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SaRpAnCh

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Everything posted by SaRpAnCh

  1. I first had the same views about you lot on the video but I've changed them now,OK the video could have had a lot more Singhs in it ,but this is reality and a lot of people wear Khandeh.They may not be religious but they have pride in their roots,i see this as nothing more than nationalism the Khanda is without a doubt linked to Panjab as a national symbol even if we deny it,if the chain was an Ik Onkar it would be wrong,but I don't see no naked girls running around - all I see is proud Panjabis and Panjab belongs to Sikhs.(not so say that anyone else of any faith can live there if they wish)
  2. WJKKWJKF Sarpanch Singh :D Like your name
  3. Can SikhRoots.Com or ShaheedKhalsa.Com rip it off the BBC asian network
  4. As a speaker said today at Southall;s National Khalistan Conference on 1984 - NO CELEBRATIONS SHOULD BE HELD IN THE 1ST WEEK OF JUNE TILL THE 8TH
  5. The indian govt wnats a Sikh Vs Dalit issue,thats why they keep harping on about caste like I have said before - beadbi occured a guy was shot dead thats it - end of where does the caste issue come in he was not shot cos he was a chamar but due to his anti Sikh actions - Ravidasi's themselves say THEY ARE NOT SIKHS so what do you want others to do? They can join the KHALSA PANTH if they truly want to be Sikhs This is about the KHALSA PANTH VS BEADBI OF SGGSJ (khalsapanth includes all castes in one) DalSingh you will find Jatts are not the only ones who drink so do Tharkhans,Chamaar's,Chooreh,Lubaneh drinking is a social problem in Panjab not a Jatt problem - those of you who claim if the Jatts die out Sikhism will flourish I believe you have some sort of vendetta - in to making this a caste issue - which is what the Brahmini Sarkar wants All those castes under the Brahmin are slaves of the brahmin so instead of blaming each others so called caste background s from which we have countless Sikh Shaheeds and hereos from all castes - we should STOP RIGHT NOW and realise this This is about the KHALSA PANTH VS BEADBI OF SGGSJ (khalsapanth includes all castes in one) If these ravidasis still want to remain a cult they can do so ,as some are so adament about it they openly say WE ARE NOT SIKHS , I want to tell these ravidasis so called,UNDERSTAND THE MESSAGE OF BHAGAT RAVIDAS JI and see what he says about caste system - you can't always blame others for your problems, just because its an issue on Chamars everyone looks at the caste point of view - they've all forgotten the beadbi that occurs in their so called Gurdwareh across the world
  6. These bandar-faced mobs have nothing against Jats or any other group in particular. They are just in it for the loot and hysteria of it. So far Rs7000 crore damage has been done to public buildings and businesses due to these lunatics. I agree
  7. Thats what Indian wants you to do blame a certain section of the Panth and BINGO we have a split they want to make inter caste fights - THE REAL issue was and is of beadbi - man did beadbi he was shot up no one said kill all chamars ,their so called Guru a fake was shot up thats all no ones saying chuk the chamars out - In reality no one is stopping them from joining the Khalsa,they can take amrit whenever it is only their leaders who are sayin WE ARE NOT SIKHS so how can you blame others. Its not because of Jatts that they have gone off - let me take you to the root cause the larai di jardh - Its Brahmanvaadh end of I APPEAL TO ALL SIKHS OF SO CALLED CASTES - THIS IS NOT A CASTE ISSUE DO NOT MAKE IT IN TO ONE AS THE INDIAN GOVT AND MEDIA WANTS - ITS ABOUT KHALSA VS BEADBI OF GURU GRANTH SAHIB JI - KHALSA INCLUDES ALL CASTES END OF
  8. Just because the Flipin Sant who got shot up was a Dalit so called don't mean he was innocent , media stop trying to turn this into a Sikh Vs Dalit issue - this is what the media wants its about beadbi that took place and a guy got shot up simple as
  9. Just because the Flipin Sant who got shot up was a Dalit so called don't mean he was innocent , stop trying to turn this into a Sikh Vs Dalit issue - this is what the media wants its about beadbi that took place and a guy got shot up simple as
  10. this proves that the ravidas sabha uk does not agree with the pakhandi baba.....The Ravids Sabha UK clearly states that they are against the Anti Gurmat practices and warns the baba that he will not be able to escape from the punishment if he continues to do the Beadabi of Guru Granth Sahib Ji Maharaj.... The pics above were taken at Southall Ravidas Sabha which used to call this Pakhandi down,Singhs went over the years to warn them but they did not listen ,and as we know the place was trashed ie: the Murti Section ,the 2nd time the Saadh came down people were matha tekhing to him in his own' Diwan hall ' the 3rd time beadbi occured Singhs went down once they got there ,the ravidasis swore at them and tried to attack them with bats and broom sticks on the orders of the saadhs bodyguards and commitee The Southall Ravidas Sabha fully supported and always has supported this guy and his activities
