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Islamic Rape Gangs:
England’s Rotherham is Just The Tip of The Iceberg

JAMES DELINGPOLE

 

 

 




George Igler of the Discourse Institute has been following the Rotherham child rape gang story closely for the last three years.

The full story is more shocking than you can possibly imagine, not just because of the ugliness of the abuse itself (redolent of that horrible scene from the movie “Taken” where smack-addled girls are serially abused in a filthy dive by countless grubby men) but also because of the extent of the cover-up by the left-liberal establishment of social workers, local government officers, child welfare charities, diversity co-ordinators, not to mention the regional police forces and even imams.

Truly this is one of the biggest scandals of our time. And it's going to get bigger.

Here are some of the disturbing revelations:

*    The rape gang phenomenon has existed in the UK for at least 25 years, the first recorded instance being of a trial in Birmingham in 1989.

But - typical, this, of what was to come - the defendants were not Muslim rapists. They were the Sikh fathers of abused daughters who had tried to attack the perpetrators of the crime only to end up being arrested themselves while the police turned a blind eye to the sex crime.

*    It exists not just in impoverished, racially-divided, working class Northern towns by also in places as white and genteel as Henley-on-Thames

*    It begins like this: a "Romeo" targets the girls, wins their affections, pretends to be in love with them, makes them feel grown-up with presents, treats, drink, drugs. Then the trapdoor shuts. Next thing they know these girls are being plied with booze and heroin, shut in a room with strangers -- often related: cousins, brothers, etc -- who serially rape them, with the whole business being filmed.

The video footage is then used to blackmail the girls, who in any case, generally feel too ashamed to report the crime to the authorities. Most of them become addicted to the heroin whose purpose is first to make them resist less and secondly to make them keep coming back for more, despite their better judgement.

*   These practices have long been widely known to the police, to social workers, to child-care charities and local councils. All found an excuse to absolve the rape gangs of criminal behaviour by claiming that these sexual activities were consensual -- I.e., that these girls, some as young as 11, were sluts who had it coming to them.

*    Each child is worth about £200,000 (around $300,000) a year to the gangs -- which makes them even more lucrative than the drugs trade.

*    Money is also one of the reasons for the complicity of so many local councils. At a time of general spending cutbacks, money can always be found for jobs in the all-important "Diversity" industry. On salaries as high as £100,000 a year, senior council workers have a vested interest in not rocking the boat. Better to cover up these scandals and preserve the illusion of community cohesion then to have unwelcome public attention drawn to these unsavoury goings-on.

*    Does the broader local Muslim community know what's going on? Of course. Remember, the 200 prosecutions so far have been brought mainly against the gang organizers - not against the many thousands of men who have participated in these rape parties.

*    Also, the Muslim community has deliberately exploited white liberal squeamishness by threatening race riots and by warning off police that if they try to take the matter further they will report them for "racism."

*    Why haven't more people in authority lost their jobs? Because time and again they deploy a formulaic excuse which they may well have learned at diversity workshops organised by groups like “Common Purpose“: yes, there has been a scandal; it may be worse than we think; but only we have the training and experience to deal with it, which is why it is vital that we keep our jobs.

*    Why wasn't this reported earlier? It was. But often the people protesting were members of the BNP or the EDL whose "far-right" taint meant that their complaints could safely be dismissed by the left-liberal Establishment as racially motivated and dishonest. The same "racism" accusation was levelled against anyone brave enough to speak out such as Labour MP Ann Cryer. Most people therefore found it more convenient to look the other way.

*    Rotherham -- with 1400 girls abused -- is just the tip of the iceberg.

This has been going on, largely unchecked, all over Britain for a period of 25 years. And, if people take the apologists seriously, it may well go on largely unchecked for some time to come ...


[Courtesy: Breitbart. Edited for sikhchic.com]
September 8, 2014
 

Conversation about this article

1: Sarvjit Singh (Massachusetts, USA), September 08, 2014, 10:59 AM.

Any Sikh who visits the UK or has relatives there, especially around the Birmingham area, would know this as a serious issue. For some weird reason, even our own Sikh organizations would not raise this matter in the press against Pakistanis (perhaps due to politics or the support they receive from Pakistanis). Meanwhile, our own girls are blamed for being out of control, or our men being not attractive enough (I have heard all this). There is a discussion going on in India about 'Love Jihad' which is similar to what happens in UK. These men are married men and they can have four niqahs (Muslim marriages) and up to 40 'Mutta' or temporary marriages (which is basically prostitution, but sanctioned under the shariat). It is about time all sane people raised their voices, for God's Sake!

