Oroville Mercury-Register

Young Sikhs continue to face discrimina­tion

- By Anita Snow and Noreen Nasir

Two decades after Sept. 11attacks, younger Sikhs struggle with societal discrimina­tion that their elders faced.

MESA, ARIZ. >> Sikh entreprene­ur Balbir Singh Sodhi was killed at his Arizona gas station four days after the Sept. 11 attacks by a man who declared he was “going to go out and shoot some towel-heads” and mistook him for an Arab Muslim.

Young Sikh Americans still struggle a generation later with the discrimina­tion that 9/11 unleashed against their elders and them, ranging from school bullying to racial profiling to hate crimes — especially against males, who typically wear beards and turbans to demonstrat­e their faith.

As the 20th anniversar­y of Sept. 11 nears, those younger Sikhs say much more is needed to improve how hate crimes against their community are tracked. The FBI didn’t even begin tracking hate crimes specifical­ly against Sikhs until 2015, and many local law enforcemen­t agencies fail to record bias attacks comprehens­ively.

‘Identify the problem’

“The onus is on a community organizati­on like ours to identify the problem and then build support” to ensure better reporting, said Satjeet Kaur, executive director of the Sikh Coalition. Formed in the wake of Sept. 11, the largest Sikh advocacy group in the U.S. documented more than 300 cases of violence and discrimina­tion against Sikh Americans in just the first few months.

Such attacks can be particular­ly hard on young Sikhs, who face bullying by classmates who try to yank off their turbans or mock them as “Osama’s nephew” or “Saddam Hussein.” They often struggle with the Sikh philosophy of “chardi kala,” which calls for steadfast optimism in the face of oppression.

“The eternal optimism can help us get through it, but sometimes you also have to highlight the harsh realities,” said Tejpaul Bainiwal, 25, a doctoral candidate at the University of California, Riverside, who is studying the history of Sikhs who first began arriving in the U.S. in the late 1800s.

Outward displays

Bainiwal acknowledg­es he got into plenty of fistfights in high school with other students who tugged at his head covering and taunted him. He said terrified Sikh families debated whether to continue displaying outward signs of faith after the Aug. 5, 2012, massacre at a Sikh temple in Oak Creek, Wisconsin, which ultimately killed seven worshipper­s.

Now, as Americans watch from afar the events unfolding in Afghanista­n, Bainiwal reflected on how Sikhs have been mislabeled and mischaract­erized through history.

“One hundred years ago we were labeled Hindus, then Saudi Arabians, and when Iran was in the American eye we were called ‘the ayotollah.’ “

Media images of turbaned and bearded Taliban leaders who recently regained control of Afghanista­n with the withdrawal of U.S. troops have made Sikh Americans nervous again as they warn one another about those who incorrectl­y see their turbans and beards as symbols of extremism. In the Sikh faith, long uncut hair is one of five articles of the faith. Most males and some women traditiona­lly wear head coverings over their long locks.

Elevated risk

The FBI listed 67 antiSikh crimes for 2020, the highest annual number since the category was created in 2015, said criminolog­ist and civil rights attorney Brian Levin, director of the Center for the Study of Hate & Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino.

He said the center recently created a conflict advisory saying the risk of targeted aggression against Sikhs and others in the U.S. has been elevated to a near “severe” level. Political and internatio­nal events could sporadical­ly push those dangers even higher over the next 18 months, the advisory said.

Levin told the Committee on Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs on Aug. 5 that domestic extremism often follows “catalytic events” that provoke fear, such as the coronaviru­s outbreak, which sparked anti-Asian violence; the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol; and the upcoming anniversar­y of Sept. 11.

After the 2001 attacks, Balbir Singh Sodhi was among the first of Sikhs, Arab Muslims and others targeted in hate crimes.

Airplane mechanic Frank Roque was convicted of first-degree murder in the Sept. 15, 2001, killing and was sentenced to death before that was commuted to life imprisonme­nt. Roque also was accused of driveby shootings the same day at an Afghan family’s home and a Lebanese man’s convenienc­e store, although no one was injured in those attacks.

Rose Kaur Sodhi, Balbir Singh Sodhi’s niece, was a second grader getting ready for a relative’s birthday party when her family learned of her uncle’s murder.

“We knew something was terribly wrong because my dad came home crying. I had never seen that before,” she said of her father and Balbir’s brother, Rana Singh Sodhi, who became a well-known figure in the Sikh American community and taught her to share her family’s story and advocate for peace.

“We couldn’t believe it,” said the younger Sodhi, now 27 and a medical resident in Los Angeles. “He was so nice, always giving candy from his store to all the kids.”

Harassment increases

In the months that followed, children at her elementary school near Phoenix began harassing her then-6-year-old brother, prompting her to complain to the principal when they called him names and tugged on his topknot.

“That gas station where he was murdered is our ground zero,” said activist filmmaker Valarie Kaur, who refers to Balbir Singh Sodhi, a family friend, as “uncle.” Local and national dignitarie­s have been invited to remember Sodhi at a memorial there Sept. 15.

Kaur was a college student on Sept. 11 when she watched the Twin Towers of New York City’s World Trade Center collapse on the television set in her parents’ bedroom in Clovis, California.

When images of a bearded man in a turban repeatedly flashed on the screen, “I realized that our nation’s new enemy looked like my family,” said Kaur, who now lives with her husband and young son in Los Angeles.

After Sodhi’s death, Kaur traveled around the U.S. exploring the subsequent explosion in hate crimes against Sikh and Muslim Americans, along with other people perceived as foreign or different.

Inspiring discussion

The resulting documentar­y, “Divided We Fall: Americans in the Aftermath,” has been used in classrooms and communitie­s across the country to inspire discussion­s about hate crimes. Kaur followed up last year with a memoir, “See No Stranger: A Memoir and Manifesto of Revolution­ary Love.”

Now, she worries about what her young son will have to deal with.

“My son was born during the election season of 2016 ... when hate crimes were skyrocketi­ng,” Kaur said. “Once again, I had to reckon with the fact that he’s growing up in a nation more dangerous for him than it was for me.”

Kaur said that danger became exceedingl­y clear in 2012 when a white supremacis­t Army veteran shot and killed six worshipper­s at the gurdwara, or Sikh temple, in Wisconsin before taking his own life.

A seventh person, Baba Punjab Singh, a Sikh priest visiting from India, was shot in the head and left partially paralyzed. He died from his wounds on March 2, 2020.

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 ?? JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rose Kaur Sodhi, a medical resident at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, in Los Angeles on Sept. 1. Rose, Balbir Singh Sodhi’s niece, was a second grader getting ready for a relative’s birthday party when her family learned of her uncle’s murder. “We knew something was terribly wrong because my dad came home crying. I had never seen that before,” she said of her father and Balbir’s brother, Rana Singh Sodhi, who became a wellknown figure in the Sikh American community and taught her to share her family’s story and advocate for peace.
JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rose Kaur Sodhi, a medical resident at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, in Los Angeles on Sept. 1. Rose, Balbir Singh Sodhi’s niece, was a second grader getting ready for a relative’s birthday party when her family learned of her uncle’s murder. “We knew something was terribly wrong because my dad came home crying. I had never seen that before,” she said of her father and Balbir’s brother, Rana Singh Sodhi, who became a wellknown figure in the Sikh American community and taught her to share her family’s story and advocate for peace.

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