Sunday, December 26, 2010

Celebration of Founder's Day

Sri Guru Nanak Dev Khalsa College ,Dev Nagar,University of Delhi

Sri Guru Nanak Dev Khalsa College celebrated its Founder's day on 24th December 2010.
To mark this occasion,Kirtan Darbar (Sikh religious musical prayers ) was held.Sangat (congregation) was spell bound with divine Kirtan of Gurpreet Singh ji,(from Shimla).Kirtan performance by Students of Divinity Society of the College, added an extra dimension to the well organised Samagam( programme).
Kirtan Samagam was hugely attended by staff & students of the College.Many Sikh dignitaries & prominent members of DSGMC were also present to grace the occasion .Honourable Inderjeet Singh Monty,(an Executive Member of Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee & Chairman of Sri Guru Harkrishan Public School,Tilak Nagar)& Dr.Jaswinder Singh(Principal of Sri Guru Tegh Bahadur Khalsa College,University of Delhi)were also among them.

Principal Dr.Man Mohan Kaur gave very emotional speech while remembering martyrdom of Sri Guru Gobind Singhji's Sahibzaadey (sons).In magical few words,she put emphasis on Guru Tegh Bahadur's (Ninth Sikh Guru) hymns :Give up your Head,but forsake not those whom you have undertaken to protect,sacrifice your life,but relinquish not your faith. Her heart throbbing speech was as nice as warming closure of the Founder's Day with serving of Langar(community food)in the college premises.










Thursday, December 23, 2010

Gurmat Samagam : Sri Guru Nanak Sewak Jatha
























Please double click to view this poster properly.
You too can add your poster of Gurmat Samagam on this blog for world wide reach.
Just add name of our blog on your poster & mail a copy to us.

SikhsIndia
www.sikhsindia.blogspot.com

SGPC to give say to foreign Sikhs : Mulls panel to address Sikh concerns across globe

Even as the SGPC is gearing up for a protest outside the US Embassy in New Delhi tomorrow over the turban frisking issue, it is toying with the idea of setting up an advisory panel comprising Sikh representatives from foreign countries to deal with the problems being faced by the community abroad.

This is being seen as a move to address the concerns of Sikh community across the globe, particularly in view of the prevailing scenario over turban issue in countries like the US and France. Sikhs have a sizable population in various countries, including America, Canada, France, Argentina and New Zealand, where they are confronting various religious and social problems.

These include the issues of Sikh identity and turban issue. In France, the issue of ban on wearing Sikh turban in schools has been troubling the community while Sikh outfits there have failed to convince the lawmakers that the turban is an inseparable part of Sikh identity. A similar situation has now arisen in the US following norms by airport authorities regarding turban frisking of Sikhs.

with thanks : Tribune : link above for detailed news.

SikhsIndia

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Pak denies refusal of visas to Sikh pilgrims

Islamabad, Dec 21 (PTI) Pakistan today denied reports that 300 Indian Sikh pilgrims born in Pakistan were recently denied visas.

Responding to a calling attention notice in the National Assembly or lower house of parliament, Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Malik Amad Khan said he had checked with the Interior Ministry and there were no reports of 300 Sikh pilgrims being denied visas.

A protocol signed by Pakistan and India in 1974 contained the number of people from both countries who could make visits for religious purposes.

with thanks : msn : link above for detailed news.

SikhsIndia
www.sohnijodi.com
www.sikhsindia.blogspot.com
www.RWABhagidari.blogspot.com

Monday, December 20, 2010

People treated as pigs: SC

Nagaland Sikh Gurudwara Management Committee formed

Dimapur, December 18 (MExN): The Sikh Community leaders & representatives from Nagaland unanimously formed a Nagaland Sikh Gurudwara shrines in the state. In a press release S. Harjinder P S Ahluwalia, General Secretary of Nagaland Sikh Gurudwara Management Committee (NSGMC) in a press release stated that there are four major Sikh Shrines in the state which are being managed by the local management committees in Tuensang, Mokokchung, Kohima & Dimapur of which the Sikh Shrine in Dimapur is the oldest in the state which was established in early fifties and Mokokchung is the 2nd oldest Shrine which was established in early sixties. Further he also expressed that the renovation of old shrines and preserving the heritage will be the priority agenda of the committee and that the committee will meet for 2nd time in January 2011.

with thanks : sikhsangat

sikhsindia

SGPC Told To Step Up Efforts For Sikh Marriage Provision

AMRITSAR – The Sikh clergy today asked the SGPC to intensify the efforts for the implementation of the Anand Marriage Act to facilitate a special provision for the registration of marriages performed under Sikh religious rights.

The matter came up during a meeting of the Sikh high priests at Sri Akal Takht here following correspondence in this regard from Harbans Singh Aujla of Toronto, who has been trying to get the Act implemented, and other Sikh leaders. At present marriages performed under Sikh religious rites are registered either under the Hindu Marriage Act or the Special Marriage Act. Interestingly, Pakistan has taken the lead over India by adopting the amended Anand Marriage Act in January 2008.

