UA-56202873-1
Page 621

The Flying Sikhs from Sabah

Sport runs in the blood of the Kler family in Sabah. It began with Gurbaksh Singh Kler who came to Sabah in 1924.

“It all started when the doctor confirmed that Gurbaksh Singh Kler had a heart problem and advised him to walk three miles a day,” captured an Astro programme on the family as part of the Malaysia Day celebrations.

Starting from that, Gurkbash made the run as a routine in his life until he became a sports coach. His deep interest in sports also influenced his children when his eldest son, Dilbagh Singh Kler was an Olympic athlete and record breaker called ‘The Flying Sikh’.

Balwant Singh Kler founded the first Sabah Swimming Association and assisted in forming the Malaysian Triathlon Association.

 

RELATED STORIES:

Sabah puts Amarjit Singh to head state water department (Asia Samachar, 12 Aug 2018)

 

[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]

Volunteer caught red handed on CCTV pocketing Malacca barsi donation

0
ON CAMERA: A grab from the Malacca gurdwara office CCTV, sent to Asia Samachar, showing a volunteer allegedly pocketing some cash from the donation pile

Malacca gurdwara has lodged a police report on allegations that someone may have pocketed cash donations during the annual programme in the memory of Baba Sohan Singh.

“We have lodged a police report,” Gurdwara Sahib Malacca (GSM) management committee president Karam Singh told Asia Samachar today in a brief telephone conversation.

Initial review of a camera in the GSM office, where the donation is usually counted, showed what looked like a volunteer helping himself to some cash from the collection during the event in May 2018, according to a source.

It is understood that the gurdwara management committee had tasked a team to review the video recordings after some members had raised suspicion on the issue.

Asia Samachar had received a number of calls on the issue in the last few days from well wishers of the annual Malacca programme expressing their concerns on the issue. A few of them had said that the committee must take appropriate actions to ensure the programme, probably the largest annual Sikh gathering in Southeast Asia, does not get impacted.

The Sant Baba Sohan Singh Ji Salaana Yaadgar Semagam, or more popularly referred to as the Malacca barsi, is usually held towards end-May in the memory of the late Sikh granthi-parcharak Sohan Singh. It attracts thousands of Sikhs from all over Malaysia as well as neigbouring Singapore, Indonesia and Thailand. Some even come from Australia and New Zealand.

It involves the GMS and the Sant Sohan Ji Melaka Memorial Society Malaysia. The latter was formed after the death of Sohan Singh in Ipoh in 1972. He was cremated in Malacca on 25 May 1972.

“We are looking at how to improve the process of handling the donations,” one committee member told Asia Samachar.

When contacted, a GSM trustee said that the management committee must view the matter seriously as it involved the trust of the members and the general public.

Over the years, GSM s believed to have taken some measures to ensure that donations are properly channelled. Before the 2017 annual event, GSM had requested Asia Samachar to carry a statement encouraging donors to do it direct to the gurdwara and not to individuals ‘to avoid any misappropriation and random collection of funds’.

“Over the years, we have found out that there are also some who collect donations in the name of Barsi. Therefore, to avoid any misappropriation and random collection of funds, all those wishing to contribute in cash can bank in their contributions to the Sikh Temple Melaka Account,” it said in the statement.

 

RELATED STORIES:

Spirit of service in full display at Malacca (Asia Samachar, 26 May 2018)

Newly minted minister Gobind Singh Deo visits Sikh gathering in Malacca (Asia Samachar, 25 May 2018)

Donate direct to Malacca gurdwara to avoid ‘misappropriation’ (Asia Samachar, 26 April 2017)

Major changes in Malacca gurdwara leadership (Asia Samachar, 9 March 2015)

 

[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]

Star Travel discount offers for Amritsar, Europe and beyond at MATTA Fair

Looking for some travel deals to Amritsar, Europe or within the region itself?

Star Travel, a Kuala Lumpur-based agency with over four decades experience, is making available some exclusive discounts in conjunction with MATTA Fair now taking place at PWTC, Kuala Lumpur. The fair will run from 7-9 September.

