Southall & East London Vaisakhi Nagar Kirtan 2013

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My brother Amrik Singh (Airport Wala) was one of the Panj Piaré

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Sikh police officer and the Man in Blue

These are two of the many pictures taken at the Southall Nagar Kirtan

Underneath a link to a video on the East London Nagar Kirtan, made by the Sangat TV team with my brother Pritpal Singh

 http://youtu.be/AqurDCegTMY

21st April 2013 East Ham, London

The popular and colourful spectacle known as the Nagar Kirtan (procession) was attended by communities from across Greater and east London.

Procession started at Gurdwara Dashmesh Darbar in Rosebery Avenue in East Ham passing through Romford Road, Green Street in Ilford.

Gurdwara Dashmesh Darbar is a Sikh place of worship in Manor Park (East Ham), East London. The building is a converted church building that has been a Sikh Gurdwara for over 30 years.

Thousands of Local Sikhs got together from all over the Greater London area to take part in this Nagar Kirtan which celebrates the creation of the Khalsa at the Vaisakhi of 1699 in Anandpur Sahib. Amongst others 102 year Bhai Fauja Singh,  world’s oldest (retired) marathon runner was also present.

Pritpal Singh | The Dutch Sikh
https://www.facebook.com/TheDutchSikh

Nederlandse Sikhs uit Afghanistan met Pritpal Singh en Harjinder Singh

Videolink net boven de tweede foto !

Jatinder Singh en Diljít Kaur

Op zaterdag 25 augustus was ik (Harjinder Singh) in de Sangat TV studio in Southall samen met Diljít Kaur, Jatinder Singh en Pritpal Singh. Ik ben in Nederland geboren en getogen, kom uit een christelijke familie, ben nu 65 jaar oud en werd op 14 juli 1996 een amritdhari (ingewijde) Sikh.

Pritpal Singh, Jatinder Singh en Diljít Kaur zijn alle drie Afghaanse Sikhs en zijn als vluchteling in Nederland terechtgekomen. Ze hebben daar Nederlands leren spreken en hebben alle drie de Nederlandse nationaliteit. Jatinder en Diljít zijn broer en zus.

We hebben in de studio onder mijn leiding ongeveer 20 minuten informeel met elkaar gepraat. Dit programma gaat niet over hoe Harjinder Singh een Sikh werd, maar over hoe drie Afghanen naar Nederland kwamen, hoe ze daar opgevangen werden en hoe het contact met de andere cultuur en de andere mensen was.

Diljít Kaur en Jatinder Singh waren respectievelijk 5 en 7 jaar toen ze in Nederland aankwamen, Pritpal Singh was 18. Hij was gescheiden van zijn familie, de andere twee waren samen met hun ouders naar Nederland gevlucht.

Een laatste detail dat mij aansprak : mijn vader’s familie komt uit het dorp Ouwerkerk op het Duivelandse deel van Schouwen-en-Duiveland, Diljít, Jatinder en familie kwamen terecht in een opvangcentrum in Bruinisse, op datzelfde Duiveland.

Wij hebben genoten van ons gesprek, ik hoop dat de kijkers het ook interessant vinden.

Harjinder Singh
The Man in Blue
Sint-Truiden, Belgisch Limburg

Link naar de YouTube Video

http://youtu.be/hTTLcUZnmeI

Amarpreet Singh onze cameraman met zwarte tulband
Pritpal Singh met gele tulband

Pritpal Singh & Harjinder Singh on Sikh Channel & You Tube


Harjinder Singh & Pritpal Singh in Ealing the Sikh Channel Studio

Underneath the link to the Sikh Channel programme with Pritpal Singh and Harjinder Singh.

An inspirational chat show with Dutch Sikh Harjinder Singh. Find out why he embraced Sikhism. We take about his past experiences, his spiritual journey and his contributions to the wider society.

http://youtu.be/4Mi9Lw0463c

Find out why a Dutchman, Cornelis Heule, became Harjinder Singh

Cornelis Harjinder Singh Heule was born in 1947 in Roermond in the Netherlands as Cornelis Heule. He is known as Harjinder Singh, names given to him when he became an initiated Sikh in 1996.

He followed primary school in his home town and the first half of his secondary in Heerlen. Harjinder Singh then moved to Amstelveen (near Amsterdam) where he finished secondary school.

Harjinder went to University in Amsterdam, but he got caught up in the student movement. He worked for about 25 years in the travel industry, both in Amsterdam, The Netherlands and in Dublin, Ireland. In 1996 Harjinder Singh went to Panjab, India where he stayed for four years.

In the first 2½ years of his stay in Panjab he studied Sikhí and its history, and made himself useful in the Harmandar Sahib complex in Amritsar. The last 1½ year in Panjab he stayed mostly in Chandigarh, where he did voluntary work (seva) for the Institute of Sikh Studies.

In 2000 he came to West London, UK where he lived until June 2010. He did not have a ‘job’ but was involved in a number of different organisations as a volunteer and as ‘Faith and Cultural Diversity consultant’.

Harjinder Singh was a member of the Multi-Faith Chaplaincy team at Heathrow Airport and at Richmond upon Thames College and was involved in a number of Sikh lobby groups and advisory groups to the Police. Mr Singh did diversity training for the Slough REC, and was the National Development Officer of Faith & Belief in Further Education.

On June 17 2010 Harjinder Singh moved to Sint Truiden in the Dutch speaking Belgian province of Limburg, where he is trying to make himself useful by using his language skills. Harjinder Singh at present is assisting Sikh families from Afghanistan with their Asylum case in Belgium. He is providing all necessary assistance to one Afghan Sikh family in particular, who are threatened with deportation to Kabul, Afghanistan.

He does still write his column (The Man In Blue).

He is sixty-five, happy and busy doing seva for the Panth.

Pritpal Singh, the Dutch Sikh

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