J&K flood victims grateful to Sikhs for shelter at gurdwaras

Srinagar: Hundreds of flood-victims in Jammu and Kashmir who found shelter at various gurdwaras across the the state are grateful to the Sikh community for their contribution in the rescue efforts. Abdul Rasheed has been staying in Gurudwara Shaheed Bunga for past 17 days ever since he along with his family was rescued from his […]

Srinagar: Hundreds of flood-victims in Jammu and Kashmir who found shelter at various gurdwaras across the the state are grateful to the Sikh community for their contribution in the rescue efforts.

Abdul Rasheed has been staying in Gurudwara Shaheed Bunga for past 17 days ever since he along with his family was rescued from his marooned house in Jawahar Nagar here.

“Floodwater did not spare any community, everybody was equally affected, but we are thankful to the members of the Sikh community” he said.

Expressing gratitude towards the Sikh community, the flood victims, of whom a majority were Muslims, said they would remain indebted to the community as they helped them without discriminating on the basis of religion.

“I had never been to Gurudwara before and I am overwhelmed to see the love and care these people gave us. Without being bothered about our religion, they allowed us to live inside the main hall of the gurudwara,” Maqsood Ahmed, a resident of Bemina locality, said.

Besides setting up relief camps at gurdwaras, several members of Sikh community also volunteered in rescue efforts.

“A sardarji used his turban to pull my drowning family out. We owe our life to him, he even used the turban cloth to stop the bleeding of my daughter’s wounds,” Shabeer Ahmed another resident of Jawahar Nagar, said.

Various Sikh organisations from across the country and the globe too have extended help for the relief and rehabilitation of the flood affected residents.

“UK-based Khalsa Aid and US-based United Sikhs were among the first few charitable organisations which rushed their men and equipment to carry out the relief work in the Valley,” a government official said.

Delhi Sikh Gurudwara Management Committee (DGMC) and the Amritsar-based Shri Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee (SGPC) have set up 24-hour free Langer (community kitchens) at various places across the Srinagar city.

“Besides establishing Langers at several places in Srinagar, we have been providing packed food for more than 70,000 people daily,” DGMC member P S Chandok said.

Source: http://zeenews.india.com/

An Exclusive Series on Powers and Effects of the Daily Nitnem Banis!

Feel enlightened by learning the Power behind each Daily Bani you recite in Nitnem… Japji Sahib This bani controls one’s “ji,” one’s soul. When your Ji, your being, is endangered, when the radiance of your soul is weak, recite Japji Sahib. Guru Nanak Ji said that the thirty-eight pauris of Japji would liberate the humanity […]

Feel enlightened by learning the Power behind each Daily Bani you recite in Nitnem…

Japji Sahib

jap ji sahib

This bani controls one’s “ji,” one’s soul. When your Ji, your being, is endangered, when the radiance of your soul is weak, recite Japji Sahib.

Guru Nanak Ji said that the thirty-eight pauris of Japji would liberate the humanity from the cycles of birth and death.

Jaap Sahib

jaap sahib

The naad of Jaap Sahib rouses the soul and the self of the Being.

“Sahib” also means grace. Recite it when your position is endangered, or when your authoritative personality is weak. This bani brings grace and greatness. It will also give you the ability that, whatever people say, you will automatically be able to compute what they are actually saying. Once you are able to recite it correctly, it will give you the power, the siddhi, that whatever you say must happen. Man can direct God, and God can direct man Guru Gobind Singh Ji recited Jaap Sahib so we won’t become beggars at the doors of others.

TavPrasad Sawayie

tva prasad

This baani was spoken by Guru Gobind Singh ji. When you are not getting any satisfaction out of life, this is the bani to recite.

Chaupai Sahib

Chaupai Sahib

Chaupai Sahib is the short name for the Sikh prayer or Gurbani whose full name is Kabiobach Bainti Chaupai.

The Bani comes after the section called Charitropakhyan. Many “charitars” (tricks; deceptions) of the world are shown in Charitropakhyan. Charitars highlight negative energies that can be found on earth.

After composing Charitars, the tenth master composed the section that includes this particular bani. It is an Ardas or ‘request’ or ‘sincere plea’ to God for protection.

This Bani gives one the feeling of reliability and dependability on the Lord. If one has negative feelings and a lack of confidence in the future, one should recite this Bani to get an instant boost.

