Monday, December 10, 2012
Come, share the joy of our children at Guru Harkrishan Public School
Come, share the joy of our children at Guru Harkrishan Public School, Hargobind Enclave. We have a very creative set of teachers who ensure that the atmosphere of the school generates a sense of happiness and joy in the process of learning.
With regards,
Mrs. Jasmeet Kaur
Guru Harkrishan Public School,
Hargobind Enclave, Delhi-92
Phone:- 011-43714444
Hargobind Enclave, Delhi-92
Phone:- 011-43714444
http://ghpshargobind.org
Sunday, December 9, 2012
Saturday, December 8, 2012
US has much to learn from Sikhs: Harvard professor Diana Eck
NEW YORK: As the Sikh community in the US makes efforts to recover
from the tragedy of the Gurudwara shooting, a Harvard professor has said
Sikhs have emerged as a role model for Americans who can learn from the dignity and generosity the community.
"Most Americans still know little of the Sikh Americans whose history in the United States, dating to the early 20th century, is now firmly part of our common history."
"While we catch up on our basic education, however, it is important to know that Sikhs share three distinctly and deeply American values -- the importance of hard work, a commitment to human equality, and the practice of neighbourly hospitality," Harvard University professor of Comparative Religion and Indian Studies Diana Eck said in an editorial in the Dallas Morning News.
Eck said if the gunman Michael Wade Page had been simply a neighbour or a local visitor, he would have been warmly welcomed by the community and served food in the gurudwara.
The assailant would have "discovered a religious community so confident and expansive in its hospitality that it would embrace a complete stranger".
In the face of immense tragedy after the shooting, Sikhs still offered the food they had prepared to the hundreds of emergency workers, police officers and staff who surrounded the temple.
"The dignity and generosity of the Sikh community in the wake of this violence remind us just how much we have to learn from these neighbors," Eck added.
Eck said no other religious community demonstrates the meaning of hospitality as abundantly as the Sikhs, noting that the huge, "industrial-size kitchens" in gurudwaras prepare food for community members and strangers alike.
"This hospitality is not just a gesture; it is foundational to the Sikh faith. Eating together is what knits the Sikh community together and breaks down the barriers that divide the wider human community," Eck said adding that eating together symboliSes a Sikh's personal rejection of discrimination and prejudice.
"Sikhs remind us that eating together is one of the important liturgies of the human community, for people of every faith and none," the professor said.
Six members of the Sikh community were killed in the Wisconsin gurudwara on August 5 when Page opened fire as they were getting ready for Sunday morning prayers.
Page was wounded by a police officer and died from a self-inflicted gun shot wound to the head.
The shooting shocked the peaceful Sikh community, which received wide spread support and sympathy.
"Most Americans still know little of the Sikh Americans whose history in the United States, dating to the early 20th century, is now firmly part of our common history."
"While we catch up on our basic education, however, it is important to know that Sikhs share three distinctly and deeply American values -- the importance of hard work, a commitment to human equality, and the practice of neighbourly hospitality," Harvard University professor of Comparative Religion and Indian Studies Diana Eck said in an editorial in the Dallas Morning News.
Eck said if the gunman Michael Wade Page had been simply a neighbour or a local visitor, he would have been warmly welcomed by the community and served food in the gurudwara.
The assailant would have "discovered a religious community so confident and expansive in its hospitality that it would embrace a complete stranger".
In the face of immense tragedy after the shooting, Sikhs still offered the food they had prepared to the hundreds of emergency workers, police officers and staff who surrounded the temple.
"The dignity and generosity of the Sikh community in the wake of this violence remind us just how much we have to learn from these neighbors," Eck added.
Eck said no other religious community demonstrates the meaning of hospitality as abundantly as the Sikhs, noting that the huge, "industrial-size kitchens" in gurudwaras prepare food for community members and strangers alike.
"This hospitality is not just a gesture; it is foundational to the Sikh faith. Eating together is what knits the Sikh community together and breaks down the barriers that divide the wider human community," Eck said adding that eating together symboliSes a Sikh's personal rejection of discrimination and prejudice.
