Khalsa Land, a 20-acre Sikh campsite tucked at a lush jungle foothill just an hour’s drive from Kuala Lumpur, received a massive boost from Sikhs in Malacca.
Gurdwara Sahib Malacca today (25 March 2018) approved a RM500,000 donation towards the community project undertaken by Sikh Naujawan Sabha Malaysia (SNSM).
“The Sanggat was unanimous in their support,” GSM committee president Karam Singh told Asia Samachar. “This is an important project for the community.”
The donation, believed to be the single largest donation from the gurdwara, was approved at the GSM annual general meeting today.
The Malacca gurdwara and SNSM share one thing in common – Baba Sohan Singh.
Baba Sohan, the former Malacca granthi and a respected parcharak (preacher), was made a patron of SNSM in early 1990s, about two decades after he passed away in 1972.
GSM and Sant Sohan Singh Ji Melaka Memorial Society, usually called the Malacca Vidyala with its headquarter adjoining the gurdwara complex, celebrates an annual programme in May in the memory of Baba Sohan. It is the largest annual Sikh gathering in Southeast Asia, attracting Sikhs from neighbouring Singapore and Indonesia.
On its part, SNSM organises what is believed to be the largest annual Sikh camp, which attracts close to 1,000 participants for a one week period. The camps, called Gurmat samelan, began in the early 1960s with Baba Sohan playing an instrumental role in encouraging them.
KHALSA LAND
SNSM, an organisation set up in early 1960s and officially registered in 1967, bought a 22 acre piece of land in Kuala Kubu Bharu (KKB), about 80km from the Kuala Lumpur city centre in 2002, for RM1.7 million.
In 2010, the Selangor state approved the conversion of the land status from agriculture to commercial, though they applied for institutional use.
In 2016, Selangor approved to drastically slash the RM1.9 million land conversion premium levied on the campsite.
Khalsa Land, though only partially equipped at this juncture, has already started to attract camps by Sikh groups from Malaysia and abroad.
The SNSM team is now preparing to kickstart the next phase of its development.
In 2002, GSM had donated RM160,000, or 10%, of the cost of the land. Vidyala had then donated RM60,000.
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SASKAAR: 2pm, 25 March 2018 (Sunday) at Gui Yuan Crematorium, Kampung Tunku, Petaling Jaya |Malaysia
Narajan Singh(1938-2018), Batu Caves
NARANJAN SINGH S/O SUCHA SINGH
Born: 17 December 1938
Deceased: 24 March 2018
Saskaar / Cremation: 2pm, 25 March 2018 (Sunday) at Gui Yuan Crematorium, Kampung Tunku, Petaling Jaya
Cortege Timing: Cortege leaves from No 9, Berjaya Satu, Taman Berjaya, Batu Caves, 68100, Selangor, at 12:30pm, 25 March 2018 (Sunday)
Sehaj Path Da Bhog: 1 April 2018 (Sunday), 9.30am-12pm, at Gurdwara Sahib Sentul
Contact: House 03-6189 2093, Daughter 012-694 3241
| Entry: 25 March 2018 | Source: Family
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Amandeep S Sidhu: Partner at US law firm McDermott Will Emery – Photo: Firm
Amandeep Singh Sidhu, the first turbaned Sikh to step into University of Richmond School of Law and later the first turbaned Sikh to join US law firm McDermott Will & Emery, is optimistic about what lies ahead for the United States legal profession.
Sharing his experience from college to being made a partner at his present law firm in an article for The National Law Journal, the co-founder of US-based civil/human rights nonprofit organisation Sikh Coalition said that just as other lawyers of colour had faced challenges before him, ‘getting to this level has not been easy and did not happen by chance’.
“It’s taken a personal commitment and willingness to work twice as hard as my non-diverse peers, mentors to guide me and sponsors who put their credibility on the line to support my success….As I now mentor other lawyers of colour, I am heartened that corporations are embracing the importance of both diversity and inclusion,” he narrated in the article entitled ‘McDermott Partner Recounts His Firsts as a Sikh Lawyer and the Wave of Diversity in the Profession’.
Amandeep is a partner in the litigation practice group with substantial experience representing companies in high stakes disputes, including clients across the health care, life science and pharmaceutical industries. He was recently recognised as a “40 Under 40” by the Washington Business Journal and “DC Rising Star” by The National Law Journal.
