at
Anandpur in 1699 to formalize the
Khalsa Panth Although not all Sikhs maintain the practice of eating meat butchered in this style, it was mandated by the ten Sikh Gurus: {{Quote|According to the Sikh tradition, only such meat as is obtained from an animal which is killed with one stroke of the weapon causing instant death is fit for human consumption.
Guru Gobind Singh took a rather serious view of this aspect of the whole matter. He, therefore, while permitting flesh to be taken as food repudiated the whole theory of this
expiatory sacrifice. Accordingly, he made jhatka meat obligatory for those Sikhs who may be interested in taking meat as a part of their food. The official
Khalsa Code of Conduct and the
Sikh Rehat Maryada forbid the consumption of Kutha meat, and Sikhs are recommended to eat jhatka meat. In Sikhism, there are three objections to non-
jhatka or
kutha products: that sacrificing an animal in the name of God is ritualism and something to be avoided; that killing an animal with a slow bleeding method is inhumane; and historic opposition of the right of ruling Muslims to impose their practices on non-Muslims.
Kutha meat includes not just
Halal or
Kosher meat but any meat produced by slow bleeding or the perceived religious sacrifice of animals, including meat from animals slaughtered ritualistically in
Hinduism.
Jhatka karna or
jhatkaund is the instant severing of the head of an animal with a single stroke of any
weapon, with the underlying intention causing it minimal suffering. During the
British Raj, the Sikhs began to assert their right to slaughter through Jhatka. This practice is considered to be unacceptable by modern Sikh sects who believe only
lacto-vegetarian langar is supposed to be served inside gurudwaras after the introduction of Colonial-era "Mahants" and "
Udasis" into Sikh Gurdwaras. In early 1987
Kharkus issued a moral code banning the sale and consumption of meat and calling for jhatka shops to be closed. The ban led to much of Punjab being without meat and the closing of jhatka shops. Those who continued to sell or eat meat risked death and commonly would have their businesses destroyed and be killed. One survey found that there were no meat or tobacco shops between
Amritsar and
Phagwara. At the peak of the militancy, most of Punjab was meatless. Famous restaurants that served meat removed it from their menu and denied ever serving it. The ban was popular among rural Sikhs. Kharkus justified the ban by saying, "No
avatars, Hindu or Sikh, ever did these things. To eat meat is the job of
rakshasas (
demons) and we don't want people to become
rakshasas." ==Comparison with Kosher and Halal methods==