13 March 2008

Kashmir Singh - And Khalid Mehmood

I have been reading the Pakistani blogs today. There is much bitterness that Kashmir Singh was returned alive and well, while the exchanged prisoner from India, Khalid Mehmood, was just a tortured corpse. I do not blame them. Are the Pakistanis just now learning what we Sikhs have been very much aware of, especially since 1984. The Indian government acts in a cruel, heartless manner. I send my sympathies to the family and friends of Khalid Mehmood.. Here is a post on the blog Ronin: Is this how the Indians return a favor? As a Sikh, I would, of course, answer with a resounding YES, thinking of the times we have saved the Hindus' behinds.

From The South Asian Post:

The spy returns home after 35 years in prison
Thu, March 13 2008
By Jaideep Sarin













Kashmir Singh and Paramjit Kaur

Marking the days in a dark cell, time may have stood still for Kashmir Singh — but life has moved on.

The former soldier who has just returned home after 35 years in a Pakistan prison is coming to terms not only with his children, now grown up, his wife, now wizened with age, but also his village of Nangal Choran in Punjab that he says excitedly has become like Paris.

From Pakistan to a ‘Paris’ in the Indian Punjab, Kashmir Singh, who was released last week after having been condemned to solitary confinement for 35 years as an Indian spy, is awkwardly dealing with the hordes of people around him — perhaps longing for a solitary moment to absorb the tumultuous turn his life has taken.

“Mera pind taan Paris ho gaya hai (My village has turned into Paris),” he says with child-like excitement while sitting in the comfort of his new-found freedom, family and friends in his village in Nangal Choran in Punjab’s Hoshiarpur district, 140 km from the capital Chandigarh.

When he left his village one Sunday in 1973 to enter Pakistan as a spy under the assumed name of Ibrahim, he never thought that he would be away for so long.

In the intervening years, his ‘kuchha’ (mud) home has been replaced by a four-room concrete and bricks structure. Two of his children, a son and a daughter, are now settled in Italy — thanks to the NRI exodus bandwagon in this Doaba belt of Punjab.

His son Amarjit arrived from Italy Thursday and has not corked his liquor bottle ever since to celebrate his father’s ‘rebirth.’ At times, under the influence of liquor, he says the media and others should leave, asking where they were in the last 35 years when the family was suffering. Other family members, including his physically challenged brother Shishpal, have to calm him down.

The balding but bearded Singh, who still does not sport a turban despite being a Sikh by religion, contradicts all theories that he converted to Islam to survive in Pakistan.
“I never converted to Islam. I don’t know from where all this is coming. Of course, as a spy, I went to Pakistan under a Muslim name and religion. That is all. On return, I wanted to wear a pant-shirt or a suit instead of the normal pathani-suit not to give an impression that I converted,” he clarifies.

Singh shed his Ibrahim name only this week when the Indian embassy in Islamabad prepared his travel documents by the name of Kashmir Singh. But the three-and-a-half decades have given him the language and accent used in Pakistan. His vocabulary is mostly Urdu-Punjabi. So hearing him address his wife as “begum” or saying things like “woh toh Allah ko pyara ho gaya” is not uncommon.

After 23 years, invalid Sikh seeks justice


Can you imagine being burned alive? Of course, that happened to many of our shaheed brothers and a few sisters during that last day of October and first days of November, 1984. But a very few were burned alive and survived. Gurecharan Singh, 17, was one of those.

Now, 23 years later, he is ready to testify against Sajjan Kumar, one of those responsible for this atrocity. I beg to differ with one line of this story, the one that says:


That terrible act of violence destroyed Singh although he didn't die.


Gurcharan Singh may have had a miserable life - I'm sure he has - but he has not been destroyed. He has lived to serve all of us with his testimony. And we owe him a collective 'Thank you.'


SO, THANK YOU GURCHARAN SINGH JI!




23 Years Later Invalid Sikh Seeks Justice
March 13th, 2008 - 12:23 pm ICT by admin - Email This Post Email This Post



From Thaindians News

By Ritu Sharma
New Delhi, March 13 (IANS) Twenty-three years after a mob threw him into a burning truck, a barely living Gurcharan Singh is demanding justice after being reduced to a cripple in the 1984 anti-Sikh violence in Delhi. Confined to bed for life after the horrific incident, Singh reached the Karkardooma court in an ambulance Wednesday along with a group of other victims of the 1984 mass violence that left around 2,700 people dead.