Grab tickets to Amritsar exclusively at M.S. Star Travel and enjoy 20% off for AirAsia, 5% off for Malindo or 10% with Star Packages.

There are also options for Europe. Star Travel in partnership with The Travel Corporation brings you award winning brands under one roof at MATTA such as Insight Vacation, Trafalgar, Costsaver, Uniworld, Contiki, Luxury Gold to bring you the real taste of Europe & beyond with 97% guest satisfaction by FEEFO.

It is our quest to offer convenience to all and take care of everything. Making corporate business travel trips, group tours, families or even solo travels fun, exciting, stress-free and, of course, affordable, Star Travel said in a note on the promotion.

Exclusive Star packages are also available for Asia, Islands, Sri Lanka, India, Morocco and other destinations. Customers can visit its India Specialist to design their own tour and they also stand to enjoy free gifts and shopping vouchers.

CLUB MED

If you are looking for an all-inclusive vacation where everything is taken care of – accommodation, gourmet food & open bar, sports activities, children’s club, evening entertainment – Club Med it is as it continues to spread “happiness” around the world – a philosophy that’s been in the brand’s DNA for more than 65 years.

It offers a wide range of Club Meds sun & snow resorts offering upto 45% discounts and rebates between RM300 to RM1,000! To entice you further a free ski lesson, golf umbrellas and RM200 shopping vouchers. Visit us and meet our Club Med Specialist.

EUROPE & BEYOND

For Europe, Star Travel is working in partnership with The Travel Corporation.

Trafalgar has been hand crafting unique guided holidays for nearly 70 years; the first to introduce travellers to the local experience and continue today where destinations come to life through their hand-picked insider experiences.

CONTACT: 017 504 7177, 012 6292177 or 03 2630 7777 Email: tours@startravel.com.my

BOOTH DETAILS: More packages with great value awaits you at Star Travel Booths No 2055 – 2067 (Hall 2).

 

[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]

Dato Ir Mokkam Singh (1936-2018), Johor Bahru 

PRAYERS: Akhand Path prayers start at Gurdwara Sahib Johor Bahru at 5pm Friday, 7 September after cremation with Bhog on Sunday the 9 September at 4pm | Malaysia

 

Gurmukh Janam Sawar Dhargeh Cheleya

Dato Ir Mokkam Singh (1936-2018), Johor Bahru

Sardar Dato Ir Mokkam Singh s/o Late Sardar Tara Singh (Papan), and beloved husband of the late Sardarni Datin Pretam Kaur, passed away peacefully around 10.40am on Thursday the 6th of September 2018.

He was our beloved father, who will be deeply missed and always remembered by:

Beloved wife: Late Datin Pretam Kaur Bhullar

Daughter /Son-in-law:

Dr Harsangeet Kaur Bhullar / Dr Gareth H. Loudon

Sons / Daughter-in-law:

Ranjeet Singh Bhullar / Sunita Kaur Bhullar

Ir Nash Bhullar (Kuldeep Singh Bhullar) / Cynthia Goh Bhullar

Grandchildren:

Delwen Kaur Loudon

Geraint Singh Loudon

Heddwyn Singh Loudon

Haseena Kaur Bhullar

Randeep Singh Bhullar

Hannah Kaur Bhullar

Gavin Singh Bhullar

Hazel Kaur Bhullar

Eshna Kaur Bhullar

Sisters / Brothers-in-law   

Puran Kaur / Late Hazara Singh

Darshan Kaur

Amar Kaur / Athman Singh

Pritam Kaur / Sarjit Singh

Brothers / Sister-in-laws:

Late Ranjit Singh Bhuller / Sokhminder Kaur Bhuller

Late Harnam Singh Bhullar / Harjit Kaur Bhullar

Sisters-in-law / Brothers-in-law:   

Late Saran Kaur Hoondal / Late P. Amar Singh

Datin Satwant Kaur Hoondal / Dato Dr Harnam Singh

Late Inder Kaur Hoondal / Dr Jagdev Singh Badesha

Davinder Kaur Hoondal / Jagjit Singh Johl

Darshan Kaur / Late Daljit Singh Hoondal

Datin Narindar Kaur Hoondal / Dato Dr Charles David

Including hosts of relatives and friends.

