Akal_Purakh

Akal Purakh

Akal Purakh

Sikh name used to denote God


Akal Purakh (Punjabi: ਅਕਾਲ ਪੁਰਖ, romanized: Akāla purakha, lit.'the Timeless Being')[1] is an interchangeable Sikh name used to denote God, or the omnipresent divine.

Meaning

The body armour of Guru Gobind Singh, with the opening verses of the "Akal Ustat" - Akal Purakh Ki Rachha Hamnai

It literally means "without-death being".[citation needed] The first word Akal, literally "timeless, immortal, non-temporal," is a term integral to Sikh tradition and philosophy. It is extensively used in the Guru Granth Sahib, and the Dasam Granth hymns by Guru Gobind Singh, who titled one of his poetic compositions Akal Ustat, i.e. "In Praise (Ustati) of the Timeless One (Akal)". However, the concept of Akal is not peculiar to the Dasam Granth. It goes back to the very origins of the Sikh faith with Guru Nanak.[1]

The term Kāl refers to "time," with the negative prefix a- added to render the word akal, meaning "timeless" or "eternal."[1] Purakh refers to "being" or "entity." Together, the two words form the meaning "timeless, eternal being."

The word Purakh (ਪੁਰਖ) is the Punjabi form of Purusha (पुरुष).

Akal Purakh does not refer to a personified deity like the Christian conception of God centred around a concept of personal salvation, but rather to a concept of ultimate reality.[1] It cannot be fully described in words but it can be experienced by those who reach a certain meditative state in-which one reaches liberation.[1] Akal Purakh took pity upon the sufferings of humanity entrapped in sansara, the continuous cycle of rebirth and death, and revealed the divine words (gurshabad) in the form of gurbani, taught by the successive Sikh gurus to those of humanity willing to learn how to know and experience Akal Purakh.[1]

See also


References

  1. McLeod, William H. (1989). The Sikhs: History, Religion, and Society. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 49–50. ISBN 978-0-231-06815-4.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Akal_Purakh, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.