491.The Man in Blue – Levensloop, Sint-Truiden 1 and 2 October 2011

‘Levensloop’ (walk for life) is a fundraiser to help people suffering from cancer. The walk started at 4 pm on Saturday and finished 24 hours later. Participants could walk or run, and the idea was that throughout the 24 hours each team would have at least one member running or walking.

Palwinder Kaur, who works in the Sint-Truiden town hall, appealed on the Sunday before to the Gurdwara sangat, which resulted in more than 50 volunteers coming forward. We wanted to support the charity but we also saw this as an excellent opportunity to show that Sikhs want to work together for the common good with our fellow human beings of whatever background.

We demonstrated that Sikhs, with and without turban, are not people who only are concerned about their own group issues.

The main ‘events’ of the ‘Levensloop’ were the opening and closing rounds, when all team members, including VIPs, took part. Seeing so many Sikhs wearing turbans walking through the park around the ‘Speelhof’ buildings was very good and we had many positive reactions from fellow participants.

Sint-Truiden is a small market town and it is blessed with some very nice parks and around it are many country lanes which are ideal for people like me who like walking and cycling. Although I have taken part in the ‘Sikhs in the City’ relay marathon, I am not a runner.

It enjoyed taking part and to notice that due to my daily cycling and walking I was in good condition. I found it easy to walk several rounds, take a little rest and start again. The response from other participants was mostly positive, but when I walked early on the Sunday morning I felt a bit uncomfortable as some of the younger walkers were not quite sober.

Apart from fundraising through walking or running we also raised money through selling parkoré. Nanak Singh, the Gurdwara cook, and his volunteers had been busy and we had enough to serve both our own people and the more adventurous Limburgers. We also offered tea and free cola. Even I drank coke, not because I like it, but because I was thirsty and there was nothing else available.

When we walked the last round the sangat started doing simran, which was wonderful.

Sikhs would do themselves an enormous favour if they were to do more seva outside the Gurdwara. The true Sikh, the true Khalsa is she or he who serves all.

Guru told us to fight against injustice, nowadays we specialise in fighting each other. Guru told us to serve all, we prefer to serve only fellow Sikhs.

The Tribune – HC stays demolition of ancient monument

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, October 31. Issuing notice of motion for November 8, the Punjab and Haryana High Court today stayed the alleged demolition of a 300-year-old mound in the complex of Fatehgarh Sahib gurdwara.

The directions by the Bench of Acting Chief Justice MM Kumar and Justice Rajiv Narain Raina came on a petition filed by Chandigarh-based advocate Tekwinder Singh. Seeking issuance of directions to immediately stop the destruction of the ancient monument of religious and architectural significance, he contended it was existing as ruins of Shahi Quila, Sirhind, which was destroyed by Baba Banda Singh Bahadur in 1710.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2011/20111101/punjab.htm#19

The Tribune – SAD to open three memorials commemorating holocaust

Tribune News Service

Chandigarh, October 31. The Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) core committee today decided to inaugurate three memorials commemorating holocaust in the Sikh history next month.

Two “ghallughara” (holocaust) memorials will be inaugurated on November 28 at Kahnuwan in Gurdaspur district and on November 29 at Koperhera in Sangrur district. The memorial in the honour of Sikh warrior Banda Singh Bahadur will be inaugurated on November 30 at Chhaparchiri in Mohali district.

The core committee also decided to wait for the Prime Minister to give his assent to inaugurate the Khalsa Heritage Centre, also in November. Earlier, Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal had invited the PM to inaugurate the centre and also announced that the PM would do so.

However, PPCC chief Captain Amarinder Singh has requested the PM not to inaugurate the centre, saying this had already been done earlier. The core committee congratulated the government for successful paddy procurement despite the minimum purchase by the Food Corporation of India.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2011/20111101/punjab.htm#7

The Asian Age – Lahore has risen, says Imran, revolution near

Shafqat Ali, Asian Age Corespondent

Islamabad, 1 November 2011. Fresh from a surprisingly successful public rally in Lahore, Pakistani cricketer-turned politician Imran Khan on Monday said the gates for change were open. “There is a shift in public opinion. The gates for change are open now. The change will come,” Mr Khan, who heads the Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf, said.