Please note: Akhand Path prayers start at Gurdwara Sahib Johor Bahru at 5pm Friday, 7th of September after cremation with Bhog on Sunday the 9th of September at 4pm.

 

| Entry: 6 Sept 2018 | 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]

Day 13: Banee, Guru and shabad vichaar

0

By Surinder Kaur Sohan Singh | SIKHI STUDY | OPINION

ਇਕਾ ਬਾਣੀ ਇਕੁ ਗੁਰੁ ਇਕੋ ਸਬਦੁ ਵੀਚਾਰਿ ॥

Eikaa baanee eik gur eiko shabad vichaar 

There is one Banee, one Guru and only one SHABAD to Vichaar. (Pg 646, SGGS)

Guru Nanakji’s complete philosophy is found in every one of his shabads in the Sri Guru Granth Sahib (SGGS).

Each shabad has a central idea and if it is put into practice, a person is able to complete his spiritual journey in one life time.

Each shabad is like a finger pointing towards God. All the shabads are like thousands of fingers pointing in the same direction. The aim of all the SHABADS is the same, and that is to guide us to see the unseeable and to merge with it.

Guruji says:

ਯਾ ਜੁਗ ਮਹਿ ਏਕਹਿ ਕਉ ਆਇਆ ॥

Yaa jug mehi eaekehi ko aaeiaa

My only purpose of coming to this world is to find my  way back to the Creator. (Pg 251, SGGS):

I am just like a drop of water that gets separated from the ocean and then has to take a long cycle back to reach to the source. Heat from the sun converts that drop of water into vapour in the sky which then condenses and falls back on the Earth as rain. It then follows the little stream into the river and after a long time finally reaches the ocean. It has no rest until it reaches back to the ocean.

Sometimes it gets stranded in the little puddle of water beside the river and loses its chance to reach the ocean. In that case it has to go through the process of evaporation and condensation again before it gets to the ocean.

Just like that drop of water that gets stranded in the small puddle of water and never ends up reaching the ocean for a long time, I also have got side-tracked from my goal many times in my journey back to merge with the Creator.

Guruji says on (Pg 251, SGGS):

ਆਵਨ ਆਏ ਸ੍ਰਿਸਟਿ ਮਹਿ ਬਿਨੁ ਬੂਝੇ ਪਸੁ ਢੋਰ ॥

Aavan aaeae srisatt mehi bin bhoojae pas dtor.

Srisatt refers to the material world. Bhoojae means to be able to figure out/solve the mystery. Pas dtor refers to animals.

In the line above Guruji says: If I have come to this world but am still ignorant as to the true purpose of my life, then my level of existence is still at the level of an animal although I may look like a human being. There was is no difference between me and the animals.

Animals are born, they eat, grow, reproduce and die. I am also doing the same thing. The animals were meant to live like that but I was created different. I was bestowed with a thinking mind. I was meant to use the mind to find my way back to the Creator. If I have not made any efforts in that direction then in the eyes of the Guru, I am no different from the animals because I have wasted my precious human life which was given to me as a blessing from GOD  I have wasted it in useless pursuits.

I am like that drop of water that failed to reach the ocean. I will have to go back empty handed. I have forgotten my roots, the source from which I came.

Surinder Kaur Sohan Singh is a Malaysia-based Gurbani enthusiast. This is an edited version of her regular articles shared within a circle of fellow Sikhi seekers. The articles appear on Mondays and Thursdays.

