Sunday, June 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canadian Sikhs Blame Conversions, Drugs For Declining Population

The Canadian Press, 31 Aug, 2015 11:57 AM
    Sikh leaders in North America blame conversions, drugs and migration for the decline in the growth rate of Sikh population in India from 1.9 percent to 1.7 percent as per the 2011 census.
     
    "While Punjab leaders are promoting their family businesses, the youth has sunk in drugs. So what do you expect from drug addicts?" asked Toronto-based Sikh leader Nachhattar Singh Chohan.
     
    Chohan, who heads the Indian Trucking Association in Canada, said: "Yes, migration from Punjab to the West is one reason. But the bigger factor is that people are abandoning Sikhism and joining various 'deras' in Punjab. The SGPC has failed the Sikhs."
     
    Vancouver-based community activist Balwant Sanghera said: "First and foremost reason for declinign Sikh population is the migration from Punjab to the West. Second, there is growing awareness to have smaller families."
     
    Shrinking land holdings in Punjab are also forcing people to have fewer children to avoid further division of land among siblings.
     
    "Finally, drugs are taking their toll on the Punjab youth. The drugs are reported to be causing impotence amongst boys, resulting in fewer births," Sanghera told IANS.
     
     
    Los Angeles-based Bhai Satpal Singh Kohli, the Ambassador of Sikh Dharma in Western Hemisphere, said the Sikh population is declining because people are "not adhering to the Sikh code of conduct and leaving Sikhism to join various 'deras' due to poor leadership and discrimination against Dalits and poor Sikhs in Punjab."
     
    He too said Sikhs were migrating for better opportunities. "Moreover, the trend is that Sikhs are increasingly marrying out of their religion. So the majority of their children now end up not being Sikhs."
     
    Kohli welcomes the directive of the Akal Takht jathedar to each Sikh family to have four children. "But more importantly, Sikhs need not select family planning for a male child and stop female foeticide."
     
    Yuba City-based Jasbir Kang blames the destruction of the economy of rural Punjab for the migration of Sikhs to foreign lands. 
     
     
    "Events and after-affects of 1984 had serious impact on the Sikh psyche... Sikhs never committed suicides until the last two decades. People have lost their pride and self-respect," Kang told IANS.
     
    Kang said Sikhs are converting to other religions as the clergy has failed to address the "issues of caste divisions, drug abuse and failure the issues of gender gap. 
     
    "If moms lose respect for faith, then children will not follow it either. We are at a crossroads."
     
    Washington-based Sikh leader Rajwant Singh, who heads the Sikh Council on Religion and Education, said: "The turbulence of the 80s impacted average Sikh family dependent on agrarian economy. 
     
    "Political mishandling of economic and social issues, and militancy in the 80s and its suppression by security forces added to the woes of Punjab. These have had a direct impact on the average Sikh family."
     
    Singh says the lack of opportunities have also pushed young Sikhs to try their luck elsewhere in the world, even if it means selling off valuable assets and facing migratory restrictions in many Western countries.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Refugee Who Died In Immigration Custody Ided As Somali With Mental Health Issues

    Refugee Who Died In Immigration Custody Ided As Somali With Mental Health Issues
    A man who died last week under mysterious circumstances while detained by Canadian immigration authorities has been identified as a mentally ill Somali refugee who had spent three years in prison with little prospect for release.

    Refugee Who Died In Immigration Custody Ided As Somali With Mental Health Issues

    Cyprus Trial Set For Lebanese-canadian Suspect In Large Ammonium Nitrate Seizure

    Cyprus Trial Set For Lebanese-canadian Suspect In Large Ammonium Nitrate Seizure
    NICOSIA, Cyprus — Cyprus police say a trial date has been set for a Lebanese-Canadian man who was arrested in connection with the seizure of more than five tons of a chemical compound that can be converted into an explosive.

    Cyprus Trial Set For Lebanese-canadian Suspect In Large Ammonium Nitrate Seizure

    RCMP To Release Update On Missing, Murdered Aboriginal Women

    RCMP To Release Update On Missing, Murdered Aboriginal Women
    The release follows an RCMP report released in May 2014 which found 1,181 police-recorded incidents of aboriginal women who disappeared or were killed between 1980 and 2012. 

    RCMP To Release Update On Missing, Murdered Aboriginal Women

    Patrick Brazeau Trial Resumes With Defence Cross-examination Of Key Witness

    Patrick Brazeau Trial Resumes With Defence Cross-examination Of Key Witness
    GATINEAU, Que. — Patrick Brazeau's defence lawyer is continuing his cross examination of the Crown's key witness today at the suspended senator's assault trial.

    Patrick Brazeau Trial Resumes With Defence Cross-examination Of Key Witness

    Senate Recommends Ottawa Use A 'light Touch' When Regulating Bitcoin

    Senate Recommends Ottawa Use A 'light Touch' When Regulating Bitcoin
    TORONTO — A report from Canada's Senate says Ottawa should use a "light touch" when considering any regulation of Bitcoin and other digital currencies, to avoid stifling the growth of these new technologies.

    Senate Recommends Ottawa Use A 'light Touch' When Regulating Bitcoin

    Hit And Run In Abbotsford: Police Seek Driver Who Left White Van After Injuring After 3 Pedestrians

    Hit And Run In Abbotsford: Police Seek Driver Who Left White Van After Injuring After 3 Pedestrians
    Two women and one man, all in their 40s, were struck by a white van at about 3 a.m. Friday at George Ferguson Way and Gladwin Road

    Hit And Run In Abbotsford: Police Seek Driver Who Left White Van After Injuring After 3 Pedestrians