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asmlondon

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  1. The Sher Singh palace is in a pretty poor state and is difficult (if not impossible) to gain access to. As a previous commentator on this site just said, it is a victim of Punjabi officialdom and the bureaucracy seems to be paralysed with inaction becuase that is easier to do nothing than actually saving this building. You will know that there are precious few (if any) buildings from the period of Ranjit Singh that are left intact within East Punjab. These two stories illustrate the history and the importance of this building: http://www.punjabheritage.org/content/view/765/32/ http://www.punjabheritage.org/content/view/359/32/ The second building is the Qila Mubarak in Patiala. I visited this last in 2002 so it has been some years, but the building is truly one of the most important fortress palaces of the entire sub-continent. It also happens to be architecturally one of the very few truly Sikh buildings left in existance. MOst other truly Sikh forts have been destroyed pretty systematically over the years. It had been undergoing quite serious and very well funded restoration whilst Amrinder Singh was CM (not a huge surprise) but this stopped when the politics changed. I am not sure just how accessible it is now- perhaps someone else can let us all know. I have been inside the fortress a number of times and each time I have had to either lie, bribe or sneak my way in or use some personal connection to gain access. It's a scandalous situation where Punjabis are not given access to the most remarkable pieces of our heritage and we have to bribe or use political muscle to get into these places. I hope this helps. aman
  2. Firing this woman doesnt really solve the problem - in a sense the BBC has quickly washed its hands of the issue. The big issue is there there are still lots of people around the world who equate the turban with terrorism. This is not in the mind of ill-educated racist yobs but clearly even middle-class journalists like this woman. The BBC is one of the world's most influential news sources and they should (in my opinion) use this event to solve the underlying problem by: 1) sending this woman to meet Sikhs, learn about what we are and make a program about us, the turban and the issues we face from people like her. It would show that we are welcoming, normal and certainly not anything for her to fear. It woudl also be in the best principles of Sikhi. 2) commissioning serious programming on the issue of mistaken identity but also serious programming about Sikhs which is sorely lacking in the BBC schedules. Like I said, I think that the BBC have really washed their hands of this and they need use their influence to help cure the disease rather than simply deal with the symptom. Amandeep
  3. Great job - a fitting tribute. Amandeep
  4. Some of the personal effects of Bhai Maharaj Singh are in the British Library http://www.punjabheritage.org/material-her...tion-d1856.html
  5. curious_man thanks for posting this - I added a story on Punjab Heritage news with a very breif translation of the narrative voiceover http://www.punjabheritage.org/manuscripts/...of-neglect.html Amandeep
  6. The program was very poor. It was simply a wide ranging attack. The principle allegations were completely unsubstantiated. Allegations as serious as those presented were simply conjecture on conjecture. I have written to complain and asked them to present the evidence or withdraw that allegation. They also interviewed someone from the "Institute of Conflict Management in Delhi". I Googled it, this is an organisation set up by, and headed up by, KPS Gill. It was presented as if it were some kind of honest broker, but essentially it is a Punjab Police mouthpiece. A really disgraceful program aired on the day that 7 Muslims were actually convicted of preparing terrorist act. Instead of covering the actual threat the BBC are making up imaginary ones. Sanghera was a poor interviewee and did himself no favours; but I applaud him for standing up for himself and doing the interview in English. But I wonder if the program makers did that intentionally? I wonder if they asked Sanghera if he preferred to speak in Punjabi rather than English? interestingly they didn't embarrass Sohi by asking him to speak in English? Did they interview strong articulate voices from the Sikh Federation and choose to drop these as they didn't support their view? What ever your political views are I urge you all to make your voices heard on the BBC complaints website. Aman
  7. Please visit this video lecture from Author and Historian Parmjit Singh which includes a piece on the photograph that you have posted. This video lecture includes some fascinating details and facts about this photograph and the characters therein. You can forward to slide 26 but I woudl recomend that you watch the entire lecture which is stunningly illustrated. The second in the series of Punjab Heritage Lectures launches today. Parmjit Singh presents a “Picture of the Sikhs” a presentation on the photographic record of the last 150 years of Anglo Sikh History. The last one hundred and fifty years also coincide with the age of the development of photography. In 1849 on the eve of the second Anglo-Sikh was that ended the kingdom created by the legendry Maharaja Ranjit Singh, John McCosh, a surgeon in the British India army, took the first grainy shots of Sikhs and monuments of Lahore. Since then the history of the Sikhs has been played out in front of the camera’s lens. McCosh heralded the firs of the military photographers who went on to capture the Sikhs in the British army. Early Victorian photographs of the Sikhs highlight attitudes connected with the British presence in India, indicating both the power of photography as a colonial tool of classification and appropriation. a unique opportunity to view images from public collections including the National Army Museum, Imperial War Museum and the British Library. This lecture now accompanies Christy Campbell’s superb presentation on Maharaja Duleep Singh that was launched last month. Please visit www.punjabheritagelectures.org to view the lecture
