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In Loving Memory: Nareender Kaur d/o Avatar Singh

Peacefully sleeping, resting at last, The world’s weary trouble and trials are past, In silence she suffered, in patience she bore, Till God called her home to suffer no more.

Path Da Bhog

1ST ANNIVERSARY

In Loving Memory of

NAREENDER KAUR D/O AVATAR SINGH

Devoted Wife & Mother

Departed on 12th April 2021

Deeply missed and always remembered by :

Husband: Dr. Paul Dolman, Norwich, UK

Child: Mahaan Dolman

Parents: Avatar Singh (Shah Alam) & Late Pretam Kaur

Siblings / Spouses:
Dr. Harjinder Singh (Ipoh) / Dr. Paream Kaur (Ipoh)
Raveender Singh (S’pore) / Sangeeta Palta (S’pore)

Nephews & Niece: Ashvinder, Ashlynder, Armaan Dev & Pavan Dev

Prayers to be held at Gurdwara Sahib Guru Nanak, Shah Alam on 27th March, 2022 (Sunday) from 9:30am – 12:00 noon

Kind request to adhere to prevailing COVID-19 SOP.

Contact: Avatar Singh (012-695 7143) or Dr. Harjinder Singh (016-831 2379)

| Entry: 22 March 2022 | Source: Family





ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond.Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: editor@asiasamachar.com | Twitsdster | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here |

I only realised I’d been catfished when I flew to Singapore and my girlfriend wasn’t there

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By Anonymous | MetroUK | Britain |

In lockdown, I turned 39 and reluctantly signed up for multiple dating apps as I had given everything else a go.

Basically, I didn’t want to be single when I turned 40 – for the eighth year in a row.

I kept being encouraged by friends to use Plenty of Fish, and Tinder – as well as Asian Date (an app specifically for Asians) and Shaadi, which is an Asian marriage app.

All I wanted was a Sikh woman to settle down with, to get married and have kids, but I’d had enough of the dating game and was feeling quite low.

After swiping left for most women, I came across a lady who seemed perfect for me. She was from the Sikh community, didn’t drink or eat meat and seemed like she had similar interests to me. Her photo was simple and she looked nice. I’ll call her Sandi.

She did live in Singapore, which is thousands of miles away from me in the UK but I’d had my location set to ‘worldwide’ so, all things considered, I decided to swipe right.

I couldn’t wait to speak to her and messaged her instantly to ask how she was and what she’s looking for in a person. She replied, we exchanged numbers and spoke on the phone, every day.

I had been feeling vulnerable and was fed up with women in the UK, as it seemed like they just wanted to waste my time, and were very arrogant. To me, this seemed too good to be true – I thought I’d hit the jackpot.

Soon after we matched, we were messaging daily. She was gentle, kind, always making the effort to call and be there for me – she truly sounded like she would be the perfect wife.

I had never expected this when I had signed up to try dating apps but, within just a few months I was head over heels in love. I told her how I felt. She responded saying she felt the same.

Being someone who is quite trustworthy, I didn’t see the signs at all until it was too late.

We mainly used WhatsApp to communicate and every time I’d ask for a video call, she would make an excuse. This was usually the fact that she wasn’t able to as she lived in an extended household, and was a carer for her grandmother.

As the culture is exactly this, I wanted her to feel reassured that I understood, particularly because she told me that she’d experienced a lot of judgement from previous guys she’d spoken to. Men would ask if she was a virgin, how many guys she has dated, whether she planned to live with in-laws after getting married, and so on.

We continued to speak and, over that time, she convinced me that she’d move to the UK to live with my family. We agreed this would happen in the next year or so. She told me she needed to finish some exams first, as she was studying to be a lawyer, so she could get a job.

I told my family that I had met someone online and that I wanted to marry her. They weren’t keen as they knew nothing about her and felt that it was too rushed.

Then, one day – after we’d been messaging for two months – she asked for me to send her £5,000 to help support her with her bills.

Read the full story, ‘I only realised I’d been catfished when I flew to Singapore and my girlfriend wasn’t there’ (MetroUK, 20 March 2022), here.