“Being the first Sikh at Collegiate was a harbinger of “firsts” ahead of me, a path charted by my parents when they came to Virginia 42 years ago. I was the first turbaned Sikh to attend the University of Richmond School of Law–where I was elected president of the Student Bar Association and student speaker at graduation. I was the first Sikh summer clerk at the Supreme Court of Virginia. Then, I became the first Sikh judicial clerk at the Court of Appeals of Virginia. When I joined McDermott Will & Emery in 2007, I became the first turbaned Sikh there,” he writes.
INCLUSION RIDER
In the article, Amandeep took the opportunity to underline the importance of diversity in the work place by making reference to the remarks made by 2018 Oscar best actress winner Frances McDormant.
When receiving the award, the actress spoke about inclusion rider, two words that made his ears perk up.
McDormand had urged viewers and the assembled Hollywood luminaries to embrace a legal effort to push for greater on-screen diversity, according to one report.
In a nutshell, the inclusion rider is language that actors, producers, and directors can bake into their contracts, asking that their projects make a concerted effort to cast minorities, LGBTQ actors, and women in supporting and background roles. They can also ask for more diversity in below-the-line positions.
“When I look back on my journey, I could easily have ended up as the token nod to diversity at each step along the way. Instead, I was included—whether by invitation or, more often, through my own personal advocacy—to ensure that I had equal opportunities to excel.
“The term [inclusion rider] was immediately trending and continues to generate buzz. Inclusion riders are a thoughtful, deliberate approach to increase diversity in an industry that has slowly evolved to ‘reflect the world in which we actually live’,” Amandeep said.
He noted that inclusion riders are the latest evolution of the National Football League’s “Rooney Rule” and the current “Mansfield Rule” effort led by 44 law firms (including McDermott) and Diversity Lab.
“Firms that sign on to the Mansfield Rule certify that they will consider at least 30 percent women and minority lawyers for significant leadership roles—including promotions to equity partner, lateral searches, prominent committee membership and leadership,” he said.
As a policy, McDermott says that a diverse, inclusive culture enhances its ability to attract and retain extraordinary people who can bring the best, broadest and most innovative ideas and perspectives to bear on the complex challenges facing its clients.
“Our Firm-wide Diversity & Inclusion Committee comprises several dedicated subcommittees that steer us along the path to an ever more inclusive work environment while (1) ensuring that all of our colleagues understand the value of a diverse workplace and (2) maintaining an atmosphere in which all of our people have an equal opportunity to succeed. We are very proud that our lawyers and staff are deeply committed to extending this ethos of inclusion throughout the broader legal profession and our surrounding communities,” it notes at its website.
BACKGROUND
In his capacity at Sikh Coalition, he has led lobbying efforts in US Congress regarding hate crimes, profiling and workplace and public accommodation discrimination and serves as lead counsel in a multi-year effort to end the US military’s presumptive ban on the service of observant Sikhs and other religious minorities, according to information at the McDermott website.
While clerking, he was a member of the National Association of Appellate Court Attorneys and was appointed by Supreme Court of Virginia Chief Justice Leroy R. Hassell, Sr., to serve as a task force member of the Commission on Virginia Courts in the 21st Century: To Benefit All, To Exclude None.
Prior to law school, he was a business analyst for the Federal Defense Group of American Management Systems, Inc. While in law school, Aman was an associate editor of the Richmond Journal of Law and the Public Interest, vice president of the Moot Court Board and president of the Student Bar Association.
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A lot of good has happened. A lot of things to be thankful for.
Since I was about 10 years old, I had always been lucky. I have always achieved most of what I wanted. Luck and seva (selfless service) were two constant thing in my life. I never pondered why I always got most of what I wanted. It wasn’t necessary; I was young and carefree.
With every extra candle added to my birthday cake, and “wisdom” gained, I developed the ability to ponder about life. Ponder about everything I saw and experienced. But alongside these customary blessings, age also gifted me fear.
Fear caused me to worry. It became the gateway for anxiety to creep in and I began to believe my lucky days were numbered or that they were bottled in a jar by a superpower and were reaching its bottom.
This fear was natural because seva was no longer constant in my new lifestyle so how can luck be?
Yet I could not bring myself to change my lifestyle. Many attempts to bring back seva were futile because I did not get the same joy I did as a child. Seva in gurdwaras became laborious and boring.
Seva as an adult had a complete new setting. With age I gained access to the adult section. Things are done differently here. There is a lot less running compared to the children section. Adult seva curtailed a lot of staying put in your station until the job is done or until you yield. And if you hang around long, you’ll begin to notice the soft chatter these ladies hold. Not partaking in the seva chatter made me stick out like a sore thumb. Partaking, made me arrogant. Talk about a catch 22 situation.