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

 

RELATED STORY:

Day 12: Sweetness and humility (Asia Samachar, 3 Sept 2018)

Day 11: What does meditation/simran really mean in Sikhi? (Asia Samachar, 30 Aug 2018)

Day 10: Power of pure unconditional love (Asia Samachar, 27 Aug 2018)

Day 09 – Creation of Karma: Aapae beej aapae hee khaahu (Asia Samachar, 23 Aug 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 |

Indian air force chief visits Malaysia

1
Mohamad Sabu receives courtesy call from Chief Of Air Staff of the Indian Air Force, Air Chief Marshal Birender Singh Dhanoa – Photo: Malaysian Mindef

Indian Air Force chief of air staff Birender Singh Dhanoa paid a courtesy call on the Malaysian defence minister Mohamad Sabu in Kuala Lumpur today (5 Sept 2018).

Air Chief Marshal Birender begins a three-day visit to Malaysia after Myanmar.

Birender’s trip is to bolster India’s defence cooperation with the two countries considered strategically important from the regional security perspective, PTI reported earlier.

He is expected to hold parleys with his Malaysian counterpart and other senior military officials on ways to strengthen cooperation between the air forces of the two countries, reported PTI.

Birender, a Kargil war veteran and first-rate fighter pilot, assumed the present job on 31 Dec 2016, taking over from Air Chief Marshal Arup Raha.

 

RELATED STORIES:

Air Marshal Birender Singh Dhanoa appointed as Indian Air Force chief (Asia Samachar, 18 Dec 2016)

India renames airbase after former air force chief Arjan Singh (Asia Samachar, 17 April 2016)

 

[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]

Whence the rot set in: Time to say enough?

1
By I.J. Singh and Neena I. Singh OPINION

Like most Sikhs, we, too, have attended oodles of discussions on and about Sikhi over the years. The attendance is often heavy with both young and old Sikhs, and we parse issues that confront us, our colorful history, and our direction forward.

The primary purpose: to engage both young and old in an inter-generational conversation. Quite expectedly, the narrative often highlights the nobility of Sikh teachings and ideals, and our slipshod practices.  Some speakers aim at our silly ways and rue the inevitability of the times.  We often condemn others: often Hindus or the British for the debasement of Sikh practices. And that’s where the story usually ends until we meet, to revisit similar themes again.

And we wonder: Surely, as adults, we Sikhs have some meaningful role in this inevitable decline of Sikhs and Sikhi, or don’t we?

Hence this diatribe. The past often appears rosier in retrospect. And we won’t overlook the times of Sikh glory – the worldly triumphs while remaining reasonably connected to our religious roots and practices.

True that in the period of the Gurus and immediately afterwards, there were hair-raising battles with both Mughal rulers (Muslims) as well as the Hindu majority.  The third way (Sikhi) was not acceptable to either of the two larger religions in India; there was often a hefty price on a Sikh’s head who openly lived with the markers of his faith. Sikhs and Sikhi were then perceived as threats to the philosophy and power of the establishment — Muslims and Hindus.

But after Guru Gobind Singh, within decades, Sikhs had fought their way to triumph. They established Sikh governance in the greater Punjab, even extending into Tibet and Afghanistan. The outstanding Sikh General, Hari Singh Nalwa, was able to command and control Afghanistan.  Much of India, too, tasted a degree of independence as Muslim dominance collapsed. The larger India returned to several quasi-independent nation-states.  For much of this we credit the over two-centuries of Sikh struggle, largely in Punjab and other pockets.

These historical realities along with the struggle for independence shaped north-western India – largely Punjab and Punjabis.  Until the British and French came by sea, all traders, invaders, conquerors, the Greek hordes and early Aryan settlers entered India via the Khyber Pass through the northwest corner that connects Afghanistan to Punjab.  (Now half of Punjab constitutes Pakistan, the other half is part of India.)  This prolonged hybridization of Punjab enriched its genetic pool, resulting in greater vigor; look for similar enrichment in the Balkans and the United States as well.

It is not surprising then that Punjabis (primarily Sikhs) led the fight to seal the Khyber Pass to every wannabe conquistador.  Such a transformational shift is not attained in a day or a year.  Early results were evident within decades of the post-Guru period (the times of Banda Bahadur).  It took the Sikh message about 240 years and 10 generations of Gurus to get there.

