Sikhism By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin Tykodi Origin ● Originated in 1539 ● Originated by Guru Nanak ● Originated in Punjab, India 5 Things they Believed ● ● ● ● Monotheistic (One God) Have.
Download ReportTranscript Sikhism By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin Tykodi Origin ● Originated in 1539 ● Originated by Guru Nanak ● Originated in Punjab, India 5 Things they Believed ● ● ● ● Monotheistic (One God) Have.
Slide 1
Sikhism
By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin
Tykodi
Origin
● Originated in 1539
● Originated by Guru
Nanak
● Originated in Punjab,
India
5 Things they Believed
●
●
●
●
Monotheistic (One God)
Have ten “guru’s” (Teachers)
Men and women are equal
Self defense encouraged. If all
else fails fighting is okay.
● No caste system. Social
harmony.
● Strict dress code.
Conservative and respectful.
(Turbans. No shaving)
Type of Religion
● Universal
● Available for
anyone to
practice globally
● Mostly practiced
in India
Autonomous Structure
● Guru’s were establishers
of religion
● Believe in social
harmony
o
Everyone equal
● No central source of
power except god.
No Structured Hierarchy
Punjab
● Sikhism originated
here
o
Sikhs wanted own
country
● Most Sikhs moved to
Hindu part of India
after British took over
India
Distribution of Sikhs Outside of Punjab
● This shows that
Sikhs are very
clustered around
their origin point.
None the less, they
have diffused.
● 15% Sikhs live
outside of India
Distribution Today
Sacred Spaces or Places
● Darbar Sahib, a.k.a
Golden Temple
o Amritsar, Punjab (in India)
o Important to all Sikhs
o “Source of inspiration”
● Gurdwara
o Anyplace where the Guru
Granth Sahib visited as
was treated with
hospitality.
These immediately
became a holy places
Works Cited
Rubenstein, James M. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.
"Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People." Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People. N.p., 2011. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
.
Singh, Bijla. "Punjabi Sooba." Sikh Freedom Home Page. Sikh Freedom, 2014. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
.
V, Jayaram. "The Ten Gurus Of Sikhism." The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. Hinduwebsite.com, n.d. Web. 03 Dec.
2014..
Slide 2
Sikhism
By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin
Tykodi
Origin
● Originated in 1539
● Originated by Guru
Nanak
● Originated in Punjab,
India
5 Things they Believed
●
●
●
●
Monotheistic (One God)
Have ten “guru’s” (Teachers)
Men and women are equal
Self defense encouraged. If all
else fails fighting is okay.
● No caste system. Social
harmony.
● Strict dress code.
Conservative and respectful.
(Turbans. No shaving)
Type of Religion
● Universal
● Available for
anyone to
practice globally
● Mostly practiced
in India
Autonomous Structure
● Guru’s were establishers
of religion
● Believe in social
harmony
o
Everyone equal
● No central source of
power except god.
No Structured Hierarchy
Punjab
● Sikhism originated
here
o
Sikhs wanted own
country
● Most Sikhs moved to
Hindu part of India
after British took over
India
Distribution of Sikhs Outside of Punjab
● This shows that
Sikhs are very
clustered around
their origin point.
None the less, they
have diffused.
● 15% Sikhs live
outside of India
Distribution Today
Sacred Spaces or Places
● Darbar Sahib, a.k.a
Golden Temple
o Amritsar, Punjab (in India)
o Important to all Sikhs
o “Source of inspiration”
● Gurdwara
o Anyplace where the Guru
Granth Sahib visited as
was treated with
hospitality.
These immediately
became a holy places
Works Cited
Rubenstein, James M. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.
"Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People." Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People. N.p., 2011. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
.
Singh, Bijla. "Punjabi Sooba." Sikh Freedom Home Page. Sikh Freedom, 2014. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
.
V, Jayaram. "The Ten Gurus Of Sikhism." The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. Hinduwebsite.com, n.d. Web. 03 Dec.
2014..
Slide 3
Sikhism
By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin
Tykodi
Origin
● Originated in 1539
● Originated by Guru
Nanak
● Originated in Punjab,
India
5 Things they Believed
●
●
●
●
Monotheistic (One God)
Have ten “guru’s” (Teachers)
Men and women are equal
Self defense encouraged. If all
else fails fighting is okay.
● No caste system. Social
harmony.
● Strict dress code.
Conservative and respectful.
