Berliner Boersenzeitung - Stay or go? Dilemma facing last of the Afghan Sikhs

EUR -
AED 4.326661
AFN 82.273942
ALL 97.898814
AMD 452.629971
ANG 2.108041
AOA 1080.157743
ARS 1459.669854
AUD 1.798908
AWG 2.12321
AZN 2.007149
BAM 1.955418
BBD 2.377585
BDT 144.451806
BGN 1.956287
BHD 0.443228
BIF 3508.115287
BMD 1.177925
BND 1.499675
BOB 8.137239
BRL 6.38271
BSD 1.177545
BTN 100.498238
BWP 15.596956
BYN 3.853566
BYR 23087.331819
BZD 2.365338
CAD 1.603215
CDF 3398.314319
CHF 0.935405
CLF 0.028547
CLP 1095.459023
CNY 8.440309
CNH 8.439249
COP 4712.218658
CRC 594.671311
CUC 1.177925
CUP 31.215015
CVE 110.243483
CZK 24.646321
DJF 209.341311
DKK 7.461454
DOP 70.474749
DZD 152.109697
EGP 58.022699
ERN 17.668876
ETB 163.423335
FJD 2.637615
FKP 0.862798
GBP 0.862601
GEL 3.204416
GGP 0.862798
GHS 12.187363
GIP 0.862798
GMD 84.22618
GNF 10213.006627
GTQ 9.054041
GYD 246.364006
HKD 9.2463
HNL 30.765995
HRK 7.530244
HTG 154.606543
HUF 399.203326
IDR 19062.0084
ILS 3.939983
IMP 0.862798
INR 100.936107
IQD 1542.566183
IRR 49620.09495
ISK 142.446936
JEP 0.862798
JMD 187.953315
JOD 0.835195
JPY 170.275556
KES 152.141258
KGS 103.010002
KHR 4731.076589
KMF 492.373101
KPW 1060.089343
KRW 1606.325121
KWD 0.359609
KYD 0.981408
KZT 611.529492
LAK 25374.508866
LBP 105506.967917
LKR 353.301043
LRD 236.098907
LSL 20.713857
LTL 3.478107
LVL 0.712516
LYD 6.342762
MAD 10.569437
MDL 19.835707
MGA 5298.853309
MKD 61.531087
MMK 2473.232981
MNT 4226.84635
MOP 9.521142
MRU 46.736878
MUR 52.948179
MVR 18.14445
MWK 2042.018775
MXN 21.952406
MYR 4.972067
MZN 75.340533
NAD 20.713418
NGN 1802.15516
NIO 43.331543
NOK 11.864468
NPR 160.792204
NZD 1.944493
OMR 0.452069
PAB 1.17757
PEN 4.175585
PGK 4.864051
PHP 66.570482
PKR 334.279155
PLN 4.24364
PYG 9383.969276
QAR 4.30386
RON 5.059075
RSD 117.399127
RUB 92.591703
RWF 1692.769606
SAR 4.417612
SBD 9.820272
SCR 16.592058
SDG 707.348348
SEK 11.256846
SGD 1.499974
SHP 0.925664
SLE 26.444855
SLL 24700.50455
SOS 672.95437
SRD 44.036774
STD 24380.6712
SVC 10.303989
SYP 15315.416699
SZL 20.696906
THB 38.082753
TJS 11.451765
TMT 4.134517
TND 3.430858
TOP 2.758823
TRY 46.955033
TTD 7.986272
TWD 34.086841
TZS 3117.621455
UAH 49.110415
UGX 4224.085893
USD 1.177925
UYU 47.260776
UZS 14787.113854
VES 128.951587
VND 30838.07893
VUV 140.328108
WST 3.064638
XAF 655.828995
XAG 0.031783
XAU 0.000353
XCD 3.183402
XDR 0.815779
XOF 655.828995
XPF 119.331742
YER 285.234989
ZAR 20.722353
ZMK 10602.74357
ZMW 28.525827
ZWL 379.291399
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Stay or go? Dilemma facing last of the Afghan Sikhs
Stay or go? Dilemma facing last of the Afghan Sikhs

Stay or go? Dilemma facing last of the Afghan Sikhs

The caretaker of the last Sikh temple in Kabul to regularly host open prayer surveysthe cavernous hall where throngs once gathered in worship.

Text size:

Only a handful are left now.

"Afghanistan is our country, our homeland," said Gurnam Singh. "But we are leaving out of sheer hopelessness."

In the 1970s, Afghanistan's Sikh population numbered 100,000, but decades of conflict, poverty and intolerance have driven almost all of them into exile.

The Soviet occupation, subsequent Taliban regime and bloody US-led military intervention winnowed their numbers to just 240 last year, according to figures kept by the community.

After the Taliban returned to power in August, opening the newest chapter in Afghanistan's dark history, a fresh wave of Sikhs fled the country.

Today, Gurnam Singh estimates just 140 remain, mostly in the eastern city of Jalalabad and in Kabul.

- Spiritual home -

These remaining devotees trickle into the Karte Parwan Gurdwara temple for a recent prayer session on a wintry Monday.

Men stand to one side, women the other -- about 15 in total.

Sitting barefoot on a floor covered with thick red rugs, they warm themselves around stoves and listen to a recitation from the Guru Granth Sahib, the Sikh holy book.

In November, the temple had three copies, but two have since been sent to New Delhi for "safekeeping".

Sikhs have long faced discrimination in Muslim-majority Afghanistan. Poverty is rife and attacks from the Islamic State-Khorasan, the jihadist group's Afghan chapter, are a real threat.

The overwhelming majority of Sikhs fleeing Afghanistan have landed in India, where 90 percent of the religion's 25 million global adherents live, mainly in the northwest region of Punjab.

Since the Taliban takeover, India has offered exiled Sikhs priority visas and the opportunity to apply for long-term residency. There is no sign yet that citizenship is on the table.

Pharmacist Manjit Singh, 40, is among those who turned down the offer, despite his daughter having emigrated there with her new husband last year.

"What would I do in India?" he asked. "There is no job or house there."

Among the remaining holdouts, the prospect of leaving is particularly wrenching: it would mean abandoning their spiritual home.

"When this gurdwara was built 60 years ago, the whole area was full of Sikhs," said 60-year-old community elder Manmohan Singh.

"Whatever joy or sorrow we felt, we shared it here."

- Leaving home -

From the outside, the temple is largely indistinguishable from other buildings on the street.

But security here is markedly high, with body searches, ID checks and two fortified doors.

In early October, unidentified gunmen forced their way inside and vandalised the sacred space.

The incident had ugly echoes of the most scarring attack on the Afghan Sikh community.

In March 2020, members of IS-K assaulted the Gurdwara Har Rai Sahib in Shor Bazar, a former enclave of Kabul's Sikh community, killing 25.

Since the attack, that temple -- and the nearby DharamshalaGurdwara, the capital's oldest Sikh house of worship at an estimated 500 years -- have been abandoned.

Paramjeet Kaur was struck by shrapnel in her left eye during the IS-K attack, and her sister was among those killed.

In the weeks that followed, Kaur packed her bags and headed for Delhi, but "we had no work and it was expensive, so we came back", she said.

That was in July, a few weeks before the Taliban returned to power.

Now Kaur, her husband and three children are fed and housed by Karte Parwan Gurdwara.

Her children do not go to school, and Kaur never ventures beyond the walls of the temple, the only place where she feels safe.

She thinks about leaving again, this time for Canada or the United States.

"My son and daughters are still small," she said. "If we leave, we can make something of our lives."

(K.Lüdke--BBZ)