"Sikhs remind us that eating together is one of the important liturgies of the human community, for people of every faith and none," the professor said.
Six members of the Sikh community were killed in the Wisconsin gurudwara on August 5 when Page opened fire as they were getting ready for Sunday morning prayers.
Page was wounded by a police officer and died from a self-inflicted gun shot wound to the head.
The shooting shocked the peaceful Sikh community, which received wide spread support and sympathy.
with thanks : Economic Times : LINK
Friday, December 7, 2012
"I complain to Waris Shah today"
And add a new page to your book of love
Once one daughter of Punjab wept, and you wrote your long saga;
Today thousands weep, calling to you Waris Shah:
Today thousands weep, calling to you Waris Shah:
Arise, o friend of the afflicted; arise and see the state of Punjab,
Corpses strewn on fields, and the Chenaab flowing with much blood.
Corpses strewn on fields, and the Chenaab flowing with much blood.
Someone filled the five rivers with poison,
And this same water now irrigates our soil.
And this same water now irrigates our soil.
Where was lost the flute, where the songs of love sounded?
And all Ranjha’s brothers forgotten to play the flute.
And all Ranjha’s brothers forgotten to play the flute.
Blood has rained on the soil, graves are oozing with blood,
The princesses of love cry their hearts out in the graveyards.
The princesses of love cry their hearts out in the graveyards.
Today all the Quaido’ns have become the thieves of love and beauty,
Where can we find another one ,like Waris Shah?
Where can we find another one ,like Waris Shah?
Waris Shah! I say to you, speak from your grave
And add a new page to your book of love.
And add a new page to your book of love.
Uploaded by : Dr Gurdeep Kaur ji
Thursday, December 6, 2012
Our Salute to ASI Ravinder Pal Singh ji : SikhsIndia
Our Salute to ASI Ravinder pal singh ji who was killed in Amritsar by local Akali leaders while he was trying to save his daughter from eve teasers & molesters. Our deepest condolences to the family of ASI Ravinder pal singh ji.
SikhsIndia
Bring Akali leader before me, I'll kill him: daughter of Amritsar cop
The daughter of a Punjab Police officer, who was shot dead by a ruling
Shiromani Akali Dal leader in full public view on Wednesday, said she
would kill the accused if he is brought before her.
"Bring him before me. I will shoot and kill him like he did to my
helpless father. No one came to help us as he (the accused) attacked us," the daughter of
slain Assistant Sub-Inspector Ravinder Pal Singh said in Amritsar on
Thursday.
ASI Ravinder Pal Singh was allegedly shot dead by Ranjit Singh Rana, a
general secretary of the Amritsar district Akali Dal, and his
accomplices in Chheharta area on outskirts of the city after he objected
to his daughter being subjected to their harassment on Wednesday. Rana
had been stalking the ASI's daughter for the last few days.
Sobbing continuously, the victim said that no one from the public
came to help her and her father as Rana continued to shoot and assault
them.
"After he shot at my father with his rifle, my father collapsed. Rana
then hit me and I fell on my father. He kept kicking and hitting us in
full public glare. I cried and pleaded for help but everyone ran away.
Even when the ambulance came, I had to lift my father into it as no one
came to help me," she said.
She said that the same gang, led by Rana had harassed her on December
1 also and she had complained to the nearby police station. "However,
no one listened. Had police acted on that day, my father would have been
alive today," she said.
About Wednesday's shooting, the victim said that after her father
confronted Rana and his accomplices, Rana took out a pistol and shot her
father in the leg. She also received gunshot wounds on the hand.
"After that, he ran away and I rushed my father to the hospital in my
car. They came back with a rifle after some time and as my father came
out of the car, he (Rana) shot him. We didn't even know him or had any
enmity. I want justice," the victim said.
Rana and his accomplice were arrested on Thursday over the killing
while two other men continued to elude the police. The police officer
was in uniform when he was attacked by Rana.
