- Kam
Kam (
Sanskrit "kama") meaning "deep desire, uncontrolled longing, concupiscence, sensuality or lasciviousness" is counted among the five cardinal sins or sinful propensities. In common usage, the term stands for "excessive passion for sexual pleasure" and it is in this sense that it is considered an evil inSikhism .In
Brahmanical literature kam is not always disdained. Kam asKamadeva is a god in theHindu pantheon comparable to Eros ofGreek mythology andCupid of the Romans, and is as such not contradictory to spiritual life. Kam (gratification of desire) is inHinduism one of the four objectives (purusarthas) of human life, the other three being artha (acquirement of wealth), dharma (discharge of duty), and moksa (final emancipation).Jainism andBuddhism , which arose as protest movements againstBrahmanical ritualism and superstition, however looked upon kam with horror. Formuni s andsramana s ofJainism andBuddhism and foryogi s of the Sankhya school, kam was to be deliberately suppressed to achieve ultimate release. As a result, they preached celibacy and asceticism.The
Gurus rejectedBrahmanical superstition as well as self-mortifying austerities. Yet they recognized the four purusarthas, referred to ingurbani as char padaraths or the four human pursuits. However, inSikhism kam is not unrestricted gratification of carnal desires, but an impulse which needs to be kept under check like other impulses and passions. Unrestrained propensity towards kam, especially sexual relationship outside the marital bond, is condemned in the strongest terms inSikh codes of conduct as well as in the Scripture. It is a destructive evil and a deadly sin.To quote
Guru Arjan , Nanak V: “O Kam, thou landest people in hell and makest them wander through many births, enticest all minds, swayest all the three worlds and undoest one's meditation, austerities and restraint. The pleasure is ephemeral and thou afflictest high and low alike " (GG, 1358).Guru Tegh Bahadur Nanak IX, says: "In the sinning heart reigns kam and the fickle mind breaks out of control. Kam casts its noose even upon yogis, jangams and sannyasis. Only those imbued with God's Name (fall not a prey to it) and are able to go across the ocean of existence" (GG, 1186).Bhai Gurdas describes an idealSikh as one who is loyal to his wife and "regards all other women as mothers, sisters and daughters" (Varan, XXIX. 11).Guru Gobind Singh also said: "Love your own wedded wife ever so more, but do not go to another woman's bed even in a dream."Sikh codes of conduct strictly prohibit extramarital relations.While prescribing self-control and restraint and not total annihilation of kam, the
Gurus suggested two ways of channelizing and sublimating it. On the one hand, they pronounced grihastha or married life to be the ideal one, and, on the other laid down love of God and absorption in His Name as the essential principle of spiritual discipline. SaysGuru Gobind Singh "Hear ye all, I proclaim here the truth: only they who love God find Him." The image of a devotee most common inSikh Scripture is one of a wife deeply in love with her kant or husband presently separated from him, and waiting, craving, praying for a reunion with him. Such fervent devotion cannot but bridle the wayward passion in man. According toGuru Arjan , a person who has cultivated the love of the Lord’s feet would desire neither kingship, nor worldly power, nor even mukti or liberation (GG 534).
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