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Malaysian Hindu civil servants to get extra day off for Deepavali

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Malaysian civil servants of the Hindu faith will enjoy an extra day off on top of the designated one-day public holiday for Deepavali which falls on Nov 4.

Human Resources Minister M Saravanan said the government has given the go-ahead for the additional unrecorded leave on the second day of the festival.

The practice was started by Pakatan Harapan (PH) coalition in 2018 after it won the general elections in the same year. However, its government fell last year.

Saravanan is from the Malaysian Indian Congress (MIC), now part of a coalition in power at the federal level.

In a statement today, Saravanan hoped the move will also be emulated by the private sector.

Lots of noise on Mitra funding

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By Asia Samachar | Editorial |

There has been a lot of noise lately about alleged abuses of state funds meant for the development of the Indians in Malaysia. Certain politically-connected individuals have either pocketed funds received or used the money for their own fancy purposes, or so goes the allegations.

There is nothing really new in these allegations, other than names and outfits, perhaps. For those who have taken the trouble to track them, they would have heard them all.

You would have heard the word ‘Mitra’ being bandied around. It has nothing to do with mittar, Punjabi for friends. MITRA here is the acronym for Malaysian Indian Transformation Unit, a federal government unit now parked under the Ministry of National Unity. In its previous incarnation, it was known as Socio-Economic Development of the Indian Community Unit (SEDIC). When Pakatan Harapan (PH) took over the federal government after the 2018 polls, they rebranded the outfit.

In a nutshell, the allegations are that some sleazy people have used their political positions or connections to channel federal funds to their favoured non-governmental organisations (NGOs). These are money earmarked to help the community. The general suspicion is that scandal and swindle reigned when it came to how the money was eventually spent.

Between 2014 and 2018, SEDIC received RM203.9 million, according to the Auditor General’s report for 2018 (See: Laporan Ketua Audit Negara Persekutuan Tahun 2018- Siri 1, page 61 onwards). In 2019 onwards, MITRA was supposed to have received RM100 million annually. Roughly, that works out to about half a billion ringgit over eight years.

In the past, some Sikh organisations have also received these funding. While we don’t have the exact figure, it does not add up to much for the Sikh recipients. Generally, we believe most of them would have spent the money on projects and activities as outlined in their proposals when seeking the funding. But not all, it may seem.

Here, we would like to urge organisations that did ask for, and received government funding, to openly declare how much they received and how they spent it. This is what accountability is all about. You make it known for all and sundry to see. You have asked for public money, and you have got it. Now, you do the right thing by making public how it was spent, and the outcome. Don’t make people jump over hoops simply to obtain these details.

If any organisation is reluctant to do so, we must ask why. They should come under scrutiny. We don’t need bad apples in our midst.

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 |

‘I do all this for my inner peace’: the Sikh volunteers feeding Melbourne

‘Being a part of Sikh Volunteers Australia is like breathing to me,’ says the organisation’s co-founder and secretary Jaswinder Singh. Photograph: Christopher Hopkins/The Guardian

By Mostafa Rachwani | Australia |

With the promise of “free food” plastered in large print, Sikh Volunteers Australia vans have become a familiar sight in times of crisis, providing healthy vegetarian meals to people in need, from bushfire victims to the homeless.

So when Victoria was plunged into its sixth Covid lockdown at the start of August, the organisation ramped up its operation, beginning what would become its biggest relief effort yet.

Volunteer Simranjit Singh says the organisation cooked, packed and delivered nearly 80,000 free vegetarian meals in 81 days.

“Every day, around 800-plus meals were going out to people, so you could say that more than 800 people were in need during lockdown every single day,” he says. The volunteer responds to requests for help as well as cooking and delivering meals.

“The phone calls were always coming. Lots of people really needed the service, or they literally would go hungry.”

“It was challenging work,” says volunteer Kamaldeep Singh. “It’s not a small task, but with the help of the volunteers and their selfless service, we were able to make it a success.”

