#GuruNanak550Malaysia | PERAK: Gurdwara Sahib Jelapang will be organising a kirtan/katha semagam from Dec 6-8, 2019, to celebrate the 550th birth anniversary of Guru Nanak. The programme at the Ipoh-based gurdwara will also feature a medical camp, children tea party and food stalls.
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AKHAND PATH: 8.30am, 29 Nov (Friday) to 1 Dec (Sunday) at residence No 55, Laluan Bercham Selatan 2, Taman Desa Bercham, 31400 Ipoh, Perak. Kirtan & Path da Bhog: 9am-12pm, 1 Dec (Sunday), at Gurdwara Sahib Bercham, Ipoh| Malaysia
Awtar Singh (1961-2019), Formerly Teluk Intan / Bercham, Ipoh
Akhand Path: 8.30am, 29 Nov (Friday) to 1 Dec (Sunday) at residence No 55, Laluan Bercham Selatan 2, Taman Desa Bercham, 31400 Ipoh, Perak. Kirtan & Path da Bhog: 9am-12pm, 1 Dec (Sunday), also at Gurdwara Sahib Bercham, Ipoh
A kind hearted soul, forever generous, selfless and loving husband, father, sibling, friend, and employer. A soul that can never be replaced. A pillar of strength forever there for anyone who needed him. Will be fondly remembered and sorely missed by all who knew him.
Contact:
Wife 012 566 5712
Dhiraj (Son) 012 487 6616
Shameena (Daughter) 018 914 5337
| Entry: 25 Nov 2019; Updated:27 Nov 2019 | Source: Family
[ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Asia. How to reach us: Facebook message or WhatsApp +6017-335-1399. Our email: editor@asiasamachar.com. For obituary announcements, click here]
SAHEJ PATH DA BHOG: 1 December 2019 (Sunday), at Gurdwara Sahib Titiwangsa, Kuala Lumpur. Programme: Asa Di War followed by Kirtan & Sahej Path da Bhog from 9am-11.30am| Malaysia
Pritam Kaur (1929-2019), Puchong
PRITAM KAUR w/o LATE DAKAR SINGH GILL
(20 Dec 1929 – 24 Nov 2019)
Village: Ghal Kala, Moga
Children / Spouses:
Daya Singh (Len Seng Bus Co) & Pall Kaur
Gian Kaur & Late Mohan Singh
Late Bachan Kaur
Salinder Kaur & Gurmeet Singh (Hospital KK)
Dalbir Singh & Jassvinder Kaur
Path da Bhog: 1 December 2019 (Sunday), at Gurdwara Sahib Titiwangsa, Kuala Lumpur. Programme: Asa Di War followed by Kirtan & Sahej Path da Bhog from 9am-11.30am
Contact:
Malinder Singh +016-6577773
Dalbir Singh +6012-3070946
| Entry: 24 Nov 2019; Updated: 26 Nov 2019 | Source: Family
[ASIA SAMACHAR is an online newspaper for Sikhs / Punjabis in Asia. How to reach us: Facebook message or WhatsApp +6017-335-1399. Our email: editor@asiasamachar.com. For obituary announcements, click here]
RED FM Gurpurab Radiothon to raise funds for the Mata Tripta Family Birthing Unit at the Surrey Memorial Hospital
By Asia Samachar Team | CANADA |
This is a beautiful way to celebrate the birthday of Guru Nanak – raising donations for a hospital.
Surrey-based ethnic radio station RED FM staff and volunteers spent the whole day of Nov 12 to tap into the South Asian community of the Canadian city to raise funds for the birthing unit of the Surrey Memorial Hospital.
This was the station’s 13th annual Gurpurab Radiothon to celebrate Guru Nanak’s birthday.
At the end of the day, they raised a whooping C$790,000 for the Mata Tripta Family Birthing Unit, named after Guru Nanak’s mother after a similar donation drive in 2012.
The donation will help the unit to purchase equipment and accessories that will help parents and their newborn babies. The Surrey Hospital Foundation is the busiest surgical site in the Fraser Valley region as it serves some 1.8 million residents.
