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An
Academic Carnival
Roopinder Singh finds out what brings these foreigners to Chandigarh
-
Kristina Myrvold is back again. She has been researching on Sikhs
in Varanasi and on Punjabi marriage practices.
- Gibb
Schreffler has been back for the third time, he plays the dhol
and soon plans to teach others and make them dance to his beat.
- Margherita
Zorzetto, a human rights' activist from Venice, Italy, is learning
about Punjab and its culture.
- Anna
Bigelow was in Chandigarh recently. She is continuing research
on the shared sacred spaces in Malerkotla.
| What
has brought these foreign academics to Chandigarh is the Summer
Programme in Punjab Studies guided by Prof Gurinder Singh
Mann, Director of the recently created Center for Sikh and
Punjab Studies and Kapany Professor of Sikh Studies at UC,
Santa Barbara, the programme, in its eighth year, has attracted
over 100 scholars from 44 universities in nine countries (Australia,
Canada, England, France, Germany, India, Italy, Sweden, and
the USA). Several of the scholars who attended the programme,
like Bigelow, have now become faculty members in different
universities, and many who hold teaching positions in various
academic institutions have been enriched by their interaction
in learning more about Punjab. |

Daisy
Rodriguez plays the iktara while Gibb Schreffler strikes the
beat on the dhol (foreground) as others in the background
join in. From left: Rahuldeep Singh Gill, Sukhmit Singh Kalsi,
Vishal Bhalla, John Warneke, Chester Phillips, Margherita
Zorzetto and Amrit Kaur Gill. — Photo by Manoj Mahajan |
Flush
with the success of seeing his dream — of setting up a centre
for Punjab studies at UC, Santa Barbara — come true and holding
the much-acclaimed "International Conference on Punjabi Culture"
in May this year, the normally self-effacing Mann's satisfaction
is not difficult not to see.
Mann
says interest in Punjab studies is developing in the western world.
"We do not have any system of advertising the Summer Programme,
but young scholars find out about the programme and join it."
He maintains that Chandigarh is the best place to have a programme
like this. "The city is welcoming to foreigners. I am very
grateful for the cooperation of local scholars, who have helped
to make the programme such a success," he says.
Shinder
Thandi, Professor of Economics at the Business School of Coventry
University, UK, says: "It is a unique and all-encompassing
programme on Punjab and its people. This is the only such programme
in the world." Thandi immigrated to the UK in 1963, and is
an authority on the Indian diaspora. He is, at present, working
on a book on the relationship between the diaspora and homeland.
Prof
Constance Elsberg, author of Graceful Women: Gender and Identity
in an American Sikh Community, has been lecturing on the issues
facing the Euro-American Sikhs in North America and was in Chandigarh
to learn more about Punjab and its culture.
Rahuldeep
Singh Gill, from the UCSB, is studying the vars of Bhai Gurdas to
understand the evolution of the early Sikh community. He is also
a bhangra dancer, having founded Shera Vargi Jaan team at the University
of Rochester, NY. He helped others and brushed up his bhangra skills
during the course as well as found time to tone up at Vertical Fitness
and discover Mr Beans for coffee.
Kristina
Myrvold, on the other hand, is a die-hard Barista fan, where she
has charmed the young lads into brewing a special cuppa for her.
She is repeating the programme, has spent time at the UCSB, and
plans to offer a course in Sikhism at Lund University, Sweden, next
year. This would be the first such course in Europe.
Lectures
by major Punjabi academics, bhangra, musical performances, exposure
to art and theatre and a hectic travel week that covered religious,
cultural and academic centres in Punjab has had Chester Phillips,
who studies Liberal Art at Harvard University, dubbing the programme
an "academic carnival." He contributed to the general
atmosphere by wearing an impeccably tied dhoti on most formal occasions,
like the dinner at theatre personality Neelam Mann Singh's house.
That day, Amrit Kaur Gill, a third-generation Indian in the US,
looked great in her new salwar kameez, while Rana Ajrawat and Sukhmeet
Singh Kalsi looked natty in western clothes. John Warneke was heard
discussing the Nihangs, and Jenifer Heisler was fascinated by the
museums of Punjab. Daisy Rodriguez grew up among the descendents
of one of the earliest Sikh settlements in the US, El Centro.
Most
of the participants of this six-week intensive course were newcomers;
three repeated it. Many were foreigners, some children or grandchildren
of immigrants from Punjab.
In
the 20th century, the diaspora had left Punjab to go to other lands.
Today, scholars from those countries, including their descendents,
are visiting and studying Punjab through this unique programme.
http://www.tribuneindia.com/2004/20040814/saturday/main2.htm
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