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Jaggies Singh (1959-2020), Rawang

SASKAAR / CREMATION:  Cortege leaves No. 87, Jalan GU 2/7, Taman Garing Utama, Rawang, Selangor 11 am, 29 November 2020 (Sunday) for cremation at Jalan Loke Yew crematorium at 12pm | Malaysia

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

SARDAR JAGGIES SINGH S/O LATE SARDAR DEBARA SINGH

Departed peacefully on 28th November 2020

Wife: Late Madam Ratan Kaur

Leaving behind children, grandchildren, family & friends.

Cortege leaves No. 87, Jalan GU 2/7, Taman Garing Utama, Rawang, Selangor 11 am, 29 November 2020 (Sunday) for cremation at Jalan Loke Yew crematorium at 12pm

Details of Path Da Bhog to be announced later.

Contact:

Kaljit (+60 17-646 7327)

Balvinder (+60 14-719 0955)

 

| Entry: 28 Nov 2020 | 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 |

Time for free sanitary pads at gurdwaras?

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By Asia Samachar Team | GLOBAL |

Should gurdwaras make sanitary pads freely available to anyone who would need them? The need may be there and left unaddressed all this time.

Scotland is leading way when lawmakers on Tuesday (Nov 24) unanimously passed a legislation making period products freely available to all.

The newly passed Period Products (Free Provision) (Scotland) Act requires the Scottish government to set up a nationwide scheme to allow anyone who needs period products to get them free of charge. Among others, it involves schools, colleges and universities.

Monica Lennon, a lawmaker from the opposition Labour Party, had campaigned against “period poverty” — when someone who needs sanitary products can’t afford them — since 2016, reports AP.

Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon tweeted that she was proud to vote for the “groundbreaking” legislation and described it as “an important policy for women and girls.”

A 2017 survey by the charity estimated that 10% of girls aged 14 to 21 in the U.K. have been unable to afford period products, and 15% of girls have struggled to afford them, reports AP.

As for the Sikh community, it is believed gurdwaras do not generally make available sanitary products. A cursory check by Asia Samachar show that none of the gurdwaras in Malaysia and Singapore openly make available sanitary pads.

“Never thought about it…We have provided sanitary pads along with toiletries to the homeless in the past, though,” a gurdwara official told Asia Samachar when contacted.

“This issue had never cropped up. I’m still wondering if there’s a pressing need for it,” said another official from a Klang Valley-based gurdwara. He was, however, open to exploring further the idea.

In February 2019, Binti International, a charity focused on smashing stigma and shame surrounding menstruation, launched a Period Policy at a London gurdwara.

The event at the Khalsa Jatha Sikh Gurdwara in Shepherds Bush held an open discussion about periods and help to eradicate the stigma surrounding menstruation.

The Period Policy, moved by Binti International in collaboration with the Peter Virdee Foundation, promotes and ensures equality for everyone who visits the gurdwara, from the regular congregation to first time visitors.

This means providing free menstrual products and menstrual education to the Sikh community, including open discussions around menstruation to eliminate shame, stigma and taboo.

 

RELATED STORY:

The Period Policy launch at London gurdwara (Asia Samachar, 4 March 2019)

Menstruation: Ickkk? Not according to Guru Nanak Sahib (Asia Samachar, 16 May 2016)

 

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 |

Merry Gurpurab: Don’t extinguish the magic

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By Dya Singh | OPINION | 

I was watching a ‘Christmas’ feel good movie. One which has its ups and downs initially and normally ends well, with the jingle of bells denoting the mysterious arrival of Santa Claus. It normally brings a feeling of overwhelming love, wellbeing, goodwill, sometimes a tear or two, and everyone wishing each other ‘Merry Christmas’.

I thought about us Sikhs …

Sikhism now appears to have two broad factions to it. A number of scholars are single-mindedly trying to distinguish between the ‘hearsay’ and what they call the ‘hijacking of Sikhi’ from the ‘facts’ as they see them. The other side is entrenched in the forklore and the tales (‘sakhian’) which have developed over generations of Sikh ‘godmen’ (sadhus, nirmalays, sants, babas, taksaliays, deras babas, bhais, and so on). One side looks upon Sikhi strictly as a tool of self-advancement, sticking mainly to what they see and research according to their ‘logical’ interpretation of the bani in the Sri Guru Granth Sahib. The other side revere and emulate what has been passed down by the ‘godmen’ – what Karl Marx called the ‘opium of the masses’ – the ‘sakhian’, ‘keramata(n)’, and otherworldliness, or, the ‘sant-sipahi’ mode as they believe Guru Gobind Singh Ji envisioned, and even emulate the dress of the period – the ‘bana’.

