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Russian boy at the Central Khalsa Orphanage


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Guest extrmemountainboy

I just returned to Canada from visiting India after that country reopened to tourists after November 20 and one of the places, I visited was the Central Khalsa Orphanage in Amritsar. Even though the institution is a Sikh orphanage for boys, it does admit orphans regardless of caste, color, or creed. The orphanage director told me that around 4% of boys who are admitted to the Central Khalsa Orphanage are non-Sikh, Non-Punjabis from other parts of India and abroad. One of the four percenters that I met was an 11-year-old Russian boy named who was brought to the orphanage at the age of eight. He told me a Sikh businessman who was living in Russia arranged for him to be sent to the Central Khalsa Orphanage after he was being abused at the orphanage he was living at in Russia.  I asked him if he suffered from any culture shock after being admitted to the orphanage and he said he did. He said that after he arrived, he was greeting by a bunch of Patka wearing boys who wanted to be his friend. He was shocked when he was told he will have to look like them and that he was no longer allowed to cut his hair as long as he lived at the orphanage.

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19 hours ago, Guest extrmemountainboy said:

I just returned to Canada from visiting India after that country reopened to tourists after November 20 and one of the places, I visited was the Central Khalsa Orphanage in Amritsar. Even though the institution is a Sikh orphanage for boys, it does admit orphans regardless of caste, color, or creed. The orphanage director told me that around 4% of boys who are admitted to the Central Khalsa Orphanage are non-Sikh, Non-Punjabis from other parts of India and abroad. One of the four percenters that I met was an 11-year-old Russian boy named who was brought to the orphanage at the age of eight. He told me a Sikh businessman who was living in Russia arranged for him to be sent to the Central Khalsa Orphanage after he was being abused at the orphanage he was living at in Russia.  I asked him if he suffered from any culture shock after being admitted to the orphanage and he said he did. He said that after he arrived, he was greeting by a bunch of Patka wearing boys who wanted to be his friend. He was shocked when he was told he will have to look like them and that he was no longer allowed to cut his hair as long as he lived at the orphanage.

That's very brave of you. I'm glad you made it home. 

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22 hours ago, Guest extrmemountainboy said:

I just returned to Canada from visiting India after that country reopened to tourists after November 20 and one of the places, I visited was the Central Khalsa Orphanage in Amritsar. Even though the institution is a Sikh orphanage for boys, it does admit orphans regardless of caste, color, or creed. The orphanage director told me that around 4% of boys who are admitted to the Central Khalsa Orphanage are non-Sikh, Non-Punjabis from other parts of India and abroad. One of the four percenters that I met was an 11-year-old Russian boy named who was brought to the orphanage at the age of eight. He told me a Sikh businessman who was living in Russia arranged for him to be sent to the Central Khalsa Orphanage after he was being abused at the orphanage he was living at in Russia.  I asked him if he suffered from any culture shock after being admitted to the orphanage and he said he did. He said that after he arrived, he was greeting by a bunch of Patka wearing boys who wanted to be his friend. He was shocked when he was told he will have to look like them and that he was no longer allowed to cut his hair as long as he lived at the orphanage.

Why did you decide to visit the orphanage? Most of us here never heard of it, so thanks for signposting

What other foreign orphans did you find out about ? Were they treated well ?

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Guest extrmemountainboy

What other foreign orphans did you find out about ?

 

There were only three other foreign orphans there, all from Nepal

 

Were they treated well?

 

All the boys living in the Central Khalsa Orphanage are treated well

 

Did he tell you how he was being abused there?

 

He mentioned he was being abused physically and emotionally

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On 12/20/2021 at 10:53 AM, Guest extrmemountainboy said:

I just returned to Canada from visiting India after that country reopened to tourists after November 20 and one of the places, I visited was the Central Khalsa Orphanage in Amritsar. Even though the institution is a Sikh orphanage for boys, it does admit orphans regardless of caste, color, or creed. The orphanage director told me that around 4% of boys who are admitted to the Central Khalsa Orphanage are non-Sikh, Non-Punjabis from other parts of India and abroad. One of the four percenters that I met was an 11-year-old Russian boy named who was brought to the orphanage at the age of eight. He told me a Sikh businessman who was living in Russia arranged for him to be sent to the Central Khalsa Orphanage after he was being abused at the orphanage he was living at in Russia.  I asked him if he suffered from any culture shock after being admitted to the orphanage and he said he did. He said that after he arrived, he was greeting by a bunch of Patka wearing boys who wanted to be his friend. He was shocked when he was told he will have to look like them and that he was no longer allowed to cut his hair as long as he lived at the orphanage.

 

On 12/21/2021 at 6:18 AM, GurjantGnostic said:

That's very brave of you. I'm glad you made it home. 

 

On 12/21/2021 at 2:46 PM, dallysingh101 said:

Personally I think being required to keep your kesh, as alien as it may be to this child, is a lot better than being abused in Russia. Did he tell you how he was being abused there?

I think OP is a 'troll'. Who goes to visit orphanages on 'holiday' ? No one I know . I reckon he's a Christian Missionary

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On 12/20/2021 at 10:53 AM, Guest extrmemountainboy said:

 I asked him if he suffered from any culture shock after being admitted to the orphanage and he said he did. He said that after he arrived, he was greeting by a bunch of Patka wearing boys who wanted to be his friend.

That's what probably shocked him (if this is true), that kids wanted to be his friend. Probably was a lot different in the hell hole he was in before. 

   

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Guest extrmemountainboy
On 12/21/2021 at 7:46 AM, dallysingh101 said:

Personally I think being required to keep your kesh, as alien as it may be to this child, is a lot better than being abused in Russia. Did he tell you how he was being abused there?

He was physically and mentally abused

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1 minute ago, Premi5 said:

Wonder if they spoke in Russian

Yep, a lot of questions here. Why did he (OP) go there? What language did they speak. How did the Russian and Indian authorities arrange this? How is the Russian boy communicating with the others if he can't speak an Indic language? 

You know, I really hope and pray that we have strong, good people looking after the orphans. I know from england and the us, these places are specifically targeted by pedos.  

 

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