Monday, August 24, 2009

Amarinder supports separate committee for Sikhs in Haryana

Amarinder supports separate committee for Sikhs in Haryana
PTI 22 August 2009, 07:04pm IST

LUDHIANA: Fully supporting Haryana government's move to set up a separate committee for managing Sikh affairs in the state, former Punjab CM Capt Amarinder Singh on Saturday said the community there had the right to decide about its future.

Early this month, Haryana chief minister Bhupinder Singh Hooda had said that a separate body for Sikhs on the lines of SGPC would be set up in the state provided there were no legal hurdles. Later, he said a referendum would also be conducted to help Sikhs take a final call on the issue.

Haryana cabinet though, recommended dissolution of the state Assembly on Friday.

Speaking to media persons after appearing in a local court in Ludhiana, Singh alleged that Akalis themselves earlier divided the Sikh community which has led to such a demand from Haryana's Sikhs.

"Today they (the Akalis) are saying it amounts to dividing Sikhs, but let me remind them that they are the same people who divided the Sikhs and Punjabis decades ago when they launched the Punjabi subha movement," he said.

Amarinder pointed out that it is the democratic right of every Sikh in Haryana to decide whether he wants to remain with the SGPC or set up a separate committee there and rejected the opposition by Punjab chief minister Prakash Singh Badal and SGPC chief Avtar Singh Makkar over the move.

"Who is Badal or Makkar to decide about that?", he asked. About his party's loss in the recent bypolls on three seats in the state, he said the ruling party used "brute force" to win over the seats.

with thanks : source : http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/news/india/Amarinder-supports-separate-committee-for-Sikhs-in-Haryana/articleshow/4923049.cms

SikhsIndia
www.sohnijodi.com
A sikh web portal

Saturday, August 22, 2009

The dancing patka of Dil bole Hadipa

Have you seen the Dancing patka of Dil bole Hadipa. It can be seen in the Promos being aired on various TV channels. How can one make a joke of sikh turban or patka.

SikhsIndia
www.sohnijodi.com
A sikh web portal

Friday, August 21, 2009

Delegation from the Interdisciplinary Centre for the Study of Religion & Worldview, K.U.Leuven, Belgium, reached Golden temple, Amritsar - view pics









More pics of Belgian delegation at Amritsar





some more pics of Belgian delegation at Amritsar & Delhi

















More pics at Delhi can be viewed on our News dated 2nd August on the same blog i.e. www.sikhsindia.blogspot.com with Title Delegation from the Interdisciplinary Centre for the Study of Religion & Worldview, K.U.Leuven, Belgium, reached Gurdwara Rakab Ganj Sahib, New Delhi

with thanks : www.indiablog.be

SikhsIndia
www.sohnijodi.com
A Sikh web portal

Historical room unearthed in excavation near Lakhnor Sahib, Ambala




















In the pics above :
A devotee prays at the site of a 500-year-old room unearthed near Gurdwara Lakhnor Sahib in Ambala; and (right) wooden beds used by Guru Gobind Singh during his childhood. — Tribune photos by Kamal Sachar



Excavation near Lakhnor Sahib, Historical room unearthed
Suman Bhatnagar

An excavation conducted recently at the historical Lakhnor Sahib Gurdwara, near Ambala City, has revealed a room having several artefacts. The finding has generated a lot of enthusiasm among the local Sikh community.

The room, at the depth of about 25 feet, was found during excavation work being carried out near the gurdwara by the managing committee.

Lakhnor Sahib is a historical religious place where Guru Gobind Singh had spent the initial years of his life as his mother, Mata Gujri, hailed from this village. The devotees are of the view that the room was around 500 years old and had been constructed by the maternal grandfather and grandmother of Guru Gobind Singh. Now the devotees have started the reconstruction of this room. A large number of Sikhs have been coming here to have a look at the historical room.

A copper sword, apparently made in 1804, was also found from the house of a villager, Harpreet Singh, while he was digging the foundation of a room close to the gurdwara. A wooden bed, sword and a copper plate which was used by Guru Gobind Singh in his childhood, are kept safe in this gurdwara.

A well from which Mata Gujri used to collect water is still existing near the gurdwara. According to believers a number of diseases are cured by drinking the water of this well. Every year on the occasion of Gurpurb thousands of devotees from various states come to visit this gurdwara.

with thanks : source : http://www.tribuneindia.com/2007/20071230/haryana.htm


SikhsIndia
www.sohnijodi.com
A sikh web portal
(Plz note : It's an old news of Dec. 2007, being uploaded for our valued visitors as the news seems to had gone unnoticed at that time. Recent pics of the site are being uploaded very soon.)

UK Sikhs accuse BBC of racism

UK Sikhs accuse BBC of racism
PTI 20 August 2009, 01:06pm IST

LONDON: A race row has erupted at BBC's flagship Asian station, which has been accused of being insensitive towards Sikhs and encouraging a Muslim presenter to mock Sikhism.