The Sikh high priests praised the human rights organisation, Sikhs for Justice, for making an endeavour along with the All- India Sikh Students Federation to bring the culprits of 1984 riots to book. They commended the campaign launched by these outfits to file a petition with the United Nations Human Rights Commission, seeking recognition of 1984 riots as genocide under Article 2 of the UN Convention and seeking an impartial probe into the killing of Sikhs. Akal Takht directed the Sikh community to extend its full support to the campaign.

with thanks : thelinkpaper : link above for detailed news.

SikhsIndia

Indian Sikh wedding transforms the Pasadena Convention Center

















Grey skies and stubborn showers failed to dampen the vibrant suite of celebrations during a traditional Indian Sikh wedding at the Pasadena Convention Center on Saturday.

Inside the banquet hall, hundreds of guests milled about in their finest silk salwar kameez - the traditional pant-shirt suit of South and Central Asia - a jewel-toned mosaic set aflame with crimson and fuchsia turbans.

They were waiting for the groom to enter - an event that typically involves a festooned horse, a drummer and a round of exuberant dancing.

Such religious affairs are usually hosted in a Sikh Temple - but there were none in the area big enough to accommodate the 400 or so guests who had flown in from all over the world to attend, family members explained.

Careful planning and decoration - including white sheets lining the floors and hanging along the length of the walls, religious singers, as well as a special platform for the granthi (Sikh priest) and one for the Sikh's holy scripture - helped transform one of the Convention Center's bland banquet halls into a luminous, spiritual enclave.

"I always dreamed about it being this way, but I never thought it would be this big," said the bride, Asees Sethi of Pasadena, during one of the pre-wedding celebrations leading up to Saturday.

Asked how long she'd been planning it, Sethi said, "10 months - since the moment I got engaged."

Indian weddings are designed by the families, she explained, noting that everything in her's would be according to tradition - save a few elements she had insisted on.

"I really wanted to have flower girls and a ring bearer, which is definitely not normal; I wanted bridesmaids to enter before me because I wanted an element of Western culture in the ceremony," said Sethi, who was born to Indian parents in Japan but grew up in the U.S.

with thanks : pasadenastarnews : link above for detailed news story.

SikhsIndia

www.sohnijodi.com

Celebrations of 40th anniversary of Bristol Sikh temple







A ceremony has taken place in Bristol to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the city's first Sikh temple.

More than 500 people now worship at the temple in Summerhill Road in St George. When it was founded in 1970 there were only five members.

with thanks : BBC News : link above for detailed news.

sikhsindia

Milkha reveals how he got ‘Flying Sikh’ tag

While everyone knows who the Flying Sikh is, many wouldn’t be aware that the veteran Olympian, Milkha Singh, got this name in Pakistan in 1960 at a track event that he never wanted to contest.

“I didn’t want to go to Pakistan to attend the games as my parents were killed there during riots after the Partition. However, I was persuaded by the then Prime Minister Jawahar Lal Nehru to go,” said the veteran athlete, adding that it was there he got the title of Flying Sikh after he defeated the Pakistan champion Abdul Khaliq in the 200-metre race.

Addressing a gathering here today after receiving the Award of Excellence from the Editor-in-Chief of The Tribune, Raj Chengappa, at a function organised by the Rotary District 3080, an emotional Milkha Singh said: “Nehruji told me to bury the past and go to Pakistan”. “The then PM felt that since Pakistan had extended an invitation for the event in a spirit of friendship, it was imperative that I represented the nation,” said Milkha.

Recalling his journey, he said: “I went in a jeep decked up with flowers. Once we crossed the Wagah border and began our 20-km ride to Lahore, we saw people lined up on either side of the road to cheer us”.

About the race, Milkha recounted that some Urdu paper had then given a headline, 'Khaliq ki takkar Milkha se- Pakistan vs India'. “On the day of the race, I was told that around 60,000 persons had assembled at the Lahore stadium, including almost 20,000 burqa-clad women. Before the race began, the mullahs (priests) came to conduct prayers and bless Khaliq”, Milkha said. “I stopped one of them and sought blessings from him by saying that I am too a man of God (khuda ka banda),” he added.

He said when the race began Khaliq took an initial lead as he was a 100m sprinter. My strength was my stamina and I overtook him after 150 yards and won the race by around seven yards”, he said, adding that his timing was 20.7 sec, a new world record.

He said after the race, General Ayub (the then Pakistan President) came up to him and said: “Milkha you did not run, you flew.” “And that’s how I got my name”, he told the audience.

with thanks : tribune : link above for detailed news.

sikhsindia

Friday, December 17, 2010

Take up turban issue with US through diplomatic channels, SGPC told

Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee (DSGMC) chief Paramjit Singh Sarna shot off a letter to US President Barack Obama on Thursday, expressing concern over the recent incident of Indian diplomat H S Puri being asked to remove his turban at a Texas airport.

On the other hand, Shiromani Panthic Council head Manjit Singh Calcutta asked the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC) not to hold a protest planned for December 23 in front of the US Embassy in New Delhi.

with thanks : IndianExpress : link above for detailed news.

SikhsIndia