Anand Sahib

Anand Sahib

Whoever recites the forty pauris of Anand Sahib will have endless bliss, because the Guru is limitless. In this bani, mind and body are explained in relation to cosmic divinity. Guru Amar Das ji gave us the song of bliss, which is Anand Sahib, to qualify the mind and to understand the depth.For husband and wife to get together, recite it together,alternating sutras (lines).

Rehras Sahib

Rehraas Sahib

This Bani is recited after one has worked and is tired. It adds energy (raa-hu) to one’s being, to one’s total concept. Also, recite it when your principle worldly wealth is endangered. In naad, reh means live, and raas means commodity, so Rehras means living commodity. Rehras Sahib helps you when you are physically weak, or weak in money, property and earthly goods.

Shabad Hazare

Shabad Hazare

This is the highest love letter by a disciple, written by Guru Arjan Dev Ji to Guru Ram Dass Ji. Its gift is that it gives the benefits of a thousand shabads, and one’s soul will merge directly with God. It makes the separated ones come home with grace. One who recites this shabad will never be separated from their beloved.

Kirtan Sohila

Kirtan Sohila

This bani is done before sleep at night. It is the most harmonious Naad ever uttered. It multiplies the aura to the sensitivity of protection That it eliminates any negativity for miles and miles.

When you are endangered by any species of direct or indirect source, and when you want to protect yourself with the surrounding of the entire magnetic field of the earth, recite Kirtan Sohila.

Sajjan Singh is on a mission to conserve manuscripts and artefacts related to Deccani Sikhs Culture!

Since the past 10 years, Sajjan Singh, an engineer in Hyderabad, has been chasing the stories of his people, the Deccani Sikhs, and seen them disappear like rabbits down a hole — old reports commissioned by central or state minority commissions would cancel their own oral histories or only highlight part of it; new leads […]

Since the past 10 years, Sajjan Singh, an engineer in Hyderabad, has been chasing the stories of his people, the Deccani Sikhs, and seen them disappear like rabbits down a hole — old reports commissioned by central or state minority commissions would cancel their own oral histories or only highlight part of it; new leads would pop up with the excavation of an ancient sword or a flintlock gun and be left hanging; a period-book would turn up at the Salarjung Museum in a script that he would have to learn to translate. And he would try to work out, as all minorities do, how best the history and culture of his community not only be more widely known and spoken about by the community itself, but that it should ‘appear’ in the official history of Telangana at a time when the state is charting its own.

In the 100 days following the bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh, the Telangana government has been trying to redraw its priorities. A section of the population has interpreted the recently-conducted survey as one demanding proof of nativity. The small but rooted 50,000-strong Deccani Sikh community has no such qualms. They say they are “natives”, people who arrived in Hyderabad in 1832 as part of a gentleman’s agreement between two kings. “This is our home and Telangana has always treated us as its own,” says Iqbal Singh, who runs a transport business, referring to their 200-old history of habitation at Barambala, the 600-acre area where the first Sikh regiment camped as it marched into Hyderabad from Lahore on Maharaja Ranjit Singh’s orders to help the fourth Nizam on the appeal of his Punjabi Khatri prime minister, Chandu Lal.

Around 90% of Deccani Sikhs are descendants of that army. On Barambala, stands a school run by the Sikh Education Society, and a gurudwara, one of the first constructed in the Deccan. A rare lithographic Guru Granth Sahib, the holy book of the Sikhs, of Lahore lineage is kept here. Sajjan Singh’s interest in his own history, he says, began with this book as he helped in its binding and learnt to conserve it with the advice of Salarjung Museum experts.

What Deccani Sikhs now face is a peculiar situation. They are sandwiched between two identities: a) their Deccani culture with historical links to the house of the Nizam, not a popular figure with India’s political elite due to his pro-Pakistan stand at the time of independence and hence under no obligation to honour his last orders; b) and the pressure of being Sikhs outside Punjab. Being a minority among minorities, they are also on no party’s agenda. Muslims constitute 18% of the minority population of Hyderabad, Christians are 7-9% while the Sikhs are just 1%. The dominant Muslim minority gets the cream of reservations. On the other hand, the propagation of the Sikhs’ social culture, leave alone religious culture, find, if at all, intermittent political support.

