You may be gone from our sight but never from our heart, as your memories would live in our heart eternally. We cherish all of your sacrifices, care, concern and genuine love that you have given out with no conditions. We thank you for everything that you have done for us though no words could justify it. Wherever you are, we know you are in a much better place. We will forever be grateful and thankful for every imprints of your presence that you left in our life.
| Entry: 21 May 2022 | Source: Family
ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond.Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: asia.samachar@gmail.com | Twfffitter | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here
Satvir Kaur in a Southampton City Council proceeding – Photo: Satvir Kaur Facebook
By Asia Samachar | Britain|
Southampton elects Satvir Kaur as council leader, makes history as first female Sikh leader
Southampton City Council made history when Satvir Kaur was elected as its new leader yesterday (12 May).
“So it’s official! Today I got formally elected as Southampton’s new Council Leader! First person of colour to lead the council and first female Sikh Leader in the Country. Thank you Southampton for making history,” she shared in a social media posting yesterday (19 May).
Satvir graduated in History and Politics from the University of Southampton and then studied law at Southampton Solent University. She is currently working in publishing and helping run a local fabric business. She is a trustee for local charity Relate Solent, according to information at the council’s website.
ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond.Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: asia.samachar@gmail.com | Twitter | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here
After the events 9/11, Sikh and Muslim Americans suddenly faced a huge upsurge in hate incidents. In Arizona, Balbir Singh Sodhi, a Sikh man, was shot and killed at his gas station by a white assailant who reportedly declared he wanted to “go out and shoot some towel-heads.” New York student, Harwinder Singh, reflects on how acts of solidarity have changed his life.
This story is part of the May 19th Project, which promotes solidarity within Asian and Pacific Island communities and with all communities.
Click here for the original entry at KCET which plays a role in the cultural and educational enrichment of Southern and Central California.
ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond.Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: asia.samachar@gmail.com | Twitter | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here
We pray heaven is everything you dreamt it to be, We pray you’re safe and free of pain. We pray you have heard every word we had said, We will love you forever. Till we meet again..
Sukhmani Sahib: 26 May 2022 (Thursday) at No 29, Jalan Siakap 3, Taman Permatang Pasir Perdana at 3pm – 5pm
Path da Bhog: 27 May 2022 (Friday) at Gurdwara Sahib Melaka at 10am – 12pm. Guru Ka Langgar will be served.
ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond.Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: asia.samachar@gmail.com | Twfffitter | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here
Mumtaz Bibi flanked by her brothers Baldev Singh (left) and Gurmukh Singh in the Kartarpur reunion – Photo: Screengrab of Punjabi Sanjh TV YouTube
By Asia Samachar | Kartarpur, Pakistan|
It was a teary reunion for a sister separated form her family when still an infant in a Partition melee 75 years ago. She met her brothers for the first time at Kartarpur recently, thanks to social media links and the opening of the Kartarpur Corridor.
Until some years ago, Mumtaz Bibi was not even aware of the incident where she got torn apart from other family members as they were making their way to Punjab on the Indian side.
After a futile search just days after the 1947 event, her family was left clueless on the fate of their daughter. They were not even sure if she was still alive. So, they continued their lives in Punjab, India, without ever knowing about their daughter.
“We never thought this (reunion) would ever take place, not even in our wildest dreams. We used to hear stories from our elders. During the skirmish about 10 miles from their village, everyone ran helter-skelter. Our sister was lost then, never to be found again,” Gurmukh Singh told Punjabi Sanjh TV, a portal that records oral history of people who had to leave their villages on the India side to settle in Punjab on the Pakistan side. See the interview here.
Gurmukh and his younger brother Baldev Singh met Mumtaz Bibi at Kartapur. They were accompanied by more than a dozen family members on both sides.
When Pakistan was carved out of India in 1947, the state of Punjab probably suffered the most in what has been called the Partition. Sikhs living on the now Pakistan side of Punjab migrated towards the Indian side of Punjab, while millions of Muslims moved the other way. In the process, numerous atrocities were reported. At the same time, there were also many heroic stories where people assisted each other, going beyond their religious identity.