"We should not be paying a licence fee for promoting the ignorance-based ramblings of those bent on self-promotion who sneer at Asian religion and culture," said Hardeep Singh, a spokesman of the Sikh Media Monitoring Group, which accused BBC's Asian Network of being insensitive towards listeners from the minority community.

The Sikh Group has written to the BBC asking for a full transcript of Adil Ray's show, which was removed from their website after threats from angry Sikh listeners who accused the popular Muslim presenter of denigrating the "kirpan" dagger - an important religious symbol and one of five ceremonial symbols that baptised Sikhs are expected to wear at all times, The Independent newspaper said today.

Members of the Sikh community complained that Ray, in the show broadcast by the Birmingham-based network on Thursday August 6, had been disparaging about whether Sikhs really needed to carry kirpans. The complaint was based on Ray's discussion of the cancellation of a Punjabi music concert in Canada where police had banned Sikhs who refused to remove their "kirpan", the British daily reported.

BBC's Asian Network had courted controversy last year when the Lord Ahmed of the Labour Party had accused the network of being biased against Muslims.

Indarjit Singh, veteran Sikh journalist and chief of the Network of Sikh Organisations, said Britain's Asian communities should move away from stations aimed at a small demographic.

"Stations like BBC Asian Network do little to encourage integration and social cohesion because they allow communities to ghettoise themselves," he said.

Supporters of the Asian Network, however, believe the radio station is a vital voice for Britain's Asians in the otherwise white-dominated industries of media and broadcasting.

The network, which was set up eight years ago after the BBC's then director general Greg Dyke described his own organisation as "hideously white", has denied the accusations or any suggestion that Ray meant to mock Sikhism.

with thanks : source : http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/news/world/uk/UK-Sikhs-accuse-BBC-of-racism/articleshow/4914512.cms

SikhsIndia
www.sohnijodi.com
A Sikh web portal

The Punjabi Cultural Society of Chicago

The Punjabi Cultural Society of Chicago is a not-for-profit community organization
devoted to promoting education, good citizenship, Punjabi culture, language,
performing arts, healthy life style, and sports in the metropolitan Chicago area.

Punjabi Cultural Society of Chicago invites you COME ONE COME ALL

15th ANNUAL PCS PUNJABI SPORTS FESTIVAL
A DAY OF FREE FUN & FOOD; Sunday, August 23, 2009, 9am to 5pm.
Community Recreation Center, 120 E. Oak St. Addison , IL . 60101 ( Community Park , one block North-East of Addison Road & Lake Street in Addison )
http://www.addisonparkdistrict.org/community_park.html
Directional Map
http://www.mapquest.com/maps/map.adp?address=120%20E%20Oak%20St&city=Addison&state=IL&zipcode=60101%2d2811&country=US&title=120%20E%20Oak%20St%20Addison%2c%20IL%2060101%2d2811%2c%20US&cid=lfmaplink2

http://maps.google.com/maps?hl=en&source=hp&q=120+oak+street+addison+il+60101&safe=images&um=1&ie=UTF8&split=0&gl=us&ei=4ciNSpHvJZC2MPDcza8K&sa=X&oi=geocode_result&ct=image&resnum=1

Kabaddi, Volleyball, Soccer, Athletics, Musical Chairs, Bhangra Aerobics,
Yoga, Kid's events, & much more.
PCS Kabaddi Cup First Prize $3100, Second Prize $1100,
PCS Volleyball, Basketball & Soccer Cup First Prize $500

Free entry. Free Breakfast and Lunch. Ample Parking. Family Style Fun. All day Sports Festival.

PCS BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT
Saturday August 22, 2009, 9 am to 5 pm
Community Recreation Center, 120 E. Oak St. Addison , IL . 60101
( Community Park , one block North-East of Addison Road & Lake Street in Addison )
http://www.addisonparkdistrict.org/community_park.html

For more information, Please Contact:
PCS hotline 847-359-5PCS,
Ronny S. Kular 312-318-4426,
Surinder S. Sangha 847-532-0610,
Bhinder S. Pamma 847-361-3579
or any PCS official.

For further information please contact:
PUNJABI CULTURAL SOCIETY of CHICAGO ,
P.O. Box 1244 , Palatine, IL 60078
Ph: 847-359-5727, Fax: 847-359-1107
e-mail to info@PCSChicago.org
PCS website www.PCSChicago.org

uploaded(as per mail received from PCS Chicago)by :
SikhsIndia
www.sohnijodi.com
A Sikh web portal

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

How-to CDs, clinics to get the turban right

How-to CDs, clinics to get the turban right
Supriya Bhardwaj, TNN 19 August 2009, 03:24am IST

CHANDIGARH: Just how serious is the threat to the Sikh turban from the community’s youth, increasingly at odds with the headgear? Pretty grave, it
seems.

Worried at the trend of Sikh boys shorn of long hair and sans turban, the Akaal Purkh Ki Fauj (APKF), literally meaning ‘army of God’ and with its international headquarters in Malaysia, has decided to open 100 ‘‘turban clinics across India within the next six months. The organization, which swears by technology but harps on tradition, will have experts in these clinics teaching people how to tie the ‘pagri’ in a variety of styles.

