The way in which they destroy themselves, is when poison comes out of you, you immerse yourself in poison. Your thoughts are poison, your words are poisoned. Your presense is filled with poison, and over time you poison yourself. You can't live in poison and not absorb it. If you are always trashing someone, you are living in trash, you eat trash.
Everyone wants to be happy. Many people talk about it. But do you know where true happiness comes from? Guruka Singh explains each of the following steps: commitment, character, dignity, divinity, grace, and power to sacrifice which all lead to inner happiness.
Satdeep Singh always loved the Sikh stories (Sakhis) as a child. Later in life the SNYOFF gave him an opportunity to try out his dream of being a director. He won the 1st place prize in this festival 3 years in a row, and has become professional director. Hear him tell his story in this video.
Vaisakhi talk for kids aged 8-11 years delivered at Guru Nanak School Hayes. We look at the story of the Dancing Monkey, Is life like going to the Cinema and the names of the Punj Piare Guru Khalsa that gave their head to Guru Gobind Singh ji maharaj.
This is a documentary about the Sikh festival called Vaisakhi produced and directed by John Deol and first broadcast on BBC1 on Sunday 10th April.
The Khalsa Panth has a Mother, her name is Mata Sahib Kaur. The love she gave her child Khalsa cannot be captured into words, however as good children of that mother we should sit and listen to her story.
Kamaljeet Kaur spent almost 10 years hand writing a Savrup of the Siri Guru Granth Sahib in Lareevaar. She is the first woman to hand write the SGGS since the Guru's times. This is her story.
Should Sikhs be environmentally conscious? The answer is as human beings we should be environmentally conscious. We are polluting our home, and no animal does that. For now we only have one planet so we have to start taking care of it.
Made by Hazoori Raagi Sada Sat Simran Singh and his wife Gurudas Kaur Khalsa, this 6 part crucial documentary explores the farming crisis in the Punjab.
Mother Earth has a profound intelligence of interdependence that weaves life together. When wolves were reintroduced to Yellowstone National Park in the United States after being absent nearly 70 years, the most remarkable "trophic cascade" occurred.