In 2010, the Sikligar Sikh community (the ironsmiths) was included in the Backward Class (A) category; 285 houses were built for them, but they got no government job or financial assistance. The encroachment by the Wakf Board of the 200-acre Barambala land (gifted by the Nizam, now a busy Hyderabad suburb) has meant the control of the community has dwindled to a mere 65 acres. They further allege that no government has tried reclaiming it on their behalf. Sardar Ravinder Singh, the Karimnagar mayor, a Telangana Rashtra Samithi (TRS) man, is their sole ‘political force’. It’s a political appointment, they wish him well, but Deccani Sikhs expect nothing out of it.

There may also be a token Superintendent of Police here and an IAS there among the Deccani Sikhs, but most members of the community are self-employed. They run small-time businesses or are drivers working their own vehicles, or, are security guards at factories, reports a study by sociologist Birinder Pal Singh of the Punjab University, Patiala. Deccani Sikhs are, thus unsurprisingly again, a mass of knotted longing and frustrations. In 2014, Telangana almost reminds them of the state of limbo that followed the annexation of the pricely state of Hyderabad into the union of India in 1948.

“We came flying 14 holy flags, we were a 14,000-strong army, we were led by Risaldars,” recites Baby Singh, a Class VII student at the Guru Nanak School, Barambala, at high pitch, as if she had just seen them charge past her school window. The Sikhs aided in tax collection, spread the Nizam’s rule in his dominions and were, by all accounts, a good bouncers-cum-peacekeeping force. “Unlike the British, the Sikhs didn’t come for war, or as refugees, we were invited,” says Yuvraj Singh, a young mechanical engineering student on the lookout for a job. “We came on horseback, we stayed on horseback.” This 19th-century adventure story went kaput in its post-colonial encounter — by 1950, the Nizam had entered the Governor’s house; his Sardars were getting out of their two-starred lapelled tunics and breeches into civvies, ready to leave the cantonment.

Mixed feelings

All the talk of missed opportunities since 1950s also reflect to the Deccani Sikhs’ other anxiety which many of them put in the language of demand. They are proud of being Deccani, but they also want an acknowledgement of their ‘cultural loss’ and a separation from latter-day Sikh migrants, the Punjabi Sikhs who settled in Telangana post-partition, or came here to escape the 1980s riots after Indira Gandhi’s assassination.

Sarjit Singh, a retired bank employee, the Sikh representative in the state minority commission (erstwhile Andhra Pradesh called it the Minority Finance Corporation), for example, says he is now an office-bearer without an office and a salary. “100 days of the TRS government are over but the status of the body is ambiguous”, he says. “A `1,000-crore/ year fund is allotted for minorities but the breakup per community is unclear. I spent `1 lakh out of my own pocket to go on tours, visit gurudwaras in disturbed areas… Who will give us compensation? We came here from Lahore and lost our culture, our practice of spoken (Punjabi) language.”

Deccani Sikh households speak a mix of Hindu-Urdu are fluent in Telegu; Sajjan Singh’s wife, a bank official, even got a chance to be a Telegu news reader on TV. The women wear bindis and saris, though the preference for salwar kameez has begun to catch on. The higher economic profile of the Punjabi Sikhs has triggered at the same time, a protectiveness towards their own regional identity but also a watchfulfulness towards their upwardly mobile brethren from Punjab who are equally isolationist in their attitude. Pal’s study reveals that Hyderabad’s Punjabi Sikhs maintain a “hardbound glossy directory with complete contact details of their businesses” excluding the details about Deccani Sikhs and their businesses.

A group of young Deccani Sikhs list the following differences in all seriousness and state why these are reasons enough against intra-marriage: “We follow a line, we are hardcore Sikhs. In Punjab, if they feel like dancing, they dance, they drink”; “We never allow Sikhs with trimmed beards inside the gurudwara;” “We may read the Guru Granth Sahib in Hindi and they might know Gurumukhi but we are more attached to the Sikh tenets”; “Our food can’t do without imli; they make khatti dal in amchoor…” Their relationship with Punjab and mainstream Punjabi culture is, thus, complicated. They watch Punjabi films and TV serials, but have no family there nor any special desire to relocate there. (Only two students in a class in the Guru Nanak School said they have visited Punjab). They acknowledge the importance of the Golden Temple but want to stay away from Shirmonani Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee (SGPC) politics. “The SGPC tries to capture gurudwaras of Maharashtra and Hyderabad,” says a Deccani Sikh on the condition of anonymity. “They have a `800 crore-annual budget. But no funds for scholarship or grants for schools come our way.”