  11. You cant take meat inside a Gurdwara unless you want to get battered or end up half dead so stop harping on about Akal Thakt said this that,in the same Complex women can't do Kirtan in Harmandar Sahib the exucse for that is also so called purataan maryada
  12. http://www.youtube.com/user/AntiKhalistan http://www.youtube.com/user/SikhismVsIslam This sad RSS lover has made to new channels put in copyrights for videos - as it is hard for one person to remove all the videos cos they;re different
  13. This commitee needs to fix up they are really begining to annoy local sangat with their infighting and pathetic crap like this , A MESSAGE TO SINGH SABHA COMMITEE MEMBERS READING THIS FIX UP.WE WILL NOT TOLERATE HINDUS DATING SIKH GIRLS,through you dating services funny really how some linked with the commitee are always moaning about Sikh girls going with muslims and others majority of the time they cry about the Muslims issue,BUT its shocking they aint said nothing about the Hindus taking our girls throught their own event
  14. There are no problems in southall with Sikh girls or Sikhs VS Muslims
  15. If this is true then these dera cult fanatics are asking for it ,the Khalsa will destroy each and every dera but where do we start there are so manyy
  16. Dal Khalsa will not let Sikhs forget events of 1984” Special Correspondent CHANDIGARH: Advice from the Prime Minister Manmohan Singh that the Sikhs should forget the “painful events of 1984”, notwithstanding, radical political outfit, the Dal Khalsa has decided to mobilise its activists for the “Genocide Remembrance March” along the lanes and streets of the “holy city’ of Amritsar, on June 3 this year to observe the 25th anniversary of the launching of the army action “Operation Bluestar” at the Harmandar Sahib (Golden Temple complex). This was announced by the Dal’s president’s Harsharanjit Singh Dhami while talking to reporters on Sunday, after he chaired the meeting of the organisation’s working committee. He said that the march would start from Dal Khalsa office and conclude at the Akal Takht where prayers service would be performed in the memory of those who “embraced martyrdom” during the attack. After paying homage to Sikh martyrs at Akal Takht, the delegation of the Panthic bodies would meet the SGPC officials to remind them of the resolution adopted by executive committee of the institution in 2003 pledging to build a memorial in memory of the 1984 martyrs within the Harmandar Sahib complex. “Wounds not healed” Ridiculing those Sikhs who in “connivance” with the Indian Union were attempting to erase this period from the public memory, Mr Dhami said, “much water has flown down the rivers of Punjab since 1984. There was a change in political leadership with some Sikhs at the helm of affairs both at Centre and the State. This however has not healed our wounds of June 84. These wounds are simmering, even after 25 years.” Critical of Dr Singh for advocating the Sikhs to forget the 1984 events, Mr. Dhami said “Sikhs will neither forget the brutality of the State nor the supreme sacrifices made by around 300 fearless Sikhs who fought till their last breath to defend the sanctity of their holiest shrine”. Flanked by party General Secretary Manjinder Singh and secretary for political affairs Kanwar Pal Singh, Mr Dhami said the sacrifice of the June 1984 martyrs would never be allowed to go in vain. Responding to queries the Dal Khalsa leaders said by concentrating all energies on the seat in Bathinda to ensure the victory of the new entrant of Harsimrat Kaur Badal, the Akali Dal Badal has lost its hold on the state and its bastions to the Congress. “In his zeal and pursuit to win the seat for his wife, the Deputy Chief Minister has lost most of the seats of his party”, they observed. The Dal Khalsa expressed its opinion that it was a time for all Panthic individuals and parties to self introspect and strategise about the shortcomings, which had betrayed the community. http://www.hindu.com/2009/05/25/stories/2009052555070700.htm ================================================================ Sikh radicals reject PM’s plea to forget 1984 Amritsar, May 24 (IANS) Rejecting the advice from the country’s first Sikh prime minister, Manmohan Singh, to forget the events of 1984, radical Sikh leaders Sunday gave a call for a “genocide remembrance march” next month. The radical Sikh organisation Dal Khalsa Sunday announced that its activists would undertake a “genocide remembrance march” through