Monday, August 27, 2012

Sonia concerned over security of Sikhs abroad: Cong MLA

UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi is concerned over the security of Sikhs in the US and has advised the Prime minister and External Affairs Ministry to take up the matter with the country's administration, Congress MLA from Patiala (Rural) Brahm Mohindra said. 

Speaking at the bhog ceremony (rituals) of Subegh Singh, one of the six victims of the Oak Creek Gurudwara shooting in the US, at Rattangarh village here, Mohindra said the UPA government has asked the Obama administration to ensure security of Sikhs. 

Six Sikh worshippers, including four Indian nationals, were killed when a white supremacist went on a shooting rampage inside the Gurudwara on August 5. 



with thanks : Business standard : LINK

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Navdeep Singh: Sikh's experience gives new meaning to 'white supremacy'

Believers in white supremacy are basically ignorant and misguided on the values and beauty of humanity and coexistence. In the wake of the tragic shootings in the Milwaukee-area Sikh temple and subsequent events, I offer a different perspective of "white supremacy."

I am an ordinary Sikh living in Waunakee. The aftermath of the shootings has actually revealed what true white supremacy is. The white members of my community have cut across their faith allegiances and embraced the grief of the Sikh community.

In every possible way they lent their shoulders, their hands, their souls — everything to apply healing balm to the Sikhs. This includes not only the institutions such as Dane County government, the police, the churches and the press, but individuals, too — everybody contributing in their own way. They proved that the effects of sorrow and grief are diminished if shared.

We as a Sikh community are indebted to them for their acts of kindness, humility, tender care and serving. This is what supremacy is and should be.

For those ignorant believers, here's a word of advice which I am sure will fall on deaf ears: Bravery is not about holding the gun but facing it. God bless.

— Navdeep Singh, Waunakew

with thanks : madison : LINK

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Saturday, August 25, 2012

How Hate Gets Counted

By SIMRAN JEET SINGH and PRABHJOT SINGH

The horrific shooting at a Sikh temple in suburban Milwaukee on Aug. 5, in which a white supremacist, Wade M. Page, killed six people before fatally shooting himself, elicited an outpouring of sympathy from American leaders and a greater understanding of the role Sikhs have played in American life. 

But there are two disturbing aspects of the response to the shooting that deserve wider public attention. 

First is the notion of “mistaken identity” — the assumption that Mr. Page, who had long-established ties to radical right-wing groups, mistook Sikhs for Muslims, his presumed target. The second is the government’s failure to accurately measure the extent of anti-Sikh violence in America — a gap that must be remedied. 

Whatever the roots of Mr. Page’s hatred, it is wrong to assume that every attack against a Sikh is really meant for a Muslim. That assumption overlooks the long history of discrimination and hatred directed at Sikhs in America. 

Indeed, the first documented race riot targeting American Sikhs occurred in 1907 in Bellingham, Wash. Their distinct religious identity (uncut hair, turban, beard) has historically marked Sikhs, particularly men, as targets for discrimination, both in their homeland in South Asia and in the various communities of the Sikh diaspora. And of course, 9/11 brought about a surge in fear and persecution directed at Sikhs, Muslims and other minorities with ties to the Middle East and South Asia. 

There is also the question of whether white supremacist groups have specifically targeted American Sikhs. The authorities in Southern California, where Mr. Page was active in the white-power music scene, are investigating whether he was involved in the killings of two elderly Sikh men in Elk Grove, Calif., in March 2011. Just after the temple shooting, a Sikh man in Oak Creek, Wis., reported that a white man had pulled up next to him in a pickup truck, shaped his hands like a gun, and pretended to shoot him six times before stating, “We want to kill all of you.” 

And on Aug. 15, 10 days after the Oak Creek shooting, another member of the Sikh community there, Dalbir Singh, 56,  was killed in the armed robbery of a local convenience store. (While the police have not uncovered any evidence to treat the killing as a hate crime, many Sikhs have wondered if the violence was more than random.) 

White supremacist Web sites clearly demonstrate intentional, targeted anti-Sikh sentiments. For example, the leading neo-Nazi figure Alex Linder was quoted as saying on a right-wing Web site: “Take your dead and go back to India and dump their ashes in the Ganges, Sikhs. You don’t belong here in the country my ancestors fought to found, and deeded to me and mine, their posterity. Even if you came here legally, and even if you haven’t done anything wrong personally. Go home, Sikhs. Go home to India where you belong. This is not your country, it belongs to white men.” 

The “mistaken identity” assumption is directly associated with a second problem: a lack of data about the extent of anti-Sikh hatred. 

The F.B.I. currently classifies nearly all hate violence against American Sikhs as instances of anti-Islamic or anti-Muslim hate crimes. As a result, we do not have official statistics on the extent of hate crimes in which Sikhs are targeted, despite a long history of such violence. 


with thanks : nytimes : LINK : for detailed news.

