<div class="section1"><div class="Normal"><span style="" font-family:="" arial="" font-size:="">KISHANGANJ: For him faith is supreme and all Gods are one. Twenty-year-old Md Kalam, a newspaper hawker is a Muslim by birth but loves to make the annual pilgrimage to Baba Baidyanathdham.</span><br /><br /><span style="" font-family:="" arial="" font-size:="">This was his second year to the holy place.
He trekked all along from Sultanganj to Baidyanathdham with a "Kanwar" in his hand.</span><br /><br /><span style="" font-family:="" arial="" font-size:="">"It has been a unique experience for me," he tells ToI. He feels transported to the "other world" while jostling along with other Kanwarias.</span><br /><br /><span style="" font-family:="" arial="" font-size:="">While trekking in the saffron dress chanting "bol bam" which reverberates along the 105 km-long road journey he says all worldly worries simply evaporate. It is simply transcendental, he adds.</span><br /><br /><span style="" font-family:="" arial="" font-size:="">"Religion should not create barriers. We should truly follow God''s path," he says modestly.</span></div> </div>