(Turbans. No shaving)
Type of Religion
● Universal
● Available for
anyone to
practice globally
● Mostly practiced
in India
Autonomous Structure
● Guru’s were establishers
of religion
● Believe in social
harmony
o
Everyone equal
● No central source of
power except god.
No Structured Hierarchy
Punjab
● Sikhism originated
here
o
Sikhs wanted own
country
● Most Sikhs moved to
Hindu part of India
after British took over
India
Distribution of Sikhs Outside of Punjab
● This shows that
Sikhs are very
clustered around
their origin point.
None the less, they
have diffused.
● 15% Sikhs live
outside of India
Distribution Today
Sacred Spaces or Places
● Darbar Sahib, a.k.a
Golden Temple
o Amritsar, Punjab (in India)
o Important to all Sikhs
o “Source of inspiration”
● Gurdwara
o Anyplace where the Guru
Granth Sahib visited as
was treated with
hospitality.
These immediately
became a holy places
Works Cited
Rubenstein, James M. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.
"Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People." Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People. N.p., 2011. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
.
Singh, Bijla. "Punjabi Sooba." Sikh Freedom Home Page. Sikh Freedom, 2014. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
.
V, Jayaram. "The Ten Gurus Of Sikhism." The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. Hinduwebsite.com, n.d. Web. 03 Dec.
2014..
Slide 4
Sikhism
By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin
Tykodi
Origin
● Originated in 1539
● Originated by Guru
Nanak
● Originated in Punjab,
India
5 Things they Believed
●
●
●
●
Monotheistic (One God)
Have ten “guru’s” (Teachers)
Men and women are equal
Self defense encouraged. If all
else fails fighting is okay.
● No caste system. Social
harmony.
● Strict dress code.
Conservative and respectful.
(Turbans. No shaving)
Type of Religion
● Universal
● Available for
anyone to
practice globally
● Mostly practiced
in India
Autonomous Structure
● Guru’s were establishers
of religion
● Believe in social
harmony
o
Everyone equal
● No central source of
power except god.
No Structured Hierarchy
Punjab
● Sikhism originated
here
o
Sikhs wanted own
country
● Most Sikhs moved to
Hindu part of India
after British took over
India
Distribution of Sikhs Outside of Punjab
● This shows that
Sikhs are very
clustered around
their origin point.
None the less, they
have diffused.
● 15% Sikhs live
outside of India
Distribution Today
Sacred Spaces or Places
● Darbar Sahib, a.k.a
Golden Temple
o Amritsar, Punjab (in India)
o Important to all Sikhs
o “Source of inspiration”
● Gurdwara
o Anyplace where the Guru
Granth Sahib visited as
was treated with
hospitality.
These immediately
became a holy places
Works Cited
Rubenstein, James M. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.
"Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People." Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People. N.p., 2011. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
.
Singh, Bijla. "Punjabi Sooba." Sikh Freedom Home Page. Sikh Freedom, 2014. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
.
V, Jayaram. "The Ten Gurus Of Sikhism." The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. Hinduwebsite.com, n.d. Web. 03 Dec.
2014..
Slide 5
Sikhism
By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin
Tykodi
Origin
● Originated in 1539
● Originated by Guru
Nanak
● Originated in Punjab,
India
5 Things they Believed
●
●
●
●
Monotheistic (One God)
Have ten “guru’s” (Teachers)
Men and women are equal
Self defense encouraged. If all
else fails fighting is okay.
● No caste system. Social
harmony.
● Strict dress code.
Conservative and respectful.
(Turbans. No shaving)
Type of Religion
● Universal
● Available for
anyone to
practice globally
● Mostly practiced
in India
Autonomous Structure
● Guru’s were establishers
of religion
● Believe in social
harmony
o
Everyone equal
● No central source of
power except god.
No Structured Hierarchy
Punjab
● Sikhism originated
here
o
Sikhs wanted own
country
● Most Sikhs moved to
Hindu part of India
after British took over
India
Distribution of Sikhs Outside of Punjab
● This shows that
Sikhs are very
clustered around
their origin point.
None the less, they
have diffused.
● 15% Sikhs live
outside of India
Distribution Today
Sacred Spaces or Places
● Darbar Sahib, a.k.a
Golden Temple
o Amritsar, Punjab (in India)
o Important to all Sikhs
o “Source of inspiration”
● Gurdwara
o Anyplace where the Guru
Granth Sahib visited as
was treated with
hospitality.
These immediately
became a holy places
Works Cited
Rubenstein, James M. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.
"Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People." Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People. N.p., 2011. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
.
Singh, Bijla. "Punjabi Sooba." Sikh Freedom Home Page. Sikh Freedom, 2014. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
.
V, Jayaram. "The Ten Gurus Of Sikhism." The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. Hinduwebsite.com, n.d. Web. 03 Dec.
2014..
Slide 6
Sikhism
By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin
Tykodi
Origin
● Originated in 1539
● Originated by Guru
Nanak
● Originated in Punjab,
India
5 Things they Believed
●
●
●
●
Monotheistic (One God)
Have ten “guru’s” (Teachers)
Men and women are equal
Self defense encouraged. If all
else fails fighting is okay.
● No caste system. Social
harmony.
● Strict dress code.
Conservative and respectful.
(Turbans. No shaving)
Type of Religion
● Universal
● Available for
anyone to
practice globally
● Mostly practiced
in India
Autonomous Structure
● Guru’s were establishers
of religion
● Believe in social
harmony
o
Everyone equal
● No central source of
power except god.
No Structured Hierarchy
Punjab
● Sikhism originated
here
o
Sikhs wanted own
country
● Most Sikhs moved to
Hindu part of India
after British took over
India
Distribution of Sikhs Outside of Punjab
● This shows that
Sikhs are very
clustered around
their origin point.
None the less, they
have diffused.
● 15% Sikhs live
outside of India
Distribution Today
Sacred Spaces or Places
● Darbar Sahib, a.k.a
Golden Temple
o Amritsar, Punjab (in India)
o Important to all Sikhs
o “Source of inspiration”
● Gurdwara
o Anyplace where the Guru
Granth Sahib visited as
was treated with
hospitality.
These immediately
became a holy places
Works Cited
Rubenstein, James M. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.
"Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People." Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People. N.p., 2011. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
.
Singh, Bijla. "Punjabi Sooba." Sikh Freedom Home Page. Sikh Freedom, 2014. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
.
V, Jayaram. "The Ten Gurus Of Sikhism." The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. Hinduwebsite.com, n.d. Web. 03 Dec.
2014..
Slide 7
Sikhism
By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin
Tykodi
Origin
● Originated in 1539
● Originated by Guru
Nanak
● Originated in Punjab,
India
5 Things they Believed
●
●
●
●
Monotheistic (One God)
Have ten “guru’s” (Teachers)
Men and women are equal
Self defense encouraged. If all
else fails fighting is okay.
● No caste system. Social
harmony.
● Strict dress code.
Conservative and respectful.
(Turbans. No shaving)
Type of Religion
● Universal
● Available for
anyone to
practice globally
● Mostly practiced
in India
Autonomous Structure
● Guru’s were establishers
of religion
● Believe in social
harmony
o
Everyone equal
● No central source of
power except god.
No Structured Hierarchy
Punjab
● Sikhism originated
here
o
Sikhs wanted own
country
● Most Sikhs moved to
Hindu part of India
after British took over
India
Distribution of Sikhs Outside of Punjab
● This shows that
Sikhs are very
clustered around
their origin point.
None the less, they
have diffused.
● 15% Sikhs live
outside of India
Distribution Today
Sacred Spaces or Places
● Darbar Sahib, a.k.a
Golden Temple
o Amritsar, Punjab (in India)
o Important to all Sikhs
o “Source of inspiration”
● Gurdwara
o Anyplace where the Guru
Granth Sahib visited as
was treated with
hospitality.
These immediately
became a holy places
Works Cited
Rubenstein, James M. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.
"Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People." Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People. N.p., 2011. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
.
Singh, Bijla. "Punjabi Sooba." Sikh Freedom Home Page. Sikh Freedom, 2014. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
.
V, Jayaram. "The Ten Gurus Of Sikhism." The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. Hinduwebsite.com, n.d. Web. 03 Dec.
2014..
Slide 8
Sikhism
By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin
Tykodi
Origin
● Originated in 1539
● Originated by Guru
Nanak
● Originated in Punjab,
India
5 Things they Believed
●
●
●
●
Monotheistic (One God)
Have ten “guru’s” (Teachers)
Men and women are equal
Self defense encouraged. If all
else fails fighting is okay.
● No caste system. Social
harmony.
● Strict dress code.
Conservative and respectful.
(Turbans. No shaving)
Type of Religion
● Universal
● Available for
anyone to
practice globally
● Mostly practiced
in India
Autonomous Structure
● Guru’s were establishers
of religion
● Believe in social
harmony
o
Everyone equal
● No central source of
power except god.