Michelle reaches out to Sikhs, meets gurdwara victims' kin


Friday, August 24, 2012

Lt. Brian Murphy, heroic Brooklyn-born cop who was shot nine times while trying to stop Wisconsin Sikh temple massacre, released from hospital

  
 Lt. Brian Murphy, age 51.

The heroic Brooklyn-born cop who was shot nine times while trying to stop the Wisconsin Sikh temple massacre is out of the hospital.

Lt. Brian Murphy, a 21-year veteran of the Oak Creek, Wisc., police department, was released Wednesday, capping a miraculous recovery following the Aug. 5 tragedy that saw six worshipers killed.

The tough-as-nails officer was originally in critical condition after being struck in the neck by Michael Wade Page, a neo-Nazi.

His daughter, Erika, who lives in South Korea, took to Twitter to express her pride and relief.

“finally able to talk to my dad for the first time since the shooting,” the daughter posted Thursday. “he’s doing well and he sounds like batman. more proof he’s a superhero.”

Murphy, who moved to the Milwaukee area to be closer to his wife’s family, was the first to respond to reports of shots fired at the temple. Seconds after climbing out his cruiser, he was hit by a spray of bullets.

 GUNMAN8N_4_WEB

Despite being badly wounded, he waved off officers running to his rescue and directed them to tend to the injured worshippers.

His fellow Oak Creek police officers said that Murphy maintained his distinct New York accent. Murphy’s brother Terry just retired from the NYPD Intelligence Division.




with thanks : nydailynews : LINK for detailed news.

 










CANDLE LIGHT VIGIL for remembering WISCONSIN HATE CRIME VICTIMS.

UNITED SIKHS has launched a 'I Pledge Against Hate Crime' campaign to combat that odium of violence that Sikh community is facing since 9/11. People of all faith and no faith across the globe to organise and participate in Inter-faith vigils within their respective communities to remember and pray for the individuals and communities affected by the recent tragic events at the Sikh Gurudwara at Wisconsin on 5th August, 2012. Hate Crime is a serious issue that impact us all and we must all join to beat it. CANDLE LIGHT VIGIL for remembering WISCONSIN HATE CRIME VICTIMS Date: Sunday, August 26, 2012 Time: 5 pm to 7 pm (IST) Venue: Jantar Mantar, New Delhi (INDIA) http://www.facebook.com/IPledgeAgainstHateCrime http://www.facebook.com/unitedsikhs.org

Maria Cantwell calls for DOJ to track hate crimes against Sikh Americans

 Maria Cantwell

Sen. Maria Cantwell has joined with 18 other U.S. senators urging the Department of Justice to track hate crimes against Sikh Americans.

Cantwell said she signed on to the bipartisan letter Thursday. Earlier in August, white supremacist Wade Michael Page shot and killed six people at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin.

"Until we have a more comprehensive understanding of the number and type of hate crimes committed against Sikhs, our law enforcement agencies will not be able to allocate the appropriate level of personnel and other resources to prevent and respond to these crimes," the letter said. "Moreover, the collection of this information will likely encourage members of the Sikh community to report hate crimes to law enforcement officials."

The Sikh Coalition had been asking for federal law enforcement to track hate crimes against Sikh Americans. The Justice Department tracks crimes committed against Jews, Catholics, Protestants, Muslims and atheists, but lumps Sikhs in with "other religions."

This is a good first step, and an important show of support for the Sikh American community from our leadership in Washington, D.C. I said in a Tuesday column that the silence after the Sikh shooting was deafening, especially in light of the scrutiny around the shootings in Aurora, Colo. First lady Michelle Obama is also meeting with families of the victims.


with thanks :  seattletimes : LINK for detailed news.

Michelle Obama Visting Sikh Shooting Victims' Families

Michelle Obama Sikh Shooting
 
OAK CREEK, Wis. — Mandeep Singh Khattra and his family received Michelle Obama with an embrace Thursday as the first lady consoled relatives of worshippers gunned down earlier this month at a Sikh temple in suburban Milwaukee.
 
"She gave us a hug and said, `I'm sorry for what happened,'" said Khattra, 26, whose grandfather, Suveg Singh Khattra, was one of six people killed Aug. 5. "She asked what kind of person he was, and my dad told her he was always good-natured, always at the temple."

Obama spent nearly 90 minutes visiting with the Khattras and other families of Sikh worshippers who were killed or injured in the shooting at the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin. She expressed her sympathies, offered support and listened to many stories about victims.

Relatives of the victims said afterward that Obama asked informed questions that showed she had read up on the plight of those killed and injured.

