Tom Mulcair Responds: Tells India he won’t be bullied and stands firm on 1984 Statement
Guest blogged by ResistSingh Every June and November, Sikhs in Canada (and globally) are curious to see what Canadian politicians will say about the tragedies of 1984. Will they align themselves with the community and provide support and solidarity with the Sikhs as they come together to remember both...
India’s Foreign Interference: Telling Lies, Spreading Hate
Guest blogged by ResistSingh As the month of June has passed, Canadian Sikhs, along with human rights activists and their allies, are recovering from yet another campaign of misinformation by the Indian High Commission and a recent wave of visceral and unfounded attacks. Twenty-eight years after the...
Decision-Making Amongst Sikhs
Guestblogged by Harinder Singh Harinder Singh is a co-founder of the Sikh Research Institute and the Panjab Digital Library. He is interested in anything Sikhi, esp. institutional development towards community building. His Twitter handle is @1Force. I heard as recently as last Sunday at a Baltimore...
#10DaysofTerror
Guest blogged by @NSYF (National Sikh Youth Federation) The Sikh community in the UK is once again preparing to mark the anniversary of the June 1984 Indian army invasion of their holiest place of worship. Harmandir Sahib, also known as the Golden Temple located in Amritsar, was invaded in an unprecedented...
Challenging Misinformation about Sikhi on BBC Radio
Guest blogged by Naujawani Sardar Sikhs in the UK celebrated a victory of sorts today with the news that the national broadcaster, the BBC, ‘regretted’ comments made by a presenter on their digital radio station, the BBC Asian Network. On 13 March, DJ Nihal Arthanayake had suggested on his...
Learn About Sikhi at Sidak 2012
Guest blogged by Sharandeep Singh http://www.vimeo.com/37006707 Sidak, run by Sikh Research Institiute, is a diamond among jewels. It is one program, which after attending, completely changes your outlook on Sikhi, and life – I speak unequivocally when I say there is nothing else like it! As a...
Balwant Singh Rajoana’s Gift to the Nation
The following is a guest-post, In Defence of Assassination: Balwant Singh Rajoana’s Gift to the Nation, by our guest-blogger Inklabi Singh. Balwant Singh Rajoana has been in jail since 1995 and was sentenced to death 5 years ago, but it was only recently, as the date of his execution started...
LIVE FROM AMRITSAR – Day 2 (day after the Punjab Bandh)
Day 2, March 29: Day after 1st Punjab Bandh I tend to spend my nights at the Darbar Sahib, emerging from the complex around 9 am from the Manji Sahib jorha house. What I saw this morning near the South side of the Darbar Sahib complex near Baba Atal was notedly different from the scenes described yesterday. As...
LIVE FROM AMRITSAR – Day 1 on Punjab Bandh
The following are daily live reports we have been receiving from a friend in Amritsar. This came from yesterday (March 28, 2012) on the Day of the Bandh. So long as we hear from them, we’ll keep posting.  We’re posting this exactly as they wrote it – spelling, capitalizations, and...
Zindabaad
Guest blogged by Preeti Kaur For Bhai Balwant Singh Rajoana For everyone who flies the kesri jhaanda today   ZINDABAAD TO THE KESRI FLAG WAVING ACROSS MY HEART ZINDABAAD TO MARCH 31, 2012 ZINDABAAD TO THE EYES ZINDABAAD TO THE LUNGS ZINDABAAD TO THE WRIST WHICH WEARS THE KARA TO REMAIN SHACKLED...
Sikh Punjabi Western
Guest post by Naujawani Sardar The title to this article might have conjured up images of a cowboy-style shoot ’em up between turban-donning, mounted riders, and whilst I would welcome development of such an idea into a film, sadly that’s not what i’m writing about.  I am Sikh, Punjabi...
Reflecting on the Punjab 2012 Elections
Guest post by Nirbhau Kaur [Admin note: This post was penned by the author the morning after election results were made public in Punjab.] Pain. Disgust. Hurt. Dread. Longing. Connect, then Disconnect. For the first time I felt these feelings in relation to Punjab – a land where I was not born,...
Surat-Lalkaar 2012 – A New Collaboration
Guest blogged by Mewa Singh. Earlier this year, I wrote an in-depth post, summarizing the workshops and questions raised at the Jakara Movement’s annual Lalkaar conference.  I was hardly alone.  Our sisters at Kaurista shared their thoughts, as did a number of individual participants. So now...
Remembering Partition, One Story at a Time
Guest blogged by Ranjanpreet Nagra and Jaskiran K. Mann In February 2011, six months after finishing my Master’s in South Asian Studies from University of Michigan, I moved to Berkeley and was still looking for a job and a place to live when I met the founding members of The 1947 Partition Archive,...
Sikh Identity: Separate but Equal?
Guest blogged by Birpal Kaur Over this past weekend there was an article published in the Los Angeles Times of the  experiences of Sikh women and maintaining kesh.  This article addresses the journey and relationship with kesh, looking at societal pressures as well as a personal journey, and in this...
Confusion to Solution: Educating Children about the Sikh Identity
Guest blogged by Navjot Kaur Usually, I can take quite a lot before something unsettles me. Today, my pressure cooker was whistling. When you think things can’t get much worse, they have a way of doing just that. When it rains, it pours, right? As I went to pick up my son at the end of his second day...
Nishaan – The Sikh Society Network
Guest blogged by Naujawani Sardar There has been a lot of talk about the SGPC elections recently, even over on our blog. And it got me thinking about a whole range of things from ‘selection vs. election’ to Sikh bodies outside of Punjab. My life in Sikh circles has been positively fascinating...
If England were like a langar hall there’d be no riots
 Guest blogged by Eren Londonwala Each day I walk down Ferry Lanein Tottenham to my workplace. On Friday 5 August a police cordon blocked my usual route. I learned later that police had shot dead 29 year-old alleged gang-member Mark Duggan the night before. The precise facts remain unclear but early...
Remembering Hari Singh Everest
Guestblogged by Mewa Singh. A young and vibrant community in the diaspora, it is incumbent upon us to remember our trailblazers.  Hari Singh Everest was one such person.  I remember reading his name during my undergraduate days.  Stumbling across the ‘Sikh Review’, when I should have been...
The Sacred Thread: It’s All In the Head
Guest blogged by Gurchit Singh.  Gurchit is a 16-year-old aspiring activist (in his own words) who submitted this piece (his first) to The Langar Hall.  Raksha Bandan was last Saturday, August 13th.  Oh the joys of Raksha Bandan! The air is filled with love, family members are conversing and munching...
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