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Genocides Anonymous: Armenians and Sikhs

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  • Genocides Anonymous: Armenians and Sikhs

    The Langar Hall
    April 24 2009


    Genocidees Anonymous: Armenians and Sikhs

    Posted by Mehmaan (Guest) in Human Rights, world news on 04 24th, 2009
    Blogged: Amol Singh


    On the night of April 24, 1915, over 200 of Constantinople's Armenian
    intellectual and civic leaders were taken from their homes and boarded
    upon trains headed eastward toward the city of Ankara. What followed
    over the next few months would be a concerted, systematic Ottoman
    project meant to eradicate the Armenian identity. Millions of
    Armenians, depicted by the state as dangerous Russian conspirators and
    hazardous to the security of the Ottoman Empire, were uprooted from
    their homes and marched across the Turkish desert. What transpired
    over the course of that summer was the raping, pillaging, and
    butchering of over a million people. Though the Ottoman forces might
    have failed in the complete liquidation of a people, genocide served
    as a near consolation prize.

    As April 24th approaches, Armenians around the world will gather as
    they have for the past 90+ years and demand that the Turkish state
    take responsibility for its actions. This summer, as Sikhs also embark
    on projects to mark the events of 1984, it seems hard to escape the
    fact that we too, are becoming part of a global collective searching
    for some sort of acceptance of the atrocities that have been done to
    us. This sharing of spaces by the world's downtrodden is allowing for
    more nuanced perspectives of each atrocity. In this understanding, the
    1915 Armenian genocide becomes not a yearlong campaign to annihilate
    Armenia, but rather a set of events concurrent with a larger Ottoman
    decades- long campaign meant to undermine Armenian existence. In this
    sphere, Operation Blue Star becomes not a plan to rid Harimander Sahib
    of radicals hijacking the Sikh identity, but rather another incident
    in a set of systematic attacks on Sikh sovereignty by the Indian
    Center.

    In this mold, we are becoming participants in a unique Genocidees
    Anonymous of sorts, where the recognition of our tragedies becomes
    cast into a set of layered political demands.

    As a Sikh friend stated recently, `We're the Armenians looking for a
    genocide, the Palestinians looking for a home, and the Tibetans
    looking to practice our faith in the face of an intolerant
    government¦' This is nothing new for the quam. Our history can be
    marked by stages where relentless attacks on Sikh autonomy have forced
    us to assert and reassert our visions for social justice. The most
    remarkable part of these assertions has been the universalization of
    our demands for justice. Whether it was Guru Hargobind Ji rejecting
    release from Gwalior kila (jail) because freedom did not mean freedom
    if it those imprisoned alongside him would still languish while he
    left or Bhai Kanhaiya giving water to those mandated to annihilate
    anyone like him, a Sikh existence has meant an inherent demand for
    engagement with the world.

    As an undergraduate at what is considered to be a leading US
    university, the interpretation of Sikhi many students including myself
    have received through our work with the community, is an attack on
    anything that deals with any engagement with the world around us. It
    seems implausible to construct a vision of the world where we can
    become active practitioners of the Sarbat da Bhalla yearned for in
    ardaas, if we continue to view the world with utter and sheer
    contempt. Over the past year, Sikhs attempting to engage with their
    local communities have been likened to rapists and accused of
    prostitution for holding turban tying days by professors considered to
    be the voices of Sikh academia. We have been warned of associating
    with Goray (white) Sikhs because they are practitioners of a falsified
    version of Sikhi. Entire organizations have been critiqued and
    undermined for offering `lightweight models of Sikhi' without the
    presentation of any alternative.

    Any engagement they have had with the American populace at large has
    been deemed conciliatory and thus subversive and dangerous. At first
    glance, it seems easy to simply listen and subsequently ignore what we
    believe to be a confined understanding of Sikhi. Yet at the point
    where the collective investment of the Panth, through the work of
    entire curriculums and organizations can become so easily undermined
    by a terrified few, then we fear that the greater global challenges
    that we as Sikhs feel mandated to engage in are placed in jeopardy.

    A part of us still holds true to the conviction that the heroes of
    Sikh lore we grew up with would be immune to this disease of
    communalism. It seems almost nonsensical for us to think a Sikh
    history whereupon Guru Tegh Bahadhur doesn't faithfully march towards
    Chandi Chowk because he is protecting the right of religious
    expression, even if it is indirectly for the leaders of a faith who
    through caste, have mandated one of the world's most expansive forms
    of subjugation. I fail to believe that the forces of the Dal Khalsa
    would not march into Afghanistan if those taken were only Sikh
    women. Our history is not littered with heroes who served faithfully
    for an insular cause. Rather, we cherish those who looked at these
    artificial societal veneers and used pen and sword to shatter them
    beyond comprehension. To once again become the embodiment of what our
    ancestors were, and to adopt the tragedies of the faceless and
    powerless, we must learn to reject those within our panth who wish to
    narrowly define what it means to be Sikh. Sikhi, in my humble opinion,
    is not meant to be an expression of the insecurities toward the world
    of a few, but rather a space so special that it elicits a response
    that shakes the world's oppressors toward justice.

    http://thelangarhall.com/archives/2975
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