After months of wrangling and open spats, the Akal Takht has taken action against two popular Sikh preachers.
In a meeting in Amritsar, Punjab, yesterday (24 Aug),Akal Takht acting jathedar Giani Harpreet Singh said gurdwaras have been asked not to allow programmes for Ranjit Singh Dhadrianwale and UK-based Harinder Singh, until they appear before the Akal Takht.
Leading a team of panj pyarey, Harpreet said they had received a report from a sub-committee formed earlier to investigate allegations against Dhadrianwale for allegedly distorting the religious and historical facts.
Harpreet also asked Sikhs not to listen to or share his online videos. The decision is expected to be widely debated.
The Sikh jathedars, who wield sway on the larger Sikh community globally, have also asked Sikhs not to listen to his online preaching or share them forward, a decision that is expected to be widely debated.
In the same sitting, Harpreet also announced that Sikhs not to allow programmes by UK-based preacher from the Nirvair Khalsa Jatha UK for not responding to an earlier complaint against him.
These were among a clutch of issues deliberated by the panj pyarey in the marathon meeting.
True to his style, Dhadrianwale had put out an immediate video response in which he said: “Jathedars! Bring proof and I’m ready to bow down in front of you.” See here.
Dhadrianwale took issue with the Akal Takht order which also cautioned gurdwara management committees that they would be held responsible for any ‘untoward incident’ should they allow him to take on the stage. After a few disturbances by groups opposing his preaching, Dhadrianwale had suspended all stage programmes since February.
The once Baba-style preacher, who has now taken on a more rationale-based presentation, has strongly denounced what he considers to be anti-Gurbani, cult-like practices of certain Sikh religious groups. His Gurmat views did not sit down well with many groups.
He was earlier summoned by the Akal Takht to appear before a five-men committee to answer charges against his purported derogation of certain traditional practices.
But he has refused to meet the committee until and unless the Akal Takht first investigates travesties and wrongdoings committed by others before him which, he claimed, had irrevocably damaged the image, sanctity, honour and status of Guru Granth Sahib and Akal Takht. Some quarters had also raised issue with the committee make-up while others have criticised him for not appearing before the panj pyarey.
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 |
A 28-year-old journalist, working with a vernacular daily in Patiala, succumbed to coronavirus Sunday (23 Aug) while undergoing treatment at Government Rajindra Hospital, according to a report.
The journalist was admitted to the hospital on August 20 with breathlessness. The doctors at the hospital said that he was on ventilator support from the last couple of days, reports The Tribune.
Patiala has been seeing a sharp rise in COVID-19 cases and deaths. Government Rajindra Hospital reported 20 COVID-19 deaths in the past 24 hours, the report added.
On Sunday, 4,001 new deaths and 213,866 new cases were recorded worldwide. Based on latest reports, AFP reported that the countries with the most new deaths were India with 836 fatalities, followed by Brazil with 494 and United States 433.
Punjab on Sunday recorded its second highest fatality count after 50 more people died from coronavirus even as 1,136 fresh cases took the state’s infection tally to 41,779. The disease has claimed 1,086 lives in the state so far, according to media reports.
On Sunday, 19 deaths were reported from Patiala; nine from Ludhiana; seven from Jalandhar; six from Gurdaspur; two each from Ferozepur and Hoshiarpur; and one each from Fazilka, Kapurthala, Muktsar, Sangrur and Tarn Taran. The state had reported its highest 51 deaths on August 17.
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 |
Grandchildren: Ameesha Jeet K Bhullar, Armaan Gobind S Bhullar, Jagkeerat Singh, Onkaar Kaur, Manish Pal Singh, Gurshant Singh & Gaganvir Singh
Sisters & Brothers:
Surinder Kaur & Late Sdr Gurcharan Singh
Pritam Kaur & Zagkit Singh
Harnam Kaur & Late Sdr Gardial Singh
Pritam Singh & Charanjit Kaur
Gurcharan Kaur & Harpal Singh
Harcharan Singh & Baljit Kaur
Harjeet Kaur & Karam Singh
Contact:
Jasbir Singh 019 – 333 3045
Surinder Singh 012 – 324 9444
The family wishes to thank relatives and friends for their support. Special thanks to the UMMC doctors and nurses for their loving care.
| Entry: 24 Aug 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 |
Former London home of exiled Prince Victor Albert Jay Duleep Singh (right), son of Maharaja Duleep Singh
By Asia Samachar Team | BRITAIN |
The original London home of Prince Victor Jay Duleep Singh (1866-1918), the exiled son of the last Maharaja of Lahore, is up for sale for £15.5million.