No Structured Hierarchy
Punjab
● Sikhism originated
here
o
Sikhs wanted own
country
● Most Sikhs moved to
Hindu part of India
after British took over
India
Distribution of Sikhs Outside of Punjab
● This shows that
Sikhs are very
clustered around
their origin point.
None the less, they
have diffused.
● 15% Sikhs live
outside of India
Distribution Today
Sacred Spaces or Places
● Darbar Sahib, a.k.a
Golden Temple
o Amritsar, Punjab (in India)
o Important to all Sikhs
o “Source of inspiration”
● Gurdwara
o Anyplace where the Guru
Granth Sahib visited as
was treated with
hospitality.
These immediately
became a holy places
Works Cited
Rubenstein, James M. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.
"Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People." Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People. N.p., 2011. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
.
Singh, Bijla. "Punjabi Sooba." Sikh Freedom Home Page. Sikh Freedom, 2014. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
.
V, Jayaram. "The Ten Gurus Of Sikhism." The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. Hinduwebsite.com, n.d. Web. 03 Dec.
2014..
Slide 9
Sikhism
By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin
Tykodi
Origin
● Originated in 1539
● Originated by Guru
Nanak
● Originated in Punjab,
India
5 Things they Believed
●
●
●
●
Monotheistic (One God)
Have ten “guru’s” (Teachers)
Men and women are equal
Self defense encouraged. If all
else fails fighting is okay.
● No caste system. Social
harmony.
● Strict dress code.
Conservative and respectful.
(Turbans. No shaving)
Type of Religion
● Universal
● Available for
anyone to
practice globally
● Mostly practiced
in India
Autonomous Structure
● Guru’s were establishers
of religion
● Believe in social
harmony
o
Everyone equal
● No central source of
power except god.
No Structured Hierarchy
Punjab
● Sikhism originated
here
o
Sikhs wanted own
country
● Most Sikhs moved to
Hindu part of India
after British took over
India
Distribution of Sikhs Outside of Punjab
● This shows that
Sikhs are very
clustered around
their origin point.
None the less, they
have diffused.
● 15% Sikhs live
outside of India
Distribution Today
Sacred Spaces or Places
● Darbar Sahib, a.k.a
Golden Temple
o Amritsar, Punjab (in India)
o Important to all Sikhs
o “Source of inspiration”
● Gurdwara
o Anyplace where the Guru
Granth Sahib visited as
was treated with
hospitality.
These immediately
became a holy places
Works Cited
Rubenstein, James M. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.
"Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People." Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People. N.p., 2011. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
.
Singh, Bijla. "Punjabi Sooba." Sikh Freedom Home Page. Sikh Freedom, 2014. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
.
V, Jayaram. "The Ten Gurus Of Sikhism." The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. Hinduwebsite.com, n.d. Web. 03 Dec.
2014..
Slide 10
Sikhism
By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin
Tykodi
Origin
● Originated in 1539
● Originated by Guru
Nanak
● Originated in Punjab,
India
5 Things they Believed
●
●
●
●
Monotheistic (One God)
Have ten “guru’s” (Teachers)
Men and women are equal
Self defense encouraged. If all
else fails fighting is okay.
● No caste system. Social
harmony.
● Strict dress code.
Conservative and respectful.
(Turbans. No shaving)
Type of Religion
● Universal
● Available for
anyone to
practice globally
● Mostly practiced
in India
Autonomous Structure
● Guru’s were establishers
of religion
● Believe in social
harmony
o
Everyone equal
● No central source of
power except god.
No Structured Hierarchy
Punjab
● Sikhism originated
here
o
Sikhs wanted own
country
● Most Sikhs moved to
Hindu part of India
after British took over
India
Distribution of Sikhs Outside of Punjab
● This shows that
Sikhs are very
clustered around
their origin point.
None the less, they
have diffused.
● 15% Sikhs live
outside of India
Distribution Today
Sacred Spaces or Places
● Darbar Sahib, a.k.a
Golden Temple
o Amritsar, Punjab (in India)
o Important to all Sikhs
o “Source of inspiration”
● Gurdwara
o Anyplace where the Guru
Granth Sahib visited as
was treated with
hospitality.
These immediately
became a holy places
Works Cited
Rubenstein, James M. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.
"Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People." Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People. N.p., 2011. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
.