  8. Freed, Another great posting with some really special pictures in that lot. I thought it was just my parents that used the term "Good maan di lallten" My understanding was that Goodmans Lanterns were a brand of matches (or possibly cigarettes!) that then entered common parlence aman
  9. It is worth looking at some of the recent interventions made by the custodians of the Darbar Sahib The electrification of the building and indeed the more recent cabling to support the broadcasts from the Darbar Sahib are positive but their implemetnation has been far from positive. PLease see the images below taken in 2006 by Taran Singh of how the electrification has been carried out. By looking at these I think we have a legitimate right to question very strongly the exact need for this intervention becuase there is no going back once they start. http://www.punjabheritage.org/material-her...emple-2704.html
  10. Friends The SGPC is now at an advanced level of planning to install air conditioning units in the Harimandir Sahib (Golden Temple). This move demands holes to be punched through the ancient walls of the structure. The sub-committee leading this plan has been influenced by a single political "VVIP" who is apparently visiting the site on a monthly basis and finds it uncomfortable. Please visit the story and leave your comments. http://www.punjabheritage.org/material-her...emple-2704.html The pressure applied by advocacy groups like Punjab Heritage News over the last few months on the authorities at Nanded have assured that the Ranjit Singh Baradari were conserved instead of destroyed. Please keep up the good work. Amandeep Madra
  11. http://www.punjabheritage.org/editorials--...estruction.html Reports are coming in from India that the historic Ramgharia Bunga in Hazur Sahib, Nanded is slated to be pulled down. This historical site linked to the Ramgharia Misl is one of the last of the great buildings related to Ranjit Singh in the region. It pre-dates the takht and was constructed with funds from the Ramgharia Sardars at Ranjit Singh's court to act as a place of safety and rest for visiting pilgrims. This historical site, with Ranjit Singh's own Baradari, is now in grave threat of being torn down, despite the wishes of the local community, sevadars and the Sikh clergy. These priceless Sikh buildings which have witnessed 150 years of history and are some of India's last surviving examples of Sikh architecture from the period of Sikh rule from Lahore are to be sacrificed to make way for modern buildings by a Sikh committee charged with making arrangements for the 2008 commemorations in Nanded. Please help us save these priceless buildings from destruction by adding your comments to this story (to the above link) which we will press upon Dr D. S. Pasricha chairman of the Prashasak ("logistics/arrangements") Committee for the 2008 event.
  12. This is an extrordinarily important video and something that everyone interested in Sikh material heritage shoudl look at. Its important note that this kind of documentation is all that is often left of our heritage. It is a shame that the SGPC have started to rebuild the Sikh reference library with Manuscripts and objects but havent thought of either cataloguing them properly (so wee knwo what's there) or digitising them. amandeep
  13. Thanks for putting this up.. its a real treasure. The gallery is housed inside a Haveli known as "Maharani Jindan's Haveli" and is much the same today. I was especially interested in seeing Ranjit SIngh's jewelled Horse trappings pieces that were lost in a robbery in 1996, but these werent covered in that documentary http://www.punjabheritage.org/index.php?op...8&Itemid=30 Do you know if the yatra video covers the Ranjit Singh Samadhi next to Dehra Sahib? I'd be really interested to see the condition of this before the works in 1999? Amandeep
  14. The latest story on www.punjabheritage.org in the Hidden Heritage series is about a remarkable order of merit instituted by the flamboyant Maharaja of Patiala, Bhupindar Singh. The Nishan-i-Phul is a striking piece and something that speaks volumes about Sikh symbolism of the turn of the 20th century. One of the Maharaja's personal pieces and something that he considered the highest order of merit, the Nishan-i-Phul is a window into the extravagant world of Bhupindar's Patiala court.
  15. This weekend will see an explosion of coverage about the Battle of the Somme, commemorating the 90th anniversary and remembering the 1 million men who were killed during the campaign. The role of the Sikh soldier is often forgotten during the First World War. The latest in the "Hidden Heritage" series goes some way to remember these forgotten heroes during this commemorative weekend. Please visit www.punjabheritage.org for the latest story with rare and unpublished pictures and a remarkable story using the words of the men who fought the battle Amandeep
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