The elegant family house in The Little Boltons in South-West Kensington with five bedroom is a 5,613 sq.ft. semi-detached villa providing two large roof terraces and a 52ft rear garden.
The former London home of the exiled Crown Prince of Lahore has two formal reception rooms, an informal family/media room, a family kitchen and breakfast room, five bedrooms, including the sumptuous principal bedroom suite, a gymnasium and two staff bedrooms/studios, according to the entry at London Loves Property portal.
The Little Boltons house was originally built by builder John Spicer between 1866-68, designed by architect George Godwin junior, under the auspices of Robert Gunter, of the wealthy confectionery family who had invested their fortune in luxury property development.
The large Italianiate-style villa has a three storey brick façade with white pillared entrance portico, large stucco bay and tall windows with stucco detailing. Spicer was chosen to build the houses in The Little Boltons because he had constructed the grandest houses in Pimlico for the Grosvenor family.
Upon completion in late 1868 the house in The Little Boltons was purchased by the quasi-Government owned East India Company, and registered as an investment property to be leased for rental income. The East India Company leased the property for a peppercorn rent to the Duleep Singh family, the former Royal Maharajas of Lahore, who since the 1840s had been exiled in Britain when the East India Company and the British Raj took over their state, according to the artice.
Born on the 10th July 1866 at a 99 Onslow Square in London (his godmother was Queen Victoria), and educated at Eton College and Cambridge University, Prince Victor Jay Duleep Singh was the son of Sir Duleep Singh, the last Maharaja of Lahore (1838-1893), who in 1849 had been deposed and sent into exile in London. The East India Company providing the displaced Royal family with “grace-and-favour” London homes which the East India Company acquired in The Boltons, Wimbledon and Roehampton, leased to the Indian Royals at a peppercorn rent. The family also had use of a 17,000 acre country house, Elveden Hall, in Suffolk.
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 |
PATH DA BHOG: 30 Aug 2020 (Sunday), 4pm-7pm, at Gurudwara Sahib Sentul followed by Guru Ka Langgar | Malaysia
MAJOR (RTD) AJIT SINGH
ABS (Sarawak), AMP (Perlis)
‘AGI HIDUP AGI NGELABAN’(Ranger Core)
Parents: Late Giani Gurdit Singh (Baba Tull, Tapah) & Mata Dilip Kaur
Village: Salohpur, Kanowaan, Gurdaspur
Aged 82 (Born: 7 August 1938)
Returned to Waheguruji on 17 August 2020
A devoted husband, loving father & grandfather who held his family’s hand for a short while but holds their hearts forever. A soul that brought joy and fulfilment to many. He was always full of life, humour, extremely generous, gave in abundance, a mentor, an advisor, great leader, ever so helpful……his legacy will live on forever.