Singh, Bijla. "Punjabi Sooba." Sikh Freedom Home Page. Sikh Freedom, 2014. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
.
V, Jayaram. "The Ten Gurus Of Sikhism." The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. Hinduwebsite.com, n.d. Web. 03 Dec.
2014..
Sikhism
By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin
Tykodi
Origin
● Originated in 1539
● Originated by Guru
Nanak
● Originated in Punjab,
India
5 Things they Believed
●
●
●
●
Monotheistic (One God)
Have ten “guru’s” (Teachers)
Men and women are equal
Self defense encouraged. If all
else fails fighting is okay.
● No caste system. Social
harmony.
● Strict dress code.
Conservative and respectful.
(Turbans. No shaving)
Type of Religion
● Universal
● Available for
anyone to
practice globally
● Mostly practiced
in India
Autonomous Structure
● Guru’s were establishers
of religion
● Believe in social
harmony
o
Everyone equal
● No central source of
power except god.
No Structured Hierarchy
Punjab
● Sikhism originated
here
o
Sikhs wanted own
country
● Most Sikhs moved to
Hindu part of India
after British took over
India
Distribution of Sikhs Outside of Punjab
● This shows that
Sikhs are very
clustered around
their origin point.
None the less, they
have diffused.
● 15% Sikhs live
outside of India
Distribution Today
Sacred Spaces or Places
● Darbar Sahib, a.k.a
Golden Temple
o Amritsar, Punjab (in India)
o Important to all Sikhs
o “Source of inspiration”
● Gurdwara
o Anyplace where the Guru
Granth Sahib visited as
was treated with
hospitality.
These immediately
became a holy places
Works Cited
Rubenstein, James M. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.
"Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People." Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People. N.p., 2011. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
Singh, Bijla. "Punjabi Sooba." Sikh Freedom Home Page. Sikh Freedom, 2014. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
V, Jayaram. "The Ten Gurus Of Sikhism." The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. Hinduwebsite.com, n.d. Web. 03 Dec.
2014.
Slide 2
Sikhism
By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin
Tykodi
Origin
● Originated in 1539
● Originated by Guru
Nanak
● Originated in Punjab,
India
5 Things they Believed
●
●
●
●
Monotheistic (One God)
Have ten “guru’s” (Teachers)
Men and women are equal
Self defense encouraged. If all
else fails fighting is okay.
● No caste system. Social
harmony.
● Strict dress code.
Conservative and respectful.
(Turbans. No shaving)
Type of Religion
● Universal
● Available for
anyone to
practice globally
● Mostly practiced
in India
Autonomous Structure
● Guru’s were establishers
of religion
● Believe in social
harmony
o
Everyone equal
● No central source of
power except god.
No Structured Hierarchy
Punjab
● Sikhism originated
here
o
Sikhs wanted own
country
● Most Sikhs moved to
Hindu part of India
after British took over
India
Distribution of Sikhs Outside of Punjab
● This shows that
Sikhs are very
clustered around
their origin point.
None the less, they
have diffused.
● 15% Sikhs live
outside of India
Distribution Today
Sacred Spaces or Places
● Darbar Sahib, a.k.a
Golden Temple
o Amritsar, Punjab (in India)
o Important to all Sikhs
o “Source of inspiration”
● Gurdwara
o Anyplace where the Guru
Granth Sahib visited as
was treated with
hospitality.
These immediately
became a holy places
Works Cited
Rubenstein, James M. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.
"Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People." Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People. N.p., 2011. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
Singh, Bijla. "Punjabi Sooba." Sikh Freedom Home Page. Sikh Freedom, 2014. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
V, Jayaram. "The Ten Gurus Of Sikhism." The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. Hinduwebsite.com, n.d. Web. 03 Dec.
2014.
Slide 3
Sikhism
By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin
Tykodi
Origin
● Originated in 1539
● Originated by Guru
Nanak
● Originated in Punjab,
India
5 Things they Believed
●
●
●
●
Monotheistic (One God)
Have ten “guru’s” (Teachers)
Men and women are equal
Self defense encouraged. If all
else fails fighting is okay.
● No caste system. Social
harmony.
● Strict dress code.
Conservative and respectful.
(Turbans. No shaving)
Type of Religion
● Universal
● Available for
anyone to
practice globally
● Mostly practiced
in India
Autonomous Structure
● Guru’s were establishers
of religion
● Believe in social
harmony
o
Everyone equal
● No central source of
power except god.
