Official Name: | Nankana Sahib - Birthplace of Guru Nanak |
Nankana Sahib | |
Settlement Type: | City |
Native Name: | |
Mapsize: | 150 px |
Pushpin Map: | Punjab Pakistan#Pakistan |
Pushpin Label Position: | left |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | Pakistan |
Subdivision Type1: | Province |
Subdivision Name1: | Punjab |
Subdivision Type2: | Division |
Subdivision Name2: | Lahore |
Subdivision Type3: | District |
Subdivision Name3: | Nankana Sahib |
Population Total: | 110,135 |
Total Type: | City |
Population As Of: | 2017 |
Population Footnotes: | [1] |
Leader Party: | The Saathy Party |
Leader Name: | Shahzaib Raffique |
Elevation M: | 187 |
Blank Name Sec1: | District Council |
Blank Info Sec1: | 3 seats |
Nankana Sahib (; Panjabi; Punjabi: {{Nastaliq|ننکاݨا صاحب) is a city and capital of Nankana Sahib District in the Punjab province of Pakistan. It is named after the first Guru of the Sikhs, Guru Nanak, who was born in the city and first began preaching here. Nankana Sahib is among the most important religious sites for the Sikh religion.[2] [3] It is located about 91km (57miles) west of Lahore and about 75km (47miles) east of Faisalabad.[4] According to the census of 2017 the city has a population of 110,135 inhabitants.[5] Until 2005, it was a part of the Sheikhupura District.
Originally, the locality was founded by a Hindu ruler named Raja Vairat and was originally named Raipur but it was destroyed during the Islamic invasions of the Indian subcontinent.[6] A later, re-built township on the site of the first settlement was founded during the Delhi Sultanate rule by Rai Bhoi, a Rajput of Bhati stock whose Hindu ancestor had converted to Islam due to the influence of Sufism, and thus was known as Rai-Bhoi-Di-Talwandi.[7] His great-grand son Rai Bular Bhatti, renamed it as 'Nankana Sahib' after the birth of Guru Nanak. The Gurdwara Nankana Sahib, originally constructed by Sikhs during the Mughal era in around 1600 CE was renovated in 1819–20 CE by Gian-Punjab Maharaja Ranjit Singh The Sikh Conference of Panjab, Jammu and Kashmir, Peshawar, Kangra and Hazara.
During the Akali movement, on 20 February 1921, Narain Das, the Udasi mahant (clergy) of the gurdwara at Nankana Sahib, ordered his men to fire on Akali protesters, leading to the Nankana massacre. The firing was widely condemned, and an agitation was launched until the control of this historic Janam Asthan Gurdwara was restored to the Sikhs.[8] Again in the 1930s and 1940s the Sikhs added more buildings and more architectural design.
Nankana Sahib and it surroundings were formerly a tehsil of Sheikhupura District. In May 2005, the provincial government raised the status of Nankana Sahib to a district[9] as a way of promoting development in the area. The present status is District Nankana Sahib has three tehsils: Nankana Sahib, Shah Kot, and Sangla Hill. Before December 2008, District Nankana Sahib also included Safdarabad Tehsil.
There are plans to construct a 100acres university as well as hospitals and health care facilities by the district government with mutual interest of local communities and family of Rai Bular.[10]
In 2007, the Pakistan government announced a plan to set up a university on Sikh religion and culture at Nankana Sahib, the birthplace of Guru Nanak. Chairman of Pakistan's Evacuee Trust Property Board (ETPB), Gen (R) Zulfikar Ali Khan, said that "The international Guru Nanak University planned at Nankana Sahib would have the best architecture, curricula and research centre on Sikh religion and culture".[11]
And other historical Gurdwaras of Sikhism.
The partition of India and Pakistan significantly changed the demographic composition of Pakistan's cities with the vast majority of Hindus and Sikhs having to leave Pakistan and vice versa for Muslims in India.[16] The 2017 Pakistani Census however showed that while still overwhelmingly Muslim at 97.2%, there is now a re-established Sikh community in the holy city their founder Guru Nanak was born in. Though Sikhs were not included in the 2017 census, (but included in upcoming 2023 Census results) it can be estimated the large majority of the 'Any other religion' category which numbered over 1,500 individuals are Sikhs comprising 1.4% of Nankana Sahib's population.[17] There is also a significant Christian community in the city comprising 1.2% of the population. Hindus and Ahmadis both represent about 0.1% of the population.