The next 50 years were the Golden Age for Punjab; Sikhs ruled the greater Punjab, justly and sagaciously; land reforms were established.  All three religions – Hindus, Muslim and Sikhs – were treated justly and equally, and lived in peace.  The ruler then was a Sikh, Maharaja Ranjit Singh.

In the meantime, British had entered India by sea and conquered almost all of India.  A hundred years later the British annexed Punjab in battles where non-Punjabi Indians sided with them against the Sikhs. It is true that the British won by perfidy and betrayal by some of the non-Sikh commanders in the Sikh army.

We usually mark this as the time when Sikh values, teachings and practices began their downward slide; the rot continues.

Why and how is the question.

Centuries of immigration and hybridization shaped the Punjabi mindset.  They are a pragmatic people.  In the British-Sikh wars Hindus and Muslims had aided the British.   The British won the battles but learned to value Sikh skill, will, strength,  dedication and determination in war, and respected them. So, they preferentially recruited Sikhs into the army, and opened many English-speaking schools – in fact, made allies of Sikhs; encouraged them as faithful friends.  At one time fully 40 percent of the British-Indian army officers were Sikh.  More significantly, the British encouraged, nay required,that Sikhs maintain their articles of faith while serving in the army.  The Sikhs saluted the Guru Granth at their recruitment. Thus, the British ensured Sikh loyalty.

Very shrewd of the British, we would say. It is equally obvious that Sikhs (the ruler Ranjit Singh, his statesmen and generals of the time) lacked the foresight to look beyond their own lifespans. Coming to terms with our own shortcomings is never easy but such are the necessary lessons here. Perhaps Sikhs put aside their times of struggle too readily and forgot to remain vigilant! Did they forget that those who do not remember their history live to repeat it?

How did the pragmatic Sikhs see the new reality emerging in front of their eyes? Clearly, their new world would be ruled by the British.  The British led Indian army provided them a semblance of Westernization and dignity. This shaped their reality and the nature of their future.  The Sikh connection to and reliance on their primary traditional institutions lessened, particularly the gurduara lessened.  The gurduara and its granthi were transformed, in fact, dramatically down-graded largely by these changed ground realities.

Engrossed in their new realities, expectations, standards of living and behavior, Sikhs increasingly delegated the responsibilities of their religious institutionsand  education to granthis, who effectively became caretakers of gurduaras rather than specialists in education on Sikhi.

Look around:  The granthi, often the most educated person in the community, whether in the village or even in the best Indian urban setting has now become somewhat of a “gofer.” (Before you take umbrage at our blunt assessment, we ask you instead to look at the reality). At the gurduaras around you, how often do you see scholarly exchange to improve your connection to Sikhi? Our officer-corps, civilians or from the armed services – largely Sikhs in the latter — are some of the most westernized Indians.  But the British insisted that the turban and long unshorn hair of the Sikh soldier be maintained.  They strongly enforced it.

This is how the British won the loyalty of the Sikh servicemen and the Sikh community.  The British-led Indian army necessarily created a hybrid Sikh culture.  The Sikhs responded positively to the respect and consideration they sought. Even the rural Sikhs saw that token westernization would be a powerful path (tool?) to material and worldly success.  No surprise then that the gurduara inevitably became more symbolic than meaningful to the Sikhs. As we said life had made Punjabis and Sikhs into a superbly pragmatic people.

How well had Punjab evolved in only 240 years or so, with 10 Gurus?  Sikh ascendancy and rule had been quick, efficient and effective.  But it disappeared even faster.  Why?  Genetic hybridization hadcreated a very pragmatic people.  How they saw the future? How the British saw the Sikh talent pool?  How they came together in mutual respect!

The British played a shrewd, measured and winning hand. They courted and won Sikh friendship, even though in India’s struggle for independence fully 65 to 68 percent of all freedom fighters who were hanged by the British or sentenced to life imprisonment were Sikhs.  The Sikhs were a minority as they still are — barely two percent of India’s burgeoning billion.  The larger Indian society gave them little support then, and offers even less today.

