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No
More Foreign in Punjab
Roopinder Singh
Tribune News Service
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Gerlind
Spekat is a 10-year veteran of the Royal Canadian Mounted
Police from Surry in Canada. “The best thing I have
done for myself,” she says, “is to be a part of
a summer programme on Punjab studies run by the University
of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB), in Chandigarh.”
It
was the murder of two Punjabis that set her on this course.
She found it difficult to communicate with the families of
the victims. Determined to learn more about the community,
she took some courses that took her to this programme. |

Participants
at the summer programme on Punjab studies run by the University
of California, Santa Barbara, USA.
— Photo by Roopinder Singh |
In
the past 11 years, 152 students from 58 universities in 10 countries
have participated in the programme. On the concluding day today,
Jessie C. Fidler, a global studies student at UCSB, said: “This
is an amazing programme. I feel that I will realise its impact more
and more when I return home. I am proud to say that I can read Gurmukhi,
and I understand and know Punjabi, know it very well.”
Other
students from the same campus were Alexis T. Donkin, Joy Davis,
Rana Ajrawat, Cori Montegomery, and David Fowler. Kathryn Lum came
all the way from the University of Lund, Sweden, to learn more about
Punjab.
Ravneet
Tiwana was four when she left India. She lives in California and
studies at UC Los Angles. Also from the same campus is Madeline
Kleiner, a budding scriptwriter with a background in science and
engineering.
Ashveer
Singh studies anthropology at UC Berkeley and has worked on the
availability of resources for the cancer-stricken Indian diaspora
in California. Fakhra Shah, a history student at San Francisco State
University, said she was exposed to the Punjab’s plural culture.
Prof
Gurinder Singh Mann, director of the Centre for Sikh and Punjab
Studies at UCSB, whose brainchild this programme is, said he was
touched by the participants’ cooperation and local scholars’
willingness to share knowledge.
Some
of the alumni of the programme now held important positions as faculty
members in North America and Europe. They were a great help in realising
the wider objective of the programme - promoting Sikh and Punjab
studies in the West - he added.
Prof
Mann is helped in his endeavour by Prof Shinder S. Thandi, head
of department, economics, finance and accounting, Coventry University,
UK, a regular for five years now.
At
a debriefing session today, Shoaib Memon, a student of Chicago Medical
School, expressed satisfaction on the way the Sufi philosophy and
movement was explained while Harpreet Singh, a computer engineering
student of the Institute of Technology, NZ, wanted more emphasis
on contemporary history in the course. These students were going
back with keenness to know more about Punjab and Punjabis.
http://www.tribuneindia.com/2007/20070811/cth1.htm#3
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