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The Third<i>Ghallughara</i>: On the Sikh Dilemma Since 1984
10
Citations
37
References
2015
Year
South Asian CultureNationalismIndigenous PeopleIndigenous MovementCultural TheoryCultural StudiesIndigenous StudySikh CommunitySikh HeritageCasteCultural HistoryLanguage StudiesIntellectual HistorySikh EliteCritical TheoryEthnographyArtsIslamic StudySikh Dilemma
This article examines the enduring impact of 1984 tragedy upon the Sikh community. After outlining the initial reaction to the Government of India's army action in the Golden Temple Amritsar, it looks at some of the ways common Sikhs made sense of the loss of the Sikh heritage and the hurt of desecration of their holiest shrine. While the Indian stately discourse enforced by the media tried to justify its ghastly action, this was challenged, by a section of the Sikh elite. Even after three decades the reverberations of the tragedy seem unending, reminding Sikhs individually as well as collectively about the precarious public space available for community's cultural, linguistic, and political expressions. The article points towards the persistent dilemma of the Sikh elite as it makes sense of various compulsions, choices, and strategies in the postcolonial Indian polity.
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