2: Tinku (Punjab), September 08, 2014, 11:21 AM.

I don't mind criticism. But when I highlighted in a comment pertaining to another article here that instead of doing charity in Iraq and far-flung places, we should be doing service to our own people first -- for example, widows and kids displaced from 1984 genocide -- people responded negatively to my comments. Well, add this issue to the list, as the person(s) doing seva in Iraq should first have looked at his backyard as to the thousands of Sikh girls and families destroyed by the Muslims gangs in UK alone.

3: Kaala Singh (Punjab), September 08, 2014, 12:17 PM.

Sikhs being a small minority everywhere have to face problems that others don't. Also, many Sikhs suffer from a complex as they are small in numbers and are bombarded with malicious propaganda regarding their faith and way of life and how they look like. This, combined with the breakdown of the value systems of some immigrant families, and the desire to "fit-in" prompts Sikh girls to look for "love" outside the community. Such affairs are kept secret for obvious reasons and are revealed when the damage has already been done. One can't expect these gangs to mend their ways and the only solution is strong families and a return to our roots and values so that innocent girls don't fall prey to these predators. This problem is not confined to UK alone, this happens in other places as well.

4: N Singh (Canada), September 08, 2014, 12:26 PM.

#2: I for one agree and support your view. It is because of negative comments such as those and those types of people that we are where we are today: sitting ducks in whichever country we live in.

5: Ek Ong Kaar Kaur  (Espanola, New Mexico, USA), September 08, 2014, 1:37 PM.

For every girl that is subject to this extreme kind of seduction and exploitation, we have lost an entire generation. But at the same time, the girls are not the responsible party. A world-wide culture that glorifies sexual violence against women is responsible. And the Internet, with its access to extreme pornography, has just made this situation so much worse. There is money to be made in raping young girls. And there is money to be made because there are buyers. That is the heart of the problem. Young women need to be taught life skills so they can avoid these situations. And young men in all faith traditions need to be taught to respect the creativity of the woman. Do you see the Divine in her or not? If you do - and if you see it in all women - then how could you participate in these situations? My prayers are with those communities who are suffering. It might be good to create an online support environment where young girls and their families can get to help to heal. And men, young and old, can learn some life skills that would help them handle their sexuality in a more health way.

6: N Singh (Canada), September 08, 2014, 2:02 PM.

This was going on when I was a young girl further back than 1989. Sikhs tried to protest but the British establishment saw this as an ethnic problem. Now that 'white' girls have become the target there is an 'uproar'. This is what happens when you let a cancer spread.

7: Tinku (Punjab), September 08, 2014, 2:23 PM.

#4: Thanks N Singh, for understanding my point of view. Another thing I want to highlight is the importance of words chosen by our gurdwara committee members. Sometimes we say words that lets people put their guard down, thinking that our elders are saying "xxx" are trustworthy and so worth. We have to careful about that as well in today's world where there is a cut throat competition between some religions to increase their numbers.

8: Gurmit Singh (Toronto, Ontario, Canada), September 08, 2014, 3:20 PM.

It's a numbers game, people. The United Kingdom of Islam is just two generations away. Census figures show almost a tenth of babies and toddlers in England and Wales are Muslim -- nearly twice the proportion in the general population. An Islamic state is a certainty without even a single bullet fired. Please heed my words and for those of you that don't, continue holding hands in a circle and sing 'Kum Ba Yah.'

9: Harinder Singh (Punjab), September 08, 2014, 3:25 PM.

In Islam it is permitted for Muslims to rape non-Muslim women. Mostly, such women are welcomed as 'war booty.' All of which is a total contrast to the teachings of Sikhi.

10: Sunny Grewal (Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada), September 08, 2014, 3:53 PM.

Child molesters and Jihadis ... Pakistani parents should be proud of themselves.

11: Sunny Grewal (Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada), September 08, 2014, 3:56 PM.

I am curious as tp how the Pakistani community has been responding to all of the press that has come out in the last year regarding the institutionalization of child rape in their community. Do they see themselves as the victims of a malicious media? Are they ashamed at the actions of their men? Do they see this as something which was known to all but was kept under wraps to prevent it from surfacing? Or, are they sitting in their homes laughing that they have been humiliating kafir men and their women? Perhaps someone from the UK can answer my question.

