Antelope Valley Press

West Point makes history with first female Sikh grad

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ROSWELL, Ga. (AP) — The United States Military Academy at West Point will make history Saturday when it graduates the first Sikh woman to successful­ly complete the path to a fouryear degree.

Second Lt. Anmol Narang, is a second-generation immigrant born and raised in Roswell, Georgia. She did a year of undergradu­ate study at the Georgia Institute of Technology before transferri­ng to West Point, where she will graduate Saturday with a degree in nuclear engineerin­g. She hopes to pursue a career in air defense systems.

“I am excited and honored to be fulfilling my dream of graduating from West Point,” Narang said in a news release from the Sikh Coalition, a nonprofit based in New York that works to protect the constituti­onal right to practice faith without fear. “The confidence and support of my community back home in Georgia has been deeply meaningful to me, and I am humbled that in reaching this goal, I am showing other Sikh Americans that any career path is possible for anyone willing to rise to the challenge.”

Narang will complete her Basic Officer Leadership Course at Fort Sill in Lawton, Oklahoma, officials said. Following that, she will then head to her first post in Okinawa, Japan, in January.

Congress passed a law in 1987 that prohibited Sikhs and other religious communitie­s from maintainin­g their articles of faith while in the military. A Sikh’s visible articles of faith, including turbans and unshorn facial hair, were banned.

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