Dearly Missed and Forever Remembered by his beloved
Wife: Manjeet Kaur D/O Chanda Singh & Mohinder Kaur from Sentul (ex MPPJ)
Dr Harmeet Kaur (Poliklinik Plaza Damansara) / Keshminder Singh (Microsoft, S’pore)
Ajinder Singh / Dr Jacqueline Armstrong
Dr Sukhvinder Singh
Grandchildren: Ekraj Singh, Avreet Kaur, Armand AJ Singh, Hans Reyes Singh, Galaxys Armstrong Kaur and Diana Lau Kaur
Brothers
Twin Brother Late Arpajan Singh (Bangkok)
Twin Brothers Late Sjn. (Rtd) Mahinder Singh PPN (Malacca) & Late Jitender Singh
Major (Rtd) Kirpal Singh AMN, AMP (KL)
Late Mohan Singh (USA)
Amran Amir Gurdev (Ampang)
Sisters
Late Sada Kaur (Uttar Pardesh)
Late Amar Kaur (Punjab)
Late Kuldip Kaur (Punjab)
Late Swaran Kaur (Punjab)
Late Vidya Kaur (Punjab)
Late Gajoh Kaur (Punjab)
Late Tharmo Kaur (Canada)
Late Mahender Kaur (Butterworth)
Amarjieeta Kaur (KL)
and a host of relatives & friends
Sehej Path Da Bhog will be held at Gurudwara Sahib Sentul on 30 Aug 2020 from 4 to 7 pm followed by Guru Ka Langgar
Kindly treat this as a personal invitation
“Death is not extinguishing the light. It is putting out the lamp because the dawn has come.” Rabindranath Tagore. Writer & Artist
Contacts:
016-9633666 (Kuljit)
019-2211455 (Harmeet)
019-9196679 (Ajinder)
016-2927340 (Sukhvinder)
Home Address: 139, Jalan Union, Sentul 51000 KL
| Entry: 22 Aug 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 |
The recent pronouncements by Indian PM Modi that Guru Gobind Singh has written ‘Gobind Ramayan‘ and former Jathedar of Takht Patna Sahib, Iqbal Singh, that Guru Nanak and Guru Gobind Singh are descended from Lav and Kush, the twin sons of Rama Avtar, have once again sparked off debate about the status and authenticity of the ‘Dasam Granth’.
In his defense, Iqbal Singh argued that everything he said can be sourced to the ‘Rama Avtar‘ bani in the ‘Dasam Granth’, and technically Iqbal Singh is right. As for Modi, clearly somebody did his homework for him as indeed there is a composition in the ‘Dasam Granth’ called ‘Gobind Ramayana’ which is part of the ‘Bachitar Natak Bani‘.
Critics of Iqbal Singh (and Modi) seem to be divided into two factions. There are those who accept the Dasam Granth as the word of Guru Gobind Singh ji. They argue that the reference was taken out of context, and that Guru Gobind Singh, in his composition, explicitly rejects the Sanatan world view. This faction defends the text by claiming the true aim of Guru Sahib, in translating and interpreting the story of Rama in ‘Rama Avtar’, was to educate, not indoctrinate Sikhs.
The other faction rejects the authenticity of what they term ‘akhauti‘ or ‘so-called’ Dasam Granth. For them, this Granth has nothing to do with Guru Gobind Singh and Sikhism and has conspiratorily been implanted into the Khalsa Panth by Satanist elements with the expressed aim of absorbing Sikhism into the Hindu fold. They argue that Modi’s and Iqbal Singh’s statement forms part of a pattern and concerted attempt by the RSS to gain control of the Panth.
So where do I stand? Basically, as I have little knowledge of the Dasam Granth, I reserve judgment about its veracity and authenticity. However, I reject the idea that Guru Gobind Singh, who was a great scholar with a passionate interest in poetry, did not put pen to paper. And as for the various compositions in the Dasam Granth, whether they are the direct words of the Guru or of the may poets in his court, I must accept they are impressive compositions in their own right. Take, for example, the Akaal Ustat, which in many senses is a revolutionary text from where we get the lines, ‘Manas ki jaat sabh ekey pechanbo‘ or ‘recognise the human race as one’.
There are many many other examples from this text of beautiful and profound poetry. Therefore, I believe it is wrong to speak ill of this literary work. The way to respond to any literature, religious or secular, is not to condemn, but to read, understand, critique and learn. Book banning and book burning is characteristic of totalitarian states and hence has no place in Sikh principles of plurality, tolerance and learning.
But sadly today both sides of the debate have abandoned these important principles and adopted extreme positions. Some want to have the Dasam Granth banned and designated as an imposter Sanatan text. On the other extreme, by treating the Dasam Granth with the same level of symbolic reverence as Guru Granth Sahib ji, by placing it on a palki, doing chaur, performing akhand paths, taking hukamnama, prostrating before it, they are de facto designating it as a parallel granth.
There is so much polarisation and emotional investment that is it difficult to see how we can get out of this situation, not least because many Sikh scholars appear to have adopted rigid opposing positions. And of course, the ultimate danger is that if some kind of middle ground or third way is not found, then we could see a total bifurcation of the Panth, not dissimilar to the divides amongst Christians (Protestant and Catholic) and Muslims (Sunni and Shia).