“We want reservation, we want Baisakhi declared a state holiday,” says Kunal Singh, a bank employee. “Deccani Sikhs are cremated at Hindu cremation grounds. We want our own graveyard,” he adds when another young Sikh shuts him up with a cackle referring to a member of their community. “That Darshan Singh Rajan, ever since he got a vehicle fitted with Gurbani cassettes to take people to the funeral ghat, two people have been dying every week!” No population to speak of and how we go on about having our own crematorium…”

~ Source: http://www.hindustantimes.com/

Bidding a Silent Last Good Bye – Shaheed Bhagat Singh’s last surviving sister passes away on his birthday in Canada!

Canada News: Shaheed Bhagat Singh’s last surviving sister passes away on his birthday in Canada. Bibi Prakash Kaur, the last surviving real sister of Shaheed Bhagat Singh passed away in Canada on Sunday. She was 94. Coincidently, she passed away on the birth anniversary of the martyr, which falls on September 28. Professor Chaman Lal, […]

Canada News: Shaheed Bhagat Singh’s last surviving sister passes away on his birthday in Canada.

Bibi Prakash Kaur, the last surviving real sister of Shaheed Bhagat Singh passed away in Canada on Sunday. She was 94. Coincidently, she passed away on the birth anniversary of the martyr, which falls on September 28.

Professor Chaman Lal, a former professor of JNU Delhi and an author of several books on the martyr confirmed the news.

She was living with her son Rupinder Singh in Toronto. Interestingly, a few hours before she died, Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) activists in Canada visited her to greet her on Bhagat Singh’s birth anniversary though she was not in a condition to respond.

She was bed ridden for 6-7 years. “Bibi Prakash Kaur was the last real sister of Bhagat Singh. Her husband Harbans Singh expired more than a decade ago. Her daughter’s brother-in-law was killed by Punjab police in an encounter and that had become a big issue in Punjab,” said Dr Lal.

Shaheed Bhagat Singh’s siblings included Jagat Singh, Bhagat Singh, Amar Kaur, Kulbir Singh, Shakuntla Devi, Kultar Singh, Prakash Kaur, Ranbir Singh and Rajinder Singh. Jagat Singh died very young, while others lived longer, apart from Bhagat Singh’s martyrdom at 23. Prior to Bibi Prakash Kaur, Kultar Singh died in 2004, at the age of 86 years.

Kultar Singh had remained MLA and minister in ND Tiwari led UP government. Kulbir Singh remained a Jan Sangh MLA from Punjab in the early 1960s.

Dr Lal also visited Bibi Prakash Kaur along with her other relatives living in Toronto in January 2012; she was known as Sumitra in family.

Nephews and nieces of Bhagat Singh, Virender Sandhu, Kiranjit Singh Sandhu, Inderjit Dhillon and Abhey Sandhu also condoled the passing away of Bibi Prakash Kaur.

~ Source: Sikh Channel

The Sikh Daughter – Mai Bhago!

Mai Bhago also known as Mata Bhag Kaur was a Sikh woman who led 40 Sikh soldiers against the Mughals in 1705. She killed several enemy soldiers on the battlefield, and is considered to be a saint warrior by the Sikh Nation for over 300 years. She was the sole survivor of the battle of […]

Mai Bhago also known as Mata Bhag Kaur was a Sikh woman who led 40 Sikh soldiers against the Mughals in 1705. She killed several enemy soldiers on the battlefield, and is considered to be a saint warrior by the Sikh Nation for over 300 years. She was the sole survivor of the battle of Khidrana, i.e. Battle of Muktsar (fought on 29 December 1705); was a daughter of Bhai Mallo Shah, granddaughter of Bhai Pero Shah, the younger brother of Bhai Langah, a Dhillon Jatt Chaudhary of 84 villages who had become a Sikh during the time of Guru Arjan, the fifth Sikh Guru. She was the only sister of four brothers.

Born at her ancestral village of Jhabal Kalan in present day Amritsar district of the Punjab, in the Majha region, she was married to Nidhan Singh Varaich of Patti, she was a staunch Sikh by birth and upbringing, she was distressed to hear in 1705 that some of the Sikhs of her village neighborhood who had gone to Anandpur Sahib to fight for Guru Gobind Singh Ji had deserted him under adverse conditions.