Under the British 40 percent of the officers in the Indian armed services were Sikh, but not anymore in free India.  Sikhs remain a minority but they did not get swallowed up by Hinduism, as Buddhism and Jainism did. We think the independent Sikh identity saved them from Indian mythology’s Boa Constrictor embrace. Hinduization still impacts often passively, because of their large numbers, cultural misinterpretation and miscegenation.

Our cultural habits have become largely secular in an attempt for the minority to merge with the main stream. Think back: What are the early lessons- essential advice–drummed in the head of Indian children and adolescents irrespective of their religious identity?  They began and ended with: study hard, get good grades, get a good stable job, marry well; a fair summary of what was drummed into our heads? Where is Sikhi in this truly secular message? Sikhs essentially did what a pragmatic people would do.

In fact, our relationship to the two languages critical to us changed dramatically.   Competence in English defined our proficiency at work in the new world.  Skill in Punjabi defined us within our community.  We never saw the need to pick up a book on poetry, history or philosophy in English because it would likely not be work-related. And we didn’t pick up a book on philosophy, history or poetry in Punjabi because Punjabi had become increasingly limited to social banter and easy, crass humor.

Ergo, the life of the mind became increasingly unexplored in English or Punjabi.

Ergo, in this mixed and sometimes sorry tale Sikhs, too, have a responsibility for their place in contemporary Indian society, and our purpose is to sketch it briefly. Free India’s policies today disrespect the Sikhs in history, in religion or place in society, in fact India seems to be on a path that ignores Sikhs entirely while Sikhs are too busy to even notice.  For a minority, as Sikhs are, the drive for material success outweighs Sikh teachings and values.  But where is accountability?

Just look at Bollywood often seen as the culture of modern India! Sikhs are a presence there, but as buffoons, for the cheap joke and easy laugh, without a thought about the damage to our image in the larger society. Punjabi music, catchy as it is, promotes liquor and drug culture and we don’t notice.  Why don’t we produce good literature, wholesome entertainment, great music(remember music is in our blood.) and movies for the main stream population for meaningful impact on society rather than following the rotten Bollywood path? Do we have shortage of talent or skills, or is it common sense that is missing?

We need some introspection and to own our responsibility rather than shifting the blame to British, Muslims and Hindus or Indian government, gurduaras, granthis and management.

We need to be proactive rather than being retroactive in damage control. We need to rediscover what Gurbani means to us, and what we want for and from Sikhs and Sikhi.  Just repeating lines of Gurbani – parrot like – won’t work.

ਡਿਠੈ ਮੁਕਤਿ ਨ ਹੋਵਈ ਜਿਚਰੁ ਸਬਦਿ ਨ ਕਰੇ ਵੀਚਾਰੁ ॥

Dithae mukt na hovaee jitcher sabdna karay vitchar, Guru Granth p. 594.

Our focus needs to shift from more and expensive vestments (rumalas) for the Guru Granth,or gold and marble in gurduaras to our community and its education so that we become a more progressive people. We need to learn lessons from Jews!

Our downhill slope is not the invention of the British, Muslims and Hindus alone; we, too, have collaborated mightily with our foes. An equal place at the table of this or any society should define our goal.

T.S. Eliot reminds us of the cunning passages and contrived corridors of history that deceive us by vanities. Stay in touch with Sikh history and you will become an optimist – multi-layered and incredibly complex.

The rot set in more than 150 years ago; it continues today. Isn’t it time to say ENOUGH? It’s for us to define and construct the cure. The buck stops with us.

 

I.J. Singh is a New York based writer and speaker on Sikhism in the Diaspora, and a Professor of Anatomy. Email: ijsingh99@gmail.com. Neena is his wife.