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 

Surinder Kaur Rattan Singh (1956 – 2022), Subang Jaya

SURINDER KAUR A/P RATTAN SINGH

12.6.1956 – 20.3.2022

Village: Totti, Amritsar / Taiping, Perak

Husband: Amrick Singh Randhawa

Children: Randhill Singh, Pramila Kaur & Kavita Kaur (Spouse: Raman Katyal)

Grandchildren: Meher Katyal & Seereth Katyal

Akhand Path: 1-3 April 2022 at Gurdwara Sahib Subang

1 April 2022 at 8.30am: Arambh Akhand Paath in Shotta Darbar
3 April 2022 at 9.00am: Akhand Paath Da Bhog in Main Darbar followed by Nashta (breakfast)
10.00am: Kirtan and Antim Ardaas in Main Darbar followed by Gur ka Langgar (lunch)
Address: Gurdwara Sahib Subang, Lot 72021, Persiaran Kewajipan, SS 13, 4750 Subang Jaya, Selangor

Please do adhere to the ongoing COVID SOP.

Our family would like to thank everyone for their support and kindness during our time of loss.

Contact:

Amrick Singh 012 5389061

Randhill Singh 019 2262431

Pramila Kaur 019 2262 432



| Entry: 21 March 2022; Updated: 26 March 2022 | Source: Family





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 |

Kirandeep all set for Junior World Cup



Kirandeep Kaur and KPT-Uniten teammates after beating Negeri Sembilan to lift the Vivian May Soars Cup trophy for the third on 20 March 2022 – Photo: MHC

By Asia Samachar | Malaysia |

Budding national hockey player Kirandeep Kaur must be elated for being selected to don the national jersey for the Junior World Cup (JWC) that will be played out in South Africa April 1-12.

The 18-year-old was one of the 20 players named by national women’s coach Nasihin Nubli yesterday (20 March).

It will also be a relief for the prolific midfielder after being left out of the team earlier for the Asia Cup in Oman recently.

Kirandeep played her heart out in the the Women’s Malaysia Hockey League (WMHL) which ended yesterday (20 March).

For the JWC, Malaysia will be up against Germany, India and Wales in Group D when they make their debut in the tournament after Japan withdrew. This will also be the first outing for the junior women’s team since the tournament made its debut in 1989 in Ottawa, Canada.

Canada, also appearing in South Africa, will be fielding two Punjabi players. They are Harnoor Malhi, a defence player majoring in Human Biology at the University of Toronto, and Ishaval Sekhon, a goalkeeper who was part of the U17 National Team.

In the just concluded WMHL, Kirandeep played well for the KPT-UniTen Thunderbolts team that won the Vivian May Soars Cup. They defeated favourties Negeri Sembilan that had earlier won the Malaysian Hockey League (MHL) title.

Kirandeep scored her first international goal when she was just 14 when she donned the national colours for the Hockey Series Open at Singapore’s Seng Kang Stadium in 2018.





RELATED STORY:

Two Panjabi girls to don Canada jersey for Junior Women’s World Cup (Asia Samachar, 25 Feb 2022)

Hockey ace Kirandeep Kaur scores big time in SPM (Asia Samachar, 11 June 2021)



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 

Life, Kingsize: Punjab Has Lost Much But Not Its Spirit

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A random shot in Punjab, India, in 2005 – Photo: Kirandeep Singh / Flickr

By Arvinder Kaur | The Outlook | India |

Standing on the boundary of his small field, Harpal Singh stares at the moon as it drifts in the farm stream. There is an air of melancholy about him. When asked about the reason for his pensive demeanour, he says, a bit reluctantly, “This crop that is now ready for harvesting was sown by my father. I was at the Delhi border at that time. After finishing the sowing Bapu joined me there and gave up on life in the bitter cold that followed.” His eyes begin to well up. I look at the farm. A sheet of golden sunshine has spread over it. Late March is the time when the Rabi crop is nearly ripe and the wheat stalks nod happily in a winnowing wind that begins to blow.

Although not much has changed on the ground, there have been forces at work that have torn asunder the soul of its people, the fabric of its soc­iety and the vibe in its ambience. The people of Punjab are, however, the hardiest of the lot as historically they have always taken the divisive forces, the invaders, whether from within or without, head on. And they have lived through all this with a broad smile and with a spirit that is by now aptly known as ‘Panjabiyat’. Yes, the indomitable happy spirit that allows them to live the day to the hilt, going by the age old saying “Khada peeta lahe da/te rehnda Ahmad shahe da” (What you eat and drink today is yours, the rest will be pillaged by Ahmad Shah Abdali, who inv­aded Punjab thrice between 1747-53.)