So naive and closed minded I was for believing that the only way to keep my jar of luck filled to the brim was through religious rules; a man-made system (I’m not atheist).
Seva isn’t constricted to be within the walls of gurdwaras and no extra browny points for punching your seva card in gurdwaras. Because seva is an act that can take place anywhere and anytime. Regardless of creed, colour, religion, shape and ability.
I have not found the answer but seva outside the gurdwaras is a good start for now. I have a long way to go to rise above the fear system. A long journey to liberisation. An upheaval climb in believing we are One. An arduous journey to love all like my brothers and sisters. A long way still.
J Jaks, not her real name, plans to share more of her real and imagined fears and joys.
* This is the opinion of the writer, organisation or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of Asia Samachar.
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Mogok celebration: Sikhs holding ‘Sikh Familiy’ sign taking part in a procession on 24 March 2018 – Photo: Rajeev Singh
Sikhs are taking an active part in the 800th anniversary celebration of Mogok, a small Myanmar town famed for rubies, with prayer, Guru Ka Langgar and get-togethers in the works.
This morning (24 March), Sikh youth wearing Punjabi dresses joined a procession in the town located 200 kilometres north of Mandalay, proudly holding the sign ‘Sikh Family’.
Sikhs have been present in Mogok for more than 150 years through the Indian army. Today, there are less than a dozen families in the town, a Mogok-born Sikh entrepreneur Rajeev Singh tells Asia Samachar.
Sikhs formerly from Mogok and other parts of the country have started converging in Mogok for the grand celebration. A sehaj path (slow, intermittent, full reading of the Guru Granth Sahib) was started on Jan 5 and the path da bhog (concluding prayers) are planned at Gurdwara Sahib Mogok on Wednesday (28 March)
“We will also be distributing some 2,000 langgar boxes per day on March 30 and 31,” said Rajeev, who runs a tyre business in Mandalay.
The mythical city of Mogok has excited many imaginations since French writer and traveller Joseph Kessel’s adventure novel Mogok, the Valley of Rubies was first published in 1955, according to an article in Myanmar Times.
For centuries emperors, kings and warlords have vied for control over the valley of Mogok, north of Mandalay, once known as the “land of rubies” for its extraordinary treasure trove of jewels. Its unique “pigeon-blood” stones are the most expensive coloured gems in the world. In 2016, the so-called Sunrise Ruby sold for a record US$30.3 million (RM136.12 million), over US$1 million a carat, reported AFP.
It is nestled in a valley between a number of large mountains where, due to its altitude (1,170 metres), a cool temperate climate can found all year round.
“Most youths from this town went outside to set up businesses or for job in cities like Mandalay Yangon and Taunggyi due to the poor economic condition. Some of them are back for this celebration,” he said.
Like many other traditions preserved in Myanmar, mining in Mogok today involves little to no mechanisation and is based on intensive use of manual labour, concentrated on hillside deposits, through open trenches, deep pits, or through excavating tunnels directly into the limestone. A number of bustling ruby markets, including Panchan and Aungchanthar markets, can be found in the centre of town (note that gems sold in markets in Mogok can only be purchased at government licensed dealers), according to a Go-Myanmar.com, a website promoting the country to foreign tourists.
Located in Mandalay Division and bordering Shan State, the Mogok area hosts a diverse ethnic population, including Bamar, Shan, Lisu, Palaung, and Karen ethnic groups, as well as Chinese, Indians and Gurkhas (descendants of a Nepalese group).
Mogok celebration: Sikhs holding ‘Sikh Familiy’ sign taking part in a procession on 24 March 2018 – Photo: Rajeev Singh
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Baby Ravneet Kaur underwent another skin grafting surgery today. The surgery itself went on fine, but there is a chance she may lose a few toes on her left leg.
The nine month old child of Indian parents working in Malaysia that caught the attention of Asia Samachar readers last month when we shared the news of her predicament after being badly scalded in a hot water accident at her home in Kuala Lumpur.
“The surgery today went on fine. We pray she does not pick up any infection or catch a fever,” said a member from the donation drive team made up of Sikh Welfare Society Malaysia (SWSM), Santana Riderz Mc and Asia Samachar.
Ravneet has undergone several surgeries and a few more are expected in the weeks to come. In one surgery towards the end of February, doctors had to amputate her right thumb as well as one finger on the right hand and the little finger on the left hand.
Malaysians and Singaporeans donated close to RM127,000 towards a donation drive by the SWSM, Santana Riderz Mc and Asia Samachar within a span of 48 hours last month.
The donation drive has been stopped. The money collected is being used to settle Ravneet’s mounting medical bills, as well as for the future surgeries and medical care that she will require.