A 17-year-old at that time, Singh was a resident of Uttam Nagar in west Delhi when reprisal violence swept Delhi following the assassination of prime minister Indira Gandhi by two of her Sikh bodyguards on Oct 31, 1984.


Mobs incited by politicians immediately took over the streets, killing and raping innocents. Hundreds were injured and traumatised.


The mob that invaded Uttam Nagar killed Singh's father and maternal uncle before catching hold of him and throwing him into a burning truck. This happened on Nov 1.


That terrible act of violence destroyed Singh although he didn't die.


"When I gained consciousness, I found myself in a hospital bed. I was discharged after 10 days to live a miserable life. They (mob) had burnt our shops, homes and killed our people," Singh recalled.


"My brother was also attacked with bricks, leaving him injured in his spine. He has been incapacitated for life. From my family of seven, only two of us are alive," a grieving Singh told IANS in the court complex, speaking from the stretcher that has since then become his permanent shelter.


It was the start of an agonizing life.


Singh registered a case with Delhi Police, accusing Sajjan Kumar, a Congress MP who has been widely blamed for the 1984 mayhem but the police refused to name the MP in the first information report.


And then fear took over.


Living under constant threats of life, because the killers did not want him pointing his accusing fingers against them, Singh quietly moved out to Mohali in Punjab.


The Sikh Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee (SGPC), the Sikh religious parliament, finally came to his rescue, dishing out - in Singh's words - a monthly pension of Rs.10,000.


When the government set up the G.T. Nanavati Commission to probe the anti-Sikh violence, Singh refused to depose. "I feared for my life," he said Wednesday, as two armed policemen from Punjab stood by his side.


One day, prodded by the court, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) came to him to record his statement at Mohali.


And the volcano in Singh burst out.


"I told the CBI that the mob attacking our area was led by Sajjan Kumar. He met the local 'sarpanch' and said: 'They (Sikhs) have killed 'maa' (Indira Gandhi), kill them'," Singh told IANS.


Sajjan Kumar has denied similar allegations against him in the past.


The SGPC also promised to protect Singh, giving him the courage to travel to New Delhi.


Singh has nothing much to look forward to, but he feels strongly that justice needs to be done and those who killed innocents in 1984 should be punished.


He knows that even if that happens, he will remain a cripple for life - for no fault of his.


Babu Singh Dukhiya, president of a forum seeking justice for the 1984 victims, told IANS: "Singh is living a miserable life. His only wish is that the court must record his statement. He knows he may die soon."


(Ritu Sharma can be contacted at ritu.s@ians.in)


Photo: Gurcharan Singh

YOU WERE BORN TO STAND OUT!

09 March 2008

STOP THE WAR - March 15th - THE SIKH ACTIVIST NETWORK

Waheguroo Jee Ka Khalsa!
Waheguroo Jee Kee Fateh!


On March 15th, 2008. The Sikh Activist Network will be joing community allies from The Greater Toronto Area to demand an end to the Imperialistic Wars on Iraq and Afghanistan.

For those interested, The Sikh Activist Network will be meeting up at

DIXIE GURDWARA IN THE LANGAR AT 11:30am

From here we will be carpool To Queen's Park Downtown.

For High School Students interested in collecting Community Service Hours, please contact us immediately.

If you are able to provide transportation please contact The Sikh Activist Network via SikhActivist@Gmail.com

Please view the flyer for more details or visit http://www.nowar.ca/



--
WHY TRY TO FIT IN?
YOU WERE BORN TO STAND OUT!

08 March 2008

International Women's Day 2008

There is a lovely little nursery rhyme that every child in the UK and Canada knows. I am not so sure about the children of India, so I reproduce it here:

Twinkle, twinkle, little star,
How I wonder what you are.
Up above the world so high,
Like a diamond in the sky.
Twinkle, twinkle, little star,
How I wonder what you are!




As long as I have been expressing myself publicly (about 2 years), I
have said that the most dangerous enemy we Sikhs have is not the
Indian government, the Deras or even the Hindus. It is no force from
outside our own community. It is ourselves. We are fast destroying
ourselves through one particular practice. I have here a little poem
I wrote about that. It unites IWD and our self-destructive
tendencies.



Tinkle, tinkle, little boy,
Bring your parents so much joy.
You're their diamond, you're their pearl,
They're so glad you aren't a girl.