12: Sunny Grewal (Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada), September 08, 2014, 4:10 PM.

The young women who have been victimized by these monsters are not to blame. Each victim had been marked before a conversation with the perpetrators of these crimes had started. I am curious though, now that it is pretty much out in the open that such men are ingrained to rape non-Muslims women, is it making any significant change in the way that young Sikh girls interact with them? Are young Sikh women having a reality check when it comes to how they interact with Pakistani men? I am trying to say this in the most sensitive way possible.

13: R Singh (Canada), September 08, 2014, 4:43 PM.

Once again, where were the parents when their young daughters are/were being seduced? This is both a societal and governmental failure of gargantuan proportions. Obviously the laws of the land are ineffectual, or just plain ignored. Are there any changes that are going to be enacted or is it just a passing hue and cry, and then business as usual? Or is someone expecting the public to do something about it? Sikhs as a community are vulnerable all around, compounded by the fact we are always too busy with our identity issues and nagar kirtans to actually pay attention to any other. And yes, we need to get our proverbial head out of the sand and face the other menace -- Bollywood, the culture our kids are getting raised in.

14: Tinku (Punjab), September 08, 2014, 6:02 PM.

#13 R Singh: It's not easy for young immigrant parents when they are establishing roots in a new country. The Muslim gangs in the UK had a very clear operational plan. First, one of the young members would try to befriend these innocent girls and slowly grow closer. Then they took pictures with them, kissing or something minor. Then they blackmailed these girls using these pictures. Then it was a downward spiral after that. As far as the Pakistani community is concerned, you can watch for yourself, they will never take blame; they say it was the girls who wanted it so. Well, I am shocked how organized these people are, spread across all of UK, with single-minded commitment. I wouldn't be surprised if these low-lifes were somehow paid by the larger community. I mean, come on, between jobs and family life, how did these low-lifes find time to plan all this?

15: Tinku (Punjab), September 08, 2014, 6:33 PM.

I cannot emphasize this enough but similar games are played by Hindus in India and outside, using Bollywood media. Of course, the scale subjectively looks smaller compared to this but it's hard to quantify till more investigation is done. It's sad we don't have our own home.

16: Sunny Grewal (Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada), September 08, 2014, 7:17 PM.

@14: It seems as if the Pakistani community needs to be publically shamed into accepting that their men are pigs. Words like rapists and child molesters should be used more regularly when speaking about their community. If they refuse to disown these actions, then they are blatantly supporting it. The entire UK needs to change the way it deals with this one community.

17: Tinku (Punjab), September 08, 2014, 7:23 PM.

Forgot to mention this in my earlier comment that these low-lifes posed as Sikhs to these innocent girls, talking in Punjabi and wearing karras. Once the truth came out, it was too late for these girls to get out of that web.

18: Rup Singh (Canada), September 08, 2014, 7:37 PM.

Centuries have passed but the MO of these people is the same. Forcefully convert or kill, kidnap the innocent women and girls and sell them or use them as slaves. Happening in some Muslim countries right now. If their religion and culture does not teach this, then where is the condemnation and outcry by their community leaders?

19: Tinku (Punjab), September 08, 2014, 9:40 PM.

#18 -- What's the incentive for their community leaders to condemn this? There was a report a few years ago where someone published a typed letter by one of the maulvis in the UK instigating Muslim youth to employ these very methods to destroy non-Muslims. I think we as a community have to do things collectively instead of thinking that these things are happening to someone else's household only. Ultimately the fire or cancer, as someone mentioned here, will also reach us. 'Fight this menace collectively' should be our motto.

20: Gurteg Singh (New York, USA), September 08, 2014, 10:50 PM.

Except for some vague and formal statements, unfortunately the Pakistani Community and Muslims in general have been shamelessly silent to the point of being complicit in these horrendous crimes against women. The recent abduction of 300 hundred school girls in Africa by Boko Haram terrorists and the mass abduction of Yezidi women in Iraq by fanatics of ISIS has not elicited any strong reaction or action from any Muslim country. It is past time that the problem of Muslim fanaticism and the so called Jihad whose aim is to establish an Islamic Caliphate by resorting to violence, terrorism, rape and pillage, must be dealt with sternly by all who value freedom, liberty and respect for all, irrespective of caste, creed, race, religion or nationality.

