Khalsa Tract Society
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Kaur Singh
Title-page of 'Saflata Di Kunji - 8' ("The Key to Success") by the Khalsa Tract Society (20 July 1927) | |
| Formation | 1893 |
|---|---|
| Founder | Vir Singh Kaur Singh |
| Purpose | Sikh religious organization |
| Part of a series on |
| Sikh literature |
|---|
| Sikh scriptures • Punjabi literature |
The Khalsa Tract Society was an organization created by Bhai Vir Singh and Kaur Singh in 1893 to promote the aims and objects of the Singh Sabha Movement.[1][2] The organization had a large output of tracts over the years that touched upon various subjects.[3]
The genre of Punjabi tract literature arose in the late-19th century and played a vital role in Punjabi socio-religious reforms and engaging in refutation and criticism of religious rivals.[3]
In 1893, Vir Singh helped found the Khalsa Tract Society alongside Kaur Singh (who was the son of Sadhu Singh Dhupia).[note 1][1][2] The majority of the tracts published by the society were authored by Vir Singh.[1] The society published small, cheap volumes on religious and social subjects.[2] Alongside religious topics, with society also published works on other subjects, such as social evils that had sprung up within the wider Sikh community.[1] Keeping in-line with the ideals of the Khalsa Tract Society, Vir Singh would later found the Khalsa Samachar newspaper.[1]
In 1902, the Khalsa Tract Society claimed in its report that up till then, it had published 200 works and distributed half a million copies of these works.[2] By 1911, the organization had produced 400 tract works, with one million copies in-total.[3]
In a discussion between Master Tara Singh and Lala Lajpat Rai, the former suggested to the latter that if he is a true patiot (desh bhagat), then he should study Sikhism in-detail, specifically the Punjabi works published by the Khalsa Tract Society.[4]
It was not the only Sikh tract organization, there was also the Panch Khalsa Society, which by 1910 had printed 125 tracts.[3]