One side could have three-day marathon sittings of Waheguru Satsang, or other similar religious gatherings – the ‘akhand jaap’, the ‘akhand path’, forty-day silent jaap, lighting of divas, aarti, and other ancient Indian rituals and ceremonies. They believe in visions of the Gurus by the pious. The type who would bow to (supposedly) relics of the Guru Sahibs and even worship them.  The other side advocate personal ‘khoj shabad main leh’ (research of Gurbani), discourses and generally streamlining procedures to barest minimum, education, and placing logic above all else.

Some of the ‘scholarly side’ attempt to ‘debunk’ any ‘bani’ of Guru Gobind Singh Ji, any writings in the Dasam Granth or any other post-guru period writers or brahmgianis, unless they wrote strictly on Gurbani from the Guru Granth Sahib. Their slogan – ‘Ik Granth Ik Panth’!

I will refer to the two ‘sides’ as the ‘Babamuth’ (inclined towards the rituals) and the ‘Khojmuth’ (inclined towards facts or facts as they see them). At my age and general inclination towards gursangeet, I have had close associations with both and I do see the worth of both sides. Evolution of Sikhi needs both sides – one to pacify the side which just wishes to pay lip service to what happens naturally with the majority – the herd mentality. The other, to keep the interests of the more inquisitive and those who like to be challenged where their personal development is concerned, majority being from the younger generations. (The elderly like me are generally set in their ways).

Over twenty initial years of my life in Malaysia and keeping in touch with the community there and associations especially with Sikh religious organisations and gurdwaras, I have noticed the initial ‘invasion’ of, for want of a better word, ‘Indian traditions mentality’ having crept into our smagams and gurdwaras. Rituals like ‘raakhi’ (rekhedi), puranmasi, lighting of candles during Divali which slowly continued under the guise of Bandhi Schod Devas (which we used to celebrate with our south Indian neighbours as their celebration known as Deepavali), Lori and Dussehra were unheard of! So, the counter-balance of Khojmuth, globally and generally, is very necessary to give us our own global identity.

On the other hand, attempting to remove almost everything connected with Guru Gobind Singh Ji, for example, is dangerous. Being challenged today, to my limited knowledge are: amrit sanchar; the first paudi of the conventional Ardaas; any shabads from the Dasam Granth; Deh Shiva (though even I believe that there is a legitimate alternate Sikh Anthem within the Guru Granth Sahib from, Jo tao prem khelan ka chao …); even Benti Chaupayi; Jaap Sahib. Raag Mala has been challenged since the turn of the last century); and so on.

I have friends who now refuse to recite the Benti Chaupayi within the Rehras Sahib. To me it feels like cutting off one of my limbs if I ever tried to do that! I once had a very loving fellow younger ‘vir’, great kirtenia in his own right, who warned me not to sing anything from the Dasam Granth as he would not be able to accommodate me! He was accompanying me that day. I wanted to sing ‘Mitr Pyaray nu haal muridhan dha kehna’ – one of my favourite shabads and my venerable father’s. Once in California, i was stopped mid-way from singing the Benti Chaupayi! Again, I was once abruptly asked to stop singing our rendition ‘Waheguru Bol Pyarea’ by some youth in Greater Kailash gurdwara in Delhi calling it ‘kechi bani’!

I urge caution on taking one side or the other. As some ‘rituals’ have evolved into our gurdwaras over my lifetime, they hopefully will evolve out as there is greater ‘khoj’ and education. In my childhood and teenagehood there were no ‘visramqars’ for Baba Ji to repose after ‘samapti’!

