AgNoStiC MuSliM
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So you are saying that in the legal sense Sikhs are treated as Hindus, but not in th religious sense ...^Listen mr. Dabong, firstly, you don't know the first thing about Indian legal system.
The term Hindu as per legal definition (which has precedent) includes all dharmic religions of India. This is why Sikh personal laws come under the Hindu personal law. That does not imply that Sikhs are treated as Hindus (in the religious sense) or that they have to follow Hindu religious practices.
Now thats an oxymoron - 'Hindu personal law' (speaking of law based in a particular religious ideology) is 'highly secularized'?What is termed as Hindu personal laws is actually a highly secularized framework of personal laws. Whatever religious component is there, is common to all dharmic religions of India.
So far you have not made a 'complex argument, as you claimed to Dabong, but a rather confused and contradictory one.
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