In order to find a solution, albeit temporary, I think the former Jathedar of Akaal Takht, Joginder Singh Vedanti, who issued a sensible Gurmata (Resolution in the name of the Guru) in 2008 (reproduced here), offers a way forward. In short, the resolution emphasises the total sovereignty of Guru Granth Sahib Ji as ordered by Guru Gobind Singh himself in his proclamation ‘Sabh Sikhan ko hukam hei, Guru manio Granth’. However, it is also accepted that the Dasam Granth has an important and prominent place in Sikh literature and that nobody has the right to create controversy about those sections that have been approved by the Panth (panth parvanat bani) as prescribed in daily nitnem and Amrit Sanchar ceremony.
Diversity is a part of nature, and diversity of thought is essential for human progress. The same applies to belief systems and therefore we should not be surprised that differences exist amongst Sikhs; as they do amongst ALL other traditions. The vibrancy of a belief system is actually reliant on debate, dialogue and development of thought. In doing so one does not abandon source texts but prove their value in changing times. But this can only happen if we nurture the ability of ‘samvaad‘ and ‘goshti‘ (discussion and dialogue), something that the Sikh Gurus emphasied and practiced. If we can do this, then we will be able to overcome our differences; if we can’t, then conflict and ultimately schism is certainly a possibility.
[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.
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 |
“We’re her parents! Surely we can convince her to not do it?” she said to me as I stared pretty blankly at her.
“We can. We can force her not to… but that would make us hypocrites, won’t it?” I answered in a drab monotone.
My wife agrees immediately. She was sure before but she wanted to make sure that we were both on the same page. She’s smarter than me that way.
Our 14 year old daughter had decided to cut her long luscious thick hair months ago. She shared her intentions at one of the long coronavirus lockdown dinners. Our initial reaction was to discourage her as much as we can. As a Sikh couple, my wife and I hold down dearly to the fundamental principles of being a Sikh. Keeping unshorn bodily hair is a basic tenet to us both.
But another vital principle of being a Sikh, according to our understanding as a couple, and as parents, was to avoid compulsion onto anybody with our very personal beliefs. This includes our own children.
Many years ago, before joining in holy matrimony with my then girlfriend, I had this profound conversation with a dear wise old friend. I was instantly attracted his simplicity and straightforward honesty. This was the instance when I became his mentee over the next ensuing 16 years.
“Very often, we think we own these children of ours. We want the best for them, but we also want the best from them,” he said as he sipped his hot cup of chai in the lounging sun rays of spring. “But beta [son], we are merely the chowkidar [caretakers] to these marvelous gifts from God.”
My perplexed look made him further describe more deliberately what he meant.
He went on: “What I mean to say was that we should be the servants to these new souls who are new in their journey in this lifetime of theirs. We are just their sewadars, guiding and providing for them the best we can within our capacity. But they are individual souls with their own paths and journeys. We cannot force upon them our ideas and our expectations.”
There was a louder tone as he emphasized on the words “cannot force” while piercing his large brown eyes into the very young impressionable me. He was at the same age as my father, and commanded my equal respect and admiration, even until his passing last year.
I was still a bachelor, and couldn’t even have had imagined being a father of a teenaged girl, but his words made so much sense because I resonated to being the child and not as a parent at that time. Fast forward to today, and I’m on the other side of the table.
My daughter was sitting opposite us. She was still adamant, strong willed about her decision to cut her hair after months of going back and forth with us. We didn’t relent. But we finally acknowledged that this was a very young adult who has made up her mind. We also admitted to ourselves that we did the best we could to impart our understandings of our religion to her since her formative years.
But the lesson imparted to me by my dear old friend finally came into realization and I felt compelled to still learn from my mentor. After all, I too, had my own journey that I’m still on, learning and discovering my own truths. I was like my daughter at her age when I had very strong ideas of myself and stood firm to the decisions I made. I have no regrets, but I also had many a lessons to learn from. Why shouldn’t my girl also have the opportunity to learn from her own journey? I’d rather she learn this way than we forcefully teaching her something she’ll come to hate.
I now understand what my friend was trying to tell me that faithful day.
Jagdesh Singh, a Kuala Lumpur-based executive with a US multinational company, is a father of three girls who are as opinionated as their mother
* This is the opinion of the writer, organisation or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of Asia Samachar.