No Structured Hierarchy
Punjab
● Sikhism originated
here
o
Sikhs wanted own
country
● Most Sikhs moved to
Hindu part of India
after British took over
India
Distribution of Sikhs Outside of Punjab
● This shows that
Sikhs are very
clustered around
their origin point.
None the less, they
have diffused.
● 15% Sikhs live
outside of India
Distribution Today
Sacred Spaces or Places
● Darbar Sahib, a.k.a
Golden Temple
o Amritsar, Punjab (in India)
o Important to all Sikhs
o “Source of inspiration”
● Gurdwara
o Anyplace where the Guru
Granth Sahib visited as
was treated with
hospitality.
These immediately
became a holy places
Works Cited
Rubenstein, James M. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.
"Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People." Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People. N.p., 2011. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
Singh, Bijla. "Punjabi Sooba." Sikh Freedom Home Page. Sikh Freedom, 2014. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
V, Jayaram. "The Ten Gurus Of Sikhism." The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. Hinduwebsite.com, n.d. Web. 03 Dec.
2014.
Slide 4
Sikhism
By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin
Tykodi
Origin
● Originated in 1539
● Originated by Guru
Nanak
● Originated in Punjab,
India
5 Things they Believed
●
●
●
●
Monotheistic (One God)
Have ten “guru’s” (Teachers)
Men and women are equal
Self defense encouraged. If all
else fails fighting is okay.
● No caste system. Social
harmony.
● Strict dress code.
Conservative and respectful.
(Turbans. No shaving)
Type of Religion
● Universal
● Available for
anyone to
practice globally
● Mostly practiced
in India
Autonomous Structure
● Guru’s were establishers
of religion
● Believe in social
harmony
o
Everyone equal
● No central source of
power except god.
No Structured Hierarchy
Punjab
● Sikhism originated
here
o
Sikhs wanted own
country
● Most Sikhs moved to
Hindu part of India
after British took over
India
Distribution of Sikhs Outside of Punjab
● This shows that
Sikhs are very
clustered around
their origin point.
None the less, they
have diffused.
● 15% Sikhs live
outside of India
Distribution Today
Sacred Spaces or Places
● Darbar Sahib, a.k.a
Golden Temple
o Amritsar, Punjab (in India)
o Important to all Sikhs
o “Source of inspiration”
● Gurdwara
o Anyplace where the Guru
Granth Sahib visited as
was treated with
hospitality.
These immediately
became a holy places
Works Cited
Rubenstein, James M. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.
"Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People." Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People. N.p., 2011. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
Singh, Bijla. "Punjabi Sooba." Sikh Freedom Home Page. Sikh Freedom, 2014. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
V, Jayaram. "The Ten Gurus Of Sikhism." The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. Hinduwebsite.com, n.d. Web. 03 Dec.
2014.
Slide 5
Sikhism
By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin
Tykodi
Origin
● Originated in 1539
● Originated by Guru
Nanak
● Originated in Punjab,
India
5 Things they Believed
●
●
●
●
Monotheistic (One God)
Have ten “guru’s” (Teachers)
Men and women are equal
Self defense encouraged. If all
else fails fighting is okay.
● No caste system. Social
harmony.
● Strict dress code.
Conservative and respectful.
(Turbans. No shaving)
Type of Religion
● Universal
● Available for
anyone to
practice globally
● Mostly practiced
in India
Autonomous Structure
● Guru’s were establishers
of religion
● Believe in social
harmony
o
Everyone equal
● No central source of
power except god.
No Structured Hierarchy
Punjab
● Sikhism originated
here
o
Sikhs wanted own
country
● Most Sikhs moved to
Hindu part of India
after British took over
India
Distribution of Sikhs Outside of Punjab
● This shows that
Sikhs are very
clustered around
their origin point.
None the less, they
have diffused.
● 15% Sikhs live
outside of India
Distribution Today
Sacred Spaces or Places
● Darbar Sahib, a.k.a
Golden Temple
o Amritsar, Punjab (in India)
o Important to all Sikhs
o “Source of inspiration”
● Gurdwara
o Anyplace where the Guru
Granth Sahib visited as
was treated with
hospitality.
These immediately
became a holy places
Works Cited
Rubenstein, James M. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.
"Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People." Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People. N.p., 2011. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
Singh, Bijla. "Punjabi Sooba." Sikh Freedom Home Page. Sikh Freedom, 2014. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
V, Jayaram. "The Ten Gurus Of Sikhism." The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. Hinduwebsite.com, n.d. Web. 03 Dec.
