Guru Nanak — "I am neither male nor female, nor am I sexless. I am the Peaceful One, whose for…"
I am neither male nor female, nor am I sexless. I am the Peaceful One, whose form is self-effulgent, powerful radiance.
I am neither male nor female, nor am I sexless. I am the Peaceful One, whose form is self-effulgent, powerful radiance.
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"Realization of Truth is higher than all else. Higher still is truthful living."
"Speak the truth, live the truth, and practice the truth."
"Before becoming a Muslim, a Hindu, a Sikh or a Christian, let's become a Human first."
"The mind is like a wild elephant, it needs the goad of the Guru's word to control it."
"I am neither a child, a young man, nor an ancient; nor am I of any caste."
Founder of Sikhism and the first of the Ten Sikh Gurus, whose teachings of one universal God and rejection of caste shaped Punjab. Closely associated with Kabir (mystical poet whose verses appear in the Sikh Guru Granth Sahib). For an intellectual contrast, see Brahmanical orthodoxy, the Hindu caste-and-ritual establishment of his era — Sikhism was founded as a deliberate alternative to both Hindu ritual hierarchy and Islamic exclusivism — Nanak's universalism was a structural rejection of caste and priestly mediation.
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The quote expresses transcendence beyond binary gender categories and their negation entirely. The divine—or the enlightened soul—exists beyond all human-made distinctions. 'Self-effulgent' means radiating its own light, requiring no external source. This captures a vision of the divine as pure, boundless peace and luminosity—not a being shaped by physical form, social role, or biological category, but an infinite presence defined solely by its own radiant nature.
Guru Nanak (1469–1539) built Sikhism on Ik Onkar—One formless Creator beyond human attributes. He rejected caste hierarchy, idol worship, and gender-based spiritual inequality, declaring women equally capable of divine realization. His hymns in the Guru Granth Sahib repeatedly dissolve dualities. Having traveled thousands of miles across Asia confronting orthodoxy in Hindu temples and Muslim mosques alike, he personally embodied the dissolution of identity into the divine that this quote describes.
Guru Nanak lived in late 15th–early 16th century Punjab, witnessing the Lodi Sultanate's fall to Babur's Mughal invasion in 1526. Hindu society enforced strict caste and gender hierarchies; Islamic orthodoxy maintained rigid theological distinctions. Bhakti movement poets—Kabir, Mirabai—were simultaneously challenging these norms through devotional verse. Nanak's radical dissolution of gender identity into divine radiance directly confronted both traditions' insistence that the sacred operated within defined, categorized human frameworks.
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