Kamaldeep Singh’s role involves answering calls from people in need.

“A pregnant lady called me the other day, crying, saying she didn’t have any food, she couldn’t cook and had tested positive [for Covid] so couldn’t leave. What could she do? We had to help her.

“There are a number of situations like that: people in difficult situations, single mothers, international students, the elderly, the people that were most affected by the lockdown.”

Read the full story, ‘‘I do all this for my inner peace’: the Sikh volunteers feeding Melbourne (The Guardian, 30 Oct 2021), here.

RELATED STORY:

Amazon India heartwarming Diwali ad on Sikh humanitarian worker (Asia Samachar, 31 Oct 2020)

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 |

Singapore ex-prisons hangman Darshan Singh dies of Covid-19 complications

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Darshan Singh, who was Singapore’s longest-serving prison executioner, with his granddaughter Poojaa Gill in 2017 – Photo: Poojaa Gill / ST

By Asia Samachar | Singapore |

Former Singapore prisons hangman Darshan Singh died early on Sunday morning (Oct 31), aged 89, reports the Straits Times.

Darshan, who was warded on Oct 16 in Yishun Community Hospital for a lung infection, died of Covid-19 complications, his granddaughter Poojaa Gill told the newspaper.

Darshan, who stopped working for the prison service after 2005.,had been hangman for about four decades.

After retirement, for many years, he has been fighting the effects of dementia, diabetes, high blood pressure and heart disease, according to an earlier media report.

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 |

Sardar Tara Singh (1947-2021), Ex JKR Workshop Shah Alam

ਘਲੇ ਆਵਹਿ ਨਾਨਕਾ ਸਦੇ ਉਠੀ ਜਾਹਿ ॥੧॥

Kalay Aye Nanaka Sadhe Uth Jaye

SARDAR TARA SINGH

(Ex JKR Workshop Shah Alam)

Village: Akara, India

Led a glorious life from 6th of April 1947 till the 28th of October 2021

In our hearts you are alive forever..
In our minds, your memories are imprinted..
So Loved and So Missed..

Parents: Late Sardar Pall Singh and Late Sardarni Gurdial Kaur

Wife: Manjeet Kaur

Children / Spouses:

Kiranjit Singh/Sukhvinder Kaur
Shiranjit Singh/Shamshinder Kaur
Sanjit Singh

Grandchildren: Harshania Samra Kaur, Gyatasha Samra Kaur, Deeraj Pal Singh, Jyamisha Samra Kaur

Godchildren: Dr. Suhnaina Kaur, Dharan Pal Singh

Path da Bhog: 13 November 2021 (Saturday), from 10AM – 12PM, at Gurdwara Sahib Jalan Sungai Besi (Shapha), Kuala Lumpur

Contact:

Kiranjit (012-3088468)

Shiranjit (019-2222254)

Sanjit (010-2477728)

Our loved one has returned to Karta Purakh leaving behind beloved brothers, sisters, brother in laws, sister in laws, cousins, nephew, nieces, relatives and friends..

Our beloved had an extraordinary football career and was the man behind the prestige football club, South City F.C.

Do comply to the recent MCO and SOP’s.

We are grateful to all family and friends for sharing our grieve. Thanking you for your support and prayers.

| Entry: 31 Oct 2021 | 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 |

Amazon India heartwarming Diwali ad on Sikh humanitarian worker

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By Asia Samachar | India |

In the spirit of Diwali, e-commerce giant Amazon India has released a heartwarming advertisement. The scene starts with a mother driving her son some 50km to deliver a Diwali present to a ‘special’ family member. But who is this? The son tries to dig it out of his mother, but she tells him to be patient.

As they reach a house, a Sikh man opens the door. He lights up as he recognises the young man. He takes a step forward and gives him a big, warm hug.

Just before the door opened, the mother reveals why she took the trouble to drive instead of just delivering the parcel. In April, they nearly lost the son to Covid-19. “We didn’t know what to do. Then, out of nowhere, this man got you a bed. He saved your life, Sameer,” she says.

