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Guru Angad Dev - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (227 words) |
 | Guru Angad Dev (Punjabi: ਗੁਰੂ ਅੰਗਦ ਦੇਵ) (31 March 1504 – 29 March 1552) was the second of The Ten Gurus of Sikhism. |
 | He became Guru on 7 September 1539 following in the footsteps of Guru Nanak, who was the founder of the Sikh religion. |
 | Hence, Guru Amardas was the paternal uncle of Guru Angad's son-in-law. |
| Guru - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (6843 words) |
 | A similar interpretation describes the guru as the one that "removes the darkness of ignorance" is based on the Guru Gītā (literally "song of the spiritual teacher"), a spiritual text describing a dialogue between Śiva and his consort Pārvatī on the nature of the guru and the guru/disciple relationship. |
 | Some gurus have been perceived by the media and by critical ex-followers to be abusing their status and to be either charlatans, self-deceived, businessmen pretending to be saints, cult leaders, or a combination of these. |
 | Kapur Singh, Parasarprasna or The Baisakhi of Guru Gobind Singh (An Exposition of Sikhism), Jalandhar-1959 |