In 2014, the Gurpurab Radiothon channelled the entire donation raised to equip the hospital’s new stroke unit which was named Guru Ram Das Ji Stroke Unit. Guru Ram Das is the Sikh faith’s fourth guru.
Sikhs globally are celebrating the 550th birthday of Guru Nanak this year.
The radiothon began 13 years ago when the radio station took a bold commitment to raise $2 million for the hospital’s accident & emergency department (A&E).
“We gave a commitment to raise the funds in five years, but we managed to do it in two years,” RED FM president Kulwinder Sanghera said in an interview shared on the hospital’s Facebook.
Mata Tripta Family Birthing Unit at the Surrey Memorial Hospital
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 |
In 1947, there was a thriving Sikh community there and the first government-funded Panjabi School in Malaya. Our father, Giani Harchand Singh Bassian was the first Panjabi teacher for 6 years from 1947 to 1953 and also the Granthi and Kirtania-Parcharak.
Middle brother Baldev Singh Dhaliwal JP (Oz) and I started English schooling and youngest brother Dya Singh of Australia was born on the Vaisakhi Day on 13 April 1950.
Above a 1951 Sangat photo taken at the back of the Gurdwara Sahib on the occasion of a Gursikh leaving for India on long leave. Sikhs usually went to Panjab by ship for about six months after about five years to sort out family affairs and to visit Gurdwaras and Darbar Sahib.
The second image is that of our father, Giani Harchand Singh Bassian (1909-1975), used by Malaya Panjabi press in those days. He was well known to Sangats from Seremban to Penang and Alor Star as a Kirtania-Parcharak. Dya Singh inherited his voice and Kirtan, albeit, his own East-West blend.
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 |
You may want to mark your calendar for an event packed 5-day programme at Sentul gurdwara as part of the on-going celebration of Guru Nanak’s 550th birthday.
The event, running from Nov 27 to Dec 1 (Wed to Sun), includes a daily kirtan/katha semagam featuring Bhai Anantvir Singh (US), Bhai Manpreet Singh (Tuhi Tuhi), Bhai Sarabjit Singh Rangila, Bhai Jasbir Singh (Paonta Sahib) and Bhai Tavneet Singh (Chandigarh).
Some of the highlights are Garden of Lights of Sri Guru Nanak Dev Ji, Sultanpur Lodhi Punjabi Bazaar, documentary on the travels of Guru Nanak, art and paintings of Guru Nanak and children activities.
Sultanpur Lodhi features prominently in the life and times of Guru Nanak. He spent some years in this Punjab town at the invitation of his elder sister Nanaki and her husband Jai Ram, who was in charge of the grain storage depot (Modikhana) of Daulat Khan Lodhi, the then shiqqdar (commissioner) of Sultanpur Lodhi. Daulat Khan later rose to become the governor of Lahore.
The event is jointly organised by Sikh Naujawan Sabha Malaysia (SNSM) and Gurdwara Sahib Sentul.
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Imam Omar Suleiman (insert) talks about the Sikhs. Main photo courtesy of United Sikhs
By Omar Suleiman | OPINION | RELIGION NEWS SERVICE |
When Hurricane Katrina struck my hometown of New Orleans in 2005, I was tasked with leading a major Muslim relief effort. While Katrina brought many sights I won’t forget, one of the most enduring and treasured was members of United Sikhs, a humanitarian and civil rights nonprofit, bolting this way and that across the floor of the Superdome, which had been turned into a massive shelter, assisting distressed people with a zeal unlike anything I’d ever seen before.
This despite the fact that the Sikh community in New Orleans is minimal, and I can’t recall seeing a single Sikh Katrina victim in any of the shelters.
In fact the Sikhs, though they are the fifth largest faith group in the world, number only a few hundred thousand members in the entire U.S., most of whom live around New York City and in California. But in this rising climate of xenophobia, especially Islamophobia, they have become easy targets. Bigots often mistake Sikhs for Muslims due to their highly visible turbans, beards and scarves.
