TLDR: Three hundred and fifty years ago, a Sikh spiritual teacher named Guru Tegh Bahadur made his body a shield against imperial oppression, offering himself to an emperor's armies rather than let others suffer. At a Federal Building gathering in downtown Los Angeles, spiritual teacher and activist Valarie Kaur recounts his story and reframes it as a summons to contemporary resistance: not asking "what will you do?" but "who will you be?" She offers a practice of returning "with flowers" — combining the eyes of a sage with the heart of a warrior — as a way to sustain long-term solidarity with those being incarcerated, disappeared, and terrorized today.
Who Was the Boy Goind and Why Does His Story Matter Now?
The narrative Kaur opens with begins 350 years ago in the foothills of the Himalayas in Punjab (1:00). A boy named Goind, who would later become known as Guru Tegh Bahadur, lived with his family until one day 500 men arrived from Kashmir with accounts of imperial terror. An emperor had seized power and was sending armies to terrorize families, separate children from parents, and incarcerate anyone who resisted. These men came to Goind's father—himself a great teacher and what Kaur calls a "sage warrior"—asking for help (0:40).
This moment becomes the hinge of the story. The young boy asked his father a direct question: "Will their suffering end?" (0:46). The father's answer was not one of false comfort or abstract promise. Instead, he said: "Joy Gurani, only if someone makes a great sacrifice" (0:53). The son then asked the question that shifted everything: "Who else to do that but you, father?" (0:65).
What follows is not metaphorical. Guru Tegh Bahadur turned to the assembled people and said, "The next time imperial armies come for you, tell them to come FOR ME FIRST" (0:77). He made his body a shield. This choice—to place himself between oppressive power and vulnerable people—became the defining act of his life and the foundation of his spiritual legacy.
What Does It Mean to Be a "Shield of Humanity"?
Kaur calls Guru Tegh Bahadur the "shield of humanity" (1:05), and this phrase contains both a literal and spiritual meaning. Literally, he offered his own body as a barrier against state violence. Spiritually, he taught a radically inclusive form of protection rooted in recognition: "see no stranger, see their children as our children, risk ourselves for each other" (1:07). The principle is not tribal—it does not protect only those who share your faith or blood. It is universal in scope: when anyone is in harm's way, the obligation to shield them activates.
Kaur emphasizes that this teaching emerged from a specific historical moment of oppression—an empire terrorizing its subjects—but its logic applies across all cycles of human oppression. "In every turn through the cycles of human history, people have faced the fires of oppression" (1:48). The question then becomes not situational but existential: "The question is not what will you do. The question is who will you be in the story?" (1:57). This reframe moves resistance from the realm of tactics or responses into the realm of identity and character.
How Did Guru Tegh Bahadur's Son Carry Forward His Legacy?
The historical outcome was brutal. A few months after Guru Tegh Bahadur stood against the emperor, nine-year-old Gobin—who would become Guru Gobind Singh, one of Sikhism's most revered leaders—received his father's head on a bed of flowers (1:74). This is not ornament in the story. The flowers signal something essential: even in the face of state execution, the community's response was not rage-fueled violence but a ritual honoring that preserved both grief and dignity.
The young Gobin inherited not just a martyr's legacy but a template for action. Under his leadership, Sikh martial tradition developed, but always in service of protecting the vulnerable, never as aggression for its own sake. The image of the father's head on flowers and the son's subsequent life become a teaching across centuries: there is a way to be fierce and loving at once.
What Is "Coming with Flowers" in the Context of Modern Oppression?
Kaur's speech arrives at its contemporary urgency in the middle section (1:31). She names current forms of oppression unfolding in the United States: loved ones being abducted and disappeared from city streets, children terrorized, families ripped apart, protests met with military force. These are not historical abstractions. She is speaking at the Federal Building in downtown Los Angeles, a site of federal power, while people are being detained by immigration authorities and subjected to state surveillance and violence.
Into this context, she introduces the refrain: "We come with flowers" (1:95). This is not passivity. She defines it as coming "with our ancestors at our back" and "with love as our guide," but also "with the eyes of a sage and the heart of a warrior" (2:13). The sage's eyes suggest perception, clarity, the ability to see through illusion and recognize the humanity in the oppressor as well as the oppressed. The warrior's heart suggests courage, willingness to engage in struggle, refusal to back down. Together, they describe a form of resistance that is both grounded in spiritual clarity and willing to put the body on the line.
The repetition of "we will come with flowers" is itself a practice—a commitment made communally, anchored in the present moment ("as long as we breathe"), and oriented toward ultimate liberation ("until everyone is free"). It is not a one-time gesture but a sustained return, a refusal to abandon those in cages or to allow incarceration and disappeared persons to become normalized or forgotten.
How Does Guru Tegh Bahadur's Choice Speak to Religious Freedom?
Though Kaur does not explicitly frame the story in terms of religious freedom, the historical context is central. Guru Tegh Bahadur lived during the reign of the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb, whose policies included forced conversions and religious persecution. Guru Tegh Bahadur was executed, according to historical records, because he refused to convert to Islam and protected others' right to practice their faith. His sacrifice was ultimately about the principle that no one should be forced to abandon their conscience or their religious identity.
In Kaur's retelling, this becomes a teaching that transcends the Sikh context. She frames it as a teaching about seeing no stranger and protecting all people—regardless of their faith or background. The universality is the point: Guru Tegh Bahadur's example shows that spiritual integrity and universal protection are inseparable. You cannot truly honor your own faith while allowing others to be persecuted for theirs.
What Question Does Kaur Ask Us to Sit With?
The most provocative moment in the talk comes when Kaur poses her central question: "The question is not what will you do. The question is who will you be in the story?" (1:57). This is not a call to calculate the right action or to strategize a response. It is a call to become a particular kind of person. Will you be someone who makes your body a shield? Will you be someone who sees no stranger? Will you be someone who keeps returning, with flowers, as long as people are caged?
This reframe acknowledges that in cycles of oppression, actions alone are insufficient. You need a continuous practice of becoming—of aligning your character with your values, of deepening your capacity to love across difference, of training yourself to return again and again even when the work is not finished. Guru Tegh Bahadur's sacrifice shows what it looks like to embody that commitment completely. Kaur's invitation is to practice it, moment by moment, in the here and now.
Where to go from here
If Guru Tegh Bahadur's life raises the question of who you are in moments of oppression, then the next step is practice. Consider: In your own community, who are the strangers you are called to see? What does it mean for your body—your time, your resources, your presence—to become a shield for someone in harm's way? Kaur's framework of "the eyes of a sage and the heart of a warrior" suggests both contemplation and action. Spend time in meditation or prayer to clarify your values. Then ask yourself how those values show up in your choices about where you go, whose company you keep, how you spend your energy. The practice of "coming with flowers" is not a single heroic act but a sustained commitment to return, to remember, to keep showing up for liberation. You can explore more of Valarie Kaur's teaching on revolutionary love and sage-warrior spirituality through her newsletter and social media platforms, where she continues to weave spiritual practice with contemporary movements for justice.