Not just that, it will also distribute CDs of ‘Turban Tutor’, a software that helps people learn techniques at home, and ‘Smart Turban’, another software that wraps in 32 different turban styles, which members have developed themselves.

‘‘It’s an emergency situation,’’ said Jaswinder Singh Advocate, SGPC member and director of the Turban Pride Movement (under the APKF umbrella). ‘‘By April 13, 2010, we plan to set up 100 turban clinics across the country. The intention is to motivate Sikh youngsters and kids to take pride in the turban. CDs of Turban Tutor and Smart Turban will be distributed free of cost to people walking into the clinics,’’ he said.

Advocate added that the clinics will also pass on lessons in hair care management. The Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee, the apex body of Sikhs, has also put its weight behind the project. SGPC chief Avtar Singh Makkar said, ‘‘The turban is an integral part of a Sikh’s life. We need innovative techniques to motivate our youngsters and we will support this effort wholeheartedly. It is worrisome the way turbans are vanishing’’.

The APKF, with 80,000 members world wide, said it would do everything to make the mission a success. ‘‘The situation is quite bleak, Advocate said.

The first turban clinic was launched in Amritsar in 2006 on an experimental basis. But now branches are ready to be opened at a string of towns and cities.

with thanks : source : http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/news/india/How-to-CDs-clinics-to-get-the-turban-right/articleshow/4908733.cms

SikhsIndia
www.sohnijodi.com
A sikh web portal

Sikhs are much adored in Pakistan

Sikhs are much adored in Pakistan
Ajay Bharadwaj / DNAWednesday,
August 19, 2009 2:14 IST

Lahore: There is a curious liking for Sikhs in Lahore. The moment locals see a Sikh, they warmly greet him "satsrikaal sardarji" and go out of the way to enquire about his health. Shopkeepers even feel embarrassed taking money from Sikh customers.

In a city where there are just seven Sikh families, they stand out with their turbans and flowing beard. "It's their exotic look that perhaps attracts people here," says Zaheer Hussain, a research scholar. Hussain feels Sikhs also have a lot in common with local Muslims. There are more than a dozen sub-castes that the Sikhs share with the people here. "For instance, if you have Sidhus, Randhawas, Virks and Bhattis among the Sikhs, you have them among the Muslims as well. As a result, locals feel an immediate affinity," Hussain says.

Amritsar and Lahore were known as the twin cities before the Partition. If Lahore was the cultural capital of pre-Partition Punjab, Amritsar was its business capital.

Ashraf Ali, a businessman, however, feels Sikhs are liked here for a historic reason. "We feel that in India both the Sikhs and the Muslims were not being treated fairly. So, we tend to identify ourselves with them and give them love and affection when they come here," he says.

Many equated the 1984 Operation Bluestar with the demolition of Babri mosque in 1992. They feel persecution by the Hindus binds Muslims and Sikhs.

Meanwhile, the Pakistan Evacuee Trust Board announced that more than 25,000 acres of land had been acquired in Nankana Sahib for the proposed Guru Nanak Dev International University. Asam Hashmee, chairman of the board, said a governing body had been constituted to spearhead the project.

with thanks : source : http://www.dnaindia.com/india/report_sikhs-are-much-adored-in-pakistan_1283519

SikhsIndia
www.sohnijodi.com
A sikh web portal

BBC defends Adil Ray after Sikh comments

BBC defends Adil Ray after Sikh comments
Aug 18, 2009

The BBC Asian Network has defended its 'Breakfast' presenter Adil Ray after he commented on the cancellation of the Gurdas Maan concert over a Kirpan issue.

The comments were made on Adil's show on Thursday 6th August when the programme featured a news bulletin with two stories about Sikhs. One was about the cancellation of a Gurdas Maan concert in Canada, the other about Sikh soldiers joining the Queen's guard in the UK for the first time. Adil talked about both with the newsreader after the bulletin.

The BBC Asian Network said, "We have had a few responses from listeners who thought that he was in some way mocking the Kirpan or Sikhism, or judging the rights and wrong of wearing the Kirpan. That response has led to discussion on some message boards."

The statement further added, "The Asian Network and Adil Ray would like to assure all our listeners that he did not mock the Kirpan or Sikhism. He was expressing surprise at the cancellation of the gig over the Kirpan issue, and then to link the two stories he made a remark about the British Army and whether it would be open-minded enough to let Kirpan wearers in. At no time did he make any judgment about people's faith or the rights and wrongs of wearing the Kirpan.

The Asian Network and Adil Ray welcome the fact that he has listeners of all faiths who enjoy his humour and presentation."

Following the uproar by listeners, the BBC Asian Network has spliced out the remarks from its listen-back service, BBC iPlayer.

Earlier this year, the Network of Sikh Organisations (NSO) Media Monitoring Group expressed concern over the 'Adil Ray Show' after stand-in presenter; Tommy Sandhu made some comments about growing a beard.

with thanks : source : http://media247.co.uk/bizasia/newsarchive/2009/08/bbc_defends_adi.php

SikhsIndia
www.sohnijodi.com
A Sikh web portal