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

RELATED STORIES:

Rules, Rulers & the Ruled (Asia Samachar, 23 Aug 2018)

Sunshine & dirty laundry (Asia Samachar, 6 Aug 2018)

Are our Gurdwaras Dysfunctional? The Assessment. (Asia Samachar, 9 June 2016)

 

[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]

YAADGIRI PRAYERS: Jusbeer Kaur (1943-2017), Pritam Singh (1941-2013)

YAADGIRI PRAYERS: Jusbeer Kaur (1943-2017), Pritam Singh (1941-2013)

Jusbeer Kaur (1943-2017), Pritam Singh (1941-2013)

1st Anniversary:

Madam Jusbeer Kaur w/o Late Sardar Pritam Singh

(12.12.1943 – 17.9.2017)

5th Anniversary:

Sardar Pritam Singh s/o Late Sardar Gurdial Singh (Ex-Postal)

(27.1.1941 – 16.4.2013)

Please join our family for Sahej Path Da Bhog to be held from 10.00am to 12.00pm on September 16, 2018 at Gurdwara Sahib Kajang

Deeply missed and fondly remembered by Children, Grandchildren, Relatives & Friends

Please treat this as our personal invitation

When someone you love becomes a memory,

The memory becomes a treasure

 

Hakam Singh Gill dedicated his life to the law

By Mahadev Shankar | IN MEMORY

Sardar Hakam Singh Gill breathed his last on the 7th August 2018 in Petaling Jaya. He was born in a village near Moga, Punjab in India in the year 1924. His death at the ripe old age on ninety four was not an occasion for grief but of triumphant celebration.

He had dedicated his life to the law. And his nobility was exemplified by his sacrifice of the opportunity for judicial advancement so that his siblings would not be deprived of their prospects of a decent living and a good education.

In the early fifties he had joined the clerical service of the registry of the Sessions Court in Seremban. He very rapidly became the senior litigation clerk there and the most trusted guide philosopher and friend to every Sessions President who also served there.

The first was Syed Sheh Barakhbah, in 1954, then Raja Azlan Shah from 1956 to 1957, followed by Tan Sri Ali Hassan in 1958 to 1959. It was during these years that Tan Sri Edgar Joseph Jnr, and I became his proteges.

For his knowledge of the Subordinate Court Rules and the case law appropriate to the kind of cases tried there was encyclopedic. In those early years pre-Merdeka promising junior officers in the judicial service were being selected to be groomed for higher office with offers of a judicial scholarship for training in London to be called to the English Bar. Examples of such personnel were Sarban Singh Gill later to become Chief Justice, Au ah Wah, Sivapragasam, Parmalingam, Harun ldris, Syed Othman and many others all of whom rose to positions of the highest judicial eminence.

Hakam as we all called him was also offered this opportunity but being the character he was, he turned it down as he was then the family breadwinner and also solely responsible for the care and advancement of his siblings.

He was not only devoted but the dedication which he displayed to his work, and his grasp not just of legal principles, but also of the practical niceties of what was needed for the efficient functioning of the judicial machinery left me in no doubt that had he accepted that offer he would certainly have ended up as a judge in the Federal Court.

Nevertheless his rise through the ranks to the glass ceiling of one rank below a high court judgeship was meteroric. By the early sixties he was promoted from the Sessions Registry to become the Assistant registrar of the High Court in Malacca where he served the following judges in succession i.e. Tan Sri Ismail Khan, Tan Sri Manan Abdullah, Datuk S.M.Yong for a short spell, and then Tan Sri Ajaib Singh and lastly Tan Sri Wan Yahaya bin Pawan Teh.

We are looking at a span of twenty years here and focusing at this point in the mid eighties.

In parallel with his rise to the pinnacle of his limits Tan Sri Edgar Joseph and I had already become judges of the High Court in our own right. Ever mindful of our debt to Hakam, as it is to him that we turned when we had to deal with bottle necks in the Registries in the Courts in which we served. Edgar first in Penang and I in Johor Bahru in late eighty three . It may well be that tenderfoot judges were blooded in battle by being assigned to try a murder case.