At the time of the Partition, Mumtaz Bibi was an infant who was lying on the dead body of her mother who was killed by the local violent mobs. One Muhammad Iqbal and his wife, Allah Rakhi, adopted the baby girl and raised her as their own daughter, naming her Mumtaz Bibi. After the Partition, Iqbal took up residence at the village of Varika Tian in Sheikhupura district, reported Pakistan newspaper The Dawn.
Iqbal and his wife did not tell Mumtaz that she was not their daughter. Two years ago, Iqbal’s health suddenly deteriorated and he told Mumtaz that she was not his real daughter and that her real family was Sikh, the report added.
After Iqbal’s death, Mumtaz and her son, Shahbaz, started searching for her family through social media. They knew the name of Mumtaz’s real father and the village (Sidrana) in Patiala district of Indian Punjab where they settled after being forced to leave their native home. Both the families got connected through social media.
In the interview, Gurmukh said that after leaving her elder brother (who was about 12 years old then) in Amritsar, some family members went back to the village to see if she had been taken there. Tragically, before their return, the older drowned when he fell into a well.
“We’ve always thought about visiting the village where our parents and elders came from. But the idea kept getting postponed,” said Baldev. “When we found about our sister, we then got our passports done and started making other preparations. It took more than one-and- a-half-year to make arrangements for the meeting.”
The brothers have met their sister. Now, they long to see village where their prents were born. “We will leave first thing upon getting the visa,” Baldev quipped.
ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond.Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: asia.samachar@gmail.com | Twitter | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here
son of the late Puran Singh husband of the late Rana Vinder
SEPTEMBER 16, 1944 – MAY 19, 2022
To be human, there are a lot of things that come with it: eyes, a heart, days. But it’s the moments that illuminates life; the in between times when you’re experiencing them. They make life better.
I LOVE YOU, DAD.
Bida will be missed by his daughter (Amrita), siblings (Baby, Ambi, Mohan, Winnie), in laws nieces, nephews, grandchildren, Rex and Bailey.
Final goodbyes will be held at 44, Jalan SS15/3B, Subang Jaya at 9am, 20th May 2022 (Friday).
Cortége will depart to MPPJ Crematorium, Kampung Tunku at 11am for cremation at 12pm, 20th May 2022 (Friday).
Path da Bhog will be held at Gurdwara SahibSubang on 5th June 2022 (Sunday) from 10am to l2pm.
Contact: 019 311 5095
| Entry: 19 May 2022 | Source: Family
ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond.Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: asia.samachar@gmail.com | Twfffitter | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here
Last Respects: 10:00am, 20 May 2022 (Friday) at Gurdwara Sahib Pulapol, Kuala Lumpur
Cortège leaves from Gurdwara Sahib Pulapol at 12:00pm to Cheras Jalan Quari Crematorium.
Saskaar / Cremation: 2:00pm,20 May 2022 (Friday) at Jalan Kuari Crematorium, Cheras, Kuala Lumpur
Contact:
Taranjit Singh 013-3407416
Jagjit Singh 0169977145
Jasvinderjit Singh 0126164348
Papa Things we feel most deeply, are the hardest things to say, Dearest Papa we love you In a very special way If we could have one lifetime wish, One dream that could come true, We’d pray to God with all our hearts, For yesterday with you ..Thank you for being a wonderful dad to us, loving grandpa to all our children.. Missing you always & you will always remain in our hearts…
| Entry: 19 May 2022 | Source: Family
ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond.Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: asia.samachar@gmail.com | Twfffitter | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here
Left: The proud entry at Badminton Association of India (BAI)’s twitter. Right: Prakash Padukone, ranked world’s No. 1 badminton player in 1980, also won All England Open Badminton Championship in the same year. (Photo: Sportkeeda)
By Prabhjot Paul Singh | Opinion |
After hockey and cricket, badminton is the third game in which Indian men have been crowned World champions. The gold medal triumph at Bangkok on May 15 was the culmination of a long journey that started with a first round exit in 1949. In between India made the penultimate round in 1952, 1955 and again in 1979 in this elite inter-nation team event that has morphed into a World Championship.
