I explored SikhiWiki website to see what it tells me about a Sikh wedding. I was amazed to read following. 'If you are invited to a Sikh wedding, don’t panic!'
At the end of the day, go to bed content that you know and feel right from the bottom of your heart that you have done the best you could. At the end of it, you will be the one who would have changed your own life forever.
"O child! Those were the good time when people had modesty and people lived in the loving-fear and respect of God....
A common fallacy propagated amongst Sikhs is that the Indian Constitution includes Sikhs in the definition of Hindus. The write-up aims to dispassionately analyse this view. The contention swirls around Article 25 of the Indian constitution.
What face do we show the world? How do we define ourselves? These are questions that are vital and fundamental to our sense of self.
We have all heard the refrain, “It is hard being a minority in this day in age” or “Being a minority in the United States is difficult.” The list of challenges is real and extensive...
I stand by my feelings truth and strength defining every thrust. If I were to define it, I would say that’s what makes me Sikh.
... the day after Waris Singh Ahluwalia, a first-class Sikh-American passenger, was refused a seat on an AeroMexico flight from Mexico to New York ... because he refused to remove his turban.
If I had only a few hours or days to live what would I do? Would I spend the next hours mindlessly traveling social media? Would I spend time reading and contemplating something philosophical and uplifting, or would I think and do something that would leave my footprints in the sands of time after I am gone?
We've all got this preconceived notion of what a religious person must be like, that we can't see people for who they are. Which is pretty much the same with any label we put on a person.