I once had quite an illuminating discussion with some fairly affluent Sikh folk in Dubai. Whereas I was urging further research and ‘self-illumination’, they were of the view that all they wanted was, to be told what to do because they did not have the time nor the inclination to ‘illuminate’ themselves. “Tell us what to do that is good for our soul, and we shall do it! We do ‘parkash’ of Guru Granth Sahib and recite JapJi Sahib by ourselves every morning; listen to Jaap Sahib and Sawaiyay in our cars and at work, the occasional Sukhmani Sahib. In the evening we recite Rehras before ‘nashta’ (dinner). Before sleeping we recite Kirtan Sohila. We don’t even want to know what the Gurbani we recite or listen to means! We go to the gurdwara once a week at least, mainly on Saturday where we sit and listen to some nice sweet kirtan (does not matter that we learn nothing from it) and partake of langar. We attend important functions like Gurpurbs etc. and on invitation, for programmes in the gurdwara. All of us and our offsprings keep long hair. Our male folk tie dastaars. Our womenfolk generally go more often to the gurdwara; attend isteri satsangs; attend Sukhmani Sahib reading sessions and also help in the langar. We contribute ‘daswandh’ to the gurdwara. WHY DO WE NEED MORE ‘ILLUMINATION’? WE RATHER SPEND THE TIME IN OUR BUSINESSES!”

We laughed and I could not fault their logic! That is the way most people, let alone Sikhs, are. They just like rituals, meaningful or not, more for enjoyment and appeasing the gods! Only some are discerning and wish to learn.

On the other hand, my venerable father used to ask me after every gurdwara smagam or even after seeing a movie – Aj phir ki sikhiya? (What did you learn today?) And I had to give him an answer followed by his own version. Greater learning for me. These lovely folk in Dubai (as an example) had a different answer – Aseen sikhan thodo aye haa(n)? Aseen ta(n) anand manena si, aur maan leya. (We did not come here to learn anything! We came for the enjoyment and we enjoyed!)

Gurdwaras are there for the ‘masses’ and cater for them. Then we have some learned brahmgianis who the sangats like to hear and join in their ‘saintly’ veakheya, ‘simran’, ‘Waheguru jaap’ and simple kirtan. Some young kirtenias are very popular and cater for certain sections of the sangat (I have done my bit in that regard)! There are a new popular breed of young bilingual percharaks dressed in medieval garb who appeal to a certain section of our youth. They all create a certain ‘magic’ which is probably not in line with some of the views of the ‘Khojmuth’ types, but who appeal to the masses.

The khojmuths do not even like the word ‘magic’.

Let us take an example from  Christianity. Come pre-Christmas, we see and feel a certain rise in excitement, joy and optimism with Christians visiting ‘home’; family gatherings, friends visiting, Christmas trees being decorated, presents, turkey dinners and general merriment. We all know, and they too, that Father Christmas, Santa Clause is a fictitious figure, but he exists for the children and for Christmas (and retailers). New movies come out propounding the ‘magic’ of Christmas and celebrations! It is even a fact that Jesus was definitely not born on 25th. December, yet we have nativity plays and scenes created of his birth in a manger. They have midnight Mass on Christmas Eve, ushering in the birth of their saviour. So, I say, let us not lose the ‘magic’ of Sikhi even if some aspects which bring us joy and celebration are fictitious, or just not fact.

In time, with greater education and research from our Khojmuths,  we hope to see a responsible evolution (or maybe not), but let us not lose the simple magic of enjoying going to the gurdwara and attending simple sessions of Simran satsang and gatherings with a religious flavour, and don’t forget the langar! I call it the KISS principle – Keep It Simple Sikha! Let us remain one family notwithstanding whether we agree fully with each other … and yet we need to keep learning. Some will want to learn. After all, that is what being a Sikh means. Others just want to belong and do the bare minimum. Let us be inclusive, not exclusive.

So this Gurpurab, let us just celebrate the birth of our beloved Baba Nanak even if some of us, especially the ‘Khojmuths’ believe that Baba Nanak was actually born around Vesakhi in April!. Let us be happy and full of love for life and each other. Let us ‘enjoy’ Akhand Paths, extravagant langgars with metheyayi, classy kirteniay, dharmic kavetas about Baba Nanak and any other way we wish to celebrate.

HAPPY GURPURAB EVERYONE. GURU JI’s BLESSINGS TO ALL.

