Friday, May 20, 2016

Million dollars in help for sikh community



EDMONTON – Five semi trucks carrying donated goods to help Fort McMurray wildfire evacuees arrived in Alberta’s capital Monday afternoon thanks to the efforts of B.C.’s Sikh community.
The goods were collected by the Lower Mainland Sikh Community before being loaded onto trucks Sunday and brought 1,139 kilometres from Surrey, B.C. to Edmonton. The community had already deployed four trucks to bring clothes, blankets and other supplies to Edmonton earlier this month and says in total, the nine trucks delivered over $1 million worth of goods to Alberta.
“I think this is the Sikh way of life you know – share with the needy people and help the humanity – that’s the core values of Sikhism,” Kulmit Sangha, with the Sikh Federation of Edmonton, said. “I feel very proud and humbled.”
The goods were brought to the Edmonton Emergency Relief Services Society’s warehouse in the city’s south side.
“The Sikh community came and approached us about them wanting to come and help support us as soon as they found out that Edmonton Emergency Relief Services were going to be helping maintain the relief efforts,” Nicole Geoffroy, media relations for the Edmonton Emergency Relief Services Society, said. “With the donations that have been coming in we’re going to be sure that we’re going to be able to help get all the basics to them (evacuees) as fast as we can.”
The supplies delivered Monday were collected through a one-day donation campaign in Surrey, Vancouver and Abbotsford on Saturday. Organizers said over 200 volunteers worked to collect, sort and pack the donations. They also said a group of volunteers will be taking a bus from Surrey to Alberta to help those displaced by this month’s massive wildfire in Fort McMurray.

Justin trudreau apologized

Sikhs

by CBC News
Hearing the apology was monumental for Windsor visitors in Ottawa
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It was a packed House of Commons on Wednesday as many from Canada's Sikh community listened to the official apology from the Canadian government for refusing to take in refugees aboard the Komagata Maru nearly 102 year ago.

May 19, 2016: 
A group of Windsorites headed to Ottawa Wednesday to hear a long-awaited apology by the Canadian Government.
Harjinder Singh Kandola, president of the Sikh Cultural Society of Metropolitan Windsor, made the trek with several other Sikhs from the area.
The apology was for Canada's refusal to take in refugees aboard the Komagata Maru, a ship that anchored in Vancouver's Coal Harbour for two months in 1914.
ForIndifference (68K)
Nearly all of the 376 passengers were denied entry and the ship was forced to return to India.
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An official apology from Prime Minster Justin Trudeau.

Hearing the apology was a monumental moment for Kandola and many others who visited Ottawa on Wednesday.
TheSikhComm (125K)
The Sikh community listened, on Wednesday, to a long-awaited apology from the Canadian government.

"It was a very proud moment that Canada has recognized the value of human worth and dignity," Kandola said. "We should always stand up for justice, we must speak up against injustice and attempt to make things right."
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Sunday, May 1, 2016

To be a Kaur in India

 
To learn about each other’s experiences, Kaur Life conducted an informal survey earlier this year. Kaurs from around the world participated and shared their thoughts. Today, we present to you: Kaurs in India!

School Confirmed Sikhs Allowed to Carry Kirpans

by Ajay Nair
A school has confirmed Sikhs are allowed to carry kirpans – religious swords – on premises as long as they are worn “discreetly”.
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Kirpan worn by Jaspreet Kaur, 21. Picture: Jaspreet Kaur
27 April 2016: The comments come after newly baptised Sikh Jaspreet Kaur, 21, of South Park Drive, Ilford, claimed she was told by staff she was not allowed to wear one when going to collect her niece and nephew from Loxford Primary School, Loxford Lane, Ilford.
Headteacher Anita Johnson said: “Loxford School Trust respects the human rights of individuals to practise their religion in public or in private in accordance with the Human Rights Act.
“For child safeguarding reasons we request that visitors wear the kirpan discreetly so that it is not visible on school premises.”
Carrying a kirpan, one of the “five Ks” of the Sikh faith, is a requirement for those initiated into the Khalsa – the collective body of all initiated Sikhs.
Exemptions for Sikhs to carry kirpans are made under the Offensive Weapons Act 1996 and Criminal Justice Act 1988.
Mrs Johnson added: “So far as the individual was concerned we asked her to comply with our request. The individual has not been banned from the school premises.”