Click here for the video via Facebook.

RELATED STORY:

Sikh volunteers battle odds to supply oxygen ‘langgar’ to desperate coronavirus patients (Asia Samachar, 30 April 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 |

Sikh general takes over #WhiteKnightCorps

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Lt Gen Manjinder Singh takes command at Indian Army’s 16 Corps – Photo: Indian Army

By Asia Samachar | India |

Lt Gen Manjinder Singh has taken over as the General Officer Commanding of Indian Army’s 16 Corps, popularly known as White Knight Corps. It is based at Nagrota, a town located in the Jammu district of Jammu and Kashmir. On assuming command, he exhorted all ranks to continue working with soldierly zeal and enthusiasm, according to a tweet yesterday (29 Oct 2021) at Additional Directorate General of Public Information of IHQ of MoD (Army).

The corps is responsible to guard the strategic and sensitive Line of Control (LoC) from Akhnoor in Jammu district to Poonch, south of Pir Panjal range.

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 |

Balbir Kaur (1954-2021), Kalumpang

BALBIR KAUR W/O GURCHARAN SINGH

1.4.1954 – 29.10.2021

Husband: Gurcharan Singh

Children / Spouses:

  1. Ramesh Singh and Sanggetha Kaur
  2. Rashpall Kaur and Ranjit Singh
  3. Kashminder Kaur
  4. Dalvinder Singh and Celest Chung
  5. Ravinder Kaur and Vinod Kumar

Grandchildren:

  1. Charanjeet Singh
  2. Harsimranjit Kaur
  3. Ashwinderjeet Kaur
  4. Gashvin Singh
  5. Getleen Kaur
  6. Arneet Singh
  7. Iena Kaur
  8. Jeevan Singh
  9. Alyssha Kaur
  10. Glenys Kaur
  11. Hanaa Kaur
  12. Teyran Kumar
  13. Keeshya Laxmi

Saskaar / Cremation: 1pm, 30 Oct 2021 (Saturday), at Serendah crematorium. Cortège leaves residence at 12noon.

Path da Bhog: 14 Nov 2021 (Sunday), 12pm-1pm, at Gurdwara Sahib Kalumpang, Selangor

Note: Kindly abide to Gurdwara Sahib SOPs.

Contact: Ramesh Singh (son) 019 331 9885

Our beloved Mataji has return to Karta Purakh. She has always remained down to earth, loved and remembered for her sewa at Gurdwara Sahib Kalumpang

| Entry: 30 Oct 2021 | 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 |

Battle for kirpan

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Jaskeerat Singh Gulshan: British barrister battling for right to wear kirpan in the court

By Parminder Saini | Britain |

I became a Barrister because I wanted to help people. Those from all walks of life who were downtrodden and fighting injustice. Imagine my surprise when I find myself confronted with that very scenario but where my client is a young, promising British Sikh lawyer fighting against our own government?

My client, is Jaskeerat Singh Gulshan, a Barrister (NP) who was prevented from entering a court building due to wearing his Kirpan. Yes, you read that right – a lawyer was prevented from entering a court building simply because he was practicing his faith. This story has already featured in the press, however the battle has now gone to the High Court where I have been instructed via Direct Access and represent this Sikh lawyer in his bid to be able to wear his Kirpan and maintain a career as a lawyer by attending court.

The case is one of the most important cases the Sikh community in the UK has faced. Sikhs and their articles of faith are protected by law and Sikhs are permitted to carry Kirpans of any length in public; however, HMCTS [HM Courts & Tribunals Service, the executive agency of the Ministry of Justice] seeks to restrict the size of Kirpan a Sikh can wear in our Courts, even if completely concealed under their clothing and hidden from sight.

How can it be that in a country like modern England, which is so tolerant and respectful of minority religions and ethnic communities, this behaviour and curtailment of one’s right to manifest their faith is being perpetrated by our own government? This question and others will be answered in this landmark litigation.