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 |
Yogi Bhajan was no ordinary man. You have to hand it to him that much. That makes his fall from grace all the more spectacular.
I first met him in person during the 300th anniversary of the Khalsa in Anandpur Sahib in 1999. He was surrounded by scores of majestic looking white men and women, all wearing white flowing kurtas. There would have been an equal, if not more, women amongst them. Most donned turban, again all white. Dashing!
Needless to say, they awed the crowd. Here you have gorey and goriaa (white men and women) from the West who are fluttering about confidently as Sikhs of the Guru, while many of us are still uncomfortable under the skin being Sikhs. Almost everyone was at his beck and call. His power, prestige and paisa easily allowed him to exert influence on the Sikh authorities.
A few years earlier – in the mid-1990s – I was part of a Malaysian Sikh organisation that was planning a big Sikh event. Yogi Bhajan topped the list of potential people to invite. Also on the list was the jathedar of the Akal Takht. As part of the programme secretariat, we were in communication with Yogi Bhajan’s team in the United States.
Our team was excited with the prospect of securing a big name like Yogi Bhajan — born Harbhajan Singh Puri and who worked as a customs officer before moving to the US in 1968. We were mostly people who had years of involvement in running Sikh camps. And truth be told, I was excited about getting the ‘gorey‘ Sikhs to give our Sikhi parchaar (preaching) work a boot. We can showcase the Western Sikhs as examples to our youth. Yes, meet one of the Sikhs still uncomfortable with his identity!
I remember scouring the net for his articles. I would lap them up. He would use words like ‘Shabad technology’. Impressive for impressionable minds. I would print his lectures and shove them into the hands of friends.
But none of us were aware of the sexual abuse allegations against Yogi Bhajan. We were mindful that some were critical of the Sikhi and yoga cocktail that he was peddling. He badged it as Kundalini Yoga and built an enterprise around it. You could relegate it to a theological debate. But sexual abuse? No, that didn’t really crop up. In the end, we couldn’t secure him for the event.
Now, fast forward two and half decades. This year, the Yogi Bhajan legacy organisation called the Siri Singh Sahib Corporation (SSSC) – the umbrella organisation for 3HO and running multi-million dollar enterprises like Akal Security – had decided to deal with sexual abuse allegations against its leader who died in 2004. They roped in a Buddhist peace and reconciliation organisation An Olive Branch (AOB) to conduct the investigation.
The report was damning. It found the yoga master ‘more likely than not’ to have ‘engaged in sexual battery, other sexual abuse specifically, exposing minors to pornography, sexual harassment, and unethical behavior’. It carried graphic accounts that makes it a difficult read.
So, what made SSSC undertake the report? We can speculate on the reason. No doubt, the published outcome is damaging to Yogi Bhajan’s reputation. But what is missing may be more telling.
Allow me to share two pertinent observations made by Matthew Remski, a Toronto-based cult researcher and co-host of the Conspirituality Podcast. In a Facebook entry after the publication of the 72-page AOB report, Remski had this to say:
1. The details paint an even more depraved picture than what emerges from the Joseph Epstein files, in that the abuse was multigenerational and systematically weaponized family bonds.
2. Tragically, this report was limited in scope to testimonies about Bhajan. It didn’t touch his fraudulent spiritual claims, his extensive criminal enterprises, his colleagues and beneficiaries, his groomers and honeypotters. It failed to cite Philip Deslippe’s extensive deconstructions of the Bhajan myth. It doesn’t touch the generation of children who were separated from their parents and sent to faux-Sikh residential schools in India.
Yes, the fact that the 3HO community came around to deal with Yogi Bhajan’s sexual abuses is a major step for them. For years, they have denied them and attempted to shame those who brought them forward. But they have sidestepped the larger issues, and it may have everything to do with them wanting to keep their money-churning Kundalini Yoga enterprise.
Remski urges us to read Deslippe, a yoga historian who has written extensively about Yogi Bhajan. He wrote: “What Philip Deslippe has done, with painstaking research and peer-reviewed accountability — just like the physician-expert that would testify on Nassar’s practices — is to show that Bhajan’s entire corpus was a con job (not Deslippe’s term of course).”
So, we now have some documented evidence of Yogi Bhajan as a sexual predator. But there may be a bigger story at play still.
