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Akal Takht
Jathedar, boldly endorsed the right of self-determination of
Sikhs in NY |
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New York’s 21st Vaisakhi Sikh
Day Parade successfully held on April 26 Invitee Akal
Takht Jathedar, Joginder Singh Vedanti, boldly endorsed
the right of self-determination of Sikhs for a democratic
buffer state of Khalistan in South Asia, at the NY parade
American
Sikhs support the defiant stand of Canadian Sikhs on the
issue of display of photographs of Sikh martyrs of
Khalistan on parades
Sikh
diaspora to launch a worldwide campaign to convince Canada
to boycott the 71 nation 2010 Commonwealth Games being
held in Delhi in which city over 10, 000 Sikhs were
murdered in a state-sponsored pogrom, in November 1984;and
to-date nobody has been found guilty
On a bright and
sunny Saturday, on April 26, 2008, downtown New Yorkers
saw the colorful 21st Vaisakhi Sikh Day Parade, marching
down Broadway, in Manhatten, which culminated in the
Madison Avenue Park, where distinguished invitee Akal
Takht Jathedar, Joginder Singh Vedanti, in his speech to
the enthusiastic crowd, endorsed the Sikh right of
self-determination to seek a democratic water/food-rich
buffer state of Khalistan in South Asia. A Sikh state
destined to act as a bridge of peace and commerce between
South and Central Asia.
The patriotic call
of Jathedar Vedanti was endorsed with repeated loud cheers
of ‘Long Live Khalistan’ (Khalistan Zindabad) by the over
30, 0000 Sikhs who had gathered in the Madison Avenue
Park, New York. Sikh-American men, women and children
dressed in colorful Punjabi clothes, living in the East
Coast Tri State area, participated enthusiastically in the
above mentioned New York parade. A number of beautiful
floats, also joined the parade depicting Sikh religion,
history, culture and memorabilia honoring Sikh martyrs who
have laid down their lives fighting for freedom against
the Indian occupation of the Sikh Homeland a la American
martyrs like Nathan Hale, whose dying words, (minutes
before he was hanged by the British on September 22,
1776), “I only regret that I have but one life to lose for
my country,” gained him immortality. Or like the thousands
of Americans prisoners who were tortured to death
(martyred) in the British prison ship HMS Jersey during
the revolutionary war or like Crispus Attucks, (a mulatto
with African and Native American ancestry) who is
remembered, in the United States, as the first martyr of
the American Revolution, who was murdered by British
soldiers, in the infamous Boston Massacre, on March 5,
1770. Other highlights of the New York parade included
demonstrations of Sikh Gatka and free food stalls serving
Sikh ‘langar’.
The New York
parade, also marked the 300th anniversary of the
installation of Guru Granth Sahib, as eternal Guru by the
tenth Guru Sri Gobind Singh Ji, in 1708. This New York
parade was organized, as it has been organized for over
two decades, by the New York Richmond Hill Sikh Cultural
Society and was supported by over fifty East Coast
(tri-state) Gurdwaras and Sikh Organizations like Sikhs
For Justice, United Sikhs, Dal Khalsa (USA) and Sikh Youth
of America. The long list of distinguished guests included
Akal Takht Jathedar Sirdar Joginder Singh Vedanti, Dr.
Amarjit Singh of Khalistan Affairs Center, Washington
D.C., Dr. Surjit Singh from Buffalo New York, and two
Sikh-Canadian members of Canada’s Parliament, Dr. Ruby
Dhalla (who represents Bramptom-Springdale) and Sirdar
Gurbaksh Singh Malhi who represents Bramalea-Gore-Malton
constituency in Canada.Member of Canadian Parliament
Gurbaksh Singh Malhi, in his Madison Avenue Park speech,
advised the meeting to involve American legislators
(Law-makers) in functions like New York’s annual Sikh Day
parade in future. Dr. Amarjit Singh in his speech
mentioned the 193 national flags flying outside the United
Nations building where the Khalistan flag, he said, will
soon join the flag of newly independent Kosovo.