I encourage my fellow lawyers to not underestimate the importance of this case for other minority communities either. As history has taught us, it is the slow erosion of our morals, principles and tolerance of others (particularly when worryingly sanctioned by government) that marks the start of a decline in our society and our values. It is ironic that justice is blind and impartial, but only if you can get past the front door of the courthouse.

For me, this matter represents a fundamental check on our societal values where the Courts must consider whether a racial and ethnic minority and faith should be protected from potentially discriminatory and unlawful behaviour from their own government.

Please do share news of this litigation and please contribute whatever you can, to the JustGiving page that this young lawyer is starting, to help him fund this important case, which may likely reach the higher courts.

Parminder is a barrister practising at the Bar in London. He specialises in Public law and Human Rights, with an emphasis on Immigration, Asylum, Nationality and Free Movement law. He was appointed a Deputy Judge of the Upper Tribunal, Immigration and Asylum Chamberin 2015 and Deputy Judge of the First-tier Tribunal, Tax Chamber in 2018.

(Below is Justice4Kirpan campaign note, adapted from their LinkedIn page)

Justice4Kirpan

Advocating for the recognition of Kirpan and standing against any form of religious and racial discrimination.

Justice4Kirpan is a campaign that began as a result of Ealing Magistrates’ Court refusing entry to Jaskeerat Singh Gulshan, a lawyer, for carrying his Kirpan.

Jaskeerat Singh, a baptised (Amritdhari) Sikh, has been practising law for over 7 years and he has been wearing his Kirpan since the age of 13. He has been representing clients as a Lawyer in Immigration Tribunals, Family Courts and he had been attending other courts on regular basis whilst wearing his Kirpan.

An Amritdhari Sikh is required to observe a rigorous code of conduct (‘Rahit’) symbolised by the wearing of five articles: Kes (translated as “long uncut hair”), Kangha (translated as “a comb”), Karha (a steel bracelet), Kachara (cotton shorts), and Kirpan (a sword). The names of these articles begin with the letter ‘K’ and thus these articles came to be known as the “5 K’s”.

On 8 April 2021, Mr Gulshan was requested by Witness Support Services to attend Ealing Magistrates’ Court to provide emotional and moral support for a close relative who had been a victim of a crime, to assist her in giving evidence for the Crown against the defendant. He was prohibited from entering the court building due to the size of his Kirpan. He was discriminated against, treated like a criminal, and forced to go against his religious values and remove his kirpan as it was above 6 inches.

Mr Gulshan had never been discriminated against or refused entry into a court building due to the size of his Kirpan. He also complied with his civic duties by doing a Jury Service for two weeks in a Crown Court with the very same Kirpan but it was not an issue.

As a result of the discrimination faced by Mr Gulshan, he has lodged an application for Judicial Review at the Royal Court of Justice to challenge the outdated policy presented by HMCTS. We are now waiting for the Government Legal Department to respond to our application and a Judge to consider our application and to allow us to proceed with a Judicial Review hearing.

RELATED STORY:

NSW seeks feedback on wearing kirpan in schools (Asia Samachar, 25 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 |

The dangerous cocktail of hyper-masculinity and misogyny

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By Gurnam Singh | Opinion |

Very revealing and troubling research that suggests a significant proportion of the male population has been involved in sexual violence of some sort. Though the research is on students in the UK, there is no reason to believe it doesn’t reflect the wider picture where some 10% of those surveyed reported that they had committed on average 4 sexual assaults, rapes and other coercive and unwanted incidents in the past two years!

There are complex reasons why there is such a prevalence of this kind of sexual predatory behavour, from biological theories associated with hormones through to genetic predisposition, to a range of sociological and economic theories.

The report identifies a strong association between ‘toxic masculinity and sexual violence’, which is backed up by the fact that those who reported committing these offences also had sadistic sexual fantasies about raping and torturing women and believed that women who get drunk were to blame if they get raped.