Finding these 40 men (now called the “challi mukta”) who had deserted the tenth Guru she persuaded them to find the Guru. She managed to convince them to apologize for leaving Anandpur sahib while it had been under attack; further she them to seek the Guru’s permission to be reinstated as Sikhs.

She set off along with them and some other Sikhs to find the Guru, who had been pursued by Mughal forces since leaving Anandpur. They caught up with him in the area around Malva. Mat Bhago and the men she was leading stopped near the dhab (pool) of Khidrana just as an imperial army was about to attack the Guru.

The 40 sikhs who had asked the Guru for permission to leave Anandpur, had been allowed to leave, but the Guru had asked them first to leave the Khalsa and dis-avowing him as their Guru. Now fate gave them the chance to redeem themselves, never mind that even though they appeared as Sikhs, they were no longer Khalsa. ( But the Guru knew that they were not weak In Sikhi, they would come back, and Guru (Father), would bless them.

Fight to the death

So despite the fact that they surely faced certain death, the forty (chali) men along with Mai Bhago, waded headlong into the Muslim forces (around 10,000 soldiers) and inflicted so much damage that the Muslims were finally forced to give up their attack and retreat as darkness fell to lick their wounds in the nearby woods.

Mai Bhag kaur, was a great Sikh women, with a Keski tied around her head, with the Khalsa Uniform, with her Kirpan fighting, she was the fist women In the history of Punjab, to fight On a battlefield.

The Guru had watched the battle from a nearby hill and with deadly accuracy had rained down a flurry of arrows on the Mughal fighters during the attack. Seeing little activity among the party that had come to his aid he rode to the battlefield.

He found that group was composed of the forty men who he had asked to sign a paper dis-avowing him as their Guru, all of them had died of their wounds except one, Mahan Singh Brar, who was mortally wounded, had only the time to look up at Guru Gobind Singh as he pulled him upright with his arms pulling him into his lap. It is said that the note the men had signed slipped out of the dying Sikh’s clothing and was picked up by the Guru who told Mahan Singh that all was forgiven and that all had died as martyrs as the Guru tore-up their letter of resignation.

The Forty Liberated Ones

Sri Guru Gobind Singh blessed the forty men as the forty (chali) liberated ones (mukte) and that is still how the men are known today; the “Forty Liberated Ones”, the Chali Mukte. He took into his care Mata Bhago who had also suffered injury in the battle.

After recovering she thereafter stayed on with Guru Gobind Singh Ji serving as one of his bodyguards, in warrior attire. She was one of many Sikhs who accompanied the Guru on his journey to Nanded. After the passing of Guru Gobind Singh at Nanded in 1708, she retired down at Jinvara, 11 km from Bidar in Karnataka where, immersed in meditation, she lived to attain a ripe old age.

Her hut in Jinvara has now been converted into Gurudwara Tap Asthan Mai Bhago. At Nanded, too, a hall within the compound of Takht Sachkhand Sri Hazur Sahib marking the site of her residence is known as Bunga Mai Bhago.

~ Source: Sikhiwiki.org

Pakistan Province Aims to Boost Sikh Religious Tourism!

PUNJAB, Pakistan – The Punjab government in Pakistan has decided to promote religious tourism for strengthening provincial economy. In first phase of it’s plans, the government has decided to focus on Sikh religious tourism. The government has directed the Punjab Planning and Development Board (P&D), Provincial Departments of Tourism, Archives, Archaeology, Law and Justice to […]

PUNJAB, Pakistan – The Punjab government in Pakistan has decided to promote religious tourism for strengthening provincial economy. In first phase of it’s plans, the government has decided to focus on Sikh religious tourism.

The government has directed the Punjab Planning and Development Board (P&D), Provincial Departments of Tourism, Archives, Archaeology, Law and Justice to finalize the reports related to all Gurduaras in Punjab Province for promotion of Sikh tourism.

Reports in Pakistani media notes that Pakistan has huge potential of promotion of religious tourism which could not be fully explored in the past.

Several religious places of Buddhists, Hindus and Sikhs exist in Pakistan.

Sikh religion’s most sacred places like Gurdwara Nankana Sahib, Gurdwara Darbar Sahib (Kartarpur) and Gurdwara Dera Sahib (Lahore) are in the Punjab province of Pakistan.