She especially seemed to know the story of Satwant Singh Kaleka, the temple president who tried to stab the gunman with a butter knife in an effort to stall him so women and children in the temple would have time to hide.

"The thing she kept repeating was, `Your father was a true hero,'" said Amardeep Kaleka.

The visits with worshippers were private, and she took no questions during a public appearance with the Oak Creek mayor and a temple official at a nearby high school. She offered sympathies to them in hushed tones, then went into a classroom for private visits with each of the families.

Six Sikhs were killed and three others injured when a gunman with ties to a white supremacist group strode opened fire at the temple. The gunman also shot Oak Creek Police Lt. Brian Murphy nine times at close range before killing himself.

Murphy was released from the hospital Wednesday. As a sign of their deep gratitude, temple members gave his family a $10,000 check along with a large banner signed by well-wishers, said Inderjeet Singh Dhillon, a temple official.


with thanks : Huffington Post : LINK for detailed news.

Sikh man beaten up in US, arrested for keeping Kirpan

Washington: An elderly Sikh man, in his early 70s, was allegedly beaten up by his neighbour in New Jersey following an altercation and was later arrested by the police because of keeping 'Kirpan', a Sikh article of faith.

The incident happened on July 26, nearly 10 days before the shooting at Oak Creek Gurdwara in Wisconsin, United Sikhs, a Sikh advocacy group said yesterday.

Giving details of the incident, the group said that Avtar Singh, a gas station owner and one of the founding members of Glen Rock Gurdwara in New Jersey, went to his neighbouring shop owned by Edward Koscovski to request him to move his truck that was parked and blocking the entrance of his gas station.
The request turned into an altercation in which Avtar Singh was brutally assaulted, it said.

"I kept on yelling that please let me go but nothing moved Edward from hitting me. When I turned around using all my strength, Edward smashed my face, broke my teeth and kept punching me in the stomach. He grabbed my Kirpan and threw it at his attendant."

"The attendant removed the Kirpan from the mian (cover) and hid the mian (cover) in a room inside. He also snatched my phone and put it out of sight," Avtar Singh said.

Upon arrival at the scene, the police arrested the 72-year-old Avtar Singh and charged him with possession of a weapon (Kirpan), United Sikhs said.
 
 
with thanks : NDTV : LINK for detailed news.

Confronting religion: Sikh prohibited from carrying kirpans at airport

By Riaz Ahmad
Published: August 24, 2012
" In my 30 years of service, carrying a kirpan has always been strictly prohibited," ASF official Mian Safdar. ILLUSTRATION: JAMAL KHURSHID

PESHAWAR: Sikhs have been prohibited from entering the Peshawar airport while carrying their religious symbol kirpan (a small dagger).

The kirpan is one of the five kakar that are considered a religious necessity for all practising Khalisa Sikhs. Carrying a kirpan, kara (iron bracelet), kanga (Comb), kachera (underwear) and kesh (hair) is considered an essential part of their faith.

Talking to The Express Tribune, Dr Sahib Singh, a representative of the Sikh community and a former member of the district assembly, said that the people of his community had not been allowed to enter the Bacha Khan International Airport with a kirpan.

“If you abandon any one of the five kakar, it means that you are not a member of the Khalisa religion formed by Guru Goband Singh,” explained Dr Singh. He said that people in Punjab understand this rule and do not face any problems at the Lahore airport, where thousands of yatris from across the world are received every year.

Dr Singh further said that as per the 1971 constitution, the Sikh community had been allowed to carry a kirpan of up to three feet.  However, Sikhs in Peshawar and other parts of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa carry only small kirpans, of three to six inches in length. “The constitution of this country gives us the right to carry our religious symbol and there is no evidence that we have harmed anyone with it. It is just a symbol of bravery as our Guru also carried a kirpan with him.”

Another member of the community, Ajeet Singh, said that Sikhs cannot just abandon their religion over security measures. He said that they too are citizens of Pakistan and it is the duty of the provincial government to solve the problem.

A representative of the Hindu community, Haroon Sarb Dyal, told The Express Tribune that a number of meetings with government officials had been held but no progress has been made on the issue. Dyal said that the constitution of Pakistan gives minorities the right to live in accordance with their religious teachings and that the government should resolve the problem.

Civil Aviation Authority Public Relations Officer Pervez George said that even personnel of law enforcement agencies are not allowed to bring arms or anything that poses threat inside the airport.

Mian Safdar, assistant director of the Airport Security Force at the Bacha Khan International Airport said that carrying a kirpan in hand luggage is banned all over the country.“In my 30 years of service, carrying a kirpan has always been strictly prohibited.”  He added, however, that kirpans are allowed in
luggage that is checked in.

Published in The Express Tribune, August 24th, 2012. LINK