As a Sikh, whilst I have no reason to believe that my community is any less or more guilty of this terrible violation of women’s fundamental rights, I do wonder about the widespread display and valorisation of ‘hyper-masculinity.’ There is a concept within Sikhi of the Saint/Soldier. I think it is significant that the ‘saint’ aspect comes first before the ‘soldier’. In the absence of high ethical standards, a soldier is likely to commit any number of terrible crimes against those who do not have the power to defend themselves. It is for this same reason that Sikhs rarely, if at all, engaged offensive warfare. It was for the same reason that the Guru explicitly said, violence must be a last resort and then only for self defence.

SEE ALSO: Research reveals rapes and assaults admitted to by male UK students (The Guardian, 29 Oct 2021)

In a society where Sikhs face racism on a daily basis, not to mention the persecution we have suffered for centuries, I can see the appeal of aggressive masculinity, typified by the glorification of warfare, weaponry and militarism. Some of this is integral to the evolution of Sikhi as a resistance movement. However, I also believe that the British Imperialists played on this stereotype in their ‘racialised’ view of the world. And in the case of the Sikhs, the British were happy to construct us as a ‘warrior race’. It is for this reason that we have such a big presence in British Military and security forces across the world where we became the de facto military wing of the British Empire.

Perhaps in the medieval world, hyper-masculinity was an essential ingredient for survival and that, as evolutionary psychologists argue, today’s misogynistic attitudes and behaviour are a by-product of this history. Even if this is true, then I cannot see any justification for aggressive hyper-masculinity in today’s world, where we can deploy peaceful and democratic strategies for exercising our rights.

There is another way for humanity, and this is very much articulated within the Guru Granth Sahib, which extols the virtues of kindness, cooperation, service, non-discriminating and human rights, as well as warning against the vices of unbridled desire, aggression, greed, ego and attachment.

In Gurbani there is a strong message to men about addressing their/our misogynistic attitudes and behaviour, to reflect on our responsibility for the active and passive involvement in this crime against humanity, and to change our ways.

There is also a message to women and girls to: develop self-confidence and esteem; reject the idea that ‘good’ women should be ‘soft’, ‘passive’ and ‘obedient’; exercise good judgement; and to stand-up to male oppression. This cannot be achieved by being isolated, so you need to form strong collectivities and together no doubt you can resist and even defeat misogyny.

Understanding Sexual Aggression in UK Male University Students: An Empirical Assessment of Prevalence and Psychological Risk Factors

Authors: Samuel T. Hales, MSc, Theresa A. Gannon, DPhil, CPsychol (Forensic)

Abstract: University-based sexual aggression is an international public health issue; however, to date, there have been no formal assessments of the prevalence or psychological indicators associated with the proabuse behaviors of the most common perpetrators at UK universities: heterosexual male students. To facilitate the development of effective primary prevention interventions for domestic students who have sexually harmed, we assess across two empirical studies (Ns = 259 and 295) the psychological risk factors associated with recent sexual aggression amongst two distinct samples of UK male university students. Cumulatively, results highlighted that one in nine participants (11.4%) self-reported recent sexual aggression. These participants could be statistically differentiated from their non-offending peers on various established indicators of general sexual offending, of which logistic regression analyses highlighted atypical sexual fantasies, general aggression, hostility toward women, and rape myth acceptance as being the most reliable predictors. For more, click here.

Gurnam Singh is an academic activist dedicated to human rights, liberty, equality, social and environmental justice. He is an Associate Professor of Sociology at University of Warwick, UK. He can be contacted at Gurnam.singh.1@warwick.ac.uk

* This is the opinion of the writer and does not necessarily represent the views of Asia Samachar.

RELATED STORY:

Miracles and Godmen (Asia Samachar, 31 July 2020)

Towards a more loving, sharing and caring world in 2021 (Asia Samachar, 22 Dec 2020)

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 |