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Numbers Speak Louder Than Words:
Sikhs In America

ANTONIA BLUMBERG

 

 

 

With more than 150 years of history in the United States, Sikh-Americans are still highly misunderstood.

Regularly subjected to discrimination and occasionally even the targets of hate crimes, often because of mistaken-identity, Sikhs number as a million in the United States. There are an estimated 30 million Sikhs worldwide, making their tradition one of the largest organized religions on the globe.

Sikhism is a monotheistic faith that teaches equality, honesty and the importance of good acts over rituals, among many other beliefs. However, Sikh-Americans have become the targets of hate and violence, especially in the years following the September 11 tragedy.

A 2014 study commissioned by the National Sikh Campaign (NSC) and conducted by Hart Research Associates aimed to show how Americans view Sikhs today, analyzing date from three focus groups consisting of white Americans with mixed levels of education and a nationwide survey of 1,144 non-Asian Americans.

The results are discouraging but demonstrate the effect even a small amount of education can have in raising tolerance.

The numbers below all derive from the study, "Sikhism in the U.S.: What Americans Know and Need to Know."

 

60

The percentage of Americans who admit to knowing nothing at all about Sikh Americans, compared to 76 percent who say they know at least something about Muslim-Americans and 86 percent who know something about Jewish-Americans.


11

The percentage of Americans who have a close friend or acquaintance who is Sikh, while just 31 percent have seen or interacted with a Sikh person at all.


16-34

The age range of Americans who are most likely to know Sikh-Americans personally or have at least some knowledge of the faith.


11

The percentage of Americans who associate the image of a turbaned man with Sikhism, compared to 20 percent who assume he is Muslim.


17

The percentage of Americans who think they have much in common with a Sikh woman in a turban, compared to 30 percent who feel they have something in common a Sikh woman with long hair and no turban.


1 in 10

The number of Americans who, after viewing images of Sikh-Americans, offered the reaction that “they are human beings just like me and they deserve respect.”


2 in 3

The number of Americans who rate their feelings as highly favorable to a description of Sikhism and Sikh history in America.


17.5

The increase in percentage points who report “warm” feeling toward Sikh Americans after taking the survey.


47

The increase in percentage points of women who believe Sikh-Americans hold American values after taking the survey. Americans age 65 and older also increased in that category by 45 percentage points.


[Courtesy: The Huffington Post]
January 27, 2015
 

Conversation about this article

1: Gurjender Singh (Maryland, USA ), January 27, 2015, 12:27 PM.

After more than a century in USA, this survey shows that we are wasting our resources and time on mere nagar kirtans every year. We need to take part more in national activities such as the Rose Parade (thanks for doing it for the first time this year), Fourth of July parades, etc. And much, much more. In the mainstream arena ... and in the English language!

2: Jaswinder Singh (Brier, Washington, USA), January 28, 2015, 10:54 AM.

I agree with Gurjender Singh ji. Nagar kirtans are a pure waste of time and money, and quite possibly even create a negative image of the community. I hope we all can donate more money toward our organizations, working at a national level, so that they can spread the word about Sikhi more effectively.

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Sikhs In America"









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