Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
India

After Mahabharat and Panipat, it's now HSGPC vs SGPC

Jaideep Sarin IANS, 10 Jul, 2014 12:38 PM
    The land that is now called Haryana has been famous for epic battles like the Mahabharat and the three historic battles of Panipat. Now a leading Sikh body is fighting a politico-religious battle in the state to retain control over its gurdwaras.
     
    The Amritsar-based Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC), known as the mini-parliament of the Sikh religion, is at odds with the Congress-led government in Haryana after Chief Minister Bhupinder Singh Hooda announced that a separate committee will be set up in Haryana to control gurdwaras in the state.
     
    The move by the Hooda government, which proposes to bring legislation for a separate committee to manage gurdwaras in Haryana, will take out of the SGPC's hands the control of 72 gurdwaras.
     
    The SGPC, which has an annual budget of Rs 950 crore ($159 million) and controls Sikh shrines across Punjab, Haryana and Himachal Pradesh, surely does not want to lose control over the Haryana shrines. If the Hooda government succeeds in showing the door to the SGPC, its bosses are worried that this could have a ripple effect in other states where the SGPC controls Sikh shrines.
     
    The gurdwaras in Delhi and in Pakistan (Nankana Sahib, Panja Sahib and in Lahore) are controlled by independent Sikh bodies. The Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (DSGPC) is now dominated by Punjab's ruling Shiromani Akali Dal.
     
    Sikh leaders in Haryana allege that the SGPC used to pocket nearly Rs 30 crore annually from the Haryana gurdwaras but never did enough for these shrines or for Sikhs in the state. They even allege that the management and jobs in these shrines were given to people from Punjab.
     
     
    The SGPC and the Shiromani Akali dal are doing everything possible to prevent the Hooda government from going ahead with the move.
     
    They have sought the centre's intervention, saying that the Hooda government's move is "unconstitutional" and "illegal" since the SGPC controls Sikh shrines under an act of parliament. They have pointed out that a state cannot legislate on matters concerning parliament. The SGPC and Akali Dal leaders are trying to woo Sikhs in Haryana to oppose the move for a separate committee.
    The Hooda government however claims that it is doing this following demand of Haryana Sikhs for a separate body. Hooda set up a committee in 2005 under Harmohinder Singh Chatha, Haryana's finance minister and himself a Sikh. The committee received affidavits from nearly 300,000 Sikhs for a separate body. The total Sikh population in Haryana is over 1.5 million (six percent of the state's total of nearly 25 million).
     
    However, Hooda is being accused of initiating the move for a separate Sikh body just before Haryana's assembly polls to be held in October. The Chatha committee had submitted its report nearly seven years ago but the Hooda government never took action on it. One reason for that could be the reluctance of then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, also a Sikh, to support the move.
     
     
    The Congress has always had a love-hate relationship with the Sikh leaders and the community. The scars of the 1984 Operation Bluestar, the Indian Army's operation in the Golden Temple complex to flush out terrorists, the killing of then prime minister Indira Gandhi by her two Sikh bodyguards and the 1984 anti-Sikh riots, in which Congress leaders and activists are the main accused and which left hundreds of Sikhs killed and displaced, have never let both sides bridge the gap. The move on control of Haryana's shrines will only add to that.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    'Tehsin Embraced Terror When He Was 18'

    'Tehsin Embraced Terror When He Was 18'
    Indian Mujahideen's operational head Tehsin Akhtar, now in police custody, embraced terrorism when he was only 18 years old. Such was his passion that his handlers immediately inducted him into the banned outfit

    'Tehsin Embraced Terror When He Was 18'

    First Look: Sand artist pays tribute to lost Malaysian Flight MH 370

    First Look: Sand artist pays tribute to lost Malaysian Flight MH 370
    Sand artist Sudarsan Pattnaik Tuesday paid tribute to the passengers and crew members of the lost Malaysian airliner by creating a sand sculpture on the beach of Puri, his home town in Odisha.

    First Look: Sand artist pays tribute to lost Malaysian Flight MH 370

    It will be Kejriwal vs Modi in Varanasi

    It will be Kejriwal vs Modi in Varanasi
    In what will be the mother of all battles in the coming election, AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal announced Tuesday he will take on BJP's prime ministerial nominee Narendra Modi from this Hindu holy city.

    It will be Kejriwal vs Modi in Varanasi

    The 'donkey route' to Britain: Hair-raising tales of illegal immigration

    The 'donkey route' to Britain: Hair-raising tales of illegal immigration
    This is the hair-rising tale of 12 Indians cheated by a dodgy agent who extracts big money from them on false promises and sent them off on “the donkey route” through Russia and Europe to Britain. 

    The 'donkey route' to Britain: Hair-raising tales of illegal immigration

    AAP Favours Consensual Gay Sex

    AAP Favours Consensual Gay Sex
    In a significant championing of gender justice and gay rights, the 16-month-old Aam Admi Party (AAP) will favour decriminalisation of homosexuality in its much-awaited manifesto for the Lok Sabha polls, party sources said.

    AAP Favours Consensual Gay Sex

    Malaysian Flight MH370: Flight Crashed In Southern Indian Ocean, No Survivors

    Malaysian Flight MH370: Flight Crashed In Southern Indian Ocean, No Survivors
    The Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 that went missing shortly after taking off from Kuala Lumpur March 8 with 239 people on board ended in the southern Indian Ocean and there is no hope of any survivors, Malaysian authorities announced Monday.

    Malaysian Flight MH370: Flight Crashed In Southern Indian Ocean, No Survivors