Early life Guru Tegh Bahadur was born
Tyag Mal (Tīāg Mal) () in Amritsar on 1 April 1621. He was the youngest son of Guru Hargobind, the sixth guru. His family belonged to the
Sodhi clan of
Khatris. Hargobind had one daughter, Bibi Viro, and five sons: Baba Gurditta, Suraj Mal, Ani Rai, Atal Rai, and Tyag Mal. He gave Tyag Mal the name
Tegh Bahadur (Brave Sword) after Tyag Mal showed valor in the
Battle of Kartarpur against the Mughals. Tegh Bahadur was brought up in the Sikh culture and trained in
archery and
horsemanship. He was also taught the old classics such as the
Vedas, the
Upanishads, and the
Puranas. He was married on 3 February 1632 to
Gujri. In the 1640s, nearing his death, Guru Hargobind and his wife Nanaki moved to his ancestral village of
Bakala in
Amritsar district, together with Tegh Bahadur and Gujri. After Hargobind's death, Tegh Bahadur continued to live in Bakala with his wife and mother.
Installation as Guru of Sikhs In March 1664,
Guru Har Krishan contracted
smallpox. When his followers asked who would lead them after him, he said, "
Baba Bakala", meaning his successor was to be found in Bakala. Taking advantage of the ambiguity in the words of the dying guru, many installed themselves in Bakala, claiming to be the new guru. Sikhs were puzzled to see so many claimants. finding Guru Tegh Bahadur, with
Mata Nanaki, from
Gurdwara Baba Bakala Sikh tradition has a legend about how Tegh Bahadur was selected as the ninth guru. A wealthy trader named
Makhan Shah Labana had vowed to give 500 gold coins to the Sikh Guru upon escaping a shipwreck some time ago, and he came to Bakala in search of the ninth guru. He met each claimant he could find, making his obeisance and offering them two gold coins in the belief that the right guru would know of his silent promise to give them 500 coins. Every "guru" he met accepted the two gold coins and bid him farewell. Then he discovered that Tegh Bahadur also lived at Bakala. Makhan Shah gave Tegh Bahadur the usual offering of two gold coins. Tegh Bahadur blessed him and remarked that his offering was short of the promised five hundred. Makhan Shah made good the difference and ran upstairs. He began shouting from the rooftop, "
Guru ladho re, Guru ladho re", meaning "I have found the Guru, I have found the Guru". In August 1664, a Sikh congregation led by Diwan Dargha Mal, son of a well-known devotee of Har Krishan, arrived in Bakala and appointed Tegh Bahadur as the ninth guru of Sikhs. As had been the custom among Sikhs after the execution of
Guru Arjan by Mughal Emperor Jahangir, Guru Tegh Bahadur was surrounded by armed bodyguards, but he otherwise lived an austere life.
Journeys Guru Tegh Bahadur traveled extensively in different parts of the
Indian subcontinent, including
Dhaka and
Assam, to preach the teachings of
Guru Nanak, the first Sikh guru. The places he visited and stayed in became sites of Sikh temples. During his travels, he started a number of community water wells and
langars (community kitchens for the poor). Tegh Bahadur visited the towns of Mathura, Agra, Allahabad and Varanasi. His son,
Guru Gobind Singh, who would be the tenth Sikh guru, was born in
Patna in 1666 while he was away in
Dhubri, Assam, where the
Gurdwara Sri Guru Tegh Bahadur Sahib now stands. While in Assam, it is claimed by Sikh accounts that the guru brokered peace between
Raja Ram Singh and the Ahom ruler
Raja Chakradhwaj Singha (Supangmung). After his visit to Assam, Bengal, and Bihar, Guru Tegh Bahadur visited Rani Champa of
Bilaspur, who offered to give the Guru a piece of land in her state. The Guru bought the site for 500
rupees. There, he founded the city of
Anandpur Sahib in the foothills of the Himalayas. In 1672, Tegh Bahadur traveled in and around the Malwa region to meet the masses as the persecution of
non-Muslims reached new heights. ==Execution==