Despite the real harm this has caused Sikhs, they have consistently refused to throw the Muslim community under the bus by simply distancing themselves from Islam.
You may have seen the video of Canadian New Democratic Party leader Jagmeet Singh, a candidate for prime minister, being heckled by a protester in 2017 for trying to “push Shariah” and being in “bed with the Muslim Brotherhood.” His brother, Gurratan Singh, also a member of Parliament, went viral last month for how he handled an Islamophobic heckler outside a Muslim convention.
Gurratan tweeted afterward, “I will never respond to an Islamophobe by stating, ‘I am not a Muslim.’”
Instead of protecting themselves, Sikhs have never shied away from their mandate to service and solidarity with others.
The slaying of Deputy Sandeep Singh Dhaliwal in Houston last month reinforced the cost of how Sikhs choose to deal with their impossible situation. Dhaliwal actively assisted in disaster relief efforts to communities affected by Hurricanes Harvey and Maria, worked with at-risk communities in Houston and was a source of comfort to his hometown of Punjab, in northern India, where he helped coordinate drought relief efforts. He was an ideal citizen and a source of pride for his community.
But as he navigated the streets of Texas with or without his uniform, most people, including the man who is accused of killing him, probably saw nothing more than his skin color, turban and beard. No matter how American Dhaliwal was on paper, and how remarkable of a human being he was in action, his appearance rendered him conclusively foreign. This not only diminishes the contributions of Sikhs, but our own behavior when tragedies strike them.
These tragedies far outpace their numbers. Sikhs have borne the brunt of Islamophobia since the immediate aftermath of 9/11. Just four days after the terrorist attacks, Balbir Singh Sodhi was murdered outside of his business in Arizona by a man who wanted to go out and “shoot some towel-heads” in retaliation.
When we think of attacks on houses of worship, we often think of synagogues, mosques and black churches that have been targeted recently by white supremacist terrorist attacks. But before these attacks became a hallmark of this decade, we witnessed the horrible tragedy at Oak Creek, Wisconsin, where six Sikhs were murdered in their temple in 2012.
Muslims owe the Sikhs thanks for this unwavering and inspiring steadfastness in the face of Islamophobia. And as you grieve over the loss of Deputy Sandeep Singh Dhaliwal, we grieve with you.
As an American Muslim who wears a kufi and a beard, I want to take this occasion to say thank you to the Sikh community. Thank you for the constant solidarity you show to my community, and the constant service you render to our country. Your community is too often underrepresented in the discussion of fatal bigotry, uncared for in its grief and unappreciated for its service and solidarity.
(Imam Omar Suleiman, an American Muslim scholar, activist and civil rights leader, is founder and president of the Yaqeen Institute for Islamic Research and an adjunct professor of Islamic studies in the graduate liberal studies program at Southern Methodist University)
See original story, published at The Religion News (22 Oct 2019), here.
RELATED STORY:
(Asia Samachar, 22 Oct 2019)
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 |
Two kirtan programmes are coming to Gurdwara Sahib Petaling Jaya, with the first one running from Dec 2-5 (6pm-10.0pm), bringing some big names in the world of kirtan like Bhai Sarabjeet Singh Rangila.
The second kirtan programme will run from Dec 11-12, 2019, which includes Bhai Chamanjeet Singh Lal.
Both programmes, organised with the support of Sikh Naujawan Sabha Malaysia (SNSM), celebrate the 550th birthday of Guru Nanak.
Click here for more details. #GuruNanak550Malaysia
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 |
Kuala Pilah gurdwara present bags and uniforms to Tamil school students – Photo: Jasdeep Singh/Asia Samachar
By Asia Samachar Team | MALAYSIA |
Needy students of a local Tamil school were very much on the minds of Kuala Pilah Sikhs as they celebrated the 550th birthday of Guru Nanak.
