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Above: Gursimran Kaur chats with community elders.

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A New Generation Enters Gurdwara Management

by ROBERT MATAS

 

Nineteen-year-old Gursimran Kaur puts gender equality and fighting domestic violence at the top of her agenda as a new member of the management committee at one of the largest Sikh gurdwaras in North America.

She and two other women in a youth slate of 18 won a decisive victory in their election to the management of the Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara in Surrey, B.C., promising to protect tradition and the Sikh Code of Conduct.

The slate defeated community leaders who have run the institution since the mid-1990s.

Born in the neighbourhood of The Darbar Sahib in Punjab - popularly known as The Golden Temple - Sikh's holiest shrine, Gursimran Kaur said Monday her stand on behalf of women's rights is grounded in the centuries-old traditions. "In our religion, the first guru told us equality for women is very important because she is the one who creates the whole world, she is the creator," she said.

Throughout the campaign, Gursimran Kaur, a Simon Fraser University student majoring in mathematics, received phone calls from women saying the gurdwara needed advocates for women's rights. She quickly realized this would be her role.

Other women "would raise their voice through me," she said.

The victory of religious Sikh youth with progressive ideas reflects a significant shift in the community, holding out the promise of recasting the image of the turbaned Sikh in B.C. The official returns, signed by independent chief returning officer Ron Laufer, show that the 18 youth slate members each received support of around two-thirds of the 21,188 ballots cast in the election.

The newly elected management committee members are mostly too young to have played any role in issues within the Sikh community in recent years. Most were born and grew up in Canada, although Gursimran Kaur, who lives with her parents, came to Canada when she was four.

"This is a movement to address the needs of Canadian-born youth," Sukhminder Singh Virk, another member of the youth slate, said in an interview. The gurdwara needs "a better connect with this demographic," said Mr. Virk, a 26-year old who just received his Bachelor's in Law degree.

The youth slate, who are mostly in their 30s, ran on a two-pronged platform. They advocate a return to traditional religious observance, and an expansion of gurdwara programs mostly to respond to the needs of young families and youth. They promise better maintenance of the buildings and tighter management of finances.

They plan to develop programs to combat drug use and gang violence, and hold workshops on Sikh scripture and practices in English to appeal to the younger generation. Their platform also includes new community services programs at the gurdwara. Long range plans call for a safe-house for women.

The youth slate's campaign looked like a page torn from mainstream politics, with a Facebook site and Twitter messaging. They organized phone banks to contact voters in the days leading up to the election; they had 10 buses bringing temple members to the poll to vote. Despite pouring rain, some members waited more than 90 minutes to cast their ballots. The lineup stretched close to a kilometre at one point.

The incumbent slate of moderates were, on average, about 20 years older. Paul Gill, an active supporter of the opposing slate's candidate for president, Harjinder Singh Cheema, said their slate also brought voters to the poll. However their supporters "changed their mind" in the ballot booth and voted for the youth slate, he said.

"Many people have [joined] the gurdwara in the past five to seven years," he added. "They do not realize what has happened in the past."

The opposing slate was undermined by this open approach to the membership. "Those that support ... [us] ... are not that committed. They are like floating on the edge and do not have strong allegiance to either side," he said. "Some people say, we can change now and we can change again in three years ... we have to regroup and wait for another day."

For Gursimran Kaur, the introduction of workshops on violence against women and on women's rights is now her top priority.

"Domestic violence is one of the biggest issues in our community," she said. "No matter if they are older or younger or kids, they will ... learn how to live their life and what rights they have. We're going for women's rights first."

 

[This piece is edited from the original which first appeared in the Globe & Mail.]

November 17, 2009

Conversation about this article

1: Natalee Singh (Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada), November 17, 2009, 11:48 AM.

Congratulations to the Sikh Youth Slate! This is what we have been waiting for ... finally the Sikhs of British Columbia have made their voice heard ... and a new generation of Sikhs bring change and unity to the local Sikh community. Well done and best wishes ... may Waheguru be with you always and guide you along the way!

2: Irvinder Singh Babra (Brantford, Ontario, Canada), November 17, 2009, 12:26 PM.

Very good news from the Vancouver Sikhs after such a long time, that new, young members have taken over the gurdwara management in Surrey, British Columbia. It's the beginning of a new, brilliant era and the new committee must take along others also, those who were defeated and those who have been the founders, to manage the gurdwara affairs in a proper way. Well done. Chardi kalaa.

3: Simran (Kamloops, British Columbia, Canada), November 17, 2009, 11:02 PM.

Did they defeat the party whose president was caught driving 'under the influence'? I hope this is the start of good things to come.

4: Jessie Singh Parmar (Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada), November 21, 2009, 6:51 PM.

We are proud of you, sister. Keep up the good work. The Sikh Nation is looking up to you for leadership.

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