Amritsar June 3 - the day that the Indian Army started its “Operation Bluestar” against heavily armed Sikh separatists from the Golden Temple. “Much water has flown down the rivers of Punjab since 1984. There was a change in political leadership with some Sikhs at the helm of affairs both at centre and the state. This has not healed our wounds of June 1984,” Dal Khalsa president Harcharanjit Singh Dhami told mediapersons here. Manmohan Singh, during an election trip to Sikh-dominated Punjab earlier May, stated in Ludhiana that Sikhs could not keep the 1984 anti-Sikh riots issue alive for ever. The prime minister charged that some people want to keep the issue alive “apne dukaan chamkane ke liye (for their selfish interests)”. He held that this was of “no profit to either the country or the Sikh community”. The march, starting from the Dal Khalsa office here, would culminate at Akal Takht, the highest temporal seat of the Sikh religion. Dhami said prayers would be held in memory of those who “sacrificed their lives for the Sikh cause”. Criticising the prime minister’s statement, he said: “Wounds are still simmering, even after 25 years. Especially the wounds, which have been left to neglect. Sikhs will never forget the brutality of the state nor the supreme sacrifices made by around 300 fearless Sikhs who fought till their last breath to defend the sanctity of the holiest shrine.” He ridiculed those Sikh leaders were attempting to erase this period from the public memory. Dal Khalsa leader Kanwarpal Singh said “the sacrifice of the June 1984 martyrs” would never be allowed to go in vain. He asked the Shiromani Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee (SGPC) to implement its promise of building a memorial for those who were killed inside the Golden Temple complex in June 1984.
  17. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/n...re-1690412.html By Jerome Taylor Monday, 25 May 2009 Maharani Jind Kaur, the beauty who fought the empire and reminded her son Maharajah Duleep Singh of his heritage * Photos enlarge On 1 August 1863, shortly after 6:15 in the evening, a frail and partially-blind queen who had spent much of her life raging against the British Empire, died in her bed on the top floor of a Kensington townhouse. It was a peculiar and remarkably quiet end for a woman once the scourge of the British Raj in India. Only 15 years earlier, Jind Kaur, the Maharani of the Punjab, had encouraged the Sikh Empire to wage two disastrous wars against the British which led to the annexation of the Punjab and Jind being torn from her son when he was just nine-years-old. Adopted by a dour colonial surgeon, that son, Duleep Singh, swiftly shed his Punjabi customs, converted to Christianity and moved to England to live the life of a respectable country squire, shooting grouse on his estate and hosting decadent parties for Britain's Victorian elite. The "Black Prince", as he was known in London, became firm friends with Queen Victoria, only to fall from grace after he was caught trying to persuade Russia to invade India and return his kingdom to him. His tale has been well documented. But for the first time his mother's remarkable life has been uncovered by a British historian, Peter Bance, who publishes his findings this week in the book Maharajah Duleep Singh – Sovereign, Squire And Rebel. While researching a tome on the Duleep Singh family, which lived in exile on a sprawling country estate near Thetford, Norfolk, Mr Bance stumbled upon the gravestone of Jind Kaur in the catacombs of the Kensal Green Dissenters' Chapel. Historians had assumed that the Maharani's cremation occurred in India but here was a simple white marble tombstone in London with her name on it. As cremation was illegal in Britain at the time it appears that the Maharani's remains were kept in the chapel for nearly a year while Duleep arranged for her to be taken home. The astonishing relic of a person who made no secret of her dislike for the country where she eventually died lay hidden for more than a century. Mr Bance has dug into who Jind Kaur really was, why she ended up dying in the capital of a country that was once her sworn enemy and how, as her life slipped away in a cold London townhouse, she reawakened her son's royal heritage and inspired him to take back his lost kingdom. "It's an amazing find because Jind Kaur was only buried in Britain for little over year and yet someone went to the trouble of creating this very ornate gravestone for her," says Mr Bance. "The inscription is partly in English and partly in the Sikh Gurmukhi script and what makes it unusual is that very few people in Britain at the time would have been able to translate Gurmukhi, let alone carve it into marble. She is the first documented Sikh woman in Britain." To say that Jind Kaur was a thorn in the side of the