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Gurudwara Gurmat Parkash

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Entry: Free. Gurdwara Sahibs welcome all visitors regardless of faith, caste, or background.
Dress Code: Modest clothing covering arms and legs. Head must be covered at all times inside the Gurdwara.

Gurudwara Gurmat Parkash is a community gurdwara that serves as a center for worship, congregation, and social services for the local Sikh community located in Germany. It is situated in Germany, which has a growing Sikh community that maintains its cultural and religious traditions. As with all gurdwaras, Gurudwara Gurmat Parkash welcomes visitors of all faiths and backgrounds.

The gurdwara serves as a place of worship where the Guru Granth Sahib (the holy scripture of the Sikhs) is kept with great reverence. The community gathers here for daily prayers (Nitnem), Kirtan (devotional singing of hymns from the Guru Granth Sahib), and Katha (religious discourse). The gurdwara operates a Langar (community kitchen) where free vegetarian meals are served to all visitors regardless of religion, caste, gender, economic status, or ethnicity.

This practice, established by Guru Nanak Dev Ji and formalized by Guru Angad Dev Ji, embodies the Sikh principles of equality, sharing, and selfless service (Seva).

Significance

The gurdwara serves as a vital spiritual and community center. In Sikh tradition, a gurdwara is not merely a place of worship but a center for learning, community service, and social equality. The institution of Langar (community kitchen), Sangat (congregation), and Pangat (eating together in rows) are practiced here, reinforcing the Sikh values of equality and brotherhood.

Nearby Gurdwaras

Gurudwara Singh Sabha Ulm E.v

Germany

56 km away

Open daily for prayers and congregation;...

Gurudwara Singh Sabha Ulm e.V. is a registered Sikh religious institution (eingetragener Verein) located in the Wiblingen district of Ulm, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. Situated at Schulze-Delitzsch-Weg 21, 89079 Ulm, the gurdwara serves as the spiritual and cultural center for the Sikh community in Ulm and the surrounding region of southern Germany. Operating under the legal framework of a German registered association, the institution enjoys formal recognition within the German civic system and is one of over forty gurdwaras functioning across the country. As a gurdwara, the institution fulfills the multifaceted role central to Sikh religious life: it functions simultaneously as a house of worship, a community gathering space, an educational center, and a hub for social service. The Guru Granth Sahib Ji, the eternal living scripture and Guru of the Sikhs, is enshrined at the heart of the gurdwara and forms the focal point of all religious observance and community life. The gurdwara conducts daily prayers including Nitnem (the prescribed daily scriptural readings) and regular Diwan (congregation) services, where Gurbani (sacred hymns) is recited and sung through Kirtan. These services are open to all individuals regardless of faith, caste, gender, or nationality, in strict accordance with the foundational Sikh principles of equality and universal brotherhood. The institution also organizes special religious observances for significant occasions in the Sikh calendar, including Gurpurabs — the birth and martyrdom anniversaries of the Sikh Gurus — as well as Baisakhi and other festivals. A cornerstone of the gurdwara's community work is the Langar, the free community kitchen that provides vegetarian meals to all visitors without distinction. This practice, instituted by Guru Nanak Dev Ji, the founder of Sikhism, embodies the Sikh values of Seva (selfless service) and Sarbat da Bhala (the well-being of all). Volunteers from the local Sikh Sangat contribute their time and resources to ensure the Langar operates regularly. Beyond worship, the gurdwara serves as an important cultural anchor for the Punjabi Sikh diaspora in the Ulm region, providing a space where Sikh traditions, language, music, and values are preserved and transmitted to younger generations born and raised in Germany. Ulm, a historic city on the Danube river in Baden-Württemberg — known internationally as the birthplace of Albert Einstein and home to the world's tallest church steeple — provides a distinctive setting for this vibrant Sikh institution, which contributes meaningfully to the city's multicultural and interfaith landscape.

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