May The Fires of Our Kitchens Serve For Ever
Trust Sikhs to take observances to extremes!
All people share meals as a means of developing close inter-personal relationships.
Modern etiquette favors eating in restaurants and partaking of extravagant banquets.
Indian traditions of hospitality require us to serve guests food and refreshments as representatives of God.
The community kitchen is part and parcel of every abode of the Living Guru.
A meal at a Gurudwara is a moving experience.
Men and women, rich and poor, people of all backgrounds, and even inquisitive visitors, all eat together.
The food is nutritious but simple.
Hygiene standards are the best possible.
Service is by the faithful and their children. There are no professional caterers.
No one is turned away: not even those of other or no faiths.
The servers do not eat until every one else has been satiated.
All community families take turns at serving.
Each meal starts with Ardas.
No day is complete without community meals in the presence of the Living Guru.
All Sikhs pray that their community kitchens never stop.
There is no better place to eat or to serve the Indian way than an Abode of the Living Guru.
All people share meals as a means of developing close inter-personal relationships.
Modern etiquette favors eating in restaurants and partaking of extravagant banquets.
Indian traditions of hospitality require us to serve guests food and refreshments as representatives of God.
The community kitchen is part and parcel of every abode of the Living Guru.
A meal at a Gurudwara is a moving experience.
Men and women, rich and poor, people of all backgrounds, and even inquisitive visitors, all eat together.
The food is nutritious but simple.
Hygiene standards are the best possible.
Service is by the faithful and their children. There are no professional caterers.
No one is turned away: not even those of other or no faiths.
The servers do not eat until every one else has been satiated.
All community families take turns at serving.
Each meal starts with Ardas.
No day is complete without community meals in the presence of the Living Guru.
All Sikhs pray that their community kitchens never stop.
There is no better place to eat or to serve the Indian way than an Abode of the Living Guru.
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