Last week, they donated uniforms and bags to 10 students from Sekolah Jenis Kebangsaan (Tamil) Kuala Pilah.
Gurdwara Sahib Kuala Pilah (GSKP) has been actively engaging students from the school over the years.
For Vasakhi 2017, for example, they feted 150 students and 20 teachers from the school, ending the day with a sumptuous feast of Guru Ka Langgar, the vegetarian meal prepared by volunteers.
The gurdwara has organised an akhand path from Nov 15-17.
The gurdwara is home to 15 Sikh families from Kuala Pilah and Bahau. They also get the support of neighbouring Sikhs from Seremban, Tampin and Mantin.
Kuala Pilah is located about 100km from Kuala Lumpur.
Among those present at the latest event at the school were GSKP management committee president Surjit Singh Sidhu and committee members Gurcharan Kaur, Avtar Singh, Jagjit Singh, Surjeet Singh and Narenjan Kaur.
#GuruNanak550Malaysia
Kuala Pilah gurdwara – Photo: Jasdeep Singh/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 |
Left ro right: Harjit Singh Sajjan, Bardish Kaur Chagger, Navdeep Singh Bains and Anita Anand.
By Asia Samachar Team | MALAYSIA |
Four Indo-Canadians have been roped into the the newly formed cabinet of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
They include three Sikhs who were federal ministers in the previous government and a law professor who became the first-ever Hindu woman to be elected to Parliament.
Navdeep Singh Bains is back as Minister of Innovation, Science and Industry, Bardish Kaur Chagger as Minister of Diversity and Inclusion and Youth and Harjit Singh Sajjan as Minister of National Defence.
Anita Anand, who was a Professor of Law at the University of Toronto, takes on the public service and procurement ministry.
They are among the seven out of 37 ministers with Asian or African family roots.
Missing from the Liberal Party list of ministers were Amarjeet Singh Sohi, the outgoing Minister for Infrastructure, who had lost his seat.
The Oct 31 Canadian general elections saw 18 Sikhs being elected as lawmakers, including Jagmeet Singh who heads the New Democratic Party (NDP), a social-democratic federal political party that emerged as the fourth largest block in Parliament.
Trudeau-led Liberals got 157 seats out of the total 338 seats up for grabs, with the Conservatives as closest rival with 121 seats. Then come Bloc Québécois (32), NDP (24), Green (3) and one independent candidate.
With Liberals not getting an outright majority, Jagmeet and his fellow lawmakers may be able to exert influence on policy matters.
Here are their profiles as listed out at the Prime Minister’s official website.
Navdeep Bains: Minister of Innovation, Science and Industry
Location: Mississauga—Malton
The Honourable Navdeep Bains has been the Member of Parliament for Mississauga—Malton since 2015, and was previously the Member of Parliament for Mississauga—Brampton South from 2004 to 2011.
He has served as Minister of Innovation, Science and Economic Development, and was the Parliamentary Secretary to former Prime Minister Paul Martin. Previously, he was the critic for Public Works and Government Services, the Treasury Board, International Trade, Natural Resources, and Small Business and Tourism.
Before entering politics, he was a distinguished visiting professor at Ryerson University’s Ted Rogers School, and worked for several years in accounting and financial analysis for the Ford Motor Company of Canada.
Minister Bains has deep roots in his community, as a longtime resident of both Mississauga and Brampton, and has strong ties to the social and cultural associations of Mississauga—Malton. He has been active in a variety of community organizations, as a board member for the Mississauga Food Bank and an Ontario board member with the Heart and Stroke Foundation. He has also worked with JDRF, a diabetes research foundation, and the Guru Gobind Singh Children’s Foundation.
Minister Bains has received a number of awards recognizing his work in promoting diversity within his community, and he holds a Master of Business Administration with a specialization in Finance.
Minister Bains has dedicated his time in Ottawa to growing the economy, strengthening the middle class, and creating new well-paying jobs for Canadians in Mississauga—Malton.
Harjit Singh Sajjan: Minister of National Defence
Location: Vancouver South
The Honourable Harjit Sajjan was first elected as Member of Parliament for Vancouver South in 2015.