The Akal Takht
Jathedar Joginder Singh Vedanti spoke next. Last
Saturday’s successful New York parade, held in true
American tradition of goodwill, freedom and happiness,
reminded the participants of the huge Vaisakhi parade
(attended by over a hundred thousand determined Canadian
Sikhs) held in Surrey, Canada, on April 12, 2008, under
the shadow and strain of a widespread anti-Sikh
disinformation and intimidation campaign. A media campaign
mounted by some ignorant, ill-informed, and bigoted
Canadian journalists (‘brain-washed’ probably by the
bigotry of the likes of one, Ms. Kim Bolan, a known
anti-Sikh ‘constipated journalist’) who has constantly
tried to demonize the peaceful Sikh-Canadian community by
distorting the truth in order to play on post 9/11
Canadian phobias. An example of her writing is a
Surrey-datelined report, dated March 28, 2008, on the
website of the Times Colonist, a Victoria B.C. based
newspaper, headlined, “Mounties claim veto power over Sikh
parade,” written by Kim Bolan, which claims that, “The
RCMP (Royal Canadian Mounted Police) plans to screen
floats in an annual Sikh parade to ensure terrorism and
political violence aren’t glorified,” as if Canada is Nazi
Germany and the peaceful, prosperous and upright three
quarter million-strong Sikh Canadian community will get
intimidated and stop honoring their martyrs in their
parades and Gurdwaras. To read Kim Bolan’s above mentioned
trashy drivel please click at the following links:
http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/news/
story.html?id=3b370a6c-af5a-4182-9c1d-2947fa481f1e
or
click at:
http://www.pluralism.org/news/article.php?id=19414
About a year ago, this column, dated
July 11, 2007, challenged the Vancouver-based Fraser
Institute for providing a stage for a hate-filled tirade,
by Kim Bolan, against 750,000 Sikh-Canadians in which she
tried to call for their disenfranchisement. It was
headlined, “Washington-based Khalistan Affairs Center
takes up the issue with the Vancouver-based Institute and
suggests an apology - Ottawa-based World Sikh Organization
sues CBC for its anti-Sikh documentary Samosa Politics.”
The apology never came despite the fact that the Fraser
Institute’s News Release, dated June 29, 2007, had become
a party to the following insane suggestion from Kim Bolan
to disenfranchise Canada’s Sikhs, which reads, “Change the
nomination rules around who can vote. That little thing
will reduce the extremists’ power and influence.”
The current
vicious campaign to demonize the peaceful and happy
Sikh-Canadian community, in that country’s media, was
obviously fathered (read financed) by Indian diplomatic
offices in Vancouver, Toronto and Ottawa and was started
in right earnest following an unfortunate, stupid and
vicious letter, addressed to the Amritsar-based Shiromani
Gurdwara Prabanthik Committee (SGPC), President, Avtar
Singh Makkar, in March 2008, by none other than
‘demoNcratic’ India’s weak, ‘Quizling’, Prime minister
Manmohan Singh a ‘Rent-a-Sikh babu’ who having been
defeated once in a general election has avoided general
elections like the plague. Mr. Manmohan Singh claimed in
his letter to the SGPC, which came out of thin air that,
“The (Indian) government and our agencies have credible
information of efforts being made by extremist groups to
revive militancy in Punjab. Remnants of Sikh rebel groups
abroad are helping attempts to revive an insurgency in
India’s northern state of Punjab.”
Shame on Manmohan
Singh! “He that is shameless is graceless,” wrote Thomas
Fuller M.D. (1654-1734) the great English writer and
compiler who probably wrote the line years ago with
spineless people like Indian PM Manmohan Singh in mind.
Till now, analysts/experts have been talking and writing
only of the dangers of cyber-terrorism to states and civil
societies. For the first time China, Khalistan’s North
Eastern neighbor, has experienced the lethal force of
orchestrated ‘Cyber Democracy’, when small bands of
internet savvy Tibetans, covertly financed by Indian
operatives, showed how the air waves and the world’s
attention can be monopolized, with small colorful
protests. There is a lesson in this for the three million
strong free and prosperous Sikh diaspora. India can be
made to regret it’s decision to hold the 2010 Commonwealth
games in Delhi, where every street and lane witnessed the
murder of over ten thousand innocent Sikh, men, women and
children in a state-sponsored pogrom, in November 1984,
ordered with a ‘wink and nod’ by none other than the then
Indian Prime Minister, Rajiv Gandhi. It does not behoove
Canada, a true democracy and a champion of Human Rights to
participate in the 2010 Commonwealth Games being held in
Delhi a city ‘painted red’ with the blood of ten thousand
innocent Sikhs whose relatives, nearly a quarter century
later, still cry for justice. Even the much trumpeted cash
compensation for the survivors of the November 1984
state-sponsored pogrom has become a scam. |
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