Sunday, June 7, 2026
ADVT 
International

Awareness Campaign Increase Positive Perception About Sikhs In USA

IANS, 31 Aug, 2017 01:09 PM
    Since April, The Campaign Has Been Holding Grassroots Events In Gurdwaras Across The Us And Airing Ads And Presenting Sikhs As Neighbours And Proud Americans On Cnn & And Fox News Nationwide.
     
     
    A million-dollar Sikh awareness campaign to inform Americans about Sikhism has increased the positive perception about their religion, according to a recent survey. The month-long “We are Sikhs” ad campaign was launched by the non-profit organisation National Sikh Campaign on April 14 on the occasion of Vaisakhi, a holy day for the community.
     
     
    The survey was carried out in Fresno, California, where tens of thousands of Sikhs live and where violence towards Sikh Americans has been occurring repeatedly in the past few years, including two deaths in the recent months. The Fresno effort included grassroots events, television ads, digital ads and significant news coverage.
     
     
    Since April, the campaign has been holding grassroots events in Gurdwaras across the US and airing ads and presenting Sikhs as neighbours and proud Americans on CNN & and Fox News nationwide.
     
     
     
    The main goal of the USD 1.3 million campaign was to get the information out to Americans across the nation about who Sikhs are, their belief in equality, respect for women and all religions and that Sikhism is the fifth largest religion.
     
     
    According to the survey, 59 per cent of Fresno residents – a clear majority – say they know at least something about Sikhs who live in America.
    Sixty-eight per cent saw Sikhs as good neighbours and 64 per cent saw Sikhs as generous and kind.
     
     
    The proportion of residents who saw the ads are nearly twice as likely to say they know at least something about Sikhs who live in America (78 per cent) than those who did not see the ads (40 per cent), it said.
     
     
    As per the survey results, 57 per cent who saw the ads are also more likely to associate a bearded man wearing a turban with Sikhism, while 67 per cent of Fresno residents who saw the Sikh ads believe that Sikhs believe in equality and respect for all people.
     
     
     
    And 60 per cent of Fresno residents that saw the Sikhs ad believe Sikhs have American values. “Despite tense race relations and an extremely polarised political environment, the We Are Sikhs campaign has been able to make headway in creating awareness of Sikh Americans, who can commonly be identified by their turbans and beards,” said Geoff Garin, president of Hart Research Associates.
     
     
    “This effort is a testament to the Sikh community’s commitment to reaching out to people of all faiths to help them recognise that we all have shared values, and that is a ray of hope that proves that understanding can bring people of all walks of life together,” he said.
     
     
    In the years since the 9/11 terror attacks, Sikhs remain more likely to be targeted in cases of profiling, bigotry and backlash than the average American.
     
    In July, two Sikh Americans were killed in two separate incidents in one week in California.
     
    In March, a 39-year-old Sikh man was shot in the arm outside his home in Kent, Washington, by a partially-masked gunman who shouted “go back to your own country”.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Woman, Newborn Stranded In US After Husband Dies, Sushma Swaraj Offers Help

    Woman, Newborn Stranded In US After Husband Dies, Sushma Swaraj Offers Help
    An Indian woman in the US who gave birth to a baby girl few days ago, weeks after her husband died of a heart attack has been assured by External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj of all possible help.

    Woman, Newborn Stranded In US After Husband Dies, Sushma Swaraj Offers Help

    Back To The Shadows: Trump Win Has Hundreds Of Thousands Worried They Must Hide

    Back To The Shadows: Trump Win Has Hundreds Of Thousands Worried They Must Hide
    WASHINGTON — A feeling of dread is rippling through one particular group in the United States, as hundreds of thousands of young people fear they might have to hide in society's shadows during a Donald Trump presidency.

    Back To The Shadows: Trump Win Has Hundreds Of Thousands Worried They Must Hide

    Massive Theft Of Ontario's Casino Rama Data Sparks Proposed Class Action

    Massive Theft Of Ontario's Casino Rama Data Sparks Proposed Class Action
    TORONTO — Class-action lawyers wasted little time Friday in jumping on word of a cyberattack on an Ontario casino in which sensitive information was stolen.

    Massive Theft Of Ontario's Casino Rama Data Sparks Proposed Class Action

    Indian-Origin 'Flash Crash' Trader Navinder Singh Sarao Pleads Guilty In US Court

    Indian-Origin 'Flash Crash' Trader Navinder Singh Sarao Pleads Guilty In US Court
    An Indian-origin futures trader, who was extradited to the US after being arrested in the UK for his alleged role in the 2010 Wall Street "flash crash" which wiped nearly USD 1 trillion off the value of American shares in minutes, has pleaded guilty in a court in Chicago.

    Indian-Origin 'Flash Crash' Trader Navinder Singh Sarao Pleads Guilty In US Court

    British Prime Minister Theresa May Criticised At Home For Her 'Shambolic' India Visit

    Describing as "shambolic" British Prime Minister Theresa May's just-concluded visit to India, former Liberal Democrats leader Paddy Ashdown today criticised her hardline stance on immigration as "damaging" to UK's economy.

    British Prime Minister Theresa May Criticised At Home For Her 'Shambolic' India Visit

    Remembering India's 1.5 Lakh Fallen Soldiers in World War I

    Remembering India's 1.5 Lakh Fallen Soldiers in World War I
    World leaders gather in Belgium on Friday to mark the 98th anniversary of the end of World War I in which 1.5 lakh Indian soldiers participated as part of the largest volunteer army in the world.

    Remembering India's 1.5 Lakh Fallen Soldiers in World War I