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Armour not of Sikh Guru - Sotheby's
British Sikhs on Thursday dropped plans to bid at a controversial London auction after Sotheby's told them a body armour going under the hammer did not belong to the 10th Sikh Guru, Gobind Singh.
London: British Sikhs on Thursday dropped plans to bid at a controversial London auction after Sotheby's told them a body armour going under the hammer did not belong to the 10th Sikh Guru, Gobind Singh.
"It is important that you know that Sotheby's does not consider the Sikh armour plate to be a relic of Guru Gobind Singh, as our cataloguing and estimate clearly indicate," a Sotheby's spokesman said in a statement after Sikhs in India protested.
"I can also tell you we believe that complaints about the proposed offering are based on a misreading of Sotheby's cataloguing, which points to a stylistic similarity to a full set of armour in the possession of the Patiala royal family which the family attributes to Guru Gobind Singh," spokesman Simon Warren added.
Sikh political and religious bodies from Anandpur Sahib to Patna have petitioned Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, held demonstrations, and dashed off letters of protest to the Indian high commission in London and Sotheby's calling for the rectangular 29-by-21cm body armour to be returned to Sikhs.
The clarification calmed the nerves of London-based Sikh businessmen and Gurdwaras who had been informally rallying to bid for the object - valued at £10,000-12,000 (Dh74,000-88,800) - after a heritage website alerted Sikhs about the April 9 auction. The website - punjabheritage.org - pointed out that the piece being auctioned bears a "staggering similarity" to a set in the possession of the former royal family of Patiala that is said to have belonged to Guru Gobind Singh. "This Sotheby's piece bears a staggering similarity to that set."
"A few of us were discussing the auction when we got to know that it's not the real thing," said Ajinder Pal Singh Chawla of London.
The Sotheby's catalogue says: "The existence of this plate... points to the possibility that the Guru commissioned more than one such set."
Sotheby's said on Wednesday it will add a saleroom note: "Sotheby's has not found or been given any evidence to indicate ownership of this piece by Guru Gobind Singh and we therefore do not deem the piece to be a relic of the Guru and we therefore do not deem the piece to be a relic of the Guru.
"The piece has strong stylistic similarities to a full set of armour in the possession of the Patiala royal family, which according to family lore was attributed to the Guru.
A few of us were discussing the auction when we got to know that it's not the real thing."
Ajinder Pal Singh Chawla, Sikh resident of London
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