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Soulfinder

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  1. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to SriAkaalJiSahai in What are the Nine Treasures & 18 Spiritual Powers   
    Anything Maharaj says is worth knowing. 
    But, thanks for the Sikh2Inspire. I'm gonna have to sift through their content.
  2. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to GurjantGnostic in What are the Nine Treasures & 18 Spiritual Powers   
    I beleive Sukhraj Singh in Katha of Vaaran Bhai Gurdas Ji lists them on Sikh2Inspire...but we mostly don't know because we have no interest in them 😂 
  3. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to GurjantGnostic in Palestinians   
    Classic bro. 
    I almost feel sorry for you Ji...
  4. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to GurjantGnostic in Trouble in Slough   
    Care to explain? Their greivances appear to be with facism. 
  5. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to GurjantGnostic in Jagtar Singh Jaggi Petition   
    If Jaggi is ever to be set free. Somebody enfranchised gonna have to die. 
    The family should make known every name of every official they had communication with or played any role in this. 
    And condemn them publicly. Let's see who's most accountable for this and see if being labeled doesn't motivate anyone before some nut job does something. 
    ...said the same on X and linked to here
  6. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to SriAkaalJiSahai in What are the Nine Treasures & 18 Spiritual Powers   
    Nav Nidhhee Athaareh Sidhhee Pishhai Lageeaa Firehi Jo Har Hiradhai Sadhaa Vasaae ||
    The nine treasures and the eighteen spiritual powers of the Siddhas follow him, who keeps the Lord enshrined in his heart.
    Raag Sorath Satguru Amar Das (ang 649)
    In this ang Satguru Amar Das Ji speaks of 9 treasures and 18 spiritual powers.
    What are these treasures and spiritual powers?
    What are their significance?
  7. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to GurjantGnostic in We have coders?   
    Mannnn.... I'ma be busy like 18 months 😂 
     
  8. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to GurjantGnostic in We have coders?   
    Awesome brother man. I'll come check the updates. Been slavin but free in that it's Bhagti. 
  9. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to GurjantGnostic in We have coders?   
    Step one was just fix errors, but yeah I can't help but go big. 
  10. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to ipledgeblue in We have coders?   
    I can do coding, I have ideas but never have time.
     
    Could code an app which acts like a wrapper for sikhawareness website.
    I am also looking into coding something which records live katha from Radio stations and posts it on Youtube, and perhaps other sites like Soundcloud.
  11. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to GurjantGnostic in We have coders?   
    Niceness
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    Soulfinder reacted to Premi in The world’s first Sikh court opens in London   
    https://religionmediacentre.org.uk/news/the-worlds-first-sikh-court-opens-in-london/
     
