Sikhism understands death as a transition within an ongoing moral and devotional life, not as a moment of judgment, ritual determination, or metaphysical resolution. It affirms an enduring soul that persists beyond bodily death, yet rejects the idea that the soul is divine or that death itself effects liberation. The central obstacle to freedom is haumai (ego), which must be dissolved during life through remembrance of God, ethical conduct, and divine grace. After death, the soul ordinarily undergoes rebirth within saṃsāra, shaped by karma operating under God’s will, while liberation (mukti) releases the soul from rebirth into a non-spatial union with Waheguru. Heaven and hell language is deemphasized and treated symbolically rather than as fixed destinations. Sikhism rejects postmortem judgment courts, ancestor mediation, and ritual manipulation of fate. Funerary practices focus on acceptance of divine will and communal remembrance rather than influencing the soul’s destiny. Overall, Sikhism situates death within a life-centered devotional framework, where transformation, responsibility, and liberation are achieved through lived practice rather than postmortem mechanisms.

1. Nature of the Soul or Self

2. Destination After Death

3. Judgment and Accountability

4. Ancestors and Ongoing Presence

5. Funeral and Burial Rites

6. Eschatology (Ultimate End)

7. Social Function