ACR 37, as amended, Gray. Sikh American Awareness and Appreciation Month.
This measure would designate November 2015 as California Sikh American Awareness and Appreciation Month. The measure would recognize and acknowledge the significant contributions Californians of Sikh heritage have made to the state. The measure would also seek to afford all Californians the opportunity to understand, recognize, and appreciate the rich history and shared principles of Sikh Americans.
Fiscal committee: no.
P2 1WHEREAS, California and our nation are at once blessed and
2enriched by the unparalleled diversity of our residents; and
3WHEREAS, The Sikhs, who originated in Punjab, India, first
4entered California in 1899 legally through the Angel Island
5Immigration Station in San Francisco, California; and
6WHEREAS, The Sikh pioneers initially worked on railroad
7construction projects, and in lumber mills; and
8WHEREAS, By 1910, these pioneers turned to farming in the
9Sacramento, San Joaquin, and Imperial valleys; and
10WHEREAS, On October 14, 1912, the first Sikh temple
11(Gurdwara) in the United States, the Sikh Temple Stockton, was
12founded by Professor Teja Singh of the Pacific Coast Khalsa Diwan
13Society; and
14WHEREAS, There are now more than 100 Gurdwaras in the
15United States; and
16WHEREAS, The Stockton Record, dated November 22, 1915,
17quoted the Gurdwara’s elected leadership declaring, “We do not
18permit our people to become charges on public charity”; and
19WHEREAS, Legislation to authorize Sikhs and other East Indian
20immigrants to naturalize as United States citizens was not enacted
21until 1946; and
22WHEREAS, On January 1, 1912, Jawala Singh and Wasakha
23Singh, who immigrated to California through Angel Island in 1908
24and served as the founding Granthis of the Sikh Temple Stockton,
25recognized the value of education, and started six Sri Guru Govind
26Singh Educational Scholarships at the University of California,
27Berkeley; and
28WHEREAS, These scholarships were awarded without regard
29to ethnicity or religion and the first awardees included three
30Hindus, one Christian, one Sikh, and one Muslim; and
31WHEREAS, Board and lodging was provided at the students’
32home at 1731 Allston Way, Berkeley, where smoking and drinking
33were prohibited; and
34WHEREAS, On November 1, 1913, Ghadar, the first
35Punjabi-language newspaper in the United States, was published
36by Kartar Singh Sarabha, who was then 17 years of age, with
37financial support from the Stockton Gurdwara; and
P3 1WHEREAS, On December 31, 1913, Jawala Singh and Wasakha
2Singh organized the Ghadri Conclave in Sacramento to form the
3Ghadar Party to overthrow the British colonial rulers of the Indian
4subcontinent; and
5WHEREAS, The Ghadar Party sent 616 of its members to India,
6of whom 86 percent were Sikhs; and
7WHEREAS, Homage is paid to them annually at a dozen
8different gatherings (Melas) from Sacramento, California, to
9Bakersfield, California; and
10WHEREAS, The Sikh history and culture is represented in the
11Asian Art Museum in San Francisco, in the Smithsonian Museum
12in Washington, D.C., in the Community Memorial Museum of
13Sutter County, and the Museum at the Sikh Temple Stockton; and
14WHEREAS, Sikh farmers contribute abundantly towards
15production of peaches (Didar Singh Bains), raisins (Charanjeet
16Singh Batth), pistachios (Mangar family), and okra and other
17vegetables (Harbhajan S. Samra); and
18WHEREAS, Sikhs have also excelled in security services (Akal
19Security) and transportation services, and as doctors, attorneys,
20engineers, teachers, and other notable capacities, and as small
21business owners; and
22WHEREAS, Dalip Singh Saund, a Sikh who was born in Punjab,
23India, and earned a Ph.D. from the University of California,
24Berkeley in 1924, initially worked as a foreman of cotton pickers
25in the Imperial Valley, and later became a farmer, played a major
26role in raising the funds needed to lobby for the Luce-Celler Act
27of 1946 that enabled him and others to naturalize as citizens, and
28served as an elected judge in the Westmoreland Judicial District
29from 1952 to 1956, before becoming the first Asian American
30elected to the United States Congress, wherein he served three
31terms from 1957 to 1963; and
32WHEREAS, Sikh Americans have served as mayors of many
33California cities, including, for example David Dhillon in El
34Centro, Gurpal Samra in Livingston, Amarpreet “Ruby” Dhaliwal
35in San Joaquin, Sonny Dhaliwal in Lathrop, and Kashmir Singh