It is this spirit that has always defined the Punjabi character, making them the people that they are: bold, experimental, not cowing down to authority easily, rebellious and yet deeply sensitive. Some of the things that have been rei­terated through the results of the recent elections wherein they have been courageous enough to put their much-loved state in the hands of a party totally new to the soil. All this because they have waited long enough to break the shackles of fiefdom that have brought down the once-prosperous state to the threshold of near poverty. But Punjabis have fought on.

Hun nahi (not anymore, not now),” says Nirmal Kaur of Mansa who has lost three young sons to the drug menace. She rues the day when her eldest one first took the injection and the malaise took the younger two in its fold quickly. She looks longingly at three pictures perched on a ramshackle sandook, their marigold garlands all dried up. “When I was young this was not the case,” Nirmal goes on. “Hun taan araam naal milan lag gayi si (The damn thing was not so easy to acq­uire).” Now all you need is money to buy and they squandered away everything before dying of an overdose. “My Punjab back then was not Udta Punjab,” she goes on to say, referring to the Bollywood movie of the same name and based on the drug menace. “My husband and I worked hard in the fields but there was peace and happiness at the end of the day.” She looks wistfully at an old man lying on a broken cot, disinterested in life.

Read the full story, ‘Life, Kingsize: Punjab Has Lost Much But Not Its Spirit’ (17 March 2022, The Outlook), here.



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 

The Traveler in Me!

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Akashdip Singh at the Ulsoor gurdwara in Bangalore – Photo: Supplied

By Akashdip Singh | Travel | Malaysia |

I have not seen the face of the airport since March 2020 for reasons best known to everyone. The travel bug in me is dying to be fed. I have had my fair share (being modest) of travels; could it be due my spiritual father Sri Guru Nanak Dev Ji who had traveled far and wide. It has been printed in my mind that with travelling; my life learning curve moved from y=mx+c to y=e. The learning is exponential.

Travelling is therapeutic. It simply strengthens my soul. I strongly recommend everyone to travel (of course when the travelling restrictions are relaxed) because the knowledge that creeps into both the conscious and subconscious mind from the result of travelling, is priceless.

There is something to learn every time I travel. I guess this would be one of the best ways to put my way of life as a ‘Shishya’ (learner) into practice.

I learnt that being grateful merely for space simply means standing on the US soil at the US-Mexico border and looking at the houses built close together across the border.

I learnt that it is not all about sinning when one walks on the streets of Vegas.

I learnt that we don’t need complex machinery to build the great marvels of engineering such as the Golden Gate Bridge and the Leaning Tower of Pisa.

I learnt that being gratified is when I travel on road from Kampala to Mbale and stopping in Iganga just because someone wants to have a photograph taken with me (all credit to the crown that was bestowed to me).

Akashdip Singh in Australia – Photo: Supplied

I learnt that cultures co-exist in harmony when I walked on the bridge that connects Europe and Asia.

I learnt that the Tower Bridge and the London Bridge are not the same.

I learnt that nature is beautiful from the Swiss Alps to the Great Ocean Road down under.

I learnt that discipline is when I see the Sumo wrestlers train in the Sumo village in the land of the rising sun.

I learnt that Disneyland is indeed magical and it touches certain cords within me that brings out the child in me.

I have learnt and learnt, and the list goes on from the Americas and Europe to Africa, Australasia and Asia.

The one place that I always visited in any city I go to is the local Gurdwara. Somehow, amazingly the feeling is as if I have returned home and having the ‘Karah Parshaad’ fortifies the feeling. Of course, a visit to Harmandir Sahib is a must.

There is something we can learn from our spiritual master and travelling for almost twenty-four years with Bhai Mardana; I am certain that Sri Guru Nanak Dev Ji had a message for us.

Akashdip Singh is a consultant based in Kuala Lumpur. He views life as a journey that has shaped his outlook to see the richness of the universe in all situations. He has traveled far and wide which has tremendously enriched his life experience.

# You have your own travel story? Do share with our readers! Email: asia.samachar@gmail.com





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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 

Sikh family acquires winery in West Kelowna as they herald big changes ahead




By Asia Samachar | 
Canada |

Kalala Organic Estate Winery, a Sikh family-owned winery producing organic grapes and wine since 2006, have acquired another family-owned winery in the British Columbia as they prepare for major changes ahead.