Born to Indian parents, Ravneet does not enjoy the lower fees enjoyed by Malaysians at Malaysian public hospitals.
SWSM and Santana Riderz are working jointly to ensure smooth and proper disbursement of the funds collected. Asia Samachar will provide regular updates on Baby Ravneet’s recovery and the fund disbursement.
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Law represents the codification of societal behavior and community values, while religions speak to human aspirations and concepts of the ideal. This is so even though the ideal, by definition, is a goal and a direction, not something to be held in the palm of one’s hand. Conflicts between what is and what should be become inevitable, and are often refereed and adjudicated by the judicial system.
As of October 2005, in the state of Connecticut, ‘same sex’ couples are permitted civil unions with all of the rights that heterosexual married couples have. But that is a right that many religions, and many religious people refuse to recognize on grounds of morality.
Sikhism is silent on the issue, not because there are no homosexual couples in Sikhi but perhaps because in the sexually repressive Indian society homosexuals have always been closeted; they have never occupied public space. Traditional societies have tolerated homosexuals to a greater or lesser degree, usually the latter; their silence has often been interpreted as tacit disapproval. We know that in July 2005, when Canada legalized same sex unions, Canadian gurdwaras followed the lead of the Akkal Takht Jathedar and rejected the new law.
A friend, Amarjit Singh Buttar, an Amritdhari Sikh, is a Justice of the Peace in Connecticut. He was asked if he would perform same sex marriages. He thought about it and declined to do so. Why? His reasoning was that as a practicing Sikh he could not countenance such an act. He further believes that, even though the law grants this right to same sex couples, the vast majority of his community —almost entirely non-Sikh in Connecticut — would not be comfortable with it. Apparently, the law, does not truly represent community values to him. Also, the law grants him the privilege of performing same sex unions, but does not require him to do so. Hence his decision.
Buttar is right on both counts. But the matter deserves some more thought.
I remember when battle lines were drawn over the Civil Rights Act of 1965. After a struggle, equal rights got enshrined into law. But what were community values like? Many people found that to accept the letter and spirit of the law turned their stomachs. Many lawyers, judges and civil servants found the new law repugnant and very much against their personally held beliefs. (This is probably just as true today so many years later.) Yet, many people who ran the infrastructure of the country embraced the law fully. Perhaps they found the logic of the new law irresistible. Perhaps they were able to separate their personal beliefs from the requirements of the law and that they be respected and obeyed by all citizens at all times.
Think of the issue of birth control devices. Some states outlaw their sale. Why? Because majority values of the community prefer it thus. I would think that a licensed pharmacist would be legally bound to fill all prescriptions that met legal and professional criteria, but there are pharmacists who refuse to dispense certain prescriptions because the use of such drugs is contrary to their own personal religious beliefs.
One could argue that such reasoning results in a tyranny of the local majority, resulting in civic breakdown. A democracy has to remain sensitive to the rights of the fewest, least and lowest of its citizens. It is one thing for a religion to withhold its imprimatur from certain behaviors. For example, for Roman Catholics, this means that denying sacraments like a church wedding or communion to a divorced person would be within the Church’s power and domain. But for civil, secular law to curtail any of its citizens their rights is quite another matter. Such rights are sacrosanct unless an individual has been convicted of a serious crime and certain privileges of citizenship, like the right to vote, suspended law.
I also remember when in the 1960’s many barbers, physicians and dentists in the United States refuse to serve black clients with the excuse that they did not know how to treat hair, diseases or teeth of blacks. No licensing board would now entertain the idea as anything else than what it really was— unadulterated racism. No one compels us to break bread or share social time with any person or a people that one does not like, no matter what the reason. But no law should look away when such choices are allowed any play in the public arena. All people homosexual or not, black, white or some other god-forsaken color, men, women or even those unsure of their identity pay the same taxes. From these taxes, civil servants, bureaucrats and politicians are appointed or elected to serve the whole citizenry, not just a part of it. All citizens deserve the same equal service, with the same courtesy and efficiency.
If Guru Granth does not dwell at all on such matters as I broach today, it is because Sikhism takes a larger, universal and inclusive position. The teachings are forthright: justice, equal rights, compassion and succor for the needy. The basics of Sikhism can be summarized in three fundamentals —an honest living, sharing the rewards of life with others, and a life attuned to the Infinite within each of us, and common to us all. Nowhere does it ask that the recipient of our largesse has to be a Sikh, and cannot be a Hindu, Muslim, and Christian, Jew, or even an agnostic or an atheist. Nowhere does Sikh teaching or tradition ask us to deride, belittle or refuse to help to a neighbor if he or she is of a particular sexual orientation.