 

Malaysian-born Dya Singh, who now resides in Australia, is an accomplished musician and a roving Sikh preacher. The Dya Singh World Music Group performs full scale concerts on ‘music for the soul’ based on North Indian classical and semi-classical styles of music with hymns from mainly the Sikh, Hindu and Sufi ‘faiths’. He is also the author of SIKH-ING: Success and Happiness. He can be contacted at dyasingh@khalsa.com

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

RELATED STORY:

Corona maha-mari: A period of transformation? (Asia Samachar, 8 April 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 |

British Sikh shares hate crime when he was 15, then again in university

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By Mankamal Singh | OPINION | 
Those who claim the attack on the lone Sikh child in Telford is not racism, need a reality check. Once the joora opened, crowd laughing & persistence to carry on with attack reeks of racism. Denial angers me more than ignorance. I hate having to justify what’s blatantly obvious.
When I was 15, I was jumped by a large group of white and black teenagers near my school because I had stood up to one of them earlier that week. As they kicked me onto the floor, I heard one of them say “kick the paki’s turban off”.
My inherent reaction was to hold onto my Dastar as I  lay on the ground outnumbered and allowed myself to be kicked and stamped on. Most of the kicks were aimed at my head but my Dastar cushioned the blows and I was left with bruises on my body.
Telford hate crime case against Sikh student – Sketch by @mesmeraki

That group eventually stopped kicking, laughed and walked off. The only thing I was worried about was whether my Dastar was still on my head which left me with some ridiculous comfort that at least they failed.

I never recognised that as a hate crime back then because it was part of the growing up in the 80s and we all denied what constituted hate.
When I was at Uni some years later, I was jumped by 3 middle aged white men as I walked home at night from a friends house. They came from behind, shouted a few racial slurs, pushed me on the floor, kicked me a few times and walked off.
The only thing I was worried about was whether my Dastar was still on my head. I got up, walked home, actually saw a cop car, spoke to the officer about what happened, showed him the bruises & cuts. The officer said that was bad luck & then said I should probably be in bed anyway.
That was that, no one bothered to recognise these incidents back then and hate was allowed to fester.
The violence in all the incidents above were motivated by hate and racisim. As an individual I was targeted and allowed to be subject sustained violence.
As Sikh children in 70s/80s Britain, we unfortunately grew up with racist violent bullying. This is 2020, it angers me that attitudes have been allowed to filter down generations.
Who cares about gimmicks like #oddsocksday
Change real attitudes by first stopping the denial.

 

Sikh activist Mankamal Singh is a board member of UK-based Sikh Network. The article above is taken from a series of his tweets. 

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

RELATED STORY:

Police launch hate crime probe into British school attack (Asia Samachar, 26 Nov 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 |

Niranjan Singh (1958-2020), Formerly Telekom Butterworth

Last respects can be paid at Gurdwara Sahib Butterworth on 28 Nov 2020 (Saturday) from 1.00pm -2.45pm. Cortège leaves from Gurdwara Sahib Butterworth at 2.45pm, 28 Nov 2020 (Saturday) for Cremation at Sikh Crematorium, Jalan Siram, Butterworth | Malaysia

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

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

 

NIRANJAN SINGH A/L GURNAM SINGH

(Formerly from Telekom Butterworth)

(17.2.1958 – 27.11.2020)

Age: 62yrs

In life, we loved you dearly, in death we love you still. In our hearts you hold a place, no one else will ever fill.

Leaving Behind

Wife: Hardeep Kaur a/p Veer Singh

Children / Spouses:

Kirrenjeet kaur / Manjit Singh (MJ)

Shirenjeet Kaur / Surmukh Singh

Harvinderjeet Singh

Grandchildren: Gurpreet Kaur, Reyhanjeet Singh, Alisa Kaur

Last respect can be paid at Gurdwara Sahib Butterworth on 28 Nov 2020 (Saturday) from 1.00pm -2.45pm

The Cortège will leaves from Gurdwara Sahib Butterworth at 2.45pm, 28 Nov 2020 (Saturday) for Cremation at Sikh Crematorium, Jalan Siram, Butterworth

Enquiries:

Sirjeet Singh (013-420 0202)

Shirenjeet Kaur (012-878 3187)

Surmukh Singh (016-485 0850)

 

| Entry: 27 Nov 2020 | 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 |

Jasvir Singh to continue serving Bentong 

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Jasvir Singh – Photo: File photo from 2018
By Asia Samachar Team | MALAYSIA |

Businessman Jasvir Singh Ram Singh will continue to serve Bentong, a municipality in the state of Pahang, when he was appointed as Bentong councillor for a third term.

