As many as 84 heads of foreign missions from New Delhi led by Union minister Hardeep Singh Puri on Tuesday visited the Golden Temple to take part in celebrations of the 550thbirth anniversary of Sikhism's founder, Guru Nanak Dev.
The countries whose heads of foreign missions visited the shrine included Afghanistan, Australia, Bhutan, Cambodia, Georgia, Greece, Iceland, Israel, Kuwait, Malaysia, Mexico, South Africa, Spain, Sri Lanka, New Zealand, USA, Nepal.
On reaching the temple, they first visited the interpretation centre at its entrance, also known as Golden Temple Plaza. There they were received by SGPC chief Gobind Singh Longowal and given robes of honour with replicas of the shrine, woolen shawls and a set of Sikh religious books.
Inside the plaza, they watched four short documentaries about the Sikh religion and its history, the history of the Golden Temple and the role of the Sikh community for the well-being of humanity.
All the foreign mission heads paid obeisance at the temple's sanctum sanctorum and spent a few minutes inside. "All of them experienced a spiritual ambience as Sikh priests recited religious hymns," a SGPC official said.
The dignitaries also visited the langar (community kitchen) hall where they saw how langar is prepared for thousands of devotees each day. Some foreign mission heads cooked chapattis with Sikh devotees and also partook in 'langar' while sitting on the floor.
Inside the temple plaza, Puri in a brief address said, "We are thankful to the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR) which invited heads of foreign missions in New Delhi to visit the Golden Temple in Amritsar."