My fist was a particularly nasty murder of a Chinese Shopkeeper and his wife in Tenang by a group of five conspirators In a brutal gang robbery.

This was to be in the High Court in Muar. To shelter me from my inexperience I applied without hesitation to the Chief Justice to direct Hakam to come over from the Malacca High court to help me. Special permission had also to be obtained from Justice Wan Yahaya. What a comfort that was. Starting with the Jury selection of seven out of a list of twenty and then organising the interpreters required and keeping the Court going smoothly despite the occult interference of a Javanese Bomoh were only part of this learning experience. With five accused there was also a very troublesome formulation of the directions to the jury on the complexities of the law relating to common intention. Once again it was Hakam to the rescue with a template .

Hakam Singh Gill (black pants) with Baba Sohan SIngh of Malacca (centre) – Photo: Family collection

It was a summing up which had once been given by Ismail Khan which was a model of clarity and simplicity on what the jury needed to be told.

The defence team was composed of G.F.Nelson, Kaliadas and Balakrishnan who left no stone unturned in their valiant efforts to secure an acquittal. The trial was spread over about four months.

Outside the working hours my task was tempered by the chats I had with Hakam about old times we had spent in Seremban and those occasions when Edgar and I had appeared in his Courts as Counsel.

Hakam had served out the full term of his tenure in the service of the law. He was the hidden power house which drove the judicial machine. Like the force of gravity which is always felt but not seen he kept all the parts, court staff, files, counsel, the public and the Judges he so faithfully served like a well oiled machine.

A man like this has many stories to narrate of human foibles, and the goings on behind the scenes. He also took a very active part in the administrative affairs of the Sikh temple or Gurdwara, being a very intense spiritual person.

Thanks to his self sacrifice his siblings have all done well for themselves. One of them is Sardar Lall Singh who rose to eminence in the Department of Forstry under the leadership of Tan Sri Salleh Nor.

For his distinguished service to the county Hakam was awarded the AMN honour.

Tan Sri Edgar Joseph jnr, and I have long since retired from the judiciary but about ten years behind him we are still plodding on to the end of the road.

In good chronological sequence Hakam has gone first. Mercifully he passed on peacefully carrying with him all the memories of a full life, well lived in the service of the country, the Malaysian community and his friends and family.

Even at this late stage, in the evenings of our lives, the death of Sardar Hakam Singh Gill has diminished us. Our only consolation perhaps is the thought that when we also pass into the shades he will be there to show us the way to achieve that peace which passes all understanding.

[Mahadev Shankar is a prominent Malaysian lawyer and former Malaysian Court of Appeal Judge]

RELATED STORY:

Singapore IP ace lawyer Dedar Singh Gill made judicial commissioner (Asia Samachar, 28 June 2018)

Lawmaker Gobind, Justice Harmindar made honorary members of Kelab Aman (Asia Samachar, 17 May 2018)

 

[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]

Keep learning and feel good about it, says Dr Gurcharan Singh

Dr Gurcharan Singh

Dr Gurcharan Singh Bishen Singh, who has recently made the new director for Open University Malaysia (OUM) Graduate Centre, strongly believes that education is a lifelong endeavour and one should keep learning and feel good about it.

Gurcharan is a teacher, educator and trainer for about 30 years now. He has served as a teacher in schools and spent most of his years in the Ministry of Education Malaysia as an educational leadership trainer at the Institut Aminuddin Baki (IAB).

One of his major contributions at IAB was leading the formulation of the National Professional Qualification for Educational Leaders (NPQEL), a mandatory programme for aspiring school leaders in Malaysia, according to a note on him by the university.

Effective August 2018, Dr Gurcharan was appointed as director of the OUM Graduate Centre Kuala Lumpur, formerly known as the Kuala Lumpur Learning Centre. He is also OUM’s Programme Director of the Master of Education programme.

He obtained Doctor of Education in Educational Leadership from the University of Birmingham UK in 2010.

RELATED STORY:

Educationist with a sympathetic hand on drug addicts (Asia Samachar, 26 Sept 2017)

 

[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]