Earlier this week the partnership with Crawley Town was blessed at a ceremony in the Gurdwara (temple) attended by Drummy, his assistant Matt Gray and the club’s operations director Kelly Derham.
Canada's defence minster believes his country has learnt quickly from the "black marks in our history". Harjit Singh Sajjan was a soldier and a police officer before becoming a politician.
Guru Dain Singh (7 years old) is the only Sikh boy his his city in Chile. His parents are devoted Sikh converts. He has a strong identity, and one boy from school even copied him wearing a patka.
When this policy is overturned, and it will be, it ought to be done very publically. Doing so will feed into the American narrative — a narrative that is in desperate need of nourishment.
“Twelve years ago, when I first started, it took me a little while to convince my colleagues, ‘Don’t give up because they have brain tumors,’” he said. “Now they all agree; now it’s nationally accepted.”
Members of “other religions” (a category that includes Sikhs, Wiccans and Unitarian Universalists) are also expected to continue growing.
"Why should we remember such a dark period of our history?" We must remember that period of our history because it is still our history.
'We had to follow him for around 200 metres before I was able to wrap my turban around his neck and pull him to safety. 'The dog was frightened, so I fed him some biscuits and let him go on his own.'
Singh’s story is quintessentially Canadian. His great-grandfather was one of the first Sikhs to arrive, in 1908. He grew up part of the only Sikh family in Brooks, Alta., and says hockey was a way that helped break down differences...
We ask for hope and strength, for remembrance and resilience, for commitments and promises to memorialize that dark dawn which hatched upon those pilgrims a crimson cacophony of military bombardments thirty years ago.
