By Tricitynews Reporter
Chandigarh
28th November:- Art Historian Dr B.N.
Goswami released Amardeep Singh’s second book on the legacy of Panjabis, THE
QUEST CONTINUES: LOST HERITAGE-The Sikh Legacy in Pakistan at Hotel Aroma here
today.
The book is a seminal
work in documenting the extensive legacy of Panjab’s heritage in Pakistan,
which ex-American Express executive Amardeep Singh has painstakingly chronicled
in his coffee books.
His first book took him
four years of research and 36 days trip into Pakistan which he travelled,
exploring the hitherto forgotten monuments of Indian rich culture and
photographed them.
The second book “The
Quest Continues…” was completed in just 9 months and 9 days, says Amardeep
Singh, for which he travelled to Pakistan for 40 days from Balauchistan to
Peshawar to Sindh and discover forgotten facets of the Indian culture, Amardeep
said.
The first edition of the
500 page illustrated book went into four reprints and was widely accepted by
diaspora, and has been accepted by world’s leading libraries in US, Canada and
Singapore.
These are not the books
but my rich experience to showcase and make the younger generation understand
the richness and diversity of culture and how the people living across the
border are so closely connected with their roots as human beings, he remarked.
Though the first book is
priced at Rs.3999 while the second one is around Rs.5,000, the said part is
that Panjabis would spend that much amount in a restaurant in the evening but
would not spend to buy the book for their children to share this knowledge, he
lamented.
He shared as to how the
people in Sindh and Balauchistan still follow Nanakpanthi where all religions
congregate and the practice is into Nanak’s teachings and they follow Guru
Granth Saheb in their lives.
During the 15th century,
Sikh philosophy emerged as a reformist movement in the north-west of the Indian
subcontinent. Over the next two centuries, it evolved as a defense cohort
against oppressions of those times. In the early 18th century,
this movement grew stronger and successive decades saw the rise of an
indigenous kingdom as the bulwark against foreign intrusions. By the 19th century
the Sikh kingdom became the custodians of the Punjab and established a strong
secular rule.
It was such a formidable
empire that the fast-expanding British East India Company which had acquired
most of India was firmly stalled on the banks of the river Sutlej from further
westward advances.
Seven decades after the
searing partition of 1947, the Sikhs visiting Pakistan today have limited their
interests to the realm of religion and remain uninterested to explore beyond
the few functional gurdwaras.
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