In 1949, two years after freedom, India embarked upon its first Thomas Cup journey, its team had taken 24 hours to fly from Bombay to London from where it travelled by road to Southampton.
The next phase was a cruise that took the Indian team to Halifax in Nova Scotia enroute to Toronto where it was to make its debut in the inaugural edition of the elite tournament. In its first edition, it had eight European and two teams from North America besides India and Malaya (now known as Malaysia).
India lost its first round to the hosts Canada 2-7. Canada in turn lost to the USA 1-8. Ultimately, in the final Malaya beat Denmark to become the first champion of the Thomas Cup.
In 2022, when 16 qualifiers for the finals were clubbed, India and Canada got into the same pool. In the quarter-finals, India had the 1949 champions Malaysia as its opponent. Denmark, the losing finalist of the first edition, was India’s opponent in the semi-finals and Indonesia, winner of the Cup for 14 times – maximum by any nation – challenged the first time finalist India and lost.
I had my first exposure to this great badminton in 1975-76 when India played Malaysia at Ludhiana’s Lal Bahadur Shastri Indoor Hall.
For me as a cub reporter, it was a big event. I was not only assigned by The Tribune, the oldest and largest circulated English daily of north India at that time, but also Sportsweek, the then number one Indian sports weekly, besides a couple of other newspapers and magazines.
It was, needless to reiterate, a finest opportunity to see some of the top world badminton players in action at the only match played in Punjab in the history of the Thomas Cup. One of the architects to get this match to Ludhiana was the then Honorary Secretary of Punjab Badminton Association, Mr Naurattan Singh Bhalla.
Panch Gunalan, a great Malaysian badminton player, had come with his team as its manager. India had just beaten Pakistan 5-4 to earn the right to challenge the Malaysians.
The mainstay of the Indian team was young Prakash Padukone who not only masterminded India’s exciting win over Pakistan but was also instrumental in building 4-0 lead for the home team at Ludhiana by winning both his singles.
His efforts, however, fell short of getting India the much needed fifth win as he and his partner Asif Parpia lost a crucial doubles game. India lost 4-5.
Also in that Indian team was Dinesh Khanna, who had in 1965 become the only Indian to win the Asian Badminton championship. Now when India has won the Thomas Cup and two of its former stars – Prakash Padukone and Pulella Gopichand – had been winners of the All-England badminton championship, no other Indian has in the last 57 years could repeat Dinesh Khanna’s feat of winning the Asian title.
Born in Fatehgarh Churian, Dinesh Khanna studied at Punjab Engineering College, Chandigarh. He was also nick-named as “returning machine”. Dinesh Khanna also had the distinction of reaching semi-finals of the All-England championship. Other outstanding Punjabi players on national horizon at that time included Devinder Ahuja and Satish Bhatia.
Satish Bhatia, a flyer in Indian Air Force, was known for his spin service and was perhaps the only player to have taken a game off great Rudy Hartono of Indonesia in all-England Badminton championship.
Though not many players of Punjabi descent are on view at national or international level, badminton still remains a popular game in Punjab. Some promising youngsters, both boys and girls, are now training at various academies in Bangalore and elsewhere.
For India’s historic success at Bangkok, credit also goes to some promising and upcoming youngsters, including Lakshya Sen, who set the ball rolling with a win in the opening singles against Indonesia’s Anthony Ginting.
Lakshya, who had become the fourth Indian after Parkash Nath, Prakash Padukone and Pulella Gopichand to reach all-England final early this year, could not perform well in earlier games, including semi-finals against Denmark, as he was down with food poisoning. After losing the first set to his more experienced and higher ranked opponent, Lakshya came back strongly to win the next two sets to give India a great start with a 1-0 lead. Lakshya won 8-21, 21-17, 21-16.