It’s a unique deal as the Singh family is acquiring a winery run by the Slamka family which started the enterprise a quarter of a century.

“We relate to the Slamka family in so many ways. We are both immigrant families who started a winery in West Kelowna,” said Kalala Organic Estate Winery founder and viticulturist Karnail Singh Sidhu in a statement emailed to Asia Samachar.

The Slamka family is believed to have come from Slovak, though it was not mentioned in the statement, while the Singh family traces its origins back to Punjab, with Karnail arriving from India in the mid-1990s.

Kalala Organic Estate Winery described itself as a small family-owned winery located on the Upper Bench of West Kelowna, BC. Both its vineyards and wine are certified organic. It is also well known for winning gold at the Chardonnay du Monde competition four times while offering many other award wining wines.

Little Straw Vineyards began operating as Slamka Cellars in 1996, producing award winning wines from their Ourtoland Road winery in West Kelowna.

“Our father purchased the land and planted our first vineyard back in 1969. We were one of the very first wineries in West Kelowna. This place holds near and dear to our hearts, we have raised our children here and created abundance of memories,” the Slamka family said in the same statement.

“We had been thinking of retiring from this business for a while and were just waiting for the right person to pass our years of hard work onto. Karnail and his family were a perfect fit for us as they share similar values, and they have a great vision to take the winery to the next stage,” the family added.

On their part, Karnail said: “We understand how hard it is to start a winery from scratch and how much effort, time and patience is required to run a successful winery in this Canadian wine region.

“When I was looking for a better location, I heard that the Slamka family was ready to retire and were privately looking for a new owner to leave their winery to; therefore, I decided to reach out to them. Since I am passionate about organic viticulture, our new location had to have a high potential to become a sustainable organic winery and Little Straw Vineyards showed great potential for the transition. It was a perfect fit for both of us.”

The statement added that it was a big year of change for the Kalala family, adding that plans were in place to transition to an organic vineyard over the next few years.

It said the official launch of the new winery was scheduled for spring 2023, where they will be introducing their premium organic label, Dostana Wines.

Dostana means friendship in Hindi language and the family is excited for everyone to have a taste of Dostana (friendship), next year, the statement added.





RELATED STORY:

From farmhand to winery owner, but Karnail Singh Sidhu does not drink alcohol (Asia Samachar, 6 July 2017)

Two brothers rake in millions selling The Whisky Exchange (Asia Samachar, 24 Sept 2021)



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 

Dillon quits JF Tech 18 months after joining as CEO




By Asia Samachar | Malaysia |

Semiconductor manufacturing industry veteran Dillon Atma Singh will be leaving JF Technology Bhd (JF Tech) just under two years after joining the Malaysian-based high-performance test contacting solutions manufacturer as its chief executive officer (CEO).

Dillon, 53, will leave on effective Monday (21 March) “to pursue other opportunities”, the company said in an announcement to the local bourse Bursa Malaysia.

When he joined JF Tech, he brought with him over 28 years of experience in the semiconductor industry, with expertise in test engineering, test interfacing technology, operations and strategic management.

In November 2020, JF Technology signed a business collaboration agreement with Huawei’s wholly-owned Hubble Technology Investment Co Ltd to set up a plant in Kunshan, in China’s Jiangsu province. The plant will design, develop and manufacture integrated circuit test sockets and test interface solutions for Huawei.

Previously, Dillon has held senior leadership positions as senior director in Renesas, a Japanese semi-conductor company and prior to that Intersil (through its acquisition of Elantec Semiconductor), an American power management semi-conductor company, managing its entire Asia operations.

Prior to that, he was a test manager at Carsem for seven years (1994-2001) and test product engineer at Western Digital (1992-1994).

Dillon has a Bachelors Degree of Electrical Engineering Majoring in Communications from University Technology Malaysia and a Masters of Business Administration from Maastricht School of Management (Netherlands).





RELATED STORY:

New role for Jasjit Singh Kang at Wipro (Asia Samachar, 19 Feb 2022)



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 

Jasbeer Singh Khaira (1959-2022), Former GM, Aseania Pulau Besar, Johor

SARDAR JASBEER SINGH KHAIRA

19.1.1959 – 18.3.2022

Dear Sadh Sangat Ji. It is with profound sadness we would like to inform of the passing of our beloved, Sardar Jasbeer Singh Khaira s/o Nazar Singh Khaira JP & Mata Karam Kaur, peacefully on the morning of 18th March 2022 at 2am.

