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Found 5 results

  1. I'm going to be straight on point. Dal Khalsa UK give seem to be some sold off agents causing fights between Sikh. They will also post statuses on their FB against different political people for their own political interest. Dont know much about Dal Khalsa India but these people seem dodgy
  2. Waheguru Ji Ka Khalsa, Waheguru Ji Ki Fateh August 17, 2014 | By Parmjeet Singh Hoshiarpur, Punjab (August 17, 2014): Dal Khalsa would not allow the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS) to implement their fascist agenda in Punjab and divide the people on communal lines as Punjab is a land of great gurus and Sikh martyrs. The organization urged the people of Punjab to defeat the nefarious designs of the RSS. Taking a dig at RSS for dubbing all citizens as Hindus, party spokesperson Kanwar Pal Singh said Sikhs would not tolerate such non-sense any more. He said the RSS looks in a hurry to materialize their long dream to make India as Hindu Rashtar. “We have no objections to their dream, but one thing is clear Punjab won’t be part of Hindu rashtar”, he said while addressing the gathering of workers at local Gurdwara. He called upon people to defeat the malafide intentions of the saffron party. “Power has gone to the head of the RSS leadership as they have tasted the absolute power after a long wait. The RSS has infiltrated in the government, its power structure, bureaucracy and educational set-up to strengthen its cultural hegemony, said Kanwar Pal Singh. Dal Khalsa leader Kanwar Pal Singh addressing the meeting flayed the RSS’s supremacist ideology and slammed Shiromani Akali Dal for mortgaging the Sikh interests to Hindutva forces in lieu of cabinet berth for Badal’s Bhau in Union ministry. Commenting on Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s independence day statement that communalism, regionalism and discrimination are all obstacles in our way forward, he said it’s the state that was discriminating against those people who refused to bow before the dictates of the New Delhi. He further said it was the RSS that was spreading communalism, which has be rein in as majority extremism breeds minority extremism.
  3. JALANDHAR: Aam Aadmi Party's (AAP) growing popularity among NRIs and in Punjab is causing a churning in unexpected quarters: Radical Sikh groups. These outfits operating from abroad, who have been vociferously raising issues like injustice to 1984 riot victims and eviction of farmers from Kutch in Gujarat, are aghast at AAP "hijacking" their agenda and even garnering support. These groups claim that they enjoy widespread support in Punjab and abroad. The Dal Khalsa, for instance, sees the Congress, BJP and AAP as chips of the same block. Party head H S Dhami says, "For Sikhs, it hardly matters who holds the reins in Delhi. The community has participated in elections with enthusiasm since 1950, but could not get justice from any party even on crucial issues like massacre of Sikhs in the national capital." US-based Khalistani ideologue Dr Amarjit Singh expects little from AAP. "Sikhs who wish for Khalistan should stick to their agenda as AAP is also not addressing their issues," he had said in a recent special televised discussion on a Punjabi channel in the US. Akali Dal Panch Pardhani brought out the crux of the radicals' thought. "AAP is also working in a limited political paradigm and has limitations. The electoral process can't that address the aspirational issues of different communities and nationalities, so we are staying away from it," said acting president Harpal Singh Cheema. Author Ajmer Singh, who has written on contemporary Sikh history, believes a few groups are feeling threatened as their support base among Sikhs who feel alienated could shrink with AAP's advent. "For a few groups, this position is more like sticking to their ideological and theoretical position in place of making a strategic political intervention to change the situation. Limitations of AAP should also be understood, but to oppose it blindly when it has tried to address a couple of justice issues is not very logical from the point of view of political strategy," he pointed out. http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/lok-sabha-elections-2014/news/Sikh-radical-groups-frown-as-AAP-walks-its-talk/articleshow/34084726.cms?
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