Jasvir, who is also Gurdwara Sahib Bentong committee president, will serve as a council member of the Bentong Municipal Council from 1 November 2020 till 31 October 2022.

 

RELATED STORY:

Jasvir Singh made Bentong councillor for second term (Asia Samachar, 14 Dec 2018)

 

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 |

Sardarni Swarn Kaur (1932-2020), Kluang

PATH DA BHOG: 12 December 2020 (Saturday), from 10am to 12pm, at GURDWARA SAHIB KLUANG, JOHOR | Malaysia

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

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

 

SARDARNI SWARN KAUR D/O MEYR SINGH 

18 December 1932 – 25 November 2020

VILLAGE: AMRITSAR

Wife of LATE SARDAR PIARA SINGH S/O LATE FAKIR SINGH

Will be deeply missed and remembered forever by loved ones

Children:

Charan Singh
Vasan Singh
Harjinder Singh
Gurdev Singh
Kernail Singh
Harjinder Kaur
Balbinder Kaur

Daughters-in-law / Sons-in-law:

Jesbir Kaur
Sarjit Kaur
Balvinder Kaur
Bowinder Kaur
Surinder Kaur
Jagmail Singh
Rajinder Singh

Grandchildren, Great Grandchildren, Relatives and Friends.

Path Da Bhog: 12 December 2020 (Saturday), from 10am to 12pm, at GURDWARA SAHIB KLUANG, JOHOR

For enquiries please contact:

Sardar Charan Singh 012-7564971

Sardar Gurdev Singh 017-722 9765

 

| Entry: 26 Nov 2020 | 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 |

Police launch hate crime probe into British school attack

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Telford hate crime case against Sikh student – Sketch by @mesmeraki
By Asia Samachar Team | BRITAIN |

An attack by secondary school pupils in Telford is being treated as a hate crime, police have said.

The West Mercia force said it was aware of a video circulating on social media of a boy being attacked in an “incredibly distressing incident”, reports BBC.

It appears to show a pupil from the Sikh community being pushed to the ground by two other boys and then struck a number of times in the head.

In the report, West Mercia Police said: “We are treating this as a hate crime and with the utmost seriousness….Our inquiries into the motivation around the incident are continuing and we are working with our local communities to provide reassurance.”

On its part, Charlton School yesterday (25 Nov) said in a statement that it was aware of the incident that took place on Friday (13 Nov) involving a number of our students, on their way home from school.

“We have taken swift, immediate and appropriate action, including sanctions and targeted intervention for the perpetrators. A police investigation is ongoing, and we are co-operating fully,” it said.

Although this incident did not take place during the normal hours of the school day, the school said it had ‘taken full responsibility’ for working with all students involved, and the wider school community, to prevent any further such incident from occurring.

“We are in contact with the parents of all those involved, who tell us they are satisfied with the actions we have taken. The school is also working closely with the local Sikh community and it’s leaders at this time,” it said.

RELATED STORY:

First turbaned lawmaker for British Columbia as NDP all set to win (Asia Samachar, 25 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 |

Sikhs in America: A Contemporary Sikhs & Society Speculation

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By Nirmal Singh | OPINION |

We all have the good fortune to meet some people in our lives, who use few words, in thoughtful cryptic pauses, but are able to communicate a complex mission outline to a mind trying to be attentive. I have had my share of such experiences, more specially as I engaged in management consultancy and had to define the boundaries of the changes we could attempt to make an organization move forward a step or two.

Had lots of experiences with excellent CEOs, visionaries, who set the foundations of a new and vibrant, yet unwieldy, society that waking India has turned out to be. There are limits to change and growth that we can handle without disturbing the even tenor of societal dynamic.

