The Tribune – SGPC hails US verdict lifting ban on ‘kirpan’

Tribune News Service

Amritsar, June 10. The Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC) has hailed a US court’s decision to lift the ban on wearing ‘kirpan’ on the premises of Gurdwara of Rochester. In a statement issued here today, SGPC chief Avtar Singh Makkar said the court verdict had come as a big relief to the Sikh community in the US.

It was earlier alleged that the trustees of the gurdwara had submitted affidavits to the court supporting an application for preliminary injunction from the judge for “barring all persons entering the gurdwara premises from bringing in ceremonial sheathed swords larger than 4-6 inches or other weapons that could cause injury or be a threat to the persons on the premises”. This had invited criticism from a large section of Sikhs.

However, the board of trustees later clarified that there was no restriction on the small ‘kirpan’.

“There is also no restriction on the full-size ‘kirpan’ usually carried by Bhai Sahibans and/or anyone who normally wears it. Nobody has ever been denied entry to the gurdwara because of the size of the ‘kirpan’ during the past over 30 years of its existence,” they stated.

Makkar also welcomed the verdict of the Pakistan Supreme Court directing former chairman of the Evacuee Trust Property Board (ETPB), Syed Asif Hashmi, to deposit the money allegedly embezzled by him.

The trust looks after gurdwara affairs in Pakistan.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2013/20130611/punjab.htm#2

UK – 7 April; Guru Nanak Darbar & Havelock Road Singh Sabha Southall; Vaisakhi Nagar Kirtan

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Guru Nanak Darbar – Afghan Ekta
Plans for the new Gurdwara

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Guru Nanak Darbar – Afghan Ekta
Plans for the new Gurdwara

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Gurdwara Singh Sabha Havelock Road
Vaisakhi Nagar Kirtan

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Gurdwara Singh Sabha Havelock Road
Vaisakhi Nagar Kirtan

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Gurdwara Singh Sabha Havelock Road

Vaisakhi Nagar Kirtan, Palki Sahib

To see more World and UK Gurdwara pictures :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/4304661200/in/set-72157611278213681

To see more Southall, Middlesex, UK pictures :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157624060488388/

More UK pictures to follow
Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

The Tribune – Sarna: Will back memorial outside Rakabganj Sahib

Ludhiana, June 9. Paramjit Singh Sarna, president of the Shiromani Akali Dal (Delhi), today said he would support the Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee (DSGMC) move to raise a memorial to the 1984 riots victims if the memorial was constructed outside Gurdwara Rakabganj Sahib at any other site in Delhi.

“Moreover, we want to construct a memorial for those killed in the post-Partition communal violence,” Sarna said.

He alleged that the SAD was merely playing politics by raking up the 1984 riots issue when parliamentary elections were round the corner. (TNS)

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2013/20130610/punjab.htm#13

UK – 7 April 2013; Havelock Road Singh Sabha and Guru Nanak Darbar Southall

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Havelock Road Singh Sabha
The picture about which there was so much excitement during my previous visit to the UK

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The new  Guru Nanak Darbar – Afghan Ekta under construction

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Guru Nanak Darbar
More Gurdwaras should have notices like this !

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The new Gurdwara seen from the rear car park

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View from King Street Norwood Road

Guru Nanak Darbar
Afghan Ekta Cultural and Religious Community Centre
65-75 King Street
Southall UB2 4DQ

To see more World and UK Gurdwara pictures :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/4304661200/in/set-72157611278213681

More UK pictures to follow
Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

UK – 6 April; King’s Cross St Pancras; 7 April; Havelock Road Singh Sabha, Southall

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King’s Cross St Pancras Underground Station

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Sri Guru Singh Sabha Havelock Road
Big divan hall

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Sri Guru Singh Sabha Havelock Road

Small divan hall, kids dressed up for Nagar Kirtan

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Sri Guru Singh Sabha Havelock Road
Small divan hall, kids dressed up for Nagar Kirtan

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Sri Guru Singh Sabha Havelock Road
Small divan hall, kids dressed up for Nagar Kirtan

To see more World and UK Gurdwara pictures :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/4304661200/in/set-72157611278213681

To see more UK Trains, Underground and Buses pictures :

http://www.flickr.com/photos/12445197@N05/sets/72157611244941713/

More UK pictures to follow
Harjinder Singh
Man in Blue

The Tribune – Jatha members await Pakistan visas

Tribune News Service

Amritsar, June 3. Uncertainty looms large over the visit of SGPC jatha to Pakistan for the martyrdom day of Guru Arjan Dev. A jatha of 500 members was to leave for Pakistan tomorrow. But sources in the SGPC said they had not got visas yet. SGPC official Jaspal Singh said the picture would be clear by tomorrow.