His success was followed by the Indian doubles pair of Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty as they overcame a stiff resistance from Mohammed Ahsan and Kevin Sanjaya Sukamuljo in a gruelling three-setter at 18-21, 23-21 and 21-19.
Finally, it was Kidambi Srikant, who clinched the issue for India by defeating Jonatan Christie at 21-15, 23-21.
India had created history. The journey started in 1949 was complete and India thus became the sixth nation after Indonesia, Malaysia, China, Japan and Denmark to inscribe its name on the Thomas Cup trophy.
The win, as Kidambi Srikanth, who won all his six matches in the finals, was a team effort. This was demonstrated at the award winning ceremony.
The young Priyanshu Rajawat, who played only in the 5-0 win over Canada, was sent to receive the Thomas Cup trophy by all the experienced stars, including Kidambi Srikanth and HS Prannoy.
Prannoy also played a stellar role. In the quarter-finals against Malaysia and semifinals against Denmark, he not only played the last crucial singles to take India from 2-2 to match winning 3-2 score, but also remained unbeaten. In the semis, after twisting an ankle, he continued heroically to see his team through. In fact, Prannoy had skipped the selections but was still included in the squad in spite of criticism in some quarters. But he performed to silence his critics.
Selector and former India coach Vimal Kumar called it a momentous win, which was built on how the team fought as one. “This is an achievement of pure team spirit which was never seen in the past,” Kumar explained. “We always had talented and good players but would struggle. Now we also have a formidable doubles pair in Satwik and Chirag, who pulled it off in pressure matches. Similarly, both Srikanth and Prannoy delivered when it mattered,” Kumar was quoted as saying in the media.
Prabhjot Singh is a veteran journalist with over three decades of experience covering a wide spectrum of subjects and stories. He has covered Punjab and Sikh affairs for more than three decades besides covering seven Olympics and several major sporting events and hosting TV shows. For more in-depth analysis please visit probingeye.com or follow him on Twitter.com/probingeye
ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond.Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: editor@asiasamachar.com | Twitter | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here
Nauraj in a training session at Leipzig, Germany – Photo: Nauraj Facebook, March 2022
By Asia Samachar | Malaysia|
Malaysian high jump champion Nauraj Singh Randhawa was unable to defend the gold medal at SEA Games 2022 in Hanoi today (18 May), having to settle for the silver medal with a 2.18m clearance.
Fellow Malaysian, Eizlan Dahalan, bagged the bronze when he cleared the same height in his first attempt. This is the first appearance for the 22-year-old.
The gold medal went to Kobsit Sittichai from Thailand who cleared 2.21m.
Nauraj won gold in the event at the past three SEA Games: 2013 (Nay Pyi Taw), 2015 (Singapura) dan 2017 (Kuala Lumpur). Malaysia has been taking home the gold in this event since 2007 at the regional event.
The Olympian has a personal best of 2.30 set at the 2017 Singapore Open Championships, which is also the national record.
ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond.Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: asia.samachar@gmail.com | Twitter | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here
A 21-year-old budding Indian actress died after what her family says was a botched liposuction procedure allegedly undertaken at a clinic in Bangalore.
Chethana Raj, who acted in several television series and films in her native Karnataka, died Tuesday. Her grandmother Narayanamma told local media that the actress had asked for 150,000 rupees (around US$1,900) for the operation but the family refused, reports AFP.
“We did not encourage her to have the operation as she was healthy and not fat,” the Times of India quoted her as saying.
Liposuction, a medical procedure to remove fat, is very common and cheap in India — but is still mostly unregulated outside big hospitals.
THe report said Raj cobbled together the money herself and went to a clinic in the southern city of Bangalore without telling her parents. But she developed complications and was rushed to hospital where she was pronounced dead.
Vinayak Patil, deputy commissioner of police, told AFP that officials have registered a case of unnatural death after the woman’s father accused the clinic of botching the procedure.
ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond.Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: asia.samachar@gmail.com | Twitter | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here