This ancient wisdom has distilled into our minds and while we venture, we all think in terms of what Guru Nanak persuades us to do  – aisaa kaam moolay n keechaee jith anth pachhoteeai (ਐਸਾ ਕੰਮੁ ਮੂਲੇ ਨ ਕੀਚੈ ; ਜਿਤੁ ਅੰਤਿ ਪਛੋਤਾਈਐ ॥) – attempt not any errand that ever may end up in remorse. [M III, p. 918] Profound divine guidance is there all round us. We as if live in an envelope of such illumination, somnolently, in a half state of wakefulness.

My own reverie was broken a couple of times by Dr Rajwant Singh, great mini communicator – a subject line email from him and I went searching for two of pressing contemporary issues, we felt might hit us out of the blue – the closet LGBT among us Sikhs and the Sikh dilemma over carrying of Arms in the US, in the light of our robust religious armed tradition.

Though his real contribution is in environmental awareness among us. We would be the only faith group that has Akal Takht designated Sikh environmental day celebrated every year.

We were able to explore it and are now a more self assured community of believers, not straying, causing embarrassments, but living in the guidance of divine urgings as these come and our moorings remain unaffected, almost as stable as when the thoughts of the change did disturb our equanimity.

His third nudge was on the ethnic tick box – the UK Sikh controversy but my good friend Gurmukh Singh  had me so well informed that I could respond to Rajwant’s subject line with a subject line response. He obviously agreed. Sikhs in the US did get to it with no noise or commotion.

We have grown. We are engaged and creating space for ourselves. Americans are good people. Like us they think of the common good. We have still to go a long way but it may not seem as daunting.

WHEREFROM, SAY THAT NOW!

The Pandemic has played havoc into the whole lot of 2020 urges and the world is topsy turvy. A miniscule microbe has challenged human ingenuity and in a manner of speech has has assumed sovereignty over us all – play of divine will! Go to India, poor have no work. The mothers cannot find small jobs and buy some food. There is fear of an infection we cannot understand.

We need infrastructure for health delivery but how to create the brick and mortar places that can give us some semblance of providing support. Even for our prayers, we need to bring together sangat to sing praises of Wahiguru. If we want to come together to share our angst, our love, our homages to the departed, we have to think hard. But many of us are doing it. We have moved to the virtual space – we sing praises, we share greetings, we let the young feel part of it and a new, less cumbersome, more economic and internally engaged paradigm is getting formed.

Societies adjust to challenges. People make supreme sacrifices when needed. That stems the tide of vice and humanity needs it. Sikhs have done that but when we have to buckle up and stand for Sikh Resolute Compassion for the common good, we make the choices that answer to the call.

In a week from now we will be celebrating the 551st Parkash Utsav of Nanak, Guru of the Sikhs and a host of Hindus. Likewise many Muslims in Pakistan rever him as their Pir and Baba. Around Kartarpur, where now the largest Gurdwara has been built by the people of Pakistan in their country.

It is not virtual structure. It is real but so is the echo of blessings that will rise from the ramparts of the Gurdwaras. That Baang-!- Daraa – the call of heaven will beckon us all as we lean in our homage to the Great Guru.

The pain recedes, hope rises, Satgur thinks always of the well being of one and all.

Enjoy the spirit of bonhomie in this festive season – man rae kyon chhotae bin pyaar (ਮਨ ਰੇ ਕਿਉ ਛੂਟਹਿ ਬਿਨੁ ਪਿਆਰ) – oh, my fickle mind, how can thou ever get across this wild ocean without love in your heart! [M I, p. 60]

[Nirmal Singh has written six books on Sikhs and Sikhi and several of his articles have been published in journals like Sikh Review, Journal of Sikh Studies and Comparative Religion and Abstracts of Sikh Sudies (IOSS) as well as in the US mainstream news media. Resident in Orlando, he spends considerable time in Delhi]

RELATED STORY:

Conundrum of religion for peace and tricky reality for Sikhs – Part 1 (Asia Samachar, 20 Jan 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 |

Gurdwara food waste goes upcycle! Kuala Lumpur shows the way

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By Jespal Singh Sidhu | ENVIRONMENT |

We Sikhs are all well aware of Guru Ka Langar. Food is prepared at all Sikh gurdawaras. What happens to the waste generated when we prepare food or langar? Do we give a thought to this? The vegetable skins, peels, cutoffs of rotten parts, onion skins, fruit skins and peels, used tea leaves and last but not least the balance food left on the plates of the Sanggat (congregation) which we usually call “jooth”. We can place these into two categories :-

  1. Unavoidable food waste (peels, skins, rotten cutoffs, used tea leaves)
  2. Wastage of food (leftover food off the sanggats’ plates as per pictures below)

Usually it is packed in garbage bags and it ends up at the landfill only to increase the greenhouse gasses effect.

