Na
koi Hindu, na Musalman This is arguably one of the first Sikh teachings. Tradition says that
when Guru Nanak re-appeared after having apparently drowned in the River
Beas, the first statement he made was “Nai Koi Hindu, na Musalman”. Guru Nanak saw that these words are really just manmade labels that don’t
go with one after this life. He saw into the real souls of people, and not
the barriers, defense-mechanisms, buttresses, and prides people had set up
for themselves. There is no Hindu or Muslim! Furthermore, if a real God-sent Guru were to come to Punjab again
today, I think he would say, "There is no Hindu, Muslim, or
Sikh". In the same tradition and meaning. Because one should not use
labels, but see beyond that to what one truly and really is. No
"names" or labels will save you or support you hereafter. You
cant hide behind them in front of Dharam Raia. When God sees you, he sees the soul, the part of Him He broke off of
from himself, and planted in that body. He recognizes no names. Similarly
when Dharam Raia sees you after this life, he sees no names either. He
only sees your soul, with all of the actions you’ve done written on it.
By this he judges, and not by any "title" of job, vocation, or
religion that man has set. He sees through all of this, so we should too. Then of course someone is going to ask, "Well then why call
yourself a Sikh, or keep your hair?" The answer is that there is a
flip side to the statement of "there is no Hindu, and no
Muslim." There IS a Sikh, Hindu, and Muslim, if you are absolutely true to your
creed, and become that which your religion tells you to be. With no
hypocrisy. That is what we should strive to be. The 5 Ks help you in this
life, and help you to better your ACTIONS in this life, so you may be
better judged hereafter. A person of any faith who has lived his/her life
cleanly, is better off than a person who has uncut hair but is full of
greed. The first will be better off in the hereafter than the second. The
ideal is of course, to marry the two. To be of long hair, 5 Ks, and of the
best exemplary action, love, and compassion. That's excellence according
to Sikhism. So the 5 Ks as per this argument, are tools to help you live a cleaner
life. No one who doesn't have long hair should be afraid of or
"hate" people who do have long hair, but should see that those
people should be striving to better themselves beyond the ordinary man.
Keshadharis don't hate short haired Sikhs. At least I don't. "Na koi hindu, na musalman, nor any non-God people. We are all
souls." This is really a transcendental statement by one who saw beyond all
things earthly, to their real essence. He wasn't fooled by anyone. This statement cannot be understood by reasoning. It has to be
understood by experience. The best way to understand what Guru Nanak meant
by "Na koi Hindu Na Musalman", is to leave all else, and sit in
quiet seclusion by the seashore for a few moments. Sit there cross legged,
and close your eyes and meditate. Sitting straight, release all thoughts
of the world. Release everything. Let go of all your attachments of
EVERYTHING. Be at peace. Release it all. Everything you have ever known in
the world. Think of nothing else, and know nothing else, and be nothing
else. Release the entire world from within you. Then sit for a minute more with no thoughts in your mind. Then open
your eyes and see out into the wonderful sea. You should see nothing but
God Himself. Nothing but him. At that moment you will know that nothing
else really exists but God Himself, and that all else is false. "It
doesn't really exist." You will know that the world is maya. An
illusion. God is really all that exists! At that moment you should know that God is all that really is. You
should be laughing at yourself. You should know that everything that man
has ever conjured up in the world has no meaning. And that God is all
there is. You should also see that all that man does is wrong, and false. That
knowing God is the only way. Then one should bow his head toward God and
receive pilgrimage of the True Guru (God Himself). Sitting there one should unsee all else, and only See Him. And thereby
realize the true values of life. At that point one may even have the
realization that he has lived his life all wrong. That one has been
attached to all in the world, and has been "duped" by man and
his labels. It is then that one understands the meaning of "Na koi hindu na
musalman." Not only that but one sees that ALL is false, and only God
is wondrous. This is a state of detachment. Only in evolving above the
world does one truly understand that meaning. It cant be understood by any amount of thinking. Rather one has to let
go all "thinking" in order to see it. One doesn't see the true
message of the seers until one unsees all else. "Wah Wah Wah" is what one should be filled with at that
point. One's face should be smiling. The Gurbani in Sri Guru Granth Sahib was all written in a state of
absolute transcendence. Transcendence isn’t a word from another
religion. It means detachment, and realizing God as the essence, exactly
as Gurbani teaches. I am saying this because I have found myself saying the exact same
sentiment as expressed by that phrase, in reference to other things, many
many times. Because I see that there is nothing but God. It /He can be
realized by His Grace, and by no other way. And that state of detachment of knowing nothing but He is what is
mentioned many times in Guru Granth Sahib. Gurus minds were in God
Himself, even though their feet walked on the ground. Mohinderjeet Singh
(there is no Hindu nor
Muslim)