Punjab practice straight from hell.
Very soon its evil tell.




You are looking for a wife,
Someone who will share your life.
Not a woman to be found,
Rotting foetus in the ground.


Guru's teaching has been taught,
But its meaning never sought.
Daughter is a gift from God,
Not a dead, decaying clod.


Without woman, there's no life,
No more children, no more wife.
Guru's teachings die off now,
Go and worship sacred cow.



Tinkle, tinkle, little boy,
Bring your parents so much joy.

HAPPY INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY, 2008!!!




WHY TRY TO FIT IN?
YOU WERE BORN TO STAND OUT!

07 March 2008

Trouble In Gaza - Some Graphic Pictures

From time to time, I think it is necessary for us to remember that we Sikhs are not the only people who have serious difficulties, especially among those who are struggling with self-determination.

I hope all our readers are familiar with what is currently occurring between Israel and the Gaza Strip. Neither side is without error, but the humanitarian crisis is reaching biblical proportions. The people there are quite desperate simply trying to survive. As I understand it, food, water and medicines are in short supply. These are human beings, who breathe, love, fight and die, just like you and me.

I received this from the organisation AVAAZ:

GAZA CONFLICT - CEASE FIRE NOW!

Israel and Gaza are on the brink of war. A ground assault has left many dead, and the rain of rockets only spreads. Israel is now considering a full-scale invasion of Gaza, which has never worked before. The only answer is a ceasefire deal, already suggested by Hamas and supported by 64% of Israelis and some senior cabinet ministers. With international help, this could make civilians on both sides safer.

Peace itself is at stake in the coming days, as are thousands of lives. But both sides know they are in a battle for global legitimacy, and international opinion matters. We need to raise a massive worldwide outcry for a Gaza ceasefire now - sign the emergency petition below, we will deliver it to senior Israeli and Palestinian leaders and in a billboard campaign:

We call for Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal to stop the bloodshed and agree to an immediate ceasefire, and for the international community to engage constructively and help broker a fair deal for the safety of civilians on both sides.
To sign their petition, please go to: Avaaz Petition for Cease Fire in Gaza. Please go right away! Time is running out!


Without further comment, I offer you some recent pictures from the Gaza Strip. I warn you, they aren't easy to look at, but please look and understand. We Sikhs are not cowards. So please look.

'One picture is worth a thousand words.'



--
WHY TRY TO FIT IN?
YOU WERE BORN TO STAND OUT!

06 March 2008

The Return of Kashmir Singh



I know everyone is avoiding mentioning his 'temporary conversion' to Islam. But I don't ignore things. I will boldly say from experience that you have no idea what you'll do in a difficult situation until you are in it. Thirty-five years is a long, long time to keep your wits about you in such a horrific condition. Who among us could have even maintained the will to live. Somehow Kashmir Singh Ji managed to remain in Chardi Kala!
I also need to express my admiration of his stalwart, determined wife, Paramjit Kaur. Now there is a true Iron Lady.


And I note his first stop in his home village was to his home gurdwara.




WELCOME HOME, KASHMIR SINGH!!



Vikram Choudhury



Wednesday, March 5, 2008 (Hoshiarpur)



It looked like a victory procession, but it actually was homecoming for former Indian prisoner Kashmir Singh after 35 years of captivity.

He was delighted to be with family and people from neighbouring villages were more than happy to join in the celebrations.

On Tuesday afternoon he walked across the Wagah border after years of solitary confinement in various Pakistani jails.

And when he reached his village in Hoshiarpur, a gurudwara was his first stop. It was the place he used to visit daily as a child.

It was time for reunion with one of his childhood friends.

''We still remember the days when we used to play together and get maize and sugarcane from the field and enjoy,'' said Darshan Singh, Friend.

Then it was Singh's turn to show us that his teeth were still good enough to enjoy sugarcane, which he used to have in his village.

While in Pakistan he missed his village, his family, his friends and the sugarcane fields. Now it's time to make up for lost time.

''I missed all this. I used to have sugarcane, now I can have it again as my teeth are still intact,'' said Kashmir Singh.

His village celebrated through the night, a night that has come after years of wait.

Kashmir Singh is back and it is time to celebrate.

Even people from neighbouring villages came to celebrate. Kashmir Singh is also enjoying his old village life, meeting his friends and doing what he missed in Pakistan.