Over 5,000 people from across Vancouver Island descended Gurdwara Singh Sabha for the fourth annual Victoria Khalsa Day parade and celebration.
On Sunday, April 28, members of the Sikh community gathered on Cecelia Road to celebrate Vaisahki the establishment of the Khalsa by Guru Gobind Singh in 1699.
B次元官网网址淚t was a great event and the procession ran really well and everyone had a fantastic time,B次元官网网址 said Jindi Singh, a volunteer with the gurdwara. B次元官网网址淭he procession had a few more floats than we did in previous years, there was a lot more sangat (congregation) that had come and followed the procession as well. We also had a greater number of stalls where people were sharing food and information about charities so it was a much larger scale than weB次元官网网址檇 seen before.B次元官网网址
Throught the day, the parade and subsequant celebration saw food, devotional singing, and Gatka, a form of Sikh martial arts.
Although this is the fourth Khalsa parade, the first Sikh celebration in Victoria was in 1912 after Gurdwara Sahib Khalsa Diwan Society opened and the local Sikh population marched from Chinatown to Topaz Avenue.
Singh said although the Sikh population on Vancouver Island is old, with the first ones arriving in Victoria in the early 1900s, celebrations in Victoria are fairly recent because for years, Sikhs would typically go to Vancouver or Surrey for Nagar Kirtan processions and Vaisakhi celebrations.
B次元官网网址淏ut the Sikh youth here in Victoria started telling the gurdwara B次元官网网址榳e want to do our own processionB次元官网网址 so it was very much driven by them and youB次元官网网址檒l notice at the procession [in Victoria], all the volunteers were the youth,B次元官网网址 he said.
Although there are established Sikh families who have been on the island for sometimes four generations, there are still young families and international students who have come from India who take part in the celebrations.
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