ੴ Daily Sikhi

About

The content is currently private

Daily Sikhi is not yet open to the public. The reading text, daily Hukamnama, and search are behind a login while we await written permission from the rights holders — the translation (Dr. Sant Singh Khalsa, MD) and the transliteration & database (Dr. Kulbir S. Thind, MD) — before making the content publicly available. Until then, access is limited to the site owner.

This site

Daily Sikhi (dailysikhi.com) is a private study aid for reading and understanding Sri Guru Granth Sahib — the Gurmukhi text with transliteration and English side by side, a daily Hukamnama, and a search that answers grounded only in the Guru's own words, always citing the passage. It's a personal learning project, meant to point to Gurbani — not to serve as authoritative commentary.

About Sikhi

Sikhi (Sikhism) is a faith that began in fifteenth-century Punjab with Guru Nanak (1469–1539). Over the next two centuries, ten living Gurus shaped the path; the tenth, Guru Gobind Singh, installed the scripture — Sri Guru Granth Sahib — as the eternal Guru. Its 1,430 Angs (pages) gather the hymns of the Gurus alongside those of Hindu and Muslim saints, composed and sung in raags (musical modes).

At its heart is Ik Onkar — one universal Creator present in all. Sikhi teaches the equality of every person regardless of caste, creed, or gender, and rests on three practices: Naam Japna (remembering God), Kirat Karni (earning an honest living), and Vand Chakna (sharing with others). Selfless service (seva), justice, and langar — the free community kitchen open to all — carry these values into daily life.

About Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji — history, structure & contributors →

The creator

Built by Jaspreet Garcha as a personal project to study Gurbani more closely and share a quiet, focused way to read it. More at jaspreetgarcha.com.

Sources & attribution

Translation by Dr. Sant Singh Khalsa, MD. Transliteration and database by Dr. Kulbir S. Thind, MD. Source text from gurbanifiles.net. Gurmukhi is rendered in the open Noto Sans Gurmukhi typeface. Used here for private, personal learning only.