Friday, May 17, 2024
ADVT 
International

Sikh Community May Have To Evolve And Adapt, Says Singapore Professor

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 Nov, 2019 09:05 PM

    Sikh community institutions, organisations and gurdwaras which had traditionally defined Sikh culture may have to evolve and adapt, according to a Singapore Professor.


    “They will find it increasingly more challenging to control and shape the narrative and markers of Sikh identity,” said Prof Tan Tai Yong, President of Yale-National University of Singapore College.


    Tan, a Chinese-origin Singaporean, has studied Singapore Sikh community as an undergraduate and authored a book on the community in 1986.


    “The question is: how to create spaces for a diversity of voices and new perspectives on how Sikh identities can be negotiated,” said Prof Tan at a lecture held on Saturday as a part of the larger celebrations here for the 550th birth anniversary celebrations of the Sikhism founder Guru Nanak Dev.


    Engagement with the youths, with their different worldviews and priorities, will be the major challenge, according to Prof Tan.


    “The key is to get them (Sikh youths) interested and take some form of ownership in the preservation of Sikh religion, traditions and culture,” he pointed out.


    They may want to do so in certain ways that may cause discomfort. For instance, more could be done to acknowledge the arts and creative fields as much as the Sikh community has acknowledged and supported successes in politics, business and other professional fields, he explained.


    “As much as gurdwaras and community institutions play important roles in the shaping of Sikh identity, so too can film, art and fiction created by Punjabi Sikhs,” elaborated Prof Tan on how the community could work on maintaining its identity.


    Embracing the possibilities offered by outlets of creative expression can help expand the historical imagination of younger Sikhs, suggested the Chinese origin professor in multi-racial Singapore.


    Cultivating in the Sikh youths the consciousness based on core beliefs and values, while allowing space for them to engage (sometimes critically) and adapt to the contexts and circumstances of their everyday lives may be the surest way of ensuring that “Sikhism and the Sikhi will continue to thrive in Singapore,” he suggested.


    The definition and framing of Sikh identities in Singapore, as with similar communities all over the world, will inevitably face contestations because of changing social cultural environments, Tan said.


    The Singapore Sikh Community Lecture Series, held on Saturday, is an initiative by the Singapore Khalsa Association, one of the 10 Sikh institutions along with seven gurdwaras as well as welfare body and Punjabi/Sikh education foundation.


    Prof Tan described the Singapore’s Sikh community of 12,000 as a “minority within a minority” in a multiracial population of 5.64 million.


    Historian records that 165 Sikhs arrived at the island (of Singapore) from the British Indian province of the Punjab to form the backbone of a new police contingent in 1881.


    The community has since then prospered and has been leading participants in the public and private sectors with leadership positions.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    53-Yr-Old Indian-American Techie Killed 4 Relatives Within 1 Week

    An Indian-American man, who is facing charges for the murder of four of his relatives, killed them in a span of one week, according to court documents.    

    53-Yr-Old Indian-American Techie Killed 4 Relatives Within 1 Week

    900K Troops In Kashmir To Terrorise 8M People: Imran Khan

    Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan on Friday again criticised Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi for thinking he could "get his agenda of annexation" by using force to silence Kashmiris.

    900K Troops In Kashmir To Terrorise 8M People: Imran Khan

    FATF Retains Pakistan In Grey List; Warns Of Action

    The Paris-based Financial Action Task Force (FATF) gave the warning to Pakistan at its five-day plenary which concluded here on Friday while deciding to again put the country on the ‘Grey List’.

    FATF Retains Pakistan In Grey List; Warns Of Action

    3 Arrested For Duping Us Customers By Impersonating Microsoft Officials

    Three men were arrested for allegedly duping US-based customers through a call centre in the city’s Topsia area by impersonating officials of tech giant Microsoft, police said on Friday.  

    3 Arrested For Duping Us Customers By Impersonating Microsoft Officials

    Pakistan Man Sentenced To 5 Years In Jail For Blasphemous Facebook

    Pakistan Man Sentenced To 5 Years In Jail For Blasphemous Facebook
    The special court for cybercrime sentenced Sajid Ali, an active member of the Shia sect after he was charged for posting "sacrilegious, blasphemous and derogatory" material on Facebook in 2017.  

    Pakistan Man Sentenced To 5 Years In Jail For Blasphemous Facebook

    H1B Visa Norms Tightened, Indian Techies Explore Illegal Routes To Enter US

    H1B Visa Norms Tightened, Indian Techies Explore Illegal Routes To Enter US
    On Friday, Mexican immigration authorities deported 311 Indians -- 310 men and one woman - who reached New Delhi on Friday evening, which is the largest ever deportation in the Mexican history of the trans-Atlantic deportation by air.    

    H1B Visa Norms Tightened, Indian Techies Explore Illegal Routes To Enter US