East India Company would be an understatement. She was born into humble origins, the daughter of the Royal Kennel Keeper at the Sikh court in Lahore, but she was ravishingly beautiful and soon caught the attention of the Punjab's greatest ruler, the one-eyed Ranjit Singh. Having kept the British at bay for decades, Ranjit's empire began to crumble with his death in 1839. Following a series of bloody succession battles, Jind emerged as regent for Duleep who was less than a year old when his father died. Concerned about the instability (and attracted to the kingdom's fabulous wealth) Britain began preparing to take the Punjab, goading the Sikh armies into two wars that eventually led to the disappearance of an indigenous Asian empire that stretched from the Khyber Pass to Kashmir. Jind was instrumental in organising the Sikh resistance, rallying her generals to return to battle and plotting rebellion once the British finally took over the Punjab in 1849. To halt her influence on the young Duleep, the Punjab's new colonial masters dragged the Queen away from her son and imprisoned her. The British press began a smear campaign against the Maharani, labelling her the "Messalina of the Punjab", portraying her as a licentious seductress who was too rebellious to control. In a final act of defiance Jind Kaur escaped her jailers dressed as a slave girl and trekked 800 miles to Nepal where she was given begrudging asylum and a place in Sikh folklore as a national hero. She was only allowed to see her son 13 years later when he returned to Kolkata for a tiger-hunting trip. Duleep asked to bring his mother from Kolkata to England. The British Government decided the last Queen of the Punjab no longer posed a threat and gave him permission. But a number of historians now believe it was Jind Kaur's brief reunion with her son in the country she despised that rekindled Duleep's desire to take back his kingdom. "In a way she had the last laugh," says Harbinder Singh, director of the Anglo-Sikh Heritage Trail. "When you look at the life of Duleep Singh the moment where he began to turn his back on Britain and rebel was immediately after meeting his mother. The British assumed that this frail looking woman, who was nearly blind and had lost her looks, was no longer a force to be reckoned with. But she reminded her son of who he was and where his kingdom really lay." In the end, Duleep's attempts to persuade the Tsar of Russia to invade India backfired spectacularly because British spies had followed his every move. Publicly humiliated, Duleep lived his final years in a Paris hotel room desperately seeking the forgiveness of Victoria. "The whole family's story is desperately tragic," says Mr Bance. "None of Duleep's children gave birth to an heir and his lineage died out within a generation. But what gives me some comfort is the idea that, just before she died, this frail but formidable woman made him remember who he was." Ousted emperors: Deposed by the British *Mukarram Jah The final Nizam of Hyderabad lives in Turkey. After his kingdom was subsumed by India in 1948, Jah went to the Australian outback. In 1949 he was said to be the world's richest man but much of his wealth was lost in bad business deals. *Bahadur Shah Zafar The Last Mughal Emperor was exiled to Burma after he supported the sepoys during the Indian Rebellion of 1857. Three lineages of descendents survive today. *Tippu Sultan Called the Tiger of Mysore, his armies fought the British in south India until his death in 1799. His family was exiled to Kolkata.
  18. http://www.youtube.com/user/ysderby They do great seva educational for everyone of alll ages
  19. nice post ,yeah the Muslim panjabis do want Khalistan some are even sayin in Pakistan that Panjab should be a seperate state and they would love to live within it - ie Khalistan
  20. Sorry to do you a disservice SaRpAnCh, as you did not call me a baman. Merely an ally of the Brahmini Sarkar of Hindustan and somebody who is damaging Sikhism to the core. You're right that is much less of an insult and all because I choose not to go somewhere. Not because I am not fighting the same fight as you, but purely because I choose to not do it in the way that you do. So much krodh... I was refering to the Gurdwareh who do not support the rally and their commitees, 'if so called Gurdwareh do not support the rally you are anti sikh you are EITHER WITH US OR THE BRAHMINI SARKAR OF HINDUSTAN' i apologise if i said it out wrong or if i said it in a way which seemed like was targeting you as'naujawanidotcom'.To be honest I thought you did support the rally didn't you?
  21. yeah notcied this fools description in his homepage matches with that infamous Facebook group - he must really hate the freedom movement - im watching his every move
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