• Welcome to all New Sikh Philosophy Network Forums!
    Explore Sikh Sikhi Sikhism...
    Sign up Log in

World A Point Of Light

spnadmin

1947-2014 (Archived)
SPNer
Jun 17, 2004
14,500
19,219
Point of light
shim.gif
shim.gif
shim.gif
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Amid the seemingly unremitting gloom that engulfs as daily it is sometimes hard to discern hope but hope there is and today it is the tiny Sikh community that provides it. Sikhs are one of our smallest minorities but the ripping asunder that was Partition means that many of their holiest shrines are on 'our' side of the border whereas the bulk of Sikhs live on the other Indianside. They are a minority within the Indian population as well, perhaps two or three per cent, which is no impediment to one of their number becoming president, both unthinkable and constitutionally impossible here in the Land of the Pure.

Over 200 Sikh yatrees (pilgrims) have just returned home and declared themselves well-satisfied by the welcome and the protocol they received here, their sense of feeling secure in a country currently in the throes of a significant disturbance in the security environment, and their pleasure at the way their shrines and monuments have been preserved. Hospitality exceeded their expectations and they were quick to dispel rumours that their holy places had been neglected by our government. Sikh shrines have stood on the land which is now Pakistan for centuries and will stand for centuries to come. They are as much a part of our heritage as they are of the Sikhs. The Sikhs have gone home happy and we will welcome them again next year. We should perhaps spend a few thoughtful moments pondering why it is that we can welcome two hundred Sikhs as guests; but have difficulty living with the three or four million Christians, Hindus Sikhs and Buddhists who live within our own borders.
 
Feb 19, 2007
494
888
75
Delhi India
The Pakistanis behaviour is quite anomalous. They are gregarious and hospitable to the extreme. Go as visitor to Pakistan and their treatment is unbelievably warm. you will be treated like long lost bosom friend and chaperoned around. Go abroad and fellow Indians and even Sikhs will greet you with a cold stare but a Pakistani as soon as he spots a visible Indian such as a Sikh will give him a bear hug and offer all sorts of help.

Many of their leaders and ex leaders (especially Musharraf) gladly take part in Indian talk shows on popular channels and charmingly hold their own in front of a hostile crowd. No Indian has been able hold a candle to them.

But while doing all this they are also quite capable of planning and having something nefarious up their sleeve!
 

Astroboy

ਨਾਮ ਤੇਰੇ ਕੀ ਜੋਤਿ ਲਗਾਈ (Previously namjap)
Writer
SPNer
Jul 14, 2007
4,576
1,609
First Sikh officer in Pakistan Army

From SikhiWiki



GC Harcharn Singh wearing turban as required by his Sikh faith


Harcharan Singh 19, of Nankana Sahib is the first Pakistani Sikh in the country’s 58-year history who has been commissioned in the Pakistan Army as an officer. The minorities in Pakistan are allowed to sit in all examinations, including the one conducted by Inter Services Selection Board (ISSB), but neither a Hindu nor a Sikh had ever been selected for army service since the country’s inception. Though, many Christians have served in the army.
Harcharan was skeptical in 2007 as he participated in the ISSB’s preliminary tests, thinking that such examinations were not meant for (Sikhs) as he could not get through the initial phase last year. “This year, I got through the preliminary phase and appeared in the ISSB examination. However, I was mentally prepared to settle for admission in BA (Architecture) in the National College of Arts”.
“It was the happiest moment of my life when I came to know about my selection in the army. I am privileged to have this honour which none of my predecessors could ever achieve,” Harcharan told Dawn.
Harcharan, who passed his FSc (pre-engineering) in 2004 with 726 marks, wants the government to open the doors for his community to the law enforcement agencies as well.
Harcharan passed his matriculation from the Government Gurunanak High School, Nankana Sahib, with 677 marks. He says that his school should be equipped with a modern laboratory and a competent teaching staff.



He says when his fellow Sikhs in Nankana Sahib learned about his selection in the army they really felt proud of him. It has also changed their perception. Now they believe that young Sikhs have a fair chance to join the country’s most prestigious institutions.

GC Harcharn Singh in the Drill Square of PMA


Having a younger brother and three elder sisters, he wants his brother to follow suit. He says after the death of his father, a shopkeeper, some seven years ago, the credit of their education goes to his mother. “My mother wants me to earn a good name for the country.”
He says that his family migrated to the Northern Areas at the time of partition and in 1970s shifted to Nankana Sahib.
The day of the parade

It was the clear, bright sunny morning of the passing out parade day. A morale boosting day, a mood elevator morning and the dream of every cadet to be material and into reality. As the blood, of the cadets - 'Passing Out', started to rush faster and faster. Their chests seemed to swell even higher than the Himalayas, as their hearts pounded with pride and passion. The smartly turned out cadets marched in, with traditional zeal, to the tunes of the military band.
For the next 90 minutes or so, the audience was mesmerized by the perfect drill movements of the cadets as periodic applause broke the gaze of most of them. Attending such a parade comes as a pleasant surprise for most people.
However, on that bright morning, there was yet another surprise for many who were occupying the enclosure next to cadets of first & second terms who were not part of the parade. It was the sight of a young cadet wearing a turban with a green stripe on both sides instead of the usual beret, which 'til that moment had been the standard head covering always worn by cadets. And another noticeable differance was that he was the only and also, undoubtably, the first cadet to graduate sporting a beard and moustache among the crowd of clean shaven cadets.
Surely, the young boy was a Sikh cadet and sitting in Pakistan's Military Academy Kakul. To the surprise of most of those attending that day, there was the first Sikh Gentleman Cadet of Pakistan's Army, Harcharan Singh.
Harcharan Singh was born and raised in the same village, Nankana Sahib, as Guru Nanak Dev the founder of the Sikh religion. The village, then called Talwandi, is situated 280 km south of Islamabad.
At present, Harcharan Singh is being trained in the 2nd term of the 116th PMA Long Course.

GC Harcharn Singh with Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz


Ater meeting the Prime Minister upon his arrival at the academy during the passing out, Harcharan Singh said, while talking to the media, that he is proud of being a Pakistani and in the Pakistan Army. While expressing his extreme excitement on being a part of this dignified institution, he said that the Sikh youth settled in Pakistan should have joined this institution a long time ago. Regarding his future plan, he said with great zeal that being a Sikh, it is my burning desire to embrace Martyrdom. He told that initially his mother was little reluctant upon his induction in the Pak army as he is her eldest son but now his presence in the Pak Army brings her the greatest honour and pride. He told his fellow cadets once, “It is my great ambition to be a martyr while defending the mother-land”.
Gentleman cadet Harcharan Singh regularly informs his younger brother about his activities in this distinguished institution. He was first admitted in National Arts College but ended up in PMA to fulfill his dream of becoming an officer in the Pak Army.
His instructors and fellow cadets view Harcharan Singh's companionship with appreciation as he is a good friend and a nice companion. Many Christian and Parsi officers and Jawans are already serving in Pakistan's Army. Harcharan Singh is the first Sikh officer to take a commission in the Pak Army.
 

❤️ CLICK HERE TO JOIN SPN MOBILE PLATFORM

Top