Muslim Rababis of Lahore struggle to keep alive centuries-old Sikh kirtan musical tradition

Collage of rababis', Ustad Moeen Ahmed Chand (right) and Mohsin Ali Chand pictured during their rehearsal session in Lahore, Pakistan, on April 13, 2025. (AN Photo)
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Updated 15 April 2025
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Muslim Rababis of Lahore struggle to keep alive centuries-old Sikh kirtan musical tradition

  • Rababis are Muslims who perform sacred devotional music of Sikhism, passing down the craft from one generation to the next
  • 13th generation Rababi Ustad Moeen Ahmed Chand complains about lack of respect for community, few opportunities to perform

LAHORE: Ustad Moeen Ahmed Chand pumped the external bellows of his harmonium with one hand and pressed the keys on the keyboard with the other as he sat on the floor of his small, run-down house nestled in a narrow street in Pakistan’s eastern city of Lahore.

Chand comes from a long line of Rababis, Muslim singers who were the original custodians of Sikhism’s kirtan tradition, a sacred form of devotional music. 

Rababis trace their origins to Bhai Mardana (1459-1534), a Muslim musician who was one of the closest companions of Sikhism’s founder Baba Guru Nanak (1469-1539). Mardana traveled across South and Central Asia with Nanak, singing songs of divine wisdom and playing the rabab string instrument from where the Rababi community gets its name, awakening diverse audience with Sikhism’s messages of peace, unity, and oneness. 

Over the course of centuries, Rababis have added other instruments such as the tabla and the harmonium to the kirtan tradition, which is passed on from father to son through the generations. Today, it is Chand, 50, who carries forward the art and is fiercely protective of it, struggling to keeping alive the essential but often overlooked part of the history of Sikh and Indian classical music.

Chand, who lives close to Lahore’s iconic Mughal-era Shalimar Gardens, recalled that his love for kirtan took root as a child watching his father laying bricks in the morning and practicing music in the evening. 

“Watching them, I also developed a love for it [kirtan], I also took this path,” Chand, 50, told Arab News at his home on Nadeem Street near Lahore’s Malik Park. “I am the 13th generation [of Rababis in my family] … Next in line is my son.”

Before the partition of India and the birth of Pakistan in 1947, Chand’s grandfather was a renowned Rababi at Amritsar’s Golden Temple, one of the holiest sites in Sikhism. Back then, all Rababis used to get stipends from the Golden Temple.

“The temple would send us money and in those days even 200 rupees [$0.72] would amount to Rs25,000 [$90] to Rs30,000 [$108], even Rs100,000 [$360] of today,” Chand said.

But then the family moved to Lahore after the end of British colonial rule and funds from Sikh temples dried up.

“After partition, our elders faced a lot of hardships, worked as laborers, had to work very hard to survive, but with the blessings of Maharaj [Guru Nanak] they never left kirtan,” Chand said. 

“NOBODY CALLS US TO PLAY”

Despite his family preserving the kirtan for 13 generations, there is little demand for performances by Rababis now, other than at special events like Guru Nanak’s birth anniversary celebrations. This has forced musicians like Chand to diversify their portfolios, taking up the Sufi devotional music form popularly known as the qawwali, which he performs at seasonal melas and annual events such as annual death anniversary celebrations of Sufi saints of the Indian subcontinent. 

“Nobody calls us to play anymore. Once a year tourists come from abroad on Sri Guru Nanak Dev’s birth anniversary, then they call us now and then,” the musician lamented. “All we want is a consistent and reliable source of income.”

Chand’s disciple, his nephew Mohsin Ali Chand, a 32-year-old tabla player, agreed about the lack of respect for the craft and the family that was struggling to carry it forward.

“We are not very respected here [in Pakistan]. In India we are respected,” Mohsin told Arab News as he sat cross-legged at Chand’s house, his fingers softly tapping the top of a pair of tabla drums. 

“There people give us a lot of veneration and love and they respect and value us.”

More than the lack of public appreciation, Chand said the commercialization of music had drained the soul of kirtan, and of the Rababis still practicing it.

“My message for my Rababi brothers is that sing kirtan like we recite our holy books,” he said. “Kirtan should come from the heart.”

Chand also warned against imitators of the craft who had “commercialized kirtan. The only way to become a Rababi was to be mentored by another Rababi, the passing down of the skill from an “ustaad” [teacher] to a “shagird” [student], Chand said. 

“My only request is to stop lying,” the musician added. “Let the rightful Rababis get the work. Be honest, be truthful, the teacher you’ve learned from, take their name.”

 


Afghan authorities carry out strikes in retaliation for earlier Pakistani airstrikes

Updated 5 sec ago
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Afghan authorities carry out strikes in retaliation for earlier Pakistani airstrikes

  • Afghanistan’s military corps in the east says “heavy clashes” have begun in retaliation of Pakistan’s airstrikes
  • Pakistan carried out strikes in Afghanistan over weekend, saying it killed over 100 militants in three Afghan provinces

KABUL, Afghanistan: Afghan military authorities say they have begun carrying out strikes against Pakistan in retaliation for Pakistani airstrikes days ago.

A statement issued by the media office of Afghanistan’s military corps in the east said “heavy clashes” had begun Thursday night “in response to the recent airstrikes carried out by Pakistani forces in Nangarhar and Paktia” provinces.

There was no immediate confirmation from Pakistan and no immediate information on casualties.

On Sunday, Pakistan’s military carried out strikes along the border with Afghanistan, saying it had killed at least 70 militants. Afghanistan rejected the claim, saying dozens of civilians had been killed, including women and children.