36Gill in Yuba City. Numerous Sikh Americans have served as
37council members of California cities; and
38WHEREAS, Bhagat Singh Thind, a Sikh born in Punjab, India,
39who was a United States veteran of World War I, who campaigned
40actively for the independence of India from the British Rule, and
P4 1who supported Indian students and lectured on metaphysics
2throughout the United States, has been honored by the Fred
3Korematsu Institute as a “Race in the Courts Hero” for fighting
4his citizenship case in the United States Supreme Court in 1923;
5and
6WHEREAS, Sikhs have served in all American wars since
7World War I; and
8WHEREAS, Narinder Singh Kapany of Palo Alto, a Sikh born
9in Punjab, India, is an accomplished scientist and inventor, who
10has been awarded over 100 patents that spurred advances in lasers,
11biomedical instrumentation, pollution monitoring, and solar energy,
12and is widely acknowledged to be the father of fiber optics, a
13technology that has allowed for high-speed digital communication;
14and
15WHEREAS, Yuba City, often called “Mini-Punjab” because of
16its 10 percent Punjabi population, commemorates the inauguration
17of the holy Sikh scripture, Sri Guru Granth Sahib, on the first
18Sunday of November, rain or shine, and this international event
19has in recent years attracted up to 100,000 participants from all
20over the United States, Canada, and even abroad; and
21WHEREAS, Sikh Americans throughout California celebrate
22the coronation of Sikh scripture and other Sikh festivals at the
23Gurdwaras and through parades in cities across California and the
24United States; and
25WHEREAS, Various Sikh organizations, including the Sikh
26Council of Central California, the Sikh Coalition, the Sikh
27American Legal Defense and Education Fund, Sikhs United,
28Jakara, and individual Gurdwaras participate in interfaith meetings,
29seminars, conferences, meetings, and functions and share the tenets
30of their monotheistic religion that respects other religions and
31welcome all to their Gurdwaras, and try to promote mutual
32understanding and respect among all peoples; and
33WHEREAS, The Sikh American community continues to make
34significant contributions to the California and United States
35economies and societies through military service, as business
36owners, transportation professionals, doctors, attorneys, engineers,
37teachers, farmers, and in a great many other notable capacities;
38and
39WHEREAS, Since September 11, 2001, the Sikhs are often
40mistaken for terrorists of Osama bin Laden’s Al Qaida owing to
P5 1the commonality of beard and the turban, and subjected to a
2disproportionately high rate of hate crimes, and Sikh boys suffer
3bullying at twice the national bullying rate for other boys; and
4WHEREAS, The Sikh American community continues to
5peacefully overcome attacks on its identity and practices, whether
6in the form of school harassment, employment discrimination, or
7fatal shootings, including the murders of six Sikhs during the Oak
8Creek Wisconsin Sikh Gurdwara shooting on August 5, 2012, as
9well as the senseless murders of Surinder Singh and Gurmej Atwal
10in Elk Grove, California, on March 4, 2011; and
11WHEREAS, The faithful service of the Sikh American
12community to this state and country merits appreciation as an
13integral thread in the fabric of American plurality; now, therefore,
14be it
15Resolved by the Assembly of the State of California, the Senate
16thereof concurring, That the Legislature hereby designates the
17month of November 2015 to be California’s Sikh American
18Awareness and Appreciation Month; and be it further
19Resolved, That the Legislature recognizes and acknowledges
20the significant contributions made by Californians of Sikh heritage
21to our state, and by adoption of this resolution, seeks to afford all
22Californians the opportunity to better understand, recognize, and
23appreciate the rich history and shared principles of Sikh Americans;
24and be it further
25Resolved, That the Chief Clerk of the Assembly transmit copies
26of this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution to the
27Members of the Legislature, to the Superintendent of Public
28Instruction for the purpose of advising county and district
29superintendents and charter school administrators, to members of
30the California Sikh American community, and to other interested
31organizations or persons.
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