~ Source: www.eturbonews.com

Inspiring Sikh Daughters…

Celebrating Daughters Day…

“Daughter of Khalsa Panth FEAR NOT” – Guru Gobind Singh Ji

Daughter's Day 3

The rulers of Lahore, in olden times, cast a Sikh youth in prison. He was the only child of a Sikh widow; for no other crime save that he was a Sikh they would murder him if he offered not allegiance to their injustice and wrong-doing. The mother could do nothing, she shut herself in her room, And her soul, tranced in agony, passed in a vision to the Beyond, and stood before her Master: “Lord take the child in Thy care; he must owe allegiance to no one but Thee.” “Fear not, daughter;” said Guru Gobind Singh; “here comes your son.” And there she met her son arrayed in shining armor of light.

Jithe Rakhe Bikunth de Thaeen,
Man Tan Tera Dhan Bi Tera,
Tu Thakur Swami Prabh Mera

– Daughters of Mata Sahib Kaur!

Daughter's Day Series 2

From a distance, one could see the vultures circling their dying victims. As one got closer, the site changed to a vast field of slaughter. Men, women and children of noble appearance lay dead in the field. Amongst the bodies of these magnificent people, one could hear the cries of help and water from soldiers of the other army. Clearly, a battle was fought, but something told the observer that the day had witnessed the carnage and execution of benevolent people whether they must be men, women or children.

Amidst the cries for help, there were subdued words to the tune of “Waheguru. Waheguru. Waheguru.” It now dawns upon the observer that it is the noble Sikhs who breathe their last in Waheguru, whilst the soldiers of the other army lie crying for mercy and water. The observer my friends, was Jassa Singh Ahluwalia, who, as the General elect of the Khalsa, witnessed the slaughter of 21,000 Sikhs in one day by the Turkish and Moghul armies.

The now captured Princesses of Guru Gobind Singh Ji had earlier witnessed their brethren cut down whilst defending the women and children. During the battle, women were busy tending to the wounded, yet others were loading the muskets and still they were reciting. “Waheguru. Waheguru. Waheguru.” The sound of Vaheguru resounded into the air and with intermittent cries of “Jo Bole So Nihal. Sat Sri Akaal!”

The Khalsa would strike out into the encircled enemy with such valour that the Muslim contingents were struck with awe and terror. In Lahore, these captive Sikh ladies were herded into prison with no food or water. Soldiers eyed them and taunted them as to, “where was their illustrious Guru now.” The brave women would still be unaffected and sing shabads of Kalgidhar Patshah Ji. The day saw further torture in order to shake their faith. The Qazi would offer Islam and freedom (as written in the Quran) but met with such contemptible laughs and refusal that the Qazi, in outrage, would order the deed to be committed. Their babies, snatched from its mothers were flung high into the air. There was a deathening moment of silence. Before the children landed on the spear of the executioner.

The proud Princesses, steadfast as ever, started reciting the Kirtan Sohila (final prayer) whilst the infuriated Qazi kept offering Islam and freedom. No one knows how long or how many Sikh women underwent the inhumane torture. Made to work hard, the daughters of Mata Sahib Kaur Ji hand milled large sacks of wheat into flour everyday and still the Shabads would ring into the ears of the heartless Qazi.

Amongst the Sikh women it was heaven, for they were living up to the words of Guru Ji.. Jithe rakhe bikunth de thaeen (O Lord, where ever you keep me it is heaven) Man tan tera dhan bi tera (For this mind, body and wealth is yours) Tu thakur swami prabh mera (You alone are my God, saviour and benefactor)

 

“If my blood be mingled with the waters of Immortality, it is no death” – Brave Guru’s Daughter…

Daughter's Day Series 1

While the dawn was yet young a Sikh mother emerged out of space, and was seen moving towards the Golden Temple at Amritsar. “Where are you going, mother?” said Dewan Kauramal, a minister of the Mughal ruler of Lahore. “To the Guru’s Temple,” said she, “today assemble there the Guru’s Khalsa, the holy ones, and I have come to bathe myself and my child in the current of Naam.”

“But the opening of the temple to the Khalsa today is treachery,” said the Dewan, “The imperial forces are here to kill everyone that enters the temple. Today there will be a general massacre of the Khalsa.” “What matters it, O good man,” said the Sikh mother, “if my blood be mingled with the waters of Immortality, it is no death?” “Have pity on your innocent child,” said the Dewan. “I love him so I bring him with me; this death is life for us. You do not know,” said she, and passed on…

The First Westerner To Do Kirtan Inside Sri Harmandir Sahib Ji!

