MOH
MOH, from Sanskrit root muh meaning “to become stupefied, to be bewildered or perplexed, to err, to be mistaken,” stands in ancient texts for perplexity or confusion as also for the cause of confusion, that is, avidyd or ajndna (ignorance or illusion). In another context, it stands for “the snare of worldly illusion, infatuation.” Its function is twofold: it bedims the discernment of truth, prevents the discernment of reality, and it creates an error of judgement or leads to wrong knowledge (mithya jndna). Men believe in an eternal reality of their own existence or ego; they see truth in what is false and seek happiness in what begets suffering.In Punjabi moh generally means love of and attachment to worldly things and relations.In Sikh Scripture, the term frequently occurs coupled with mdyd (maid) as mdydmoh interpreted both as infatuation for or clinging to the illusory world of the senses and as illusion of worldly love and attachment. Sikh interpretation of mdyd, however, differs from that of classical advaita philosophy, which considers the phenomenal world unreal and therefore an illusion caused by human ignorance. In Sikhism, the visible world is a manifestation of God Himself and is therefore real; yet it is not satyaor true in the sense of being immutable and eternal.
This world of mass. form and movement woven into the warp and woof of time and space is God`s play created at His pleasure and is as such real and sacred; but it represents only one transient aspect and not the Ultimate Reality. Mdyd is not an illusion in the sense of a mirage, a factual nullity; it is a delusion which represents transient as permanent and a part as the whole. Moh for mdyd, i.e. for this transient world of the senses, hinders the soul`s search for its ultimate goal and is, therefore, one of the Five Evils. It is related, on the one hand, co kdm (desire, love) and lobh (possessiveness, covetousness) and, on the other, to ahankdr (sense of I, my and mine).
That is how moh has been referred to as a net, mdidjdl (GG, 266). Guru Nanak advises shedding of moh as it is the source of all evil and a cause for repeated births and deaths. (GG, 356). The antidote to moh is non attachment. This is not easy, for the Gurus preach active participation in life rather than renunciation and escapism. Ultimately, of course, all depends on nadaror God`s grace. Says Guru Nanak “nadari kare td ehu mohujdiby (His) grace alone will this moh be cancelled” (GG, 356). The right remedy is the understanding {gidn} that the mundane world, its relations and affairs, demanding one`s participation and involvement are transient.
Non attachment thus is not non action, but an attitude to action characterized by Guru Nanak as that of a bdjigar, participant in a sport. The world, says Guru Nanak in a hymn in Maru measure, “is like a seasonal pastureland where one passeth but a few days…. Like the bdjigar one plays one`s part here and departs” (GG, 1023). An image in gurbdm describing the ideal life is that of the lotus which, although living in water, keeps its head above it without allowing itself 10 be submerged.
References :
1. Sabadarth Sri Guru Granth Sahib. Amritsar, 1969
2. Avtar Singh, Ethics of the Sikhs. Patiala, 1970
3. Sher Singh, The Philosophy of Sikhism. Lahore, 1944