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Camera: Abhishek Ranjan
Video editor: Puneet Bhatia
Living up to the principles of Sikhism, ‘seva’ and ‘kirat’ karo, the Bangla Sahib Gurudwara in Delhi fed lakhs during the lockdown.
As India closed its religious places to tackle the coronavirus outbreak, the Bangla Sahib Gurdwara also emptied out but its kitchen kept running.
The langar never stopped. Since the beginning of the lockdown, more than 1 lakh people in Delhi-NCR were got food on their plates because of the langar at the Gurdwara.
53 ‘sevaks’ or helping-hands are involved in the cooking and distribution of the langar. They have been working for at least 18 hours daily from the past 2 months.
The management committee informs the ‘kitchen in-charge’ about the requirement of food daily. Accordingly the duties of langri team, sevadars and machine operators are assigned.
Many like Paramjeet Singh had a business outside the Gurudwara. He used to sell ‘kadas’. The lockdown forced him to shut shop, so he decided to do ‘seva’ in the Gurudwara instead of returning home in Punjab.
... still the handmade rotis keep the langar rooted in tradition.
‘Kirat karo’ or work honestly and diligently is one of the three principles of Sikhism. It’s a major part of the langar tradition. Manual labour is a driving force for all the sevadars.
With team of 6 other langris, head langri/cook, Balbir Singh started cooking for 40,000 people in the beginning of the lockdown. The demand kept increasing and now they are cooking langar to feed close to 1 lakh people.
Dilbagh Singh used to serve prasad to the devotees but since the lockdown there aren’t any devotees. So he took up the duty of washing utensils.
A student from Uttarakhand’s Kashipur, Azad Singh helps in loading the langar and looking after the raw food material from past 6-7 months.
Every day 2500 kg wheat, 1500 kg rice and 1000 kg dal is used to prepare this mega langar.
Initially, the Gurudwara committee was sending the langar across to the NGOs who were distributing it on ground. Now they have started their own langar seva called, ‘langar on wheels’. 15 vans take off daily from Bangla Sahib Gurudwara daily loaded with food.
With Unlock 1, religious places will open their doors for the devotees and Bangla Sahib has put safety measures in place.
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