Sikh Sarbloh Kara Smooth Flat Kada Singh Bracelet Kaur Punjabi Khalsa Bangle N12
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Sikh Sarbloh Kara Smooth Flat Kada Singh Bracelet Kaur Punjabi Khalsa Bangle
These kara are almost round with very minute edge as shown in photos. New design.
Design No. N12
Width approx. 10.3mm
Thickness approx. 5 mm
Weight of these Kara are approx 65-105g (variable due to different sizes of kara).
Sizes are the inner diameter of Kara measured in centimetres.
Please note there may be small cut mark/black marks or scruff/grind marks or hammer marks on some kara. These are present mostly at Kara joints as most of the work on these kara is done by hand and these marks are inevitable. In addition, all kara from Amritsar are always transported in Jute bags and in Jumble, which causes scruff marks/dings. However, these do not affect the quality of kara.
Punjabi Traditional Design Kada - Just Arrived
Non-allergic to skin.
These Kara are remembrance gift for life. Best thing ever to gift your loved ones and these always remind them about your presence. I am myself wearing a 21 years old Kara that my Grand-mum has gifted me and it always remind me of her.
Kara GIFT FOR LIFE
Apart from religious values Karas are the best to be given as a remembrance/memorable gift. Hence, a brilliant gift idea for loved ones.
These Karas are one of the Sikh Kakars.
(Very Smooth - as shown in photos - photos are zoomed to show details) - Very Popular design in market right now - very famous in youngsters and we are the only seller who has this exclusive design for sale in UK
Very Smooth from inside and heavy. Non allergic to Skin.
These Karas are from the Holy and blessed land of Shiri Amritsar Sahib (The City of Golden Temple/Darbar Sahib/Shiri Harmandir Sahib Ji)
Please read below more Information about Sikh Kara:
A kara (Punjabi: ਕੜਾ (Gurmukhi), کڑا (Shahmukhi) कड़ा (Devanagari)), is a steel or iron (sarb loh) bracelet, worn by all initiated Sikhs. It is one of the five kakars or 5Ks — external articles of faith — that identify a Sikh as dedicated to their religious order. The kara was instituted by the tenth Sikh Guru Guru Gobind Singh at the Baisakhi Amrit Sanskar in 1699. Guru Gobind Singh Ji explained:
> He does not recognise anyone else except me, not even the bestowal of charities, performance of merciful acts, austerities and restraint on pilgrim-stations; the perfect light of the Lord illuminates his heart, then consider him as the immaculate Khalsa.
The kara is to constantly remind the Sikh disciple to do God's work, a constant reminder of the Sikh's mission on this earth and that he or she must carry out righteous and true deeds and actions, keeping with the advice given by the Guru. The Kara is a symbol of unbreakable attachment and commitment to God. It is in the shape of a circle which has no beginning and no end, like the eternal nature of God. It is also a symbol of the Sikh brotherhood. As the Sikhs' holy text the Guru Granth Sahib says "In the tenth month, you were made into a human being, O my merchant friend, and you were given your allotted time to perform good deeds." Similarly, Bhagat Kabir reminds the Sikh to always keep one's consciousness with God: "With your hands and feet, do all your work, but let your consciousness remain with the Immaculate Lord."
The basic kara is a simple unadorned steel bracelet, but other forms exist. It was historically used like a knuckle-duster for hand-to-hand combat. Battlefield variations include kara with spikes or sharp edges. Sikh soldiers of the British Indian army would settle disputes by competing in a form of boxing known as loh-musti (lit. iron fist) with a kara on one hand.
Postage discounts for multi-buys.
Any questions please do not hesitate to contact us.
P.S. Colour of item may slightly vary due to camera flash and light condition.
Some kara may have negligible small black grinding mark on the kara joint. This is always seen on all kara as most of the Kara making/shaping work is done by hands. However, this do not affect the quality/look of kara.
Please note size may vary plus minus 1mm due to measurement variability.
Please note there may be a grinding/minor scruff marks on kara joints that happens due to grinding the joints. As someone who has ever visited Kara stores in Amritsar must have witnessed that these Kara come in jumbles and mostly made manually by hand. However, We follow proper grading/selection procedures before getting these kara but still sometimes it is hard to get the perfection and I hope it is understandable.