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June 23, 2010

LANGARS:Must read even if you are not a Sikh.



Hi everybody,
I thought I will share this e-mail about the Golden Temple in Amritsar, Punjab, India, with you. It is just amazing how devoted the volunteers are to serve in various capacities, and especially to serve freshly cooked meals to the thousands of devotees around the clock, day to day, week to week, month to month and all year round. That is not all. The volunteers are  the main work force sustaining the temple in perpetuity.
  
I was very impressed by this e-mail forwarded to me by a Parsi friend.  It is about the Langar (Community Kitchen) at Gurdwara where thousands of people are fed every day.  What an excellent organization and devoted volunteers.  I am sure you know all about it.  Some one has made a documentary out of it.

The Power of Devotion
some eye-opening facts:   



Above :The spectacular Golden Temple of Amritsar
For a moment, if one pushes the religious fact aside, 
it is no ordinary feat to serve a meal to thousands of people in a day and that too round-the-clock.




Forty to fifty thousand people, on an average, partake of langar every day at Harmandar Sahib. 
"On Sundays, festival days and Masya, the number exceeds 1 lakh," says Jathedar Harpinder Singh, 
who is in charge of the langar. 




Serving such a huge gathering is not an easy task. But, the devotion and selfless service of the 
sewadars makes the job simple. 




"We have 300 permanent sewadars who work at the langar. They knead dough, cook food, serve people and perform a number of other jobs. Also, there are a good number of volunteers, both men and women, who work in kitchen and langar hall. 
They also wash and wipe the utensils. 
"In the washing hall we have four sewadars to supervise the work," adds Harpinder Singh.




Of course, an elaborate arrangement is in place to cook and serve food at such a large scale.




The langar at Harmandar Sahib is prepared in two kitchens, which have 11 hot plates (tawi), several burners, machines for sieving and kneading dough and several other utensils. 
At one tawi, 15 people work at a time. It is a chain process - some make balls of dough, others roll rotis, a few put them on the tawi and rest cook 
and collect them. 




It is all done so meticulously that one is surprised to see that on one hot plate, in just two hours, over 20 kg of flour is used to make rotis. The kitchen also has a roti-making machine, which was donated by a Lebanon-based devotee. 
The machine is, however, used only on days that are likely to witness huge crowds. 
The machine can make rotis of 20-kg flour in 
just half-an-hour. To get the flour, there are two machines in the basement of the langar hall and another that kneads one quintal of flour in just 
five minutes. It is this fine team of man and 
machine that makes it possible for the 
gurdwara to provide 24-hour langar on all days. 






Chapati Machine 

But, what about putting together the raw material?




"About 50-quintal wheat, 18-quintal daal, 14-quintal rice and seven quintal milk is the daily consumption in the langar kitchen. We have utensils that can store up to seven quintal of cooked daal and kheer at a time," says assistant in-charge Kanwaljeet Singh. 
Items needed in langar are bought in huge quantities from Delhi . The purchase mainly includes pulses, while other every day requirements are met from 
the local market. A stock of all items is 
maintained for two months, he adds. 






British Foreign Minister, Jack Straw, makes chapatis at the langar 
hall of Golden Temple during his visit - ANI photo




"Desi Ghee comes from Verka Milk Plant in the city. 
Also, the devotees make donations. In a day we receive, over eight quintals of sugar and seven quintals of dal. Often, people also donate money in langar funds. 
For instance, we recently received a donation of 
Rs 2 lakh from a devotee who wanted to bear all 
langar expenses for a day ," says in-charge 
Harpinder Singh. 
"Besides dal-roti, kheer and karah prasad is 
prepared on alternate days. On an average, seven 
quintals of milk and an equal quantity of rice is 
needed to prepare kheer. On festive occasions, 
we also distribute jalebis.

Every day over 100 gas cylinders are needed to fuel the kitchen. For making tea, 6 quintals of sugar and 20 kg of tea leaf are consumed," adds Kanwaljeet. 



Early morning meditation at the Harmandir Sahib




But, all this wouldn't have been possible without the grace of Waheguru: "Loh langar tapde rahin" (may the hot plates of the langar remain ever in service) are the words that every devotee says in his prayers at the gurdwara. 
At a time, over 3,000 people are served on the two 
floors of the hall. 
Everyone is welcome at the darbar to share the meal, 
with no distinction of caste or religion.




The Sikh practice of 'Guru ka langar' was strengthened by Guru Amar Das, the third Sikh guru. Even Emperor Akbar, 
it is said, had to take langar with the common people 
before he could meet Guru Amar Das. 
Langar or community kitchen was designed to 
uphold the principle of equality between all 
people regardless of religion, caste, colour, 
creed, age, gender or social status.

In addition to the ideals of equality, the tradition of langar also aimed to express the ethics of sharing and oneness of all humankind.


Langar Being Served
On the other hand, following the principle of division of labour, the sewadars in the hall make sure that sangat gets the complete meal, from pickle to rice and dal. The whole thing is highly organised - from arranging the material to cooking and then serving. 
After eating, the utensils are collected in one part of 
the hall in huge bins from where they are taken 
away for washing. Once cleaned, the dishes are 
quickly but neatly stacked in huge, wheeled storage 
bins, ready to be used again for the next sitting.  

Aashima Seth Captured on film the Belgian film makers, Valerie Berteau and Philippe Witjes, and were so impressed with the langar at the Darbar Sahib that they made a documentary film on it. 
Entitled Golden Kitchen, the film has impressed audiences at numerous film festivals in Europe. On June 6 this year, it was adjudged 'Outstanding' at the Festival of Short Films organised at the New York Museum of Modern Art. 
Critics have praised the film for bringing out the beauty of what is for western audiences "an endeavour that is remarkable in scale, the clockwork efficiency with which the kitchen is organised and the fact that all the people manning the kitchen are volunteers who are inspired to undertake the heavy labour by their religious convictions." 
IN THE SERVICE around 3,000 people are served meals at a go. It wouldn't be possible without sewadars, who look for no return except 
Wahegurus blessings.

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