21: Raj (Canada), September 08, 2014, 10:53 PM.

I'm sure it didn't help when these girls' parents were watching stupid Indian movies with this Khan and that Khan, and idolizing them. Of course, kids are going to be easily lured by these thugs. Instead of sitting with kids and reading them Guru's and their sahebzaday saakhis, they watched stupid Indian movies. Unfortunately, they are reaping the benefits and don't even see the connection.

22: Kaala Singh (Punjab), September 08, 2014, 11:55 PM.

The "Islamic state" is coming to the UK. Is there a difference between what they do in Iraq and what they do elsewhere? It's the same everywhere, kill or convert the "kafirs". Once that is done, fight with each other to the death and go to "heaven" where "virgins" are waiting. This is in their DNA, you can't change that.

23: Sunny Grewal (Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada), September 09, 2014, 2:56 AM.

I have recently re-evaluated my position on Partition. I keep edging towards the thought that Partition was the best thing which has happened to our community in modern history. We were spared from living in a country with the worst human beings on the planet. I do not mean to disrespect my Sikh brothers and sisters who lost their lives during the event. However, considering that Pakistanis are easily the most intolerant community on the planet, I think it was better to get the violence over with quickly than to suffer for decades in a unified state. Who would have imagined during the time of Partition that a community which inflicted so much pain and suffering because of its intolerant views would actually continue to get worse over the decades.

24: Baldev Singh (Bradford, United Kingdom), September 09, 2014, 7:40 AM.

With some Sikhs trying to replicate decadent cultures and living out Hindi films, and getting involved in a culture of alcohol and drugs, Guru Sahib would say: "If you sow poison, then how can you expect nectar in return?"

25: Jaswinder Kaur (Germany), September 09, 2014, 8:11 AM.

Let's stop blaming other people and see in our own house where we are wrong. If we educate our daughters enough (not only school education), give them enough love, allow them to taste life outside of the house and gurdwara, I am sure they will never fall into this trap. Who is responsible for throwing them to the wolves? We ourselves, of course. The problem is we have reduced our beliefs to Hindu-like rituals, and don't follow our Guru in deeds. The day we will do that, nobody can harm us.

26: Sarvjit Singh (Massachusetts, USA), September 09, 2014, 9:24 AM.

We all agree on that wrongs have been done. There is enough consensus on the following: 1) Innocent girls have been victimized / manipulated by falsehoods. There still might be some genuine marriages between Muslim men and Sikh women, but they are a tiny fraction. We are not just worried about Sikh women but also other innocent women who have been wronged. 2) There is hardly ever a case of Sikh men and Muslim women marriages, primarily because Muslim women would be threatened and intimidated by Muslim men beyond belief. 3) In Islam, Jihad is considered a sacred duty, Love (marriage) Jihad is a sanctioned duty, provided progeny is under Islam. This is usually written into the marriage contract. Another concept is Mutta or temporary marriage; so long as men pay money to women for a determined period (basically prostitution). 3) All of this is glorified and taught to their young men. A good majority of them are on welfare in the UK. In fact there was a story documented of a young rebellious Sikh girl married as such and then sold somewhere in Pakistani Kashmir. 4) Muslim men wear karras and visit Bhangra basements and gurdwaras and do seva just for such opportunities. 5) We lack organizational setup or unified voice and don't provide enough social bonding for our youngsters. 6) Young girls are indeed not treated at par with boys. Even our women/mothers are selective, in favour of boys. We cannot force our young generation to think one way or another but we can certainly show them the reality and suggest responsible behaviour not just at home but everywhere. Those amongst us who give unequal treatment to girls over boys are major contributors to this horrendous situation.

27: Mohan Singh (Toronto, Ontario, Canada), September 09, 2014, 9:46 AM.

Agree with #25. Let's maintain a spiritual and Sikhi environment at home and the rest will follow ...!

28: Tinku (Punjab), September 09, 2014, 10:50 AM.

Agree with #25: There should be great communication channel between parents and kids to avoid these issues and we should also take these issues head-on at the community level instead of hiding from the issues.

29: R Singh (Canada), September 09, 2014, 12:18 PM.

