Saturday, October 30, 2010
Candle Light Vigil at India Gate on Ist November 2010 !
No upkeep for over 30 years, war memorial fights neglect
Paintings gather dust, weapons left to rust at Anglo-Sikh War Memorial in Ferozepur
Layers of dust on old paintings, rusting weapons of historical importance, dirty floors of the rooms housing rare artifacts and an almost crumbling heritage building — this is what greet you at the Anglo-Sikh War Memorial located on the banks of Ferozeshah canal here. It goes without saying that the memorial had ceased to draw visitors.
with thanks : IndianExpress : link in headline above for detailed news.
SikhsIndia
A taste of India
Daniel Scott journeys to a Sikh temple in Woolgoolga and unravels some of life's mysteries.
I've always been intrigued, as we've driven past Woolgoolga on journeys north, by the ornate white edifice with domes and minarets crowning a hill above the Pacific Highway. The Guru Nanak Temple, opened in 1970, is the most visible sign of Australia's largest regional Sikh population, a thriving pocket of India in the land of the Big Banana, 20 kilometres north of Coffs Harbour.
As a callow teenager, I learnt to travel in India on an epic 25,000-kilometre journey across the subcontinent. But I never visited the Punjab region, where Sikhism originates, so the religion of turbanned, big-bearded men has remained a mystery to me.
This morning, the second of a two-day family visit to Woolgoolga, I've finally made it to the temple and the mystery is unravelling.
"Sikhism is very close to Buddhism and the Baha'i faith," says a prominent Sikh on Coffs City Council, John Arkan, who is showing a small group around the temple.
"We have no caste system, no priest," he continues, as we remove our shoes and cover our heads with bandannas before entering the temple, "and the guru instilled the idea of equality between men and women."
Founded by Guru Nanak in the 15th century and based on his teachings and those of 10 subsequent gurus, Sikhism is the world's fifth-largest organised religion. In Woolgoolga, 300 families worship at the gurdwara (temple) and there are plans to build another nearby.
We make our way upstairs and into a large open room, at the centre of which is a palki, an altar upon which the scriptures are placed each day. It's a welcoming, colourful space but not overelaborate.
We sit cross-legged and Arkan explains more about his faith. "We don't cut our hair because nature created it that way," he says, "so we normally wrap it in a turban together with a wooden comb to keep it clean." The uncut hair (kesh) and comb (kanga) are two of the five "Ks" worn by baptised Sikhs; the others are circular bangles (kara), symbolising God's eternity; a small double-edged sword (kirpan), representing day and night; and undershorts (kachera).
with thanks : smh : link in headline above for detailed story.
SikhsIndia
Friday, October 29, 2010
White House denies rumors about Obama and Sikh temple
with thanks : christiancentury : link in headline above for detailed news.
SikhsIndia
Britain's longest serving Asian police officer retires
It's a career that took a fresh faced 17-year-old cadet with Thames Valley Police in 1975 to the country's elite anti-terrorism branch.
Along the way he has protected the royals and senior MPs, and worked on the drugs squad.
Now 52-year-old Detective Constable Harinder Singh Sangha is hanging up his truncheon after 35 years service.
"I have had a fantastic career. There's been a few lows. But lots of highs," he said.
It's rare for anti-terrorist officers to give interviews. But Asian colleagues and the Metropolitan Police Sikh Association (MPSA) encouraged Det Cons Sangha to go public because of his ground-breaking career.
"He has been the first in many things and is a good role model," said Det Sgt Gurpal Virdi of the MPSA.
with thanks : BBC News : link in headline above for detailed news.
SikhsIndia
Thursday, October 28, 2010
The empty-headed twenty per cent
One aspect of the planning for President Obama’s trip to India is downright depressing — and there’s no weighty issue to blame, just the ignorance of a surprisingly large group of Americans. White House organisers are reportedly considering taking the city of Amritsar off the itinerary. The reason? Amritsar is home to the Sikh Golden Temple, which is more or less a mandatory stop for a head of state visiting the city, but those who enter it are required to cover their heads.
Something like 20 per cent of Americans still falsely believe Obama to be Muslim. Sikhs aren’t Muslims, but Obama’s staffers are worried that any picture of him wearing religious headgear (Golden Temple officials have said baseball caps and the like aren’t acceptable substitutes) would spread like wildfire among the paranoid minority who remain unconvinced of Obama’s faith. It’s a reasonable fear, given the crazed intensity of some of Obama’s critics, but the White House shouldn’t give in to it. If it fits his itinerary, he should go to Amritsar and visit the temple, wearing headgear.
with thanks : IndianExpress : link in headline above for detailed news.
SikhsIndia
16 years of Sikhnet !
With best wishes to SIKHNET.
Plz view the link from headline above.
SikhsIndia
www.sohnijodi.com
www.sikhsindia.blogspot.com
www.RWABhagidari.blogspot.com
Monday, October 25, 2010
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Court paves way for fresh criminal proceedings for Sajjan
In fresh trouble for senior Congress leader Sajjan Kumar, a Delhi Court on Saturday paved the way for initiation of criminal proceedings against him in another case relating to the 1984 anti-Sikh riot.
The court rejected the plea of the Delhi police to club the case involving Kumar with the ongoing trial in another case relating to the carnage.
"There is no order on judicial records with regard to clubbing to FIR no 67/87 (allegedly involving Kumar) with FIR no 418/1991," District Judge S K Sarvaria said.
With thanks : IndianExpress : link in headline above for detailed news.
SikhsIndia
Sikhs in Malaysia eagerly await Singh's visit
"We, the Sikhs in Malaysia, are so proud that Manmohan Singh has turned India around at such a fast pace and put the country on the path of accelerated development," President of the Malaysia National Sikhs Movement, Darshan Singh Gill, a fifth generation Sikh in Malaysia whose great-great grandfather arrived in the then Malaya in 1880s,said.
Gill, who has been awarded the title 'Tan Sri' by the King of Malaysia, said he had met Manmohan Singh during his visit to Delhi earlier this year when he had presented him with a book on Sikh Community in Malaysia, compiled by him.
with thanks : hindustantimes : link in headline above for detailed news.
SikhsIndia