Path da Bhog: 3 April 2022 (Sunday), from 10am-12pm, at Gurdwara Sahib Johor Bahru

Kirtan Darbar followed by Sri Sahej Path Da Bhog & Antim

Sri Sahej Path Da Bhog in loving memory of Mata Karam Kaur Ji

Sewa Guru Ka Langar from Late Sardar Najar Singh JP Khaira Family

ਐਤਵਾਰ 3/4/22, ਸਮਾ-10.00 ਵਜੇ ਸਵੇਰ ਤੋਂ 12.00 ਵਜੇ ਦੁਪਹਿਰ ਤੱਕ

  1. ਸਵ.ਸ.ਜਸਵੀਰ ਸਿੰਘ ਸਪੁੱਤਰ ਸਵ.ਸ ਨਾਜ਼ਰ ਸਿੰਘ ਖਹਿਰਾ ਜੇ ਪੀ ,ਸਵ. ਸ.ਜਸਵੀਰ ਸਿੰਘ ਜੀ ਦੀ ਅੰਤਿਮ ਅਰਦਾਸ ਹਿੱਤ ਸਮੂਹ ਪਰਿਵਾਰ ਵੱਲੋਂ ਕੀਰਤਨ ਦਰਬਾਰ ਤੇ ਸ੍ਰੀ ਸਹਿਜ ਪਾਠ ਦੇ ਭੋਗ
  2. ਸਵ.ਮਾਤਾ ਕਰਮ ਕੌਰ ਜੀ ਦੀ ਮਿੱਠੀ ਯਾਦ ਹਿੱਤ ਸ੍ਰੀ ਸਹਿਜ ਪਾਠ ਦੇ ਭੋਗ | ਸੇਵਾ -ਗੁਰੂ ਕੇ ਲੰਗਰ

| Entry: 18 March 2022; Updated: 29 March 2022 | Source: Family





ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Southeast Asia and beyond.Facebook | WhatsApp +6017-335-1399 | Email: editor@asiasamachar.com | Twitsdster | Instagram | Obituary announcements, click here |

Pritam Singh Sidhu (1950 – 2022), Founder & Chairman of Pritam Singh Agency

JEHA CHIRI LIKHYA TEHA HUKAM KAMAEH, GHALE AAVE NAANKA SADE UTHEE JAAYE (SGGS, 1239)

ਜੇਹਾ ਚੀਰੀ ਲਿਖਿਆ ਤੇਹਾ ਹੁਕਮੁ ਕਮਾਹਿ ॥ ਘਲੇ ਆਵਹਿ ਨਾਨਕਾ ਸਦੇ ਉਠੀ ਜਾਹਿ ॥੧॥

SARDAR PRITAM SINGH SIDHU

30.6.1950 – 17.3.2022

Village: Jiwanwala

(Founder & Chairman of Pritam Singh Agency Sdn. Bhd.)

Always beloved and deeply missed by:

Wife: Opinder Kaur Hans

Parents: Late Nika Singh & Late Gurtha Kor

Brother & sister-in-law: Darshan Sidhu & Mekand Kaur

Children & spouses:
Rasvinder Singh Sidhu (Munnay) & Harjinder Kaur Hans
Gulshanjit Sidhu
Jagdev Singh Sidhu (Dave) & Paramjit Kaur Grewal

Grandchildren:
Nashreena Kaur Sidhu, Paetreena Kaur Sidhu, Areeshan Singh Sidhu,
Humreen Kaur Sidhu, Raeshan Singh Sidhu, Sachtaan Singh Sidhu,
Sohaanteg Singh Sidhu

Last respects from 1:00 pm, 19 March 2022 (Saturday) followed by funeral service at 2:30 pm, 19 March 2022 (Saturday), at Shamshan Bhoomi Hall (Jalan Loke Yew Crematorium, Kuala Lumpur)

COVID-19 SOP will apply.

Path Da Bhog will be held on 27 March 2022 (Sunday), from 10:00 am to 12:00 pm, at Gurdwara Sahib Puchong, Bandar Puteri Puchong

Contact: 012-922-2079 (Munnay)

012-302-1818 (Bobby)

016-921-8825 (Dave)

| Entry: 17 March 2022 | Source: Family





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 |