Immigrants or not, parents are responsible for the welfare of their kids. Secondly, our kids should be able to tell us everything that goes on in their lives. Totally agree with Jaswinder ji. We need to jettison this misplaced sense of honour or whatever self-delusional restraints some of us have imposed on ourselves, that any blackmail attempt should not work. Thirdly, we did not like being labelled and asked to stand in for the actions of some that got us labelled terrorists, so why are we expecting others to go through the same now? In a country that has Interpol and Scotland Yard and a great justice system, it should be able to keep such operations from happening. How about sparing some anger for where it rightfully belongs, the criminals and the system? What is being done about it, is the question of the day. We can sit and condemn everyone and an entire community, it will not make an iota of a difference. When the Indian media was collectively defaming us in the 80's with gory tales, we ended up paying for it with pogroms against us. We, of all people, should know how things happen. This is a case of clear sex racketeering. It is widespread, even if here it has been cornered by one community. The law should not spare these predators and perpetrators. Not just any one community but the entire country should be together on taking care of its criminals.

30: TJ Singh (Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada), September 09, 2014, 5:49 PM.

I am deeply troubled with what I have read. Where are the Sikh leaders in the UK? What advocacy and lobbying efforts have been made on the part of the Sikh community to target these predators? Where is Lord Indarjit Singh or the Sikh Council, etc., etc.? Have Sikhs communicated this issue with anyone to deal with Scotland Yard on behalf of the Sikh community? Shame on the Sardars of the UK for not fighting this problem head on. Maybe less time should be spent on fashion and bhangra music and more time protecting your daughters and sisters. I will say one thing about Sikhs in Vancouver, Canada, albeit it that may offend some. It's a well known fact that we have a a long history of gang violence within our community. However, that said, such bravado keeps other communities at bay as they do not dare to engage the Punjabis in such a manner. We have earned our right over the past 100 years as a community not to be messed with. I challenge the UK Sardars to stand up for their daughters and sisters against this disease that tried to eradicate our Sikh community a few hundred years ago. It didn't happen then and you should make sure it doesn't happen now.

31: Sunny Grewal (Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada), September 09, 2014, 8:24 PM.

@30 TJ Singh: Sikhs have been trying for the last three decades to bring attention to the fact that their girls are being targeted by Pakistani men for sexual exploitation. The police largely dismissed it as men from one community upset that their women are running off with men from a rival community. There is a reason why news articles detailing the actions of Pakistani men usually reference the fact that the Sikh community has been complaining about this issue for an entire generation. The only reason why these dirtbags have been making the news recently is because it has been recently exposed that they were also targeting white British girls in the thousands. I know that in the 80's there were Sikh gangs that would fight Pakistani gangs entirely for the purpose of protecting their girls. The problem is that over the last few decades the Sikhs have increased their economic position in the country and they no longer have a large male youth population that has nothing better to do than stand on the curb all day and pick fights with Pakistanis. The Pakistani community on the other hand is no better off today economically then it was 30 years ago and thus has a big male population which is involved in criminal activity of all sorts. As someone who has been following the BBC for years I can tell you that Pakistani's consistently make the news for criminal activity whereas other South Asian groups, including non-Pakistani Muslims are hardly if ever mentioned. Pakistanis seem to have an interesting cultural trait to make absolutely no progress whatsoever. One can look at their motherland to see that this is not a generalization.

32: H. Kaur (Canada), September 10, 2014, 1:31 AM.

I don't buy that the police was trying not to single out a particular community and so arresting little girls of their own race instead of child rapists. That is just nonsense. I think there were other things going on, perhaps orders from a vote-hungry city council to the top level and perhaps also cops at the top level were bought off or were abusers too, who knows. I personally find the police there just as disgusting as the rapists and pimps. If you don't catch them but blame their victims through the power of the law, are you not encouraging rapists and pimps to operate in droves in that city? It must have been quite famous among such types for being a great place to operate. Also, there aren't just Pakistani gangs like this. All over the world, there is sex slavery. Even in Canada, at any time there may be 600 sex slaves from other places being victimized. Even Canadian women and girls are sex slaves. For instance, pimps or people they may hire (young people like the girls who talk to them and offer them a place to crash) frequently hang around Greyhound bus stops looking for young girls who have run away from home (some from abuse, including sexual abuse). In India there is a huge sex slave trade. Not too long ago some girls in Punjab were kidnapped from a public bus and taken away. So many are brought from Nepal too. As long as there are disgusting creatures willing to pay money to rape these girls, the gangs will continue to operate to make money. When the cops help them even in places supposed to be fairly civilized, well then we get Rotherham.

