Pakistan opens for 500 years old Gurudwara for Indian Sikh
Pakistan opens for 500 years old Gurudwara Babe de ber for Indian Sikh

Babe-De-Ber, 500-year-old gurus located in Sialkot, Punjab, in Punjab, has been opened for Indian Sikh pilgrims on the instructions of Governor Muhammad Sarwar, here.
Lahore, Patra. Babe-De-ber has been opened for Indian Sikh devotees by 500-year-old gurus based in Sialkot, Punjab, Punjab. Until then, Indian devotees were not allowed to go to this gurdwara.
According to the local media, the Babe-De-Ber gurdwara has been opened to Indian Sikh pilgrims on the instructions of Governor of Punjab province of Pakistan, Muhammad Sarwar. Located in Sialkot, 140 km from Lahore, a large number of pilgrims arrive from India and abroad in this gurdwara.
This guru had been built by Sardar Natha Singh, a follower of Guru Nanak Dev Sahib, the founder of Sikh religion. It is said that Guru Nanak Dev, who had returned to Sialkot from the Kashmir journey in the 16th century, rested this place under a plum tree.
There are several Sikh places of pilgrimage in Pakistan where devotees from all over the world including India come.
With the joint efforts of the Government of India and Pakistan, the construction of the corridor from Gurudwara Durbar Sahib in Kartarpur, to Dera Baba Nanak in Pakistan has started in November last year. Guru Nanak Dev had spent the last 18 years of his life in Kartarpur Sahib.
