Learn Japji Sahib
Japji Sahib for Kids — Read, Understand, and Remember
Guru Nanak Dev Ji's morning prayer, learned gently — one stanza at a time. See the Gurmukhi, sound it out with an easy transliteration, and discover what each line means, with quizzes and printable coloring sheets along the way.
The Journey
Walk the path, one stanza at a time
Forty-one steps — from the Mool Mantar and opening Salok, through all thirty-eight Pauris, to the closing Salok. Tap any open step to begin. No streaks, no pressure — go at your child's pace.
How to learn Japji Sahib with your kids
A simple five-step rhythm you can repeat for every section — read, understand, learn the words, test, and color. Go at your child's pace; even one pauri a week adds up.
1. Read it together
Read the Gurmukhi out loud, then the easy transliteration. Hearing and seeing the words together helps them stick.
2. Understand the meaning
Talk about the simple English meaning. Ask your child what they think it means in their own words.
3. Learn the words
Use the word-by-word glossary to learn a few new Gurmukhi words at a time — the building blocks of the whole bani.
4. Test yourself
Take the short quiz for each section to check what you remember. Matching Gurmukhi words to meanings makes it fun.
5. Color and keep
Print the coloring sheet for each pauri. Coloring the outlined Gurmukhi is a calm, hands-on way to remember it.
Color the whole Japji Sahib
Each pauri comes as a free printable coloring sheet — the Gurmukhi drawn as outlined letters on a floral border, so children can color the bani themselves. A calm, screen-free way to spend time with the words and remember them.
Frequently asked questions
- What is Japji Sahib?
- Japji Sahib is the opening composition of Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji, written by Guru Nanak Dev Ji. It begins with the Mool Mantar and is made up of 38 pauris (stanzas) framed by an opening and closing Salok. It is the first bani of the daily Nitnem and a foundation of Sikh prayer.
- How many pauris are in Japji Sahib?
- Japji Sahib has 38 pauris (stanzas). On this page the journey is shown as 41 steps — the Mool Mantar, the opening Salok (Aad Sach), all 38 pauris, and the closing Salok — so children can move through the whole paath one calm step at a time.
- How can this page help my child learn Japji Sahib?
- Each stanza is taught line by line — the Gurmukhi, an easy transliteration, and a simple English meaning, with a key-words list to build vocabulary. Every stanza also has a short word quiz and a printable coloring sheet, so children can read, understand, and remember at their own pace.
- Are the Japji Sahib coloring sheets free?
- Yes — the per-pauri coloring sheets are free to download and print. Each one shows the Gurmukhi as outlined letters on a floral border so children can color the bani themselves. A complete bound coloring book covering all of Japji Sahib is also available.
- Is the English meaning accurate?
- The Gurmukhi text follows Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji (Ang 1–8) and should be treated as the original Gurbani. The English is a simplified, child-friendly rendering of standard scholarly translations — a learning aid alongside, not a replacement for, reading the original bani.
Keep learning
Learn Gurmukhi letters
Start with the 35 letters of the Gurmukhi alphabet — the script Japji Sahib is written in.
Gurmukhi tracing worksheets
Free printable tracing sheets to practise writing every Gurmukhi letter.
Punjabi picture dictionary
Build vocabulary with hundreds of everyday Punjabi words and pictures.