Punjab director general of police Sumedh Singh Saini told media in
Amritsar that police had swung into action immediately after Wednesday's
killing and arrested the main accused. Three weapons, all licensed,
were recovered from them.
with thanks : Hindustan Times : LINK
SHO dismissed after Akali leader kills police officer
Punjab Police on Thursday dismissed a station house officer (SHO) for
dereliction of duty a day after an assistant sub-inspector (ASI) was
shot dead by a ruling Shiromani Akali Dal leader near Amritsar.
ASI Ravinder Pal Singh was allegedly shot dead by Ranjit Singh Rana, general secretary of Amritsar district Akali Dal, and his accomplices in Chheharta area on the outskirts of the city after he (ASI) objected to his daughter being harassed by them Wednesday.
ASI Ravinder Pal Singh was allegedly shot dead by Ranjit Singh Rana, general secretary of Amritsar district Akali Dal, and his accomplices in Chheharta area on the outskirts of the city after he (ASI) objected to his daughter being harassed by them Wednesday.
Rana had been stalking the ASI's daughter for the last few days.
Rana and his accomplice were arrested on Thursday for the ASI's killing while two other men continued to elude the police.
The police officer was in uniform when he was attacked by Rana. The
accused fired at and injured the ASI and his daughter after the officer
confronted them for harassing his daughter.
After some time, Rana and his accomplices returned with more weapons and shot him in the chest, leaving him dead.
Punjab Director General of Police (DGP) Sumedh Singh Saini told
mediapersons here that police swung into action immediately after
Wednesday's killing and arrested the main accused. Three weapons, all
licensed, were also recovered.
He said the accused, who were first confronted by a police party at Sohal village near here, were fired upon.
"Police were able to corner them and arrest them at Rajoke village in Tarn Taran district," Saini said.
"Our colleague has been shot dead. We are taking this incident very seriously. We will get the accused punished," he said.
Saini admitted that Chheharta SHO had shown dereliction of duty and a decision was taken to dismiss him from service.
He said the ASI's daughter had complained to the police station about
being harassed by the youth but the SHO did not take any action. The
officer was suspended Wednesday.
"If any child complains to police, the police official has to take
action. Yesterday (Wednesday), we suspended the SHO. After further
enquiries, we have dismissed him," Saini said.
However, Akali Dal leaders washed their hands of the entire incident
saying the killing of the ASI was an "individual act" of Rana.
"We have expelled him from the party. This was his individual act. We
cannot foresee what a particular leader may do in the future. The Akali
Dal has nothing to do with it," Punjab's Revenue Minister Bikram Singh
Majithia told reporters.
Majithia is the brother-in-law of Punjab Deputy Chief Minister and Akali Dal president Sukhbir Singh Badal.
Police officials in the area had failed to reach the spot of the
shooting even 30 minutes after the incident. The incident took place
near Chheharta police station, on the outskirts of Amritsar city, 250 km
from state capital Chandigarh.
with thanks : Hindustan Times : LINK for detailed news.
Shiromani Akali Dal leader arrested for killing police officer
Amritsar Police on Thursday arrested Shiromani Akali Dal leader
Ranjit Singh Rana and an accomplice on charges of killing Assistant
Sub-Inspector Ravinder Pal Singh after he had objected to them harassing
his daughter.
Police Commissioner Ram Singh said Rana was
arrested from the border belt of Amritsar district on Thursday morning
along with another accused.
Rana had been stalking Ravinder Pal
Singh's daughter for the last few days. Two other accused in the killing
of Ravinder Pal are absconding.
The incident took place on
Wednesday afternoon near the Chhehrata police station, which is on the
outskirts of Amritsar city, 250 km from Chandigarh.
Ravinder Pal's
daughter had complained that some youth used to harass her. The ASI
objected to this and confronted the youth. Following an argument, Rana
fired at him and his daughter and left them injured.
Witnesses
said Rana and his accomplices came back to the spot in a jeep later and
shot Ravinder Pal Singh in the chest from close range.
The latter was rushed to a private hospital where he was declared dead.
The Akali Dal expelled Rana, who is a general secretary of the district unit of the party. (ANI)
with thanks : WebIndia 123 : LINK
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