Current Events
Look, No Bearskin!
Jatinderpal Singh Guards the Buckingham Palace
DAILY MAIL
This is the first picture of Buckingham Palace Guardsman Jatinderpal Singh Bhullar wearing his ceremonial uniform – with his turban!
Scots Guardsman Jatinderpal Singh will this week break a long tradition when he wears a turban adorned with a regimental cap badge on parade outside the Palace.
A
Facebook tribute page has been set up in his honour titled: "Guardsman Jatinderpal Singh Bhullar: A Credit to The Nation." It features pictures of him along with tributes and support from a whole range of people from across the United Kingdom and the world.
An entry from Jatinderpal himself reads: ‘I am very grateful for whoever set up this page, and may God be with u and every1 else who is liking this page and supporting me.’
The picture of him in his turban, red tunic and white buff belt was taken at Wellington Barracks in London’s Birdcage Walk, where he is based with colleagues from his regiment’s ceremonial company, known as F Company.
The buttons on his tunic are positioned in threes to represent the Scots Guards’ status as the third regiment in the Guards Division’s order of seniority.
His addition to this prestigious duty is considered essential to the regiment’s future, given the changing demographical picture of its recruiting heartlands. By 2018, it is expected that 25 per cent of the population in these areas will belong to ethnic minorities.
‘The regiment will cease to exist unless it can tap into this resource of potential soldiers in western Scotland and northern England,’ said a source.
‘The Scots Guards must welcome Bhullar and hope his success will encourage other Sikhs ... to enlist.
‘Bhullar is a hard-working soldier and has won a lot of respect. Nobody pretends this is an easy process for him and there are those who object on traditional grounds to him wearing a turban rather than a bearskin.
‘For them, it is regiment first and religion second and they cannot see beyond that.
‘Bhullar is expected on parade in a black turban adorned with a Scots Guards regimental cap badge early this week. Everyone at Wellington Barracks wishes him all the best.’
Jatinderpal’s family is delighted. His mother Gurbax Kaur, 48, from Slough, Berkshire, said: ‘Jatinderpal called around last Monday to show us some Army photos. My husband Surinderpal was thrilled and said he thought his son looked very striking in his uniform, holding a gun and wearing white gloves.
‘Jatinderpal wanted to join the Army because his grandfather had served in the First World War. We had family pictures of him in his uniform and Jatinderpal would love looking at them.
‘It was a great passion of Jatinderpal’s from a very young age, and he would say when he grew up he wanted to be in the Army and make his country proud of him.
‘We are very proud of him. He kept himself fit with boxing, weightlifting and going to the gym and was always on a strict diet. He is very strong.’
A Ministry of Defence spokeswoman said: ‘The Army takes great pride in its diversity and it is its long-term aim to be manned by personnel from all of the UK’s diverse communities. There are a number of Sikhs already in the Army who wear turbans when in uniform.’
December 11, 2012
Conversation about this article
1: R Singh (Surrey, British Columbia, Canada), December 11, 2012, 8:53 AM.
Jatinderpal Singh is doing the Sikh community proud.
2: Baldev Singh (Bradford, United Kingdom), December 12, 2012, 5:03 AM.
Great front cover photo featured in The Times here in UK.
3: Dr Pargat Singh (Nottingham, United Kingdom), December 12, 2012, 4:45 PM.
Jatinderpal Singh ji: well done on a fantastic achievement which makes the Sikh community proud both in the UK and abroad.
4: Jejiemder Singh (New York, United States), December 13, 2012, 5:17 PM.
Dear Jatinerpal, you have made us proud in the United States and all over the world. May Waheguru give you the strength to keep up the good work. Thanks to your family ... you make us all the more proud to be Sikh.


