Sikhism is a civilization-scale religious tradition defined by a clear founding lineage, a living canonical scripture, and durable communal institutions. Centered on disciplined discipleship (Sikhi) and collective belonging (Panth), Sikh identity is maintained through affirmation of the Guru lineage culminating in the Guru Granth Sahib, participation in core practices such as Naam simran and seva, and commitment to the Khalsa ideal. Continuity in Sikhism is preserved through scriptural authority and disciplined communal life rather than sacerdotal hierarchy or abstract belief.
1. Unit Type
Sikhism is treated here as a civilization-scale religious tradition with a defined founding lineage, canonical scripture, and durable institutional form, rather than as a sect or reform movement within another religion.
2. Naming
- Emic: Sikhi (“the path/discipleship”), Panth (“the path/community”).
- Etic: Sikhism.
- Structural note: Sikh self-identification centers on disciplined discipleship and communal belonging rather than abstract belief affiliation.
3. Boundaries
- Inclusion: Affirmation of the Guru lineage culminating in the Guru Granth Sahib; participation in core practices (e.g., Naam simran, seva); recognition of the Khalsa ideal and communal institutions (gurdwara, langar).
- Exclusion: Doctrinal or ritual systems that subordinate the Sikh Gurus, reject the authority of the Guru Granth Sahib, or reintegrate Sikh practice into Hindu or Islamic frameworks.
- Syncretism & diaspora: While emerging in a plural Indic–Islamic milieu, Sikhism establishes explicit boundaries against absorption; diaspora practice remains within scope when tied to gurdwara institutions and Khalsa norms.
- Key boundary insight: Sikhism’s boundary is scriptural–communal, not ethnic or caste-based.
4. Time Span
- Origin: Late 15th century CE in the Punjab, founded by Guru Nanak (1469–1539).
- Major transformations: Succession of ten Gurus; formation of the Khalsa (1699); consolidation of scripture as living Guru; periods of persecution, militarization, and state formation; modern global dispersion.
- Status: Active and globally distributed.
5. Geography
- Origin: Punjab region (South Asia).
- Expansion corridors: Trade, migration, imperial service, modern diaspora.
- Distribution: India (Punjab) and major diaspora communities in the UK, Canada, North America, Southeast Asia.
- Core vs peripheral: Core practice remains institutionally centered in Punjab; peripheral forms emphasize identity maintenance and community cohesion.
6. Evidence Base
- Primary: Guru Granth Sahib; Dasam Granth (contested); early janamsakhis; hukamnamas; institutional records.
- Secondary: Persian and colonial records, historical chronicles, ethnography.
- Limitations: Hagiographic layers in early biographies; modern political history shapes interpretation of earlier periods.
7. Dimensional Check
- Ritual: Present but restrained (daily prayer, initiation, communal worship).
- Myth/Narrative: Limited; emphasis on historical exemplars over cosmology.
- Doctrine: Central and explicit (oneness of God, rejection of caste, disciplined life).
- Ethics/Law: Central (seva, justice, equality, moral action).
- Institution: Strong (Khalsa, gurdwaras, collective authority).
- Material culture: Moderate (scripture as Guru, gurdwara space, symbols).
- Experiential: Central (devotional remembrance, moral discipline).
Anchor determination:
Sikhism is anchored in scriptural authority and disciplined communal life, maintaining unity through a living canon and collective practice rather than sacerdotal hierarchy or mystical speculation.