Not that I have any sure-fire answers to these matters, but I raise these matters to see if we can all think through this rationally, while keeping in mind our age-old Sikh traditions, which have historically treasured and nurtured human rights as none other.
It seems to me that an institutional religion may withhold certain sacraments from a follower who is not in good grace because of certain acts against its doctrine or tradition. However, the followers of that religion may not use this to deny or curtail any non-religious civic role to him or her.
Demeaning others because they are different from us will make their life difficult, but it will diminish us even more.
I.J. Singh is a New York based writer and speaker on Sikhism in the Diaspora, and a Professor of Anatomy. This article was written in March 2006, revised 2018. Email: ijsingh99@gmail.com.
* This is the opinion of the writer, organisation or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of Asia Samachar.
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SASKAAR: 2pm, 22 March 2018 (Thursday) at Wadda Gudwara Sahib Ipoh Crematorium |Malaysia
Gomeder Singh Cheema (1958-2018), Ipoh
GOMEDER SINGH CHEEMA A/L JIT SINGH
Village: Cheema
Born: 04 April 1958
Departed: 21 March 2018
Wife: Kermah Kaur
Children:
Paul Singh
Sadagar Singh
Raveen Kaur
Daughter In Law: Preety
Saskaar / Cremation: 2pm, 22 March 2018 (Thursday) at Wadda Gudwara Sahib Ipoh Crematorium
Cortege timing: Cortege leaves at 1.45pm, 22 March 2018 (Thursday) from No 61, Laluan Rokam 16, Pekan Razaki, 31350, Ipoh, Perak
Path da bhog: 1 April 2018 (Sunday), 10am-12pm, at Gudwara Sahib Gunung Rapat, Ipoh
Contact: Paul Singh 016-5282202
| Entry: 21 March 2018 | Source: Family
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PRAYERS: Akhand Path: 30 March (Fri) to 1 April (Sun) at residence | Path da bhog: 1 April (Sun), 10am-12pm, at Gurdwara Sahib Butterworth, Penang |Malaysia
Swaran Kaur (1937-2018), Taman Siakap, Perai
SWARAN KAUR A/P RONWAKI SINGH
Age: 81 years.
Born: 26 February 1937
Departed: 21 March 2018
Dearly missed, lovingly remembered and forever cherished by her beloved:
Husband: Nasib Singh s/o Hargopal Singh
and her family members, relatives and friends.
Akhand Path: 30 March (Fri) to 1 April (Sun) at residence at No. 122, Lengkok Siakap 3, Taman Siakap, Seberang Jaya, 13700 Perai, Penang
Path da bhog: 1 April (Sun), 10am-12pm, at Gurdwara Sahib Butterworth, Penang
Contact:
Ranjit Singh (+65) 9152 9264
Hardev Kaur (+ 6016) 444 1130
Amargit Kaur 6011-1242 5831
Dahjit Kaur 6019-283 4396
| Entry: 21 March 2018; Updated: 23 March 2018 | Source: Family
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Singapore-based healthcare company Guardant Health International has appointed Simranjit Singh as its chief executive officer (CEO) for Asia, Middle East and Africa.
Simranjit, who was the Vice President for MedTech Asia at IQVIA, also chairs BioSingapore, a biomedical association of Singapore, since 2012.
He signaled his latest corporate move to Guardant Health International, a jont venture (JV) between Guardant Health and Softbank, in an update at his LinkedIn profile.
In May 2017, Guardant Health and SoftBank announced the formation of a new joint venture to expand commercialisation of Guardant Health’s liquid biopsy technology in Asia, the Middle East, and Africa, regions where more than 7.8 million new cases of cancer are diagnosed each year.
Guardant Health, headquartered at Redwood City, California, is focused on conquering cancer by using its breakthrough blood-based assays, vast data sets, and advanced analytics. Using both molecular and digital tools, the company is addressing challenges across the cancer care continuum.
He is also a seed investor and strategic advisor to Holmusk which is building next-generation data analytic platform for chronic diseases (NCDs).
The company started building end-to-end disease management platform for pre-diabetic and early diabetics in February 2015. In the last 18 months, it has built the platform, beta tested twice and have launched B2C in Singapore. It is planning to have upto 30,000 users in Singapore itself in next three years, according to information at Simranjit’s LinkedIn profile.
Simranjit has a BSc Biomedical Sciences (2000-2003) from National University of Singapore (NUS) and a MBS Strategy from University of Chicago.
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