Avtar Singh Makkar, SGPC chief, said they had had a word with the Evacuee Trust Property Board (ETPB) in Pakistan that looks after the gurdwara affairs there. It had accepted the SGPC plea to observe the martyrdom day on June 12 as per the amended Nanakshahi calendar.

The Pakistan Sikh Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (PSGPC) has already made it clear that it will follow the original Nanakshahi calendar and observe the martyrdom day on June 16. For the past two years, the Pakistan High Commission has denied visas to SGPC jathas because of the differences between the SGPC and the PSGPC over the Nanakshahi calendar.

The SGPC had to call off its jatha’s visit to Pakistan in 2011 and 2012 with the Pakistan High Commission contending that the PSGPC was observing Gurpurab on a different date.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2013/20130604/punjab.htm#16

Vaisakhi 1699 – Short History – Vilvoorde Nagar Kirtan 26 May 2013

The speech that did not happen

Vahiguru Ji Ka Khalsa  Vahiguru Ji Ki Fateh

I am Harjinder Singh, a Sikh from the Netherlands, and I am going to give you a short outline of the history of the Sikhs from 1469 till 1699.

Sikhism, one of the world religions, has its origins in Punjab, the state that in 1947 was divided between India and Pakistan.

Sikhs often call their tradition the Sikh Dharm, or Sikh way of life. This way of life was founded by Guru Nanak, who was born in 1469. Guru means teacher, Sikh means student.
We say that Guru Nanak received God’s Light and that this light was passed on to the nine Gurus that came after him.

The Sikh Guru’s teachings emphasise a positive way of life, in which bad or useless behaviour is replaced by good behaviour. A Sikh should not be ruled by lust or anger, or by the desire for ever more, ever bigger, ever more expensive possessions.

Sikhs should definitely not follow : Me, Me, Me and sod the others.
A Sikh should earn an honest living, should share with others and keep God in mind with all she or he does.

A well-known quote from the Guru Granth, our holy book, is: ‘Truth is high, but higher still is truthful living’.

From Guru Nanak till the fifth Guru, Guru Arjan, the community of those that followed the teachings and the example of the Gurus grew.

Guru Arjan and his Sikhs were noticed by the then Indian emperor Jahangir. The Guru was seen as a threat to the Mughal Empire en in 1606 he was tortured to death in a most horrible way.

De ninth Guru, Guru Teg Bahadur, was asked by Hindus from Kashmir to go to the emperor in Delhi on their behalf, to ask him to allow them to peacefully follow their tradition, without being put under pressure to convert to Islam.

The Emperor in the days of the ninth and the tenth Guru was Aurangzeb, somebody who you can compare with the Spanish king Philips II. Aurangzeb was intolerant and did not understand that he could only keep his big empire together by compromising with the majority of the population that was not Muslim.

Aurangzeb was the wrong person to discuss tolerance with. First Guru’s companions were one by one tortured to death, and finally the Guru was beheaded.

This happened in 1675 in the centre of Old Delhi, near the Red Fort, the seat of the Emperors government.

Here is now a beautiful big Gurdwara, a Sikh place of worship, which if you ever visit Delhi, is well worth a visit.

Guru Teg Bahadur was succeeded by the last human Guru of the Sikhs, who then was still known as Gobind Rai.

The new Guru considered what had happened to his predecessor, and decided that the Sikhs should make a stand, and oppose the intolerant and violent rule of Aurengzeb.

The Sikhs are and were a peaceful community. But there are situations under intolerant regimes like that of Emperor Aurangzeb, or that of the Libyan Gadaffi or the Syrian al-Assad, where one has to fight oppression and injustice.

The Guru understood that the use of violence could undermine the ethical principles of Sikhism.

I think that because of this he decided in 1699 to ask his Sikhs to gather in Anandpur Sahib, in the north of Panjab, in order to found the Khalsa. This happened on the first day of the month of Vaisakh, which coincides with the 13th or the 14th of April, the Vaisakhi day.

Guru Gobind Rai stood with his sword in his hand before the Sikhs and asked : ‘who wants to give his head ?’ After some hesitation the first five came forward. These were initiated into the Khalsa by Guru, and then they initiated the Guru.

The first five Khalsas are known as the Panj Piaré, the Five Beloved. They came from different parts of India and were from different social groups.