Talking to reporters in Lahore before flying to China, Mr Khan said the “corrupt” PPP and PML(N) have no future role in politics. “We have dealt a blow to the status quo…,” Mr Khan said.

“PTI has torpedoed their tacit partnership, now they will not be able to keep power between themselves,” he added.

“Their time is up, our time is now,” said Mr Khan, adding a sweeping revolution is in the making which will dwarf the one of 1970.

Mr Khan said his party had set up a cell to collect the details of politicians’ assets and as soon as they had enough material they would approach the Supreme Court and Election Commission. “We will set an ultimatum for them and then jam all the cities of Pakistan,” he added.

The former Pakistan cricket captain also forecast elections after March 2012. Largely regarded until now as a political lightweight, Imran Khan burst spectacularly onto the national stage in a massive show of force at his Lahore rally on Sunday night as thousands of supporters gathered at the Minar-e-Pakistan to answer his call of “remove the government, save Pakistan”.

Making good on his promise that he would fill the sprawling Minar-e-Pakistan grounds, Mr Khan left little doubt about who rules Lahore. He told the crowd, which reportedly comprised well over 100,000 supporters, most of them youth, that a revolution was around the corner and the government could not stop it. He said he had one complaint to make of the people of Lahore: they took a long time to wake up. “But now that Lahore has risen, we are unstoppable,” said Mr Khan.

http://www.asianage.com/international/lahore-has-risen-says-imran-revolution-near-510

The Netherlands : Den Haag – Rotterdam – Amsterdam 2 till 12 September 2011

Mostly pictures of gurdwaras, trains and trams taken during my recent visit to the Netherlands

Amsterdam 8 September 2011

My train arrives at Amsterdam Lelylaan station


The GVB tram I took from Lelylaan to Overtoom going to Central Station
From here it is only a short walk to Gurdwara Maan Sarovar


Gurdwara Maan Sarovar

Gurdwara Maan Sarovar
From here Gursev Singh would collect me and take me to his house

Gurdwara Maan Sarovar Sahib
Baarsjesweg 281/282
1058 AE Amsterdam

To see more pictures of Gurdwaras and sangat in the Netherlands :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157622147381380/

Belgium and Netherlands public transport pictures at :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157622685920411/

More Netherlands pictures to follow
Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

The Tribune – On the LAC Part 2; India needs to ramp up infrastructure along LAC

Ajay Banerjee writes from Fukche in Ladakh

All along the backbreaking drive on the 109-km dirt track connecting Loma, Fukche and Demchok, it is disconcerting to see how India has failed to lay a metalled road on a flat plain-like plateau in South-Eastern Ladakh despite its announced focus on ramping up infrastructure along the Chinese frontier.

The story of the dirt track repeats itself if an approach is to be made to Chushul, another area on the Line of Actual Control (LAC) with China. Rather, for Chushul – it is the place where the epic battle of Rezang La was fought in 1962 – there are two approaches and both are dirt tracks. One road takes off from south of the Pangong Tso lake and the other one takes off from Loma. Men like Phuntsog Namgayal, local councillor of the Ladakh Autonomous Hill District Council, echo the demand saying “we have lot of troubles, at least the road should be good”.

Loma, around 180 km south-east of Leh and located along the banks of the Indus, is the bifurcation point for two important approaches towards the sensitive LAC. A left turn takes off to Chushul and the last 68-km stretch is a dirt track. New Delhi now wants to make up and is planning a road to Chushul that will travel a different route and be behind the mountains hence movement on it will be outside visual range of the Chinese.

