Hemkund or Hemkunt is a pilgrim's journey situation for Sikhs in Chamoli dominion, Uttarakhand, India. With a background of a polar lake environed by seven mountain peaks and each top is ornamented by a Nishan Sahib on its drop off, it is located in the Himalayas at an elevation of 15,200 foot as per the Survey of India. It is accessible exclusively by groundwork from Gobindghat on the Rishikesh-Badrinath main road.
Hemkund is famed for the Sikh worship-place Gurudwara, known as Sri Hemkunt Sahib Ji, given to Guru Gobind Singh Ji (16661708), the tenth Sikh Guru, which ascertains reference in Dasam Granth, a piece of work recited by Guru Gobind Singh Ji, Himself. The lake as well has a Lakhmana shanty on its shore which was afterward built up into proper little shrine by the Sikhs.
Hemkund is a Sanskrit language name derived from Hem ("Snowfall") and Kund ("roll"). Dasam Granth tells this is the place where Pandu Raja applied Yoga.
Bachitira Natak is an autobiographic explanation of incarnated spirit of Shri Guru Gobind
Singh Ji as a powerful younker who was sent for into being during Sat Yug, the 'epoch of accuracy' (the first of four historic periods granting to Hindoo mythology) to do battle with violent devils that terrorised somebodies and idols letting in Hindu deities and divinities. When they had been ruined, the spring chicken, known as Dusht Daman, the 'uprooter of evil', was taught to go to Hemkunt Sapatsring to contemplate until he was called upon by God. Guru Gobind Singh's ain explanation in Bachitra Natak finishes this fib. After making his unity with God through meditation and ascetic bailiwick, he was converted in Kal Yug, the 'age of dark', as the boy of the 9th Guru and his married woman. After, after his male parent's martyrdom, he turned the tenth and last aliveness Guru of the Sikhs.
In the above verse lines, the Guru Ji tells of His bloods. He lines the place Hemkunt Parbat Sapat Sring, the "lake of ice rink" "spates" decorated with "seven tips", as the same office where King Pandu, the forefather of the five Pandava brothers of Mahabharata fame, committed yoga. In that location, the Guru Ji did intense meditation and asceticisms until He unified with Idol. Because His earthly parents had served Graven image, Graven image was pleased with them and gave a precept that the Guru Ji to be born to them. In the mortal world He would carry out a military mission to teach the true religious belief and rid peoples of evil ways. He was reluctant to go forth his state of matrimony with the creator, but God compelled Him. In this agency the Guru Ji took nativity into the world.
The search for and uncovering of Hemkunt got out of the desire of the Sikhs to rear shrines to honour billets dedicated by the visit of the tenth Guru during his lifespan or, in the case of Hemkunt, during his previous life. Although Bachitra Natak was included in the Dasam Granth some time in the 1730s, Sikhs obviously did not study looking for Hemkunt Sapatsring until the late 19th one c. It did not go a place of pilgrimage until the twentieth century. Pandit Tara Singh Narotam, a 19th century Nirmala student, was the first Sikh to retrace the geographic location of Hemkunt. He wrote of Hemkunt as one among the 508 Sikh shrines he lined in Sri Gur Tirath Sangrah (first written in 1884). A lot afterwards, renowned Sikh scholarly person Bhai Vir Singh was instrumental in developing Hemkunt after it had been, in a sentiency, re-discovered by another Sikh in search of the Guru's beg asthan.
Sohan Singh was a pulled back granthi from the Indian ground forces who was working in a gurdwara (Sikh tabernacle) in Tehri Garhwal. In 1932, he read the description of Hemkunt in Bhai Vir Singh's Sri Kalgidhar Chamatkar (1929). This explanation of the berth and the speculation of a capital yogi there was based on the tale of Guru Gobind Singh's life and premature life as told in Bachitra Natak and the Suraj (Prakash) Granth.
In 1930, Sant Sohan Singh, a retired granthi from the Indian Regular army, claimed to have ascertained Hemkunt as stated in Bachitra Natak. To some extent he was financed by Bhai Vir Singh, a romantic poet of Punjab, belonging to landed gentry. Bachitra Natak was someway able to catch the imaginativeness of Sikhs, for the most part because of the beautiful poetry, and songs and verse lines that came across to their opinions and medicine. Sohan Singh, who passed around 1937, was helped by a Sikh soldier, Havildar Modan Singh of the Bengal Sappers and Miners, who then placed the foundation of the first edifice and opened up admission to the public through Govindghat. Later on, he went on to populate here and remained until his death in 1960. The Sikh religious systems deputed Hemkund as a special position for adoration.
How to Reach
Hemkund is unaccessible because of snow from Oct through Apr. Each year the first Sikh pilgrims get in English hawthorn and posed to work to mend the wrong to the route over the wintertime. This Sikh custom is sent for kar seva ("work religious service"), a conception which shapes an of import dogma of the Sikh religion of belonging to and lending to the community .
The take-off point for Hemkund is the town of Govindghat about 275 kilometers (171 mi) from Rishikesh. The 13 klicks (8.1 mi) trek is along a somewhat substantially preserved path to the village of Ghangaria. There is another Gurudwara where pilgrims can spend the night. In addition there are a few hotels and a bivouac with tents and mattresses. A 1,100-metre (3,600 foot) climb on a 6-kilometre (3.7 mi) of rock paved track leads Hemkund. There are no sleeping transcriptions at Hemkund so it is necessary to leave by 2 phase modulation to make it back to Govindghat by evenfall.
From Delhi, holidaymakers take the railroad train to Haridwar and then travel by heap to Govindghat via Rishikesh. It is also possible to drive from Delhi to Govindghat. It takes almost 18 minutes. Auli, a ski resort at 3,000 chiliad (9,800 foot), is often used to repose and acclimate to the high EL. The main town
below Auli is Joshimath.