Punjab celebrates Baisakhi, marking beginning of wheat harvest

By Asif Bajwa
April 13, 2025

Gurdwara Janam Asthan hosts Baisakhi celebration in Hasan Abdal

An undated image shows a Sikh devotee throwing petals as the procession passes by during the Baisakhi festival at Panja Sahib shrine in Hassan Abdal. — Reuters/File

Baisakhi festival is being celebrated in Punjab on Sunday (today), a centuries-old event that marks the start of the wheat harvest.

Held annually on April 13 and occasionally on April 14, this purely agrarian celebration remains one of the most significant cultural events in rural Punjab.

Traditionally, this day marks the end of vigilant crop-watching and the beginning of reaping the fruits of months of labour. For farmers, it is perhaps the happiest day of the year — the moment their toil turns to tangible reward.

Before the Partition of India, Baisakhi festivals were vibrant festivals steeped in folk tradition. Farmers would gather to the beat of the drum, kick-starting the harvest. Women sang tapay and mahiye, their melodies accompanied by the drum, while men and boys performed spirited bhangra dances in the fields.

Now, mechanisation has altered the customs, with combine harvesters and threshers replacing the communal harvest, and has drained the day of its vibrancy.

While rooted in agrarian tradition, Baisakhi also holds profound religious significance for the Sikh community, commemorating the founding of the Khalsa by Guru Gobind Singh in 1699. Post-Partition, the festival became more closely associated with Sikhism, and it is now marked by a special ceremony held at Gurdwara Panja Sahib in Hasan Abdal.

This year, the central celebration is being held at Gurdwara Janam Asthan in Nankana Sahib, the birthplace of Guru Nanak.

Sikh pilgrims gesture from inside a bus before leaving for Pakistan during 'Baisakhi', a spring harvest festival, in Amritsar, India, on April 10, 2025. — AFP

Ahead of the celebrations, the Pakistani High Commission in New Delhi issued more than 6,500 visas to Indian pilgrims (Yatrees), allowing them to take part in the Baisakhi festival from April 10 to 19.

The Indian pilgrims are visiting several revered gurdwaras across Pakistan, including Gurdwara Panja Sahib, Gurdwara Kartarpur Sahib, and Gurdwara Nankana Sahib.

These visits are facilitated under the Pakistan-India Protocol on Visits to Religious Shrines of 1974, which allows cross-border travel for religious purposes.

Charge d’Affaires Saad Ahmad Warraich said that the large number of visas issued by the government of Pakistan was a manifestation of Islamabad's policy to foster harmony and promote understanding between peoples, cultures and religions.

He added that Pakistan would continue to facilitate such visits to sacred and holy sites.


Next Story >>>
Advertisement

More From Pakistan