The other road from Loma goes across a bridge on the Indus and leads to a dirt track to Fukche and Demchok, both located smack on the LAC but 20 km apart, west-to-east. The 109 km drive takes more than three hours in one of the high-end SUVs.

Sources point out that the road work on the stretch had hit a hurdle as the area falls under the “Chumathang cold desert wildlife sanctuary” which was notified around 10 years ago.

There is not a single tree along the route and the population, as per government records, is less than 900. A few hundred wild animals like the Kiang – a kind of mix between a horse and a donkey – inhabit the area. In the second week of October, an independent survey of the animal population was completed and it is hoped the road work will commence in the next fiscal after formal clearance from the environment impact assessment committee.

India’s planning on this front has been faulty despite it having stationed its military outposts at Demchok and Fukche since 1965 and even earlier at Chushul. In contrast, China set up its military posts across the LAC in 2008. Along with the posts have come fully metalled roads, well-stocked storehouses and concrete accommodation for its troops. The difference between India and China’s infrastructure is glaring in these parts of the LAC. The Chinese efforts are visible as one looks across the Indus that runs along the LAC. The Chinese watch towers at Domshele and Demchok are triple-storeyed concrete structures and are visibly well-protected and insulated.

Only now has India ramped up facilities for its jawans at Chushul and provided them with the latest DRDO-built accommodation where inside temperatures can be controlled even if it’s snowing outside.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2011/20111101/main2.htm

Dawn – A scent of change in the air

By Zaheer Mahmood Siddiqui

Lahore: The Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaaf meeting at Minar-i-Pakistan on Sunday was said to be the largest-ever political gathering of people in decades, motivating a large number of hitherto silent educated youth, especially women, to start directly taking part in politics in the hope of bringing about a change by and for them.

Waving the PTI flags, the crowd was charged and responsive with a political enthusiasm not witnessed in Lahore after 1986 when people thronged thoroughfares from airport to Minar-i-Pakistan to welcome Benazir Bhutto.

There were cars, mini-buses and wagons parked on both sides of Circular Road from near Sheranwala Gate up to Urdu Bazaar, with people marching towards a jam-packed Minar-i-Pakistan till around 7 pm when Imran Khan started spelling out his “manifesto for change.”

Though the meeting was scheduled to begin at 2pm, participants from other cities started reaching the venue around 9.30am and a number of them opted for visiting Lahore Fort and Badshahi Mosque before coming to Minar-i-Pakistan.

A big group from Imran’s hometown Mianwali was the first to arrive, followed by those from Hazara, Dera Ismael Khan, Kohat, Dera Ghazi Khan, Sialkot, Khanewal, Kasur, Okara and Sahiwal.

Activists of the Insaaf Students Federation from Peshawar reached there with headbands inscribed with Al-Jihad and joined their colleagues from Bannu, Abbottabad, Mardan and Swabi performing Hattan dance on a Pushto song being played there. They also displayed a big banner carrying “Go Zardari, Go Nawaz” slogan besides a huge flag of the PTI.

The Lahorites, especially those accompanying families, began thronging Minar-i-Pakistan around 4pm when the front-rows in the enclosure reserved for them had been occupied by the youth. However, on the request of organisers the youth moved away without any argument.

Led by Sardar Tarlok Singh and Sardar Harpal Singh, a group of Sikhs from Wapda Town of Lahore also arrived with a banner, calling for change and raising slogans.

A remote-controlled aeroplane carrying the PTI flag besides balloons released in the air from time to time remained the focus of attention of a good number of children, who had been attending their first such meeting.

Eight walkthrough gates were installed for the meeting where the PTI youth wing activists along with some plainclothes men were deputed to carry out body search of the participants. The arrangements worked well till 5pm after which the youth started climbing up the fences and grills to reach the lawns of Minar-i-Pakistan.

http://www.dawn.com/2011/10/31/a-scent-of-change-in-the-air-2.html

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