2014.
Slide 6
Sikhism
By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin
Tykodi
Origin
● Originated in 1539
● Originated by Guru
Nanak
● Originated in Punjab,
India
5 Things they Believed
●
●
●
●
Monotheistic (One God)
Have ten “guru’s” (Teachers)
Men and women are equal
Self defense encouraged. If all
else fails fighting is okay.
● No caste system. Social
harmony.
● Strict dress code.
Conservative and respectful.
(Turbans. No shaving)
Type of Religion
● Universal
● Available for
anyone to
practice globally
● Mostly practiced
in India
Autonomous Structure
● Guru’s were establishers
of religion
● Believe in social
harmony
o
Everyone equal
● No central source of
power except god.
No Structured Hierarchy
Punjab
● Sikhism originated
here
o
Sikhs wanted own
country
● Most Sikhs moved to
Hindu part of India
after British took over
India
Distribution of Sikhs Outside of Punjab
● This shows that
Sikhs are very
clustered around
their origin point.
None the less, they
have diffused.
● 15% Sikhs live
outside of India
Distribution Today
Sacred Spaces or Places
● Darbar Sahib, a.k.a
Golden Temple
o Amritsar, Punjab (in India)
o Important to all Sikhs
o “Source of inspiration”
● Gurdwara
o Anyplace where the Guru
Granth Sahib visited as
was treated with
hospitality.
These immediately
became a holy places
Works Cited
Rubenstein, James M. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.
"Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People." Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People. N.p., 2011. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
Singh, Bijla. "Punjabi Sooba." Sikh Freedom Home Page. Sikh Freedom, 2014. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
V, Jayaram. "The Ten Gurus Of Sikhism." The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. Hinduwebsite.com, n.d. Web. 03 Dec.
2014.
Slide 7
Sikhism
By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin
Tykodi
Origin
● Originated in 1539
● Originated by Guru
Nanak
● Originated in Punjab,
India
5 Things they Believed
●
●
●
●
Monotheistic (One God)
Have ten “guru’s” (Teachers)
Men and women are equal
Self defense encouraged. If all
else fails fighting is okay.
● No caste system. Social
harmony.
● Strict dress code.
Conservative and respectful.
(Turbans. No shaving)
Type of Religion
● Universal
● Available for
anyone to
practice globally
● Mostly practiced
in India
Autonomous Structure
● Guru’s were establishers
of religion
● Believe in social
harmony
o
Everyone equal
● No central source of
power except god.
No Structured Hierarchy
Punjab
● Sikhism originated
here
o
Sikhs wanted own
country
● Most Sikhs moved to
Hindu part of India
after British took over
India
Distribution of Sikhs Outside of Punjab
● This shows that
Sikhs are very
clustered around
their origin point.
None the less, they
have diffused.
● 15% Sikhs live
outside of India
Distribution Today
Sacred Spaces or Places
● Darbar Sahib, a.k.a
Golden Temple
o Amritsar, Punjab (in India)
o Important to all Sikhs
o “Source of inspiration”
● Gurdwara
o Anyplace where the Guru
Granth Sahib visited as
was treated with
hospitality.
These immediately
became a holy places
Works Cited
Rubenstein, James M. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.
"Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People." Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People. N.p., 2011. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
Singh, Bijla. "Punjabi Sooba." Sikh Freedom Home Page. Sikh Freedom, 2014. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
V, Jayaram. "The Ten Gurus Of Sikhism." The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. Hinduwebsite.com, n.d. Web. 03 Dec.
2014.
Slide 8
Sikhism
By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin
Tykodi
Origin
● Originated in 1539
● Originated by Guru
Nanak
● Originated in Punjab,
India
5 Things they Believed
●
●
●
●
Monotheistic (One God)
Have ten “guru’s” (Teachers)
Men and women are equal
Self defense encouraged. If all
else fails fighting is okay.
● No caste system. Social
harmony.
● Strict dress code.
Conservative and respectful.
(Turbans. No shaving)
Type of Religion
● Universal
● Available for
anyone to
practice globally
● Mostly practiced
in India
Autonomous Structure
● Guru’s were establishers
of religion
● Believe in social
harmony
o
Everyone equal
● No central source of
power except god.
No Structured Hierarchy
Punjab
● Sikhism originated
here
o
Sikhs wanted own
country
● Most Sikhs moved to
Hindu part of India
after British took over
India
Distribution of Sikhs Outside of Punjab
● This shows that
Sikhs are very
clustered around
their origin point.
