ÿþ<HTML><HEAD><TITLE>PU&#256T</TITLE> <style type="text/css"> .BODY { background-color: #EAF1F7; background-image: url('images/gtbh.jpg'); background-repeat: no-repeat; background-attachment: fixed; background-position: center; color: #0066CC;} .C1{text-align: justify;color: #0066CC;FONT-size: SMALL;FONT-family: Tahoma;} .BIB{text-align: center;color: #000099;FONT-size: SMALL;FONT-family: Tahoma;} .CONT{text-align: right;color: #FF0000;FONT-size: SMALL;FONT-family: Tahoma;} </style><META NAME="keywords" CONTENT="PUT"> <META http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8"></HEAD> <BODY class="BODY" oncontextmenu="return false" ondragstart="return false" onselectstart="return false"> <FONT ALIGN="JUSTIFY" FACE="Tahoma"> <p class="C1">&#65279PU&#256T, is an old village in Ludhi&#257&#7751&#257 district, 8 km east of M&#257chh&#299v&#257&#7771&#257 (30º-55'N,76º-12'E). Gur&#363 Gobind Si&#7749gh passed through this village after quitting Chamkaur on the night of 7 December 1705, but there was no Sikh shrine constructed here. It was only after the migrations of 1947 that the villagers established a <i>gurdw&#257r&#257</i> in one of the rooms of a residential house belonging to a Muslim emigrant. The Gur&#363 Granth S&#257hib is seated in this room and a Sikh pennant flies over it.</p> </ol><p class="CONT">Major Gurmukh Si&#7749gh (Retd.)<br></p><BR> </font><img src="counter.aspx" width="1px" height="1px" alt=""></HTML></BODY>