into rings and bangles.
Isn’t it gold all the same?
Distinctions are only words we invent …
Kabir says they are both mistaken.
Neither can find the only Ram.
One kills the goat, the other cows.
They waste their lives in disputation

Read the following statements regarding Kabir and select the appropriate option.

  1. Kabir was a nirguna saint.
  2. He believed in formless supreme God.
  3. He wanted to remove the differences based on caste and religion.
  4. He condemned the superstitious cults, the ritualism, the doctrines of both Hinduism and Islam.

Baba Guru Nanak was born in ______.


Who compiled the hymns of Baba Guru Nanak?


Arranged them in chronological order.

  1. Kabir
  2. Mirabai
  3. Guru Nanak
  4. Shankaradeva

Match the following:

List I List II
A. Lingayat 1. Punjab
B. Kabirpanthi 2. Karnataka
C. Baba Guru Nanak 3. Rajasthan
D. Mira Bai 4. Benaras

The bhakti Saint who was not a worshipper of Krishna was ______.


Who was the tenth Guru of Sikh?


Read the following source carefully and answer the questions that follow:

Love for the Lord

This is part of a song attributed to Mirabai:
  I will build a funeral pyre of sandalwood and aloe;
  Light it by your own hand
  When I am burned away to cinders;
  Smear this ash upon limbs.
  ... let flame be lost in flame.

In another verse, she sings:
  What can Mewar's ruler do to me?
  If God is angry, all is lost,
  But what can the Rana do?

  1. Examine the reason for calling Meera Bai an ascetic figure.
  2. Analyze Meera Bai’s relation with Mewar.
  3. How was Mirabai unique among the poet-saints of the Bhakti movement?

'Kabir is known as one of the saints whose philosophy has greatly influenced the Bhakti Movement.' Justify the statement with suitable points.


"Meera Bai was perhaps one of the best known woman poet within the Bhakti Tradition." Substantiate the statement.


'Kabir Das is one of the most outstanding examples of a Poet-saint who has given extensive views on social situation, institution and on ultimate reality.' Explain the statement.


'Meerabai was a well known poet of North Indian Hindu Tradition.' Explain her philosophy and belief system.


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