It’s not for nothing that Punjabis swear by the “donaali”—the double-barreled shotgun. The Guru’s 400th birth anniversary is more like it, especially at a time when Punjab will be voting a new assembly next year. The Congress is playing the religion card to the hilt since the Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) has floundered on several occasions during its rule when multiple cases of blasphemous acts such as miscreants burning Sikh religious texts were reported. The Akali Dal-BJP coalition government was accused of lethargy in catching and punishing the culprits. Memory is a powerful tool and the sacrilegious cases of 2015 still rankle. The panthic or religious forces, once the core support base of the Akalis, have now vacillated towards Captain Singh—but not necessarily towards the Congress. The stakes, no doubt, has gone up for the chief minister. To keep this influential constituency happy, the government has elaborate plans and special programmes to celebrate Guru Tegh Bahadur’s anniversary. “It shall be our endeavour to spread Guruji’s message of secularism and peaceful co-existence globally,” the CM said.