Hb Singh is a Kuala Lumpur-based journalist with some experience in dealing with Sikh organisations, both from within and outside.
* This is the opinion of the writer, organisation or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of Asia Samachar.
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 |
PATH DA BHOG: 23 August 2020 (Sunday), 10am – 12noon, at Gurdawara Sahib Kajang, Jalan Sungai Chua, 43000, Kajang, Selangor | Malaysia
ਘਲੇ ਆਵਹਿ ਨਾਨਕਾ ਸਦੇ ਉਠੀ ਜਾਹਿ ॥੧॥
MADAM RAJENDER KAUR
D/O LATE MR. CHANAN SINGH AND MDM. AVTAR KAUR OF KAJANG
Born 20th April 1934 passed away peacefully on 14 August 2020
Husband: Kirpal Singh Brar (late)
Sons:
Ashvinder Singh Brar
Bhupinder Singh Brar
Daughter-in-law: Harinder Kaur Dhillon (Popo)
Grandchildren:
Rasonnia Kirpa Kaur Brar (Sonnia)
Gatreena Kiret Kaur Brar (Treena)
Brothers:
Dr. Pretam Singh (late)
Gurcharan Singh (late)
Balbir Singh (late)
Sisters:
Datin Balbir Kaur (late)
Satwant Kaur (late)
Balwant Kaur (Nikki) (late)
Jesveer Kaur
and a host of Cousins, Nieces, Nephews and Relatives.
Path da Bhog: 23 August 2020 (Sunday), 10am – 12noon, at Gurdawara Sahib Kajang, Jalan Sungai Chua, 43000, Kajang, Selangor
Contact:
Ashvinder 012 – 642 2072
Popo 014 – 627 6276 (Popo)
| Entry: 20 Aug 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 |
ALL SET TO HELP: (L-R) Aliyah Karen, Tulips Movement advisor Raja Azura Raja Mahayuddin and Dr Sangeeta Kaur – Photo: Supplied
By Asia Samachar Team | MALAYSIA |
Mental health advocate Dr Sangeeta Kaur and concerned associates in Malaysia are leaving no stones unturned in their quest to provide help to those who need it.
The latest in the strong of their endeavors is the setting up of the Yayasan Health On World (YHOW), a foundation that aims to provide help to ‘harmonise yourself by stabilising your mental, emotional and physical well-being’.
Along with co-founder Aliyah Karen, a director of a chain of hospitality centres, they hope to reach out to those in need of help.
“This is an avenue where people can call in or drop an email. We have trained counsellors on board. We also hope to reach out to more schools,” Dr Sangeeta told Asia Samachar.
Dr Sangeeta is the founder/MD of Emerging Journey Asia Sdn Bhd, a company specialising in analysing, identifying and leveraging the way people think and behave.
Depression is a major concern globally as nations impose various measures to the Covid-19 pandemic. Malaysia is in its recovery phase of the movement control order (MCO) imposed in mid-March.
In a recent statement, the Malaysian Medical Association (MMA) noted the MCO had affected the livelihoods of many Malaysians and many are going through tough financial times. The organisation expressed concern that the financial stress may lead to an increase in cases of depression, anxiety and ultimately suicides. Depression must be given more serious attention, it said.
Numerous studies have indicated that the majority of suicides are linked to depression. According to WHO, globally, over 264 million people of all ages, suffer from depression. In Malaysia, according to the National Health and Morbidity Survey 2019, 2.3% of our adult population has depression.
MMA estimated that cases of depression in the country was much higher as many do not seek professional help and a number of cases are undiagnosed and untreated.
Mental health must be made a priority in our public healthcare system. Awareness on mental health issues needs to be increased. The public must be aware that there is help available from trained professionals, the statement added.
In an updated on her LinkedIn page, Aliyah said many were struggling in silence during this unprecedented time of the novel coronavirus crisis and the aftermath was still unknown.
“It’s worrying and we are all walking on thin ice, afraid of second and third waves, which would further dampen not just the economy but our livelihood, eventually leading to disastrous misfortunes.
“We all need someone to talk to, laugh with and depend on. I urge you to work with Yayasan Health On World (YHOW) and together, let’s reach out to as many before it’s too later,” she said.
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 |