Victor Harvey Briggs III / Vikram Singh Khalsa / Antion (b- 14 February 1945) was born in Twickenham, London, England. Growing up with a love of music and particularly Jazz, he became a rock musician, best known as the lead guitarist with Eric Burdon and The Animals during the 1966-1968 period. Currently plays classical Indian […]

Victor Harvey Briggs III / Vikram Singh Khalsa / Antion (b- 14 February 1945) was born in Twickenham, London, England. Growing up with a love of music and particularly Jazz, he became a rock musician, best known as the lead guitarist with Eric Burdon and The Animals during the 1966-1968 period. Currently plays classical Indian and Hawaiian music.

Vic Briggs played guitar and piano with various groups in the 1960s, including The Echoes (Dusty Springfield’s backing group), Brian Auger and the Trinity (the Back up band of Steam Packet), Johnny Hallyday and Eric Burdon and The Animals.

He says that a “jugalbandi” (duet) recording of Ravi Shankar and Ali Akbar Khan that he purchased in the late 1960s, hooked him on Indian music. It was the deep vibrant ringing sound of Khansahib’s sarod that appealed to him more than the sound of the Sitar. The music of Ali Akbar Khan captured his imagination, in particular, he states, it was his ability to express karuna (spiritual longing) that intrigued him deeply.

It was after listening to a concert by Khan, that he in his own words said, “I realized that music could be much more of a tool for raising consciousness than I had previously imagined”.

After being laid off from a job with Capital Records in LA, he answered an ad for a yoga class where he met Yogi Bajan. Hoping to learn a little about Sikh devotional music he went with a friend he made in the yoga class to listen to a ‘Punjabi folk singer’ named Jagat Singh Jagga.

Soon he was off to London with a message relayed from Yogi Bhajan, “Tell him to study harmonium, learn the music of the Sikhs and go to Sikh Temple occasionally”. In London he found a giani, Giani Joginder Singh Sarl who agreed to teach him Gurbani Kirtan. As his name was Vic, the Giani the giani suggested he call himself Vickram Singh. It wasn’t long before he realized that he would need to learn to read Panjabi and in particular the script or alphabet that the Guru Granth Sahib is written in; Gurmukhi.

Next, while out for a walk, he chanced to meet three men, a ragi jatha visiting from India, Bhai Gurcharan Singh, his brother, Bhai Avtar Singh and Bhai Swaran Singh, the tabla accompanist who were staying at a nearby Gurdwara.

He later became the first non-Indian to perform kirtan at Harmandir Sahib (also called the Golden Temple of Amritsar). He moved to San Diego, where he had a plumbing business in the 80s. He has made several albums of Indian music and was the first non-Indian to perform kirtan at Harimandir Sahib (also called the Golden Temple of Amritsar).

Briggs currently goes by the name Antion and plays Hawaiian chant music.

Kanwaljeet Singh Bakshi Re-elected to New Zealand Parliament!

Melbourne: Three Indian-origin politicians, including a Sikh, were elected to New Zealand’s Parliament in the just-concluded general elections. Kanwaljeet Singh Bakshi, Dr Parmjeet Parmar and Mahesh Bindra have made it to the 121-member Parliament, the New Zealand Herald reported on Monday. While Delhi-born Bakshi is set to begin his third term in Parliament, Pune-graduate Parmar […]

Melbourne: Three Indian-origin politicians, including a Sikh, were elected to New Zealand’s Parliament in the just-concluded general elections.

Kanwaljeet Singh Bakshi, Dr Parmjeet Parmar and Mahesh Bindra have made it to the 121-member Parliament, the New Zealand Herald reported on Monday.

While Delhi-born Bakshi is set to begin his third term in Parliament, Pune-graduate Parmar and Mumbai-born Bindra are ready to make their debut, taking the growing contribution of Kiwi Indians in New Zealand to Parliament as well.

Bakshi is both New Zealand’s first Indian and first Sikh member of Parliament. He was first elected in the 2008 elections.

Bakshi and Parmar fought the elections as the candidates of the ruling National Party, while Bindra was elected as the New Zealand First candidate.

The National Party, led by Prime Minister John Key, won 61 seats as compared to 59 in the last elections, claiming 48.06% of the total votes cast, up from 47.31% in 2011.

Following the election results, Bindra said he was the living proof that his party New Zealand First and its leader Winston Peters were not anti-immigration and anti-Asian.

