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The Sardari in-which the Rakhi tax was paid to by the locals was obliged to protect them from "plunder, theft, or molestation" from within the community or by outsiders. [3] [9] Folks from all backgrounds were afforded protection by the Khalsa through the Rakhi arrangement; from various religious backgrounds (such as Hindus, Sikhs, and Muslims) to various social classes (peasants and landowners).
The Rakhi system was the payment-for-protection tributary protectorate scheme practiced by the Dal Khalsa of the Sikh Confederacy in the 18th century. [ 42 ] [ 43 ] It was a large source of income to the Sikh Misls.
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Rakhi, Nepal, a town in Nepal; Rakhi system, an 18th-century payment-for-protection scheme practiced by the Dal Khalsa of the Sikh Confederacy; Raksha Bandhan, or Rakhi, an annual Hindu ceremony, and a type of bracelet associated with the ceremony
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Official establishment of the Rakhi system [10] 7 November 1760 Sarbat Khalsa passes Gurmata to attack Lahore [11] 27 October 1761 Gurmata passed during the annual Diwali meeting at Amritsar that supporters, such as agents, informers and collaborators, of the Durrani Empire must be annihilated.