Both the Guru and the first five Khalsas were given the name Singh. Guru Gobind Rai became Gobind Singh. From then on they wore the five Sikh symbols and the turban.

The five symbols are :

Kesh : Uncut, unshorn hair

Kangha : Wooden comb, often worn in the top-knot

Kara : Steel bangle

Kacchera : Cotton Panjabi style ‘boxer’

Kirpan : Small Sword

The Kirpan stands for the fight against injustice, against oppression. In a democratic society we will ‘fight’ using democratic means, under a dictatorship violence can be used. 

By the adoption of a common name the caste differences were done away with, by wearing the turban Sikhs became equal to turban wearing worldly and spiritual leaders.

After the first five many more Sikh men and women were initiated into the Khalsa, and the call of Guru is still heard today.

Even now Sikhs offer their head to Guru, commit themselves to the Sikh way of life and to standing up against injustice and oppression.

The Guru said to his Khalsa that they should not fight out of anger or greed, and not to conquer other’s land. The Guru wanted his Sikhs to have courage, self-confidence and self-respect.

He emphasised that his Khalsa had to look differently and to behave differently, i. e. better. The Khalsas are the Saint-Soldiers, who always strive to serve all, not just the Sikh community.

A good example is the story about Bhai Ghanaya. This soldier of Guru Gobind Singh gave water to all wounded soldiers left on the battlefield, regardless whether they were soldiers of the Guru or of the Emperor.

Many Muslims supported Guru Gobind Singh in spite of the fact that he fought against a Muslim emperor. Throughout the history of the Sikhs there have been Hindus and Muslims who supported the Gurus.

After the death of Guru Gobind Singh in 1708 followed a period of about 100 years of struggle, which resulted in 1799 in a Sikh kingdom under Maharaja Ranjit Singh. In the government of Ranjit Singh were Hindu, Muslim en Sikh ministers, and the three communities lived together peacefully.

Today Sikhs walk through Vilvoorde in the Vaisakhí Nagar Kirtan, the annual Sikh parade commemorating Vaisakhí 1699.

Nagar Kirtan means ‘singing in the town’ and the texts that we sing are from our holy book, the Guru Granth.

The five men in orange robes carrying swords that precede the parade represent the first five initiated Sikhs, the Panj Piaré.

We are taught to see all humanity as one family. We want to practice this also here in Belgium.

The singers on the truck with the Guru Granth, the five men with their swords that walk in front of the truck and the whole Sikh community, want to share Guru’s ideals with you.

These ideals are not ‘exotic’, these ideals are not anti-western or anti-Belgian. What the Guru was trying to achieve comes very close to the slogan of the French revolution : Freedom, Equality and Brotherhood.

We believe that there is no Christian God, Hindu God, Muslim God or Sikh God, there is One God for all, regardless what name we give Her/Him.  All mankind, regardless of skin colour, nationality or faith are brothers and sisters, of one humanity.

Religion, spirituality should unite people, not divide them.

Vahiguru Ji Ka Khalsa   Vahiguru Ji Ki Fateh

The Tribune – Explain delay in widening of road: High Court to Amritsar administration

G S Paul, Tribune News Service

Amritsar, May 26. Taking cognisance of traffic congestion and hassles en route the Golden Temple, the Punjab and Haryana High Court has issued a notice of motion to the Amritsar Deputy Commissioner, Municipal Commissioner and the Executive Officer of the Improvement Trust, directing them to furnish affidavits by May 29 and explain why the road widening project on this route could not be executed till date.

Acting on a petition filed by Amritsar resident Manmohan Singh, the High Court has questioned the delay in widening the road leading from GT road to the Golden Temple passing through Ghee Mandi even as a compensation of Rs 8.98 crore has been awarded to 105 affected property owners. The court also took notice of the old buildings in deplorable conditions on both sides of this route.

Under the project, the 1.5-km stretch opposite the momentous Jallianwala Bagh till Ghee Mandi is to be widened up to 40 ft to ease congestion on the way to the Golden Temple. The administration had issued notices to residents and traders, asking them to shift their belongings to a safer place. But due to political intervention, the authorities have so far failed to take possession of the required land despite awarding compensation.

Amritsar Deputy Commissioner Rajat Aggarwal said: “We will comply with the directions of the High Court”.

The Golden Temple is located in the centre of the walled city. Approach to this Sikh shrine, which receives over 1 lakh visitors daily, is through two main roads.

Via Hall Bazaar: Hall Bazaar is a commercial hub of the city. Temporary shops have come up outside Dharam Singh Market and loading/unloading of goods is a common sight in the narrow Katra Ahluwalia. Haphazard parking and encroachments on pedestrian paths in Bazaar Pappara, Brahambuta Market are traffic hazards.