I was trying to kick off a project to upcycle this food waste to compost at the gurdawara since 2016. Why? This is because 18,000 tonnes of food waste (SWcorp stats) is thrown onto the landfills per day in Malaysia. That is why every little bit that we can save from ending up at the landfills will make a difference. This includes both unavoidable food waste and wasted food.

Many discussions and meetings and emails were sent but nothing came. In 2019 when a Sikh gentleman Sardar Gian Singh proposed this to the current President of Sentul Gurdawara Dato Rajpal Singh and this was the beginning of the composting project at the Gurdwara Sahib Sentul. Sardar Gian Singh managed to get the green light and I was excited. With my experience in commercial composting I spoke to Gian Singh and the project was kicked off during the 550 years Guru Nanak celebrations at the Sentul Gurdwara in November 2019.

UNDERSTANDING COMPOST

What is composting? In simple terms it is the breakdown of organic material (food waste, garden waste such as dried leaves, grass clippings, green leaves with the help of fungus and microbes into a soil like substance called compost. The process requires three main components:

  • Moisture (the right level of moisture for the microbes to work their magic)
  • Air (aerobic process)
  • Effective Microbes (which are added at the beginning in the starters).

Over several months, the composting project gathered the interest of the young ones too as can be seen from the pictures. They were thought the finer points of composting of what can and what cannot be composted and the role that the black soldier fly larvae plays in the composting process.

Youth participation in Sentul gurdwara compost project – Photo: Supplied

A system was put in place to separate out leftover food and vegetables skins, peels, tea leaves from kitchen and the washing area and these are placed in designated buckets. Wilted flowers from the darbar sahib together with the never ending supply of dried leaves became the “brown” components. The project is still going strong despite the MCO in March 2020 and the current CMCO. As mentioned it is an aerobic process so the compost pile is turned over twice a week usually every Wednesday and every Saturday.

Sentul gurdwara compost project: Food waste being added to the compost pile – Photo: Supplied

There is strong support from the golden citizens of Sentul who come every Wednesday and Saturday (strictly adhering to the Covid-19 SOPs) and treat the turning over of the compost as exercise for themselves and also sewa. There are also some young gentlemen that come on a regular basis to assist.

Sentul gurdwara compost project: Golden citizens adding water to ensure moisture level of the compost pile is just right – Photo: Supplied

Since November 2019 it can be estimated that about one and a half tons to two of compost (wet weight) has be produced. Since the MCO and CMCO there has been little or no cooking at the gurdwara so the active volunteers actually collect fruit skins and peels from fruit sellers and they bring their non-meat based food waste from their respective homes to be composted. These families have embarked on the journey of reducing organic waste ending up at landfills. Let’s hope that this article inspires our community to collectively start composting at gurdwaras and the waste can come from homes too.

At the moment the matured compost at Gurdwara Sahib Sentul is placed in huge storage containers and the sanggat is informed to take this compost free from these containers using their own containers which is also to reduce the usage of plastics. Compost is a soil enhancer and if used frequently it conditions the soil to be more “healthy”. The project requires funding to be further improved and we do hope to get the committee’s approval for the amount of about RM 9,000.00 to lay concrete at the composting area and to place a roof above the storage shed. Currently the idea is to upcycle the waste thus reducing carbon footprint, greenhouse gasses and also touching on many of sustainable development goals (SDGs) agenda.

Jespal Singh Sidhu, a real estate negotiator and an avid gardener, produces compost on a commercial scale which he supplies to farms, fruit orchards and home gardening enthusiasts. He is passionate about sustainability, waste management, separation at source organic waste management and environmental related topics. He is available to guide Gurdawaras to reduce carbon footprint. He can be contacted at compost.sprout@gmail.com

 

RELATED STORY:

Finding Guru Nanak: An environmental message for humanity (Asia Samachar, 16 Nov 2020)

 

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