33: H. Kaur (Canada), September 11, 2014, 2:32 AM.

Sunny, your comment (#23) is not like your usual comments. I think it is very easy for people to jump on the bandwagon and start disliking Pakistanis. They do the same thing to Sikhs when hearing stuff on the media. And, of course, we have our own fair share of boors and criminals. I think it is really easy to throw the baby out with the bathwater in this case. I think the baby for us to think about is that our Gurus didn't teach us that Muslims or Pakistanis are disgusting creatures we can just start hating. Of course, being human, it is easy to hate when people tend to behave badly against us and it is a trend. I know the feeling of hate, I can tell you, but we have to just try to not let it blind us. I personally do not like some things about Islam, for instance it does promote rape of non-Muslim women. However, the common Pakistani Muslim or common Muslim I am sure does not go around justifying rape. Mardana certainly didn't. Most, I am sure, find other stuff to focus on from Islam, stuff that does promote ethical behaviour and compassion. All that being said, I remember quite a few years ago I was sitting in a coffee shop in Ontario, in Rexdale not too far from the Gurdwara. I was reading a book when this Muslim guy came and asked if he could join me at the table. I shrugged saying I wanted to read my book but he could sit there if he wanted for I didn't own the chairs in the shop. Most people would have taken off, but he still chose to sit there. I was not that young but looked younger than I was by several years. He started talking and asking all sorts of questions including if I was single, lived by myself. He had a British accent but said he was from Pakistan. He just wouldn't go away and other people started staring for they could tell I didn't care to have him there but he just wouldn't go away. In the end he just had to for I just started ignoring him pretending I was reading still and stopped my one word answers too. He left saying he was interested in meeting me again and that nobody was a stranger. Now I would just be much more forthright and rude right from the beginning but I didn't have those skills I guess back then. I wondered what his game was, trying to convert me or what, like what was he doing in an area he said was a Sikh strong hold. There were a lot of people including odd Sikh sects who tried to covert me when I was there. The worst was this Morman guy. I was talking on my cell and walking along and he actually blocked my path and tried to interrupt my conversation to do his spiel. I told him I was on the phone and was quite rude for he really pissed me off.

34: Harpreet Singh (Delhi, India), September 11, 2014, 8:21 AM.

May Waheguru protect all Sikh youth. But I will request all Sikhs to please have faith in Kalgidhar and the power of ardaas. While doing every thing possible, please always pray for protection of your or all Sikh children or even all humanity. Guru Nanak will definitely respond. Gurbani and our great history is proof of it. After reading the above piece, I myself did and will always do ardaas for such Sikhs. We Sikhs must always remain in sangat of shabad Guru and true gursikhs who are out there but in small numbers and away from publicity. Sikhs have survived all assaults and will survive this one too. The sinners will be punished definitely, sooner or later.

35: Sunny Grewal (Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada), September 12, 2014, 12:10 AM.

@33 H. Kaur ji: It is very difficult for me to find any sympathy for Pakistanis or the nation of Pakistan. I quite dislike the intolerance imbedded in their culture, but my own liberal heritage prevents me from foaming at the mouth and acting out my violence towards their men and women. I cannot say the same for them. I would not use the actions of a minority to paint the entire majority. However, when the crimes the minority commits are things like a rape crusade against other communities in the UK or targeting minorities in Pakistan when they themselves make up 99.9% of the population, it tends to make me quite upset. Although I do not look upon Islam kindly, I understand that the vast majority of Muslims are good people. Pakistanis however are one subgroup of Muslims who, because of their history and identity issues which built up over a century, have created a culture which is imbedded in intolerance.

36: Kaala Singh (Punjab), September 15, 2014, 1:12 PM.

I am sure these guys can be dealt with like we dealt with the Hindu thugs who tried to do the same but in a very subtle way. The number of Sikh girls marrying or eloping with others in our community has become negligible these days.

37: Anna (United Kingdom), October 30, 2014, 10:24 AM.

Great article. Islamist snakes love poisoning the world. I wish there were a billion Sikhs. The world would be a nicer place as Sikhs are a force of good.

38: Raja Singh (USA ), August 20, 2015, 1:49 PM.

Can we spread the word arround to all the parents of young Sikh girls, and all the gurdwaras in the world to be aware of this issue, it can happen anywhere.

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