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Merit / Merit and Virtue: Sanskrit Punya, Pali Punna - Chinese Gung de -... nalanda-university.com | Merit / Merit and Virtue: Sanskrit Punya, Pali Punna - Chinese Gung de -... bhaisajya-guru.com | Pharmacist.com | Five for five: MTM survives in all HCR bills pharmacist.com | SUTTON Pilates - FIVE DOCK | Five Dock | Sydney... findpilates.com.au |
In Sikhism, the Five Virtues are fundamental qualities which one should develop in order to reach Mutki, or to reunite or merge with God. The Sikh Gurus taught that these positive human qualities were Sat (truth), Daya (compassion), Santokh (contentment), Nimrata (humility), and Pyar (love).
[edit] Sat
Sat is the virtue of truthful living, which means practising "righteousness, honesty, justice, impartiality and fair play."[1]
[edit] SantokhSantokh, or contentment, is freedom "from ambition, envy, greed and jealousy. Without contentment, it is impossible to acquire peace of mind."[1]
[edit] DayaThe exercise of Daya, or compassion, involves "considering another's difficulty or sorrow as one's own and helping to relieve it as far as possible. Compassion also includes the overlooking of imperfections and mistakes of others, for to err is human."[1]
[edit] NimrataNimrata, translated as "humility", "benevolence" or "humbleness", is the fourth virtue.
[edit] PyarPyar requires Sikhs to be filled with the love of God.
[edit] References
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