Panj Pyare
The Panj Pyare (Punjabi: ਪੰਜ ਪਿਆਰੇ, Pañj Piārē, lit. "Five Beloved Ones") were the five Sikhs who volunteered to offer their heads in sacrifice to Guru Gobind Singh, the tenth Sikh Guru, during the Vaisakhi gathering of 1699 at Anandpur Sahib, thereby becoming the first initiates into the Khalsa, a disciplined Sikh brotherhood dedicated to faith, equality, and resistance against oppression.[1][2][3]
These men—Bhai Daya Singh from Lahore (a shopkeeper), Bhai Dharam Singh from Hastinapur (a farmer), Bhai Himmat Singh from Jagannath Puri (a water carrier), Bhai Mohkam Singh from Dwarka (a tailor), and Bhai Sahib Singh from Bidar (a barber)—hailed from varied castes and distant regions of India, embodying the Guru's rejection of social hierarchies and promotion of universal brotherhood within the Sikh fold.[1][2]
In the inaugural Amrit Sanchar ceremony, Guru Gobind Singh symbolically tested their resolve through a dramatic display of sacrifice, then baptized them with khande di pahul—amrit prepared by stirring water with a double-edged sword while reciting sacred verses—bestowing upon them the surname "Singh," the five articles of faith (5 Ks), and a mandate to uphold Sikh virtues of courage, humility, and service.[1][2][3]
The Panj Pyare reciprocated by baptizing the Guru, establishing the principle of collective authority in the Khalsa Panth, where the community's wisdom supersedes individual leadership, as demonstrated when they later commanded the Guru to engage in battle at Chamkaur despite personal risk to preserve the faith's future.[1][3]
Their formation catalyzed the rapid expansion of the Khalsa, with tens of thousands baptized shortly after, and they participated in early Sikh military engagements, solidifying the tradition's emphasis on spiritual and temporal sovereignty; today, any quintet of baptized Sikhs may convene as Panj Pyare to administer initiations, lead processions, and resolve doctrinal matters, perpetuating their role as embodiments of the Guru's eternal guidance.[1][2][3]