Sri Guru Singh Sabha Gurdwara, widely known as the Revesby Gurdwara, is a landmark of Sikh faith and community life in Sydney, Australia. Located at 14–22 The River Road, Revesby, in the Canterbury-Bankstown municipality of New South Wales, this institution holds the distinction of being the first Gurdwara established in Sydney and the third to be founded anywhere in Australia. Its establishment in 1978 marked a pivotal turning point for the Sikh diaspora in New South Wales, providing a permanent spiritual home for a community that had long sought a dedicated place of worship in the nation's largest city.
Managed by Sri Guru Singh Sabha, Sydney — an organisation whose roots trace back to a historic founding meeting in November 1976 — the gurdwara complex today spans several properties along The River Road and Victoria Street. This expanded footprint accommodates a full spectrum of religious, educational, and social activities that serve both the Sikh community and the broader multicultural population of Greater Sydney. At its spiritual heart stands the Darbar Sahib, the principal prayer hall where the Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji — the eternal living Guru of the Sikhs — is reverently installed.
Daily programs of Asa di War (morning hymns), Rehras Sahib (evening prayers), and Kirtan (devotional singing) are conducted throughout the week. Extended sessions on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays attract large congregations of families and devotees from across the metropolitan area who gather for prayer, fellowship, and community service. Beyond worship, the Revesby Gurdwara functions as a vibrant community hub.
It houses the Guru Nanak Library and operates the Khalsa School, offering Punjabi language instruction on weekends (Saturdays 6–8pm, Sundays 11am–1pm). Additional educational programs include kirtan instruction, Santhia studies of Sri Guru Granth Sahib, computer skill classes, and even martial arts training. These programs have been central to transmitting Sikh language, music, and culture to generations of diaspora youth.
The langar — the free communal kitchen that is a defining institution of Sikhism — operates daily, welcoming all visitors regardless of religion, background, or nationality. On weekdays, tea and snacks are served from 6:30pm, with the main meal following after kirtan. On Sundays, langar is served from 1:30pm.
This daily practice of Seva (selfless service) is sustained by a committed body of volunteers for whom service in the langar is an act of devotion and an expression of Sikh values. With its pioneering history, comprehensive programs, and deep communal roots, the Revesby Gurdwara has become not only a spiritual anchor for Sikhs in New South Wales but also a visible symbol of multicultural Australia's respectful embrace of diverse faiths and traditions.
Significance
The Revesby Gurdwara occupies a position of extraordinary importance in the religious and cultural life of the Australian Sikh community. As the first Sikh place of worship in Sydney and the third in all of Australia, it represents the pioneering determination of a small immigrant community to establish and preserve their faith in a new homeland. In a city that would eventually be home to tens of thousands of Sikhs — the 2021 Australian census recorded 47,165 Sikhs in New South Wales alone — the gurdwara at Revesby served as the foundational spiritual institution upon which a rich diaspora community life was built.
Religiously, the gurdwara is centred on the Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji — the eternal, living Guru of the Sikhs — which is installed and venerated in the Darbar Sahib. Daily prayers, Kirtan programs, and the observance of all major Gurpurabs (commemorations of the Sikh Gurus' births and martyrdoms) maintain the gurdwara as a living centre of Sikh theology and devotional practice. Culturally, the gurdwara has served as a guardian of Punjabi language, music, and heritage for generations of Sikh youth raised in Australia.
Its Punjabi school, Guru Nanak Library, and kirtan instruction programs have been instrumental in sustaining cultural and spiritual continuity within a diaspora community. The universal institution of Langar also gives the gurdwara a broader humanitarian significance, making the values of equality and selfless service tangible and accessible to the entire community — Sikh and non-Sikh alike.
Nearby Gurdwaras
Sikh Temple
15 km away
Sikh Temple is a community gurdwara that serves as a center for worship, congregation, and social services for the local Sikh community located in Australia. It is situated in Australia, where the Sikh community has grown significantly in recent decades. As with all gurdwaras, Sikh Temple 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).
Sikh Temple
19 km away
Sikh Temple is a community gurdwara that serves as a center for worship, congregation, and social services for the local Sikh community located in Minto, Australia. It is situated in Australia, where the Sikh community has grown significantly in recent decades. As with all gurdwaras, Sikh Temple 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).
Sikh Mission Centre
20 km away
The Sikh Mission Centre, located at 170 Ninth Avenue in Austral—a suburb within the City of Liverpool in south-western Sydney, New South Wales, Australia—is one of the most active and prominent Sikh places of worship in the greater Sydney metropolitan area. Established as an organisation in 1988 and opening its dedicated temple complex in Austral in 2010, the gurdwara—meaning 'door to the Guru'—serves as a spiritual home for the growing Sikh diaspora in Sydney's rapidly expanding south-western corridor. The Sikh Mission Centre Sydney Inc., a registered charity in Australia, runs the facility entirely through volunteer effort, embodying the Sikh principle of seva (selfless service). Situated amid the suburban growth of south-western Sydney, the gurdwara draws devotees not only from the immediate Austral and Liverpool areas but from across the broader metropolitan region. The surrounding City of Liverpool local government area has experienced significant demographic growth, with a substantial Punjabi-speaking population making this gurdwara a vital cultural and spiritual hub. The centre serves approximately 5,000 members of the local Sikh community, providing a combination of spiritual nourishment, cultural continuity, and community welfare. Central to the gurdwara's daily life is the perpetual presence of the Guru Granth Sahib, the eternal Sikh scripture, enshrined in the Darbar Sahib (main prayer hall). Weekly keertans (devotional hymns), path (scripture readings), and ardas (communal prayers) draw hundreds of worshippers each weekend. The institution also maintains a langar—a free community kitchen—where vegetarian meals are served to all visitors regardless of faith, caste, or background, a tradition central to Sikh philosophy since the time of Guru Nanak Dev Ji. What distinguishes the Sikh Mission Centre is its deep integration into the broader Australian multicultural fabric. During the COVID-19 pandemic, it served as a critical community engagement point, receiving a AUD $20,000 grant from the New South Wales Government under the Empowering and Supporting Local Communities Program in 2021. The centre produced health resources in Punjabi, ensuring vulnerable community members had access to vital health information. NSW Multiculturalism Minister Natalie Ward personally visited the gurdwara in November 2021 to acknowledge the centre's contributions. Bawa Singh Jagdev, a founding pioneer who arrived in Sydney from Punjab in 1975, was instrumental in establishing the centre and was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) in 2012, becoming the first Sikh-Australian to receive one of Australia's highest civilian honours. The Sikh Mission Centre stands as both a place of worship and a testament to the resilience and community spirit of Australian Sikhs.
Sikh Temple
20 km away
Sikh Temple is a community gurdwara that serves as a center for worship, congregation, and social services for the local Sikh community located in Australia. It is situated in Australia, where the Sikh community has grown significantly in recent decades. As with all gurdwaras, Sikh Temple 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).