“Mr Peters was perceived by the Indian community for some time as being a politician who doesn’t want immigrants. That was a myth and that myth has now been dispelled,” Bindra was quoted by the paper as saying.

A political science and psychology graduate, Bindra moved to New Zealand in 2002 with his family.

Bakshi graduated from the University of Delhi in 1985 and moved to New Zealand in 2001 with his family.

Parmar, who lives in Auckland, was born in India and migrated to New Zealand in 1995. She holds a PhD in biological sciences from the University of Auckland and bachelor’s and master’s degrees in biochemistry from the University of Pune.

~ Source: www.hindustantimes.com

SGPC continues to airlift relief material to J&K

The humanitarian task undertaken by the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC) for providing relief to the flood-hit people of Jammu and Kashmir entered the 10th day on Friday. The SGPC continues to send relief material to J&K by airlifting essential commodities to Srinagar from the Sri Guru Ram Das Jee international airport here. The only […]

The humanitarian task undertaken by the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC) for providing relief to the flood-hit people of Jammu and Kashmir entered the 10th day on Friday.

The SGPC continues to send relief material to J&K by airlifting essential commodities to Srinagar from the Sri Guru Ram Das Jee international airport here. The only difference being that now the SGPC is sending only what is required in the Kashmir Valley after coordinating with the state officials camping in Gurdwara Shaheed Bunga at Badgam near Srinagar.

The relief material dispatched by the SGPC included 10 quintal rice, 5 quintal pulses, onions, bread, dry milk powder and blankets.

SGPC SENDS MONITORING TEAM
Along with the relief material, a 15-member SGPC team, led by its general secretary Sukhdev Singh Bhaur and executive member Rajinder Singh Mehta, left for Srinagar. There task will be to monitor the distribution of relief, including ‘langar’ (cooked food) to the flood-hit families in and around the capital town.

According to information received at the SGPC headquarters here, the SGPC relief camp at Gurdwara Shaheed Bunga is catering to a large number of families who have been rendered homeless. ‘Langar’ is being distributed round-the-clock to these families.

On Thursday around 500 persons reported at the medical camp se tup by the SGPC at the gurdwara. They were given medicines free of cost. A 5-member SGPC team along with medicines was sent from here three days ago.

Two women patients who needed hospitalisation were airlifted by the SGPC to Amritsar and New Delhi. The patient coming to Amritsar was admitted at the SGPC-run Sri Guru Ram Das Chairtable Hospital, Vallah.

In Srinagar, the SGPC has set up mohalla-level committees with the assistance of the locals there for house-to-house distribution of cooked food and other relief material. The SGPC team, under Bhaur, will send a detailed report to their chief Avtar Singh Makkar, who was also to go to Srinagar, but could not do so due to the death of former SGPC president Jagdev Singh Talwandi.

The SGPC is also receiving relief material from other religious groups and is dispatching it to Srinagar.

DIST ADMINISTRATION ALSO SENDS RELIEF
Deputy commissioner Ravi Bhagat said that on Friday 25,000 blankets, 2,000 towels, 7000 ladies suits and 5 tonne of food packets, which included dry milk powder, were sent by a special IAF cargo plane to Srinagar. Till date, the administration has sent 31,000 blankets and 45 tonnes of dry ration.

The DC said that around 5,000 persons airlifted by the IAF from Srinagar have landed at the airport here so far. He said that the administration made arrangements for sending these persons to their homes. The entire expenditure was borne by the administration.

CII REACHES OUT
Continuing its efforts to reach out to the most distressed people in the flood affected in J&K, Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) on Friday provided relief material in one of the most affected area — Bemina. The CII team not only reached out to villages outside Srinagar but also interacted with the villagers to understand their needs and plan the next course of action.

CII Amritsar Zonal Council is also contributing its bit for the cause. The Amritsar Computer Traders Association (ACTA) handed over a cheque of `50,000 to Gurpreet Singh Munjral, Chairman CII Amritsar Council towards CII Foundation for relief and rehabilitation.

Mr Munjral said, “CII, under the aegis of CII Foundation, has already reached and impacted 4,000 families and the aim is to provide immediate relief to 5,000 families in the next few days.The relief material being distributed includes most essential items like drinking water, medicines, ready- to-eat food packs, blankets, family tents, dry rations, water purifiers and baby food”.

~ Source: www.hindustantimes.com