Guru Nanak — "The greatest wealth is to be without desires."
The greatest wealth is to be without desires.
The greatest wealth is to be without desires.
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"Dwell in peace in the home of your own being, and the Messenger of Death will not be able to touch you."
"By the grace of God, I am what I am. And what I am is really craving some pakoras right now."
"The mind is a mirror, and the world is its reflection."
"The greatest treasure is the Name of God."
"Make compassion the cotton, contentment the thread, modesty the knot and truth the twist. This is the sacred thread of the soul; if you have it, then go ahead and put it on me."
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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True abundance comes not from owning more but from wanting less. When you stop chasing possessions, status, and endless cravings, you discover a quiet sufficiency that money cannot buy. A person ruled by desires is always poor because the hunger never ends, while someone content with what they have is already rich. Freedom from wanting is the only wealth nobody can take from you or inflate away.
Guru Nanak spent decades traveling as a wandering teacher, rejecting caste privilege, ritual hoarding, and the merchant wealth of his own upbringing as a accountant's son in Talwandi. He preached that attachment to maya, worldly illusion, blocks union with the divine. Living simply, sharing meals through langar, and working honestly (kirat karni) while remembering God defined his path. This saying distills his lifelong insistence that inner contentment outranks any material prize.
Guru Nanak lived 1469 to 1539, during the early Mughal conquest of Punjab and the tail end of the Delhi Sultanate. He witnessed Babur's brutal 1521 invasion of Saidpur, rigid Hindu caste hierarchies, Islamic clerical power, and heavy temple and pilgrimage economies that extracted wealth from the poor. Spiritual authority was bought through donations and rituals. Against this backdrop of violence, inequality, and religious commercialism, his teaching that desirelessness, not gold or conquest, was real wealth was genuinely radical.
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