Minister Sajjan immigrated to Canada from India with his family when he was five years old. He grew up in South Vancouver and benefitted from everything its diverse and culturally rich community has to offer.
Minister Sajjan has made serving others a cornerstone of his life. He has served as a former detective with the Vancouver Police Department, a former Lieutenant Colonel with the British Columbia Regiment, and a long-time advocate for youth education and mentorship programs.
For 11 years, Minister Sajjan was a member of the Vancouver Police Department, based primarily in South Vancouver. He completed his career as a detective with the gang crime unit. As a member of the British Columbia Regiment (Duke of Connaught’s Own), he participated in four operational deployments—one to Bosnia and three to Afghanistan.
Minister Sajjan has lived in Vancouver for many years with his wife and two children.
Bardish Chagger: Minister of Diversity and Inclusion and Youth
Location: Waterloo
The Honourable Bardish Chagger was elected in 2015 as the Member of Parliament for Waterloo.
Minister Chagger is devoted to inclusion and community building. From assisting with recreational sports for kids to volunteering with seniors, she is committed to strengthening the bonds of the Waterloo community.
In an earlier role with the Kitchener-Waterloo Multicultural Centre, Minister Chagger worked to foster diversity within the community and provide opportunities for social and economic engagement. As an executive assistant to former Member of Parliament Andrew Telegdi, she gained a deep understanding of the issues of importance to residents of Waterloo, including manufacturing, technology, and innovation.
Passionate about community involvement, Minister Chagger has lent her support to many different causes and organizations, including the Rotary Club of Waterloo, Interfaith Grand River, and the Workforce Planning Board of Waterloo Wellington Dufferin.
Minister Chagger considers herself part of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms generation, and has participated in policy conferences on many issues, including the advancement of same-sex marriage rights and a national manufacturing strategy.
She graduated from the University of Waterloo with a Bachelor of Science. In 2012, the Waterloo Region Record recognized Minister Chagger as one of “40 under 40” who would lead the Region of Waterloo into the future.
Anita Anand: Minister of Public Services and Procurement
Location: Oakville
The Honourable Anita Anand was first elected as the Member of Parliament for Oakville in 2019.
Minister Anand is a scholar, lawyer, researcher, and mother of four children. Born and raised in rural Nova Scotia, she moved to Ontario in 1985.
Minister Anand is a devoted leader with a proven record of service. In her Oakville community, she has served on the Board of Directors of the Lighthouse Foundation for Grieving Children, the Oakville Hospital Foundation, and Oakville Hydro Electricity Distribution Inc.
For the past two decades, Minister Anand has been a legal academic, employed most recently as a Professor of Law at the University of Toronto where she held the J.R. Kimber Chair in Investor Protection and Corporate Governance. She served as Associate Dean and was a member of the Governing Board of Massey College and the Director of Policy and Research at the Capital Markets Research Institute, Rotman School of Management. She has also taught law at Yale Law School, Queen’s University, and Western University.
Minister Anand has completed extensive research on the regulation of financial markets, corporate governance, and shareholder rights, and has appeared regularly in the media to discuss these topics. In 2015, she was appointed to the Government of Ontario’s Expert Committee to Consider Financial Advisory and Financial Planning Policy Alternatives. She has conducted research for Ontario’s Five-Year Review Committee, the federal Wise Person’s Committee, and the Task Force to Modernize Securities Legislation in Canada. In 2019, the Royal Society of Canada awarded her the Yvan Allaire medal for outstanding contributions in governance relating to private and public organizations.
Minister Anand holds a Bachelor of Arts (Honours) in Political Studies from Queen’s University, a Bachelor of Arts (Honours) in Jurisprudence from the University of Oxford, a Bachelor of Laws from Dalhousie University, and a Master of Laws from the University of Toronto. She was called to the Bar of Ontario in 1994.
Minister Anand and her husband, John, raised their four children in Oakville.
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 |