Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

Paldi, BC, The Oldest Sikh Settlement In Canada Falls On Bad Days

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Jan, 2019 01:16 AM

    Paldi, the first Sikh enclave of any kind in Canada named after its founder Mayo Singh's native village in Hoshiarpur district of Punjab, has fallen on bad days and has lost its sheen as the oldest Sikh settlement and a home to many Asians.


    This once bustling British Columbian town was a testimony to the entrepreneurship and resilience of a Sikh Mayo Singh-originally named Maiya Singh --- and an epitome of Punjabis' contribution towards British Columbia's culture and economy.


    Mayo Singh was a Minhas Rajput Sikh hailing from Paldi village of Hoshiarpur district in Punjab.

    Since, no one from the original Punjabi settlers or their families except for a few members of Mayo Singh's family live in this erstwhile 'Mini Punjab' of British Columbia, it was more or less called as the 'Ghost Town' of Duncan which was brimming to the full with life till 1973-74.


    Paldi was a name that evoked memories of good old days of logging in the BC and was a Sikh hamlet where Mayo Singh had helped more than 1,500 Punjabis, Sikhs and Chinese to settle down and be part of the then thriving lumber industry.


    Mayo Singh had intially immigrated from Punjab to San Francisco in the USA in 1906. From there, he migrated to the Vancouver Island at a time when Canada's racially discriminatory immigration laws did not allow Asian women to enter the country.


    Initially, he worked hard in the local Fernridge mill till it closed down in 1912 and then set up his own lumber mill in a joint venture with fellow Punjabis and other co-workers, who had preferred to stay put at the place even after the closure of the mill where they were earning their livelihood.


    Gradually, he was not only able to run the lumber mill, but also founded a town and named it after his hometown, Paldi in Hoshiarpur. A school was also set up in this distinctive Punjabi hamlet for children of Punjabi workers. The first gurdwara there was opened by the Punjabi settlers in Paldi in 1917 and it was renovated in 1928. Now, the gurdwara stands as a major landmark of Paldi where a number of tourists keep visiting.


    Though, the town has lost the golden sheen of its glorious past, the Sikhs of British Columbia were striving to preserve the old culture and the gurdwara in more than one ways.


    Interestingly, a 'Jor Mela' is organised every July by them to perpetuate the memory of a town which was symbol of hard work and mettle of the Punjabi community.


    "Mayo Singh was known as a 'Santa Claus' among jobless Punjabis for he gave work to whosoever landed in the BC from Punjab and who had no work at his hands," said Jaswant Deed, well-known Punjabi writer and former Assistant Director of Doordarshan, Jalandhar.


    Deed had spent days in Paldi and in gurdwara situated there and has come out with a documentary film on Paldi. The documentary, according to him, will be released during the forthcoming'Jor Mela' of Paldi in July.


    He said none except only a few family members of Mayo Singh were living in Paldi these days. "Inhabitants of Paldi and their next generations moved to other places in search of greener pastures."


    Deed has also interviewed Mayo Singh's family members, including his daughter-in-law Joan Mayo who has also authored a book "Paldi Remembered" to help preserve the local history of Paldi. The book keeps hanging in the gurdwara and evokes interest of visiting tourists.


    Chatarjit Singh Parmar, a businessman running an Indian restaurant in Naniamo, a small town situated at about 20 km from Paldi. A large number of Punjabis were expected to converge from all over the BC and other parts of Canada to refresh the cherished memories of Paldi and its hard-working Punjabi pioneers of logging industry.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Hydro To Be Restored To Vancouver Island Customers By Thursday Night: Bc Hydro

    Hydro To Be Restored To Vancouver Island Customers By Thursday Night: Bc Hydro
    BC Hydro says about 4,000 customers still have no lights, down from roughly 7,000 customers early on Boxing Day.

    Hydro To Be Restored To Vancouver Island Customers By Thursday Night: Bc Hydro

    Police Chief Calls 2018, With 96 Homicides So Far, A 'Unique' Year For Toronto

    Mark Saunders said officers had recovered 514 handguns so far in 2018 — or 222 more than in 2017 — and the number of homicides caused by shootings had gone up by nearly 30 per cent.

    Police Chief Calls 2018, With 96 Homicides So Far, A 'Unique' Year For Toronto

    How Long Can It Go? Resilient Economy Enters 2019 With Signs Of Weakness

    How Long Can It Go? Resilient Economy Enters 2019 With Signs Of Weakness
    Through much of 2018, Canada's unemployment rate hovered near a 40-year low and job-creation remained strong as the evidence pointed to an economy going at close to full tilt.

    How Long Can It Go? Resilient Economy Enters 2019 With Signs Of Weakness

    Can The Liberals Take All The Credit For Economic And Jobs Gains?

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau decided the end of 2018 was a good time to look back at the economic and jobs gains since he took office. "We took" low growth and sent it higher, he said. 

    Can The Liberals Take All The Credit For Economic And Jobs Gains?

    Maxime Bernier Challenges Quebec Political Orthodoxy With New Party

    The host barely contained a smirk as he accused Bernier of wanting to shove a pipeline "down the throats" of Quebecers. "At the end of the day," Bernier replied, "the federal government has the right to approve a project or not."

    Maxime Bernier Challenges Quebec Political Orthodoxy With New Party

    'I Lost Everything': Winnipeg Teacher In Lap-Dance Video Shares Story Years Later

    Chrystie Fitchner knows she made a stupid mistake, a one-minute mistake. And she feels she's paid enough for it over the last eight years.    

    'I Lost Everything': Winnipeg Teacher In Lap-Dance Video Shares Story Years Later