None the less, they
have diffused.
● 15% Sikhs live
outside of India
Distribution Today
Sacred Spaces or Places
● Darbar Sahib, a.k.a
Golden Temple
o Amritsar, Punjab (in India)
o Important to all Sikhs
o “Source of inspiration”
● Gurdwara
o Anyplace where the Guru
Granth Sahib visited as
was treated with
hospitality.
These immediately
became a holy places
Works Cited
Rubenstein, James M. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.
"Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People." Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People. N.p., 2011. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
Singh, Bijla. "Punjabi Sooba." Sikh Freedom Home Page. Sikh Freedom, 2014. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
V, Jayaram. "The Ten Gurus Of Sikhism." The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. Hinduwebsite.com, n.d. Web. 03 Dec.
2014.
Slide 9
Sikhism
By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin
Tykodi
Origin
● Originated in 1539
● Originated by Guru
Nanak
● Originated in Punjab,
India
5 Things they Believed
●
●
●
●
Monotheistic (One God)
Have ten “guru’s” (Teachers)
Men and women are equal
Self defense encouraged. If all
else fails fighting is okay.
● No caste system. Social
harmony.
● Strict dress code.
Conservative and respectful.
(Turbans. No shaving)
Type of Religion
● Universal
● Available for
anyone to
practice globally
● Mostly practiced
in India
Autonomous Structure
● Guru’s were establishers
of religion
● Believe in social
harmony
o
Everyone equal
● No central source of
power except god.
No Structured Hierarchy
Punjab
● Sikhism originated
here
o
Sikhs wanted own
country
● Most Sikhs moved to
Hindu part of India
after British took over
India
Distribution of Sikhs Outside of Punjab
● This shows that
Sikhs are very
clustered around
their origin point.
None the less, they
have diffused.
● 15% Sikhs live
outside of India
Distribution Today
Sacred Spaces or Places
● Darbar Sahib, a.k.a
Golden Temple
o Amritsar, Punjab (in India)
o Important to all Sikhs
o “Source of inspiration”
● Gurdwara
o Anyplace where the Guru
Granth Sahib visited as
was treated with
hospitality.
These immediately
became a holy places
Works Cited
Rubenstein, James M. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.
"Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People." Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People. N.p., 2011. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
Singh, Bijla. "Punjabi Sooba." Sikh Freedom Home Page. Sikh Freedom, 2014. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
V, Jayaram. "The Ten Gurus Of Sikhism." The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. Hinduwebsite.com, n.d. Web. 03 Dec.
2014.
Slide 10
Sikhism
By: Cameron Oen, Emma Perkins, Arin
Tykodi
Origin
● Originated in 1539
● Originated by Guru
Nanak
● Originated in Punjab,
India
5 Things they Believed
●
●
●
●
Monotheistic (One God)
Have ten “guru’s” (Teachers)
Men and women are equal
Self defense encouraged. If all
else fails fighting is okay.
● No caste system. Social
harmony.
● Strict dress code.
Conservative and respectful.
(Turbans. No shaving)
Type of Religion
● Universal
● Available for
anyone to
practice globally
● Mostly practiced
in India
Autonomous Structure
● Guru’s were establishers
of religion
● Believe in social
harmony
o
Everyone equal
● No central source of
power except god.
No Structured Hierarchy
Punjab
● Sikhism originated
here
o
Sikhs wanted own
country
● Most Sikhs moved to
Hindu part of India
after British took over
India
Distribution of Sikhs Outside of Punjab
● This shows that
Sikhs are very
clustered around
their origin point.
None the less, they
have diffused.
● 15% Sikhs live
outside of India
Distribution Today
Sacred Spaces or Places
● Darbar Sahib, a.k.a
Golden Temple
o Amritsar, Punjab (in India)
o Important to all Sikhs
o “Source of inspiration”
● Gurdwara
o Anyplace where the Guru
Granth Sahib visited as
was treated with
hospitality.
These immediately
became a holy places
Works Cited
Rubenstein, James M. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography. 11th ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.
"Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People." Sikhism Religion of the Sikh People. N.p., 2011. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
Singh, Bijla. "Punjabi Sooba." Sikh Freedom Home Page. Sikh Freedom, 2014. Web. 03 Dec. 2014.
V, Jayaram. "The Ten Gurus Of Sikhism." The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. Hinduwebsite.com, n.d. Web. 03 Dec.
2014.