Via Ghee Mandi, Sheranwala Gate: Main approach from the GT road. Both these roads are in a deplorable condition. On the Sheranwala Gate road, a flyover has been made, but it ends at Saragarhi parking meant for personal vehicles.

Encroachments and parking of heavy trucks on the road below the flyover lead to chaos. The only alternative for a hassle-free ride to the Golden Temple is left with widening of the Ghee Mandi road, adjoining the Sheranwala Gate.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2013/20130527/punjab.htm#14

Woolwich Machete Attack on Soldier

National Sikh Security Forum - Two arrested after Mosques attack

Dear all,

Please be vigilant against any attacks on Gurdwaras following the despicable incident in Woolwich earlier today. Details below.

SIE had forwarded guidance on how to make places of worship prior to and during the summer riots a few years ago.

Hard copies were also distributed to some national Sikh bodies who promised to forward them on to their members.

As SIE does not have resources to reprint and distribute again and again, please seek copies from the National Sikh bodies to which your Gurdwara is affiliated to and presumeably pays subscriptions to.

Harmander Singh
Chair National Sikh Security Forum
07958 94 6868

Attack on Mosque

Two men have been arrested after separate attacks on mosques following the terrorist incident in Woolwich.

A 43-year-old man is in custody on suspicion of attempted arson after reportedly walking into a mosque with a knife in Braintree, Essex.

Local MP Brooks Newmark tweeted: “Local mosque in Braintree attacked by man with knives and incendiary device. Man arrested. No one injured.”

Essex Police confirmed a 43-year-old from Braintree had been arrested on suspicion of possession of an offensive weapon and attempted arson after the incident in Silks Way at 7.15pm. The spokesman added that police were investigating the “full circumstances” and said “it would not be appropriate to speculate at this time”.

Meanwhile, police in Kent were called to reports of criminal damage at a mosque in Canterbury Street, Gillingham, at 8.40pm. A spokesman said a man is in custody on suspicion of racially-aggravated criminal damage. The force has stepped up the police presence after a man was butchered in broad daylight on the streets of London.

Supporters of the English Defence League (EDL) gathered at Woolwich Arsenal train station near the scene and threw bottles at police.

EDL leader Tommy Robinson, who was among a group of around 250 men, said: “They’re chopping our soldiers’ heads off. This is Islam. That’s what we’ve seen today.”

He added: “They’ve cut off one of our Army’s heads off on the streets of London. Our next generation are being taught through schools that Islam is a religion of peace. It’s not. It never has been. What you saw today is Islam. Everyone’s had enough. There has to be a reaction, for the Government to listen, for the police to listen, to understand how angry this British public are.”

The secretary of the mosque in Braintree, Sikander Saleemy, reportedly told Channel 4 News that he felt like it was a “revenge attack”. Mr Saleemy said: “The police said it’s too early to try and link it to what happened in Woolwich, but those of us who were here feel that it was some sort of revenge attack. It was clear from the man’s behaviour.

“We absolutely condemn what happened in Woolwich, but it had nothing to do with us. It was an appalling act of terror – but it wasn’t “Islamic” in any way. I wish it wasn’t described like that, because sadly people will now start to blame Muslims.”

The Tribune – Memorial for riot hit at Rakabganj Sahib

Syed Ali Ahmed, Tribune News Service

New Delhi, May 22. The Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee (DSGMC) today decided to construct a memorial for the 1984 anti-Sikh riot victims on the premises of Gurdwara Rakabganj Sahib.

The DSGMC president, Manjit Singh (GK), said a committee consisting of architects and Sikh historians would decide the shape of the memorial.

About 14,000 Sikhs are believed to have been killed during the 1984 riots, about 4,000 in Delhi alone. The government puts the casuality figure in Delhi at 2,733.

“As the victims have not been given justice, we decided to raise a building in their memory. Last year we had decided to construct the memorial at a park in Punjabi Bagh. But this was opposed by the government,’ Manjit Singh said. Asked about government permission, he said this was not required.

The SAD in charge of Delhi affairs, Balwant Singh Ramoowalia, said the memorial would be for all those who believed in justice.

General secretary of the DSGMC Manjinder Singh Sirsa said a resolution to construct the memorial was passed by the General House, with three members against it and five in its favour.

A senior member of the DSGMC, Avtar Singh Hit, said: “We will raise the memorial at any cost.”

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2013/20130523/punjab.htm#12

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