    The world’s first Sikh court opens in London
    By Liz Harris
     
    Contributor April 25, 2024 8:23 pm News Sikh chants echoed around the panelled walls of the 15th-century Old Hall in Lincoln’s Inn at the launch of the world’s first Sikh court on Saturday.
    Beneath portraits of England’s 17th-century judiciary, 46 Sikh “magistrates and judges” took an oath to “uphold the principles of justice, equality, and integrity as prescribed by the teachings of the Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji and the Sikh faith”. Most of them were women.
    The court was set up by Sikh lawyers who felt the UK courts lacked the religious and cultural expertise and resources to deal with disputes between Sikhs due to the pressure they were under.
    It will operate as an alternative forum for dispute resolution for UK-based Sikhs involved in family and civil disputes.
    Its launch is likely to reignite debate over the operation of religious courts, including Sharia and Beth Din dispute resolution systems, which operate in the UK for Muslims and Jews.
    However barrister Baldip Singh, one of the court’s founders, insisted it was not a religious court. Unlike Islam and Judaism, Sikhism does not have its own legal code.
    He said its purpose would be “to assist Sikh families in their time of need when dealing with conflict and disputes in line with Sikh principles”.
    It was not a parallel system, but was based on the mediation-arbitration framework and would work in tandem with the UK courts, Mr Singh said. The court’s founders also hoped it would alleviate backlogs in the civil and family courts by dealing with low level disputes.
    However, Dr Prakash Shah, Reader in Culture and Law at Queen Mary University of London, said: “I see this kind of movement as a sign — one of the signs — towards reinforcing the fundamentalist strain in the Sikh tradition. I do not find the reasons given to prefer the secular courts over a Sikh religious court particularly convincing. Contemporary secular courts do go to some lengths to take on cultural and religious issues and are also able to call on expert evidence to supply relevant information.”
    But the court’s founders said those now appearing before the secular family courts rarely had the benefit of expert religious opinions, because of the cost. In one case, a Sikh couple who had separated were in a dispute about cutting their son’s hair. The mother wanted it short, while the father applied for a court order for the boy’s hair to be kept long.
    Under the tenets of their faith, baptised Sikhs, also known as Khalsa (pure), do not cut their hair. In this instance, the parties could not afford an expert to provide evidence to the court, which ruled in the mother’s favour as primary carer of the child.
    In such cases, Mr Singh said, the judge had to make a decision without the benefit of an expert, while the Sikh court would benefit from judges with knowledge of the Sikh tradition.
    At the first instance, Sikh court “magistrates” will mediate in disputes to try to negotiate a settlement, as well as directing court users to courses that can help them work on issues that have contributed to the dispute. These courses, developed with Sikh charities, cover low-level domestic violence, anger management, gambling and substance misuse and are available in Punjabi as well as English.
    Supporters of the Sikh Court say they will be available at “significantly lesser costs” than in the family courts. If mediation is unsuccessful, the case could be brought in front of a Sikh court judge who can give a legally binding judgment under the Arbitration Act.
    Its supporters said impetus for the court came after the introduction of “no-fault” divorces in England and Wales two years ago. That legislation removed the previous requirement that spouses must attribute blame for a marriage’s breakdown.
    They acknowledged the reformed divorce law reduced the bad feeling that often accompanied marital breakdown, but Mr Singh wanted “to see how we can prevent that level of animosity in other ways as well, where it preserves the sanctity of marriage or preserves the religious values that people have been brought up with”.
    Women’s rights groups have raised concerns in the past about religious courts, arguing that in some cases they can be used to pressure women to stay in abusive marriages — or to dissolve marriages on very unfavourable terms to the wife.
    However, Sukhvinder Kaur, 40, the faith and exploitation lead at Sikh Women’s Aid, said she was “cautiously optimistic” about the role the Sikh court could play for “vulnerable, mainly women, and some men too, who have been financially, emotionally, and sexually exploited by people holding positions of trust in religious settings”.
    Such cases sometimes fall between the gaps within the British system as cases of so-called “spiritual abuse” may not meet the threshold for prosecution.
    Ms Kaur, who has faced threats of violence after supporting women who have alleged sexual abuse in a faith setting, said there was currently no Sikh body that could take action on Sikh granthis (religious officials) who abused their position of trust. But she would reserve full judgment on the value of the court until it had been operating for at least a year.
    “In any community when you are trying to police your own, it is never 100 per cent safe for the victim,” she said.
    Sharan Bhachu, 47, a barrister specialising in family law, who was sworn in as a “judge” that morning, is chief lead for the family section in the Sikh court.
    “If we think that there are really significant safeguarding issues that we cannot deal with and should not deal with, they will be directed to the appropriate place,” she said. “We’re not here to take over and upset the English courts.”
    Mr Singh also stressed that under the rules of the new court both parties would have to consent to participating.
    He believed Sikh women would benefit from using the court rather than going to a judge who may not fully understand their cultural or religious issues and from being able to explain, “in their own language without an interpreter, that ‘this is what my husband is doing to me and I can’t take it any more’.”
    Gurpreet Anand, president of the Khalsa Jatha in Holland Park, west London, the UK’s oldest gurdwara, said there was an “interesting mix” of reactions in the Sikh community. “There are people who are excited by it, but there are some who seem against it,” he added. “I’ve heard comparisons to Shariah courts, which I don’t think is accurate here.”
    He was initially cautious about the court, but said the founders gave “very good answers” to his questions. “Quite often, as president of a gurdwara I get people coming to me with their problems and I’m not always the best person to deal with it,” he said.
    “Quite often I end up having to recommend people go down the legal route. The court gives us more of a community or citizen-based type solution that people can try out before they spend tens of thousands going to court.”
  16. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to GurjantGnostic in Wa He Gu Roo, Focusing On 4 Different Places   
    If we apply naval seal breathing to it, it'd be slow full inhale "Vaheguru", slow full exhale "Vaheguru", and still breath pause of the same time frame while mentally saying "Vaheguru". Tactical Simran. 😂 
     
    Hmm this one looks like two holds. I think david goggins or someone did the one I first saw. 
  17. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to GurjantGnostic in Wa He Gu Roo, Focusing On 4 Different Places   
    Yeah I remembered it wrong. Its 4 counts for each phase. In Vaheguru, silent Vaheguru, exhale Vaheguru, silent Vaheguru would be tactical Simran. 
  18. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to Premi in History Of Grooming Episode 1: Ex- Shere Panjab Member.   
    That's a jump from the stats posted. 
    Do you think that is what will happen eventually ? A WW2-like situation in Germany/Europe? Looks like the Germans are frustrated with immigration
    https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/germany-racist-survey-white-players-euro-2024-nagelsmann-b2555545.html
    Germany coach Julian Nagelsmann condemns ‘racist’ survey asking if team should have more white players
    The poll conducted by German broadcaster ARD found 21 per cent of participants would want more white players in the team
    Jamie Braidwood 23 hours ago 10Comments Germany head coach Julian Nagelsmann condemned a “racist” survey published by a public broadcaster that asked participants if they would prefer more white players in the national team.
    Germany hosts the European Championships this month and the poll by ARD found 21 per cent of 1,304 randomly selected participants said they would want more white players playing for the country at the tournament.
      The midfielder Joshua Kimmich criticised the survey as “absolutely racist” and said it was “madness for a public broadcaster to ask such a question.”
    And Nagelsmann, 36, said the country has to “wake up” as he agreed with Kimmich’s assessment that the ARD’s poll was racist.
    “I see this in exactly the same way. This question is insane,” Nagelsmann said.
  19. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to Premi in Dancing Dogs   
  20. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to GurjantGnostic in Dancing Dogs   
    You could get stuff done to this. 
  21. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to Premi in Dancing Dogs   
    And cats
     
  22. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to Premi in Dancing Dogs   
  23. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to dalsingh101 in Dancing Dogs   
    I think the black and white kootaah had much better moves than the other one. 
  24. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to Premi in Dancing Dogs   
    Other one is cuter though!
  25. Like
    Soulfinder reacted to dalsingh101 in Dancing Dogs   
    Exactly bro. Back in the day I bet I could 'buss moves' better than all of you put together. lol
    I'm not that uptight that I have some deep hatred of dancing, but I know a lot of you can see what I'm saying about it in relation to our quom. 
     

     


     

     
     
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