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The Sikh-American Community Is Building Resilience As Hate Crimes Rise

Celebrant Arwinder Singh pauses during a prayer reading at a gurudwara in Yuba City, California. Creative Commons photo by Carol M. Highsmith’s America, Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division

NEW YORK — Within one week in April, three Sikh men between 45 and 72 were assaulted and severely injured in Queens, New York. The Sikh community was also marking the first anniversary of the mass shooting at an Indianapolis FedEx warehouse last year, where four of the eight employees fatally shot belonged to the Sikh community. 

According to Harvard University’s Pluralism Project, there are currently 500,000 Sikh Americans residing in the United States, forming 0.15% of the total U.S. population. Other estimates like the World Religion Database at Boston University calculate there are about 280,000 Sikhs in the U.S., based on the number of Punjabi immigrants from India and Pakistan and an assumption about the proportion of them who are Sikh.

Sikh Americans are the most disproportionately targeted group in the country, at a rate four times the national average, according to an analysis of the population size. Anti-Sikh hate crimes hit a record high of 89 documented incidents in 2020 according to the FBI, reflecting an 82% increase over 2019, despite an overall decrease in the number of anti-religious hate crimes. 

Awareness and resiliency as tools 

Marking the one-year anniversary of the Indianapolis shooting, the Sikh American Legal Defense and Education Fund — one of the oldest national Sikh American civil rights organizations that raises awareness about the community and advocates for inclusive policies — held a webinar to discuss ways the community is coping and building solidarity in these testing times.  

“The community is in the process of healing.,” said Kiran Kaur, SALDEF’s executive director. “The emotions are raw. I think there’s a sense in our community that we want to ensure that our voices are heard. There’s an understanding that the community has been through difficulties, and unfortunately, other tragic incidents have happened especially post-9/11.”

In its annual report published in 2021, the FBI reported that 8,052 single-bias hate crimes involving 11,126 victims occurred in 2020. Nearly 62% of victims were targeted because of the offenders’ bias against the victims’ race, ethnicity or ancestry, while 13.3% were targeted because of the offenders’ religious bias.

“Every tragedy that happens, the repercussions are great,” said Inni Kaur, creative director of the Sikh Research Institute. “The fear is constantly there.”

Japneet Singh, a community organizer in Queens who also ran for city council last year, said the community expressed fear after the three Sikh men were brutally assaulted in their Queens neighborhood earlier this month. 

Sikh Americans gathered online on April 15, 2022, to honor the Indianapolis FedEx shooting victims of 2021. Photo provided by the Sikh American Legal Defense and Education Fund, the organizer of the event

Singh emphasized that the hate crimes against the community have risen during the pandemic. 

Within a week, “these perpetrators found it so comfortable to come to the same location around the same time frame,” Singh said. 

“They took off their dastars (turbans), pulled their beards — so those are telltale signs (that) it had to do with how we look,” he said. “For this to happen just two blocks away from the gurdwara (place of worship) has raised fears in many, and as the youth of this community, it alerts us that we need to do a better job at protecting our elders and protecting ourselves.”

Based on whether one is initiated or not, Sikhs are either “amritdhari” or “sahejdhari.” Amritdhari Sikhs are required to wear the five articles of faith, also known as the five K’s, while the majority of the uninitiated population wear some articles of faith as part of their religious expression. The five articles of faith are ‘kesh’ (uncut hair), ‘kanga’ (wooden comb), ‘kachera’ (cotton undershorts), ‘kirpan’ (a steel blade), and ‘kara’ (a steel bracelet). 

Each of these carries a symbolic significance. For instance, the kirpan symbolizes one’s commitment to protecting the defenseless and defending their faith. 

The community is on guard, Singh added:

“We’ve been guiding the elders to be careful, and if you don’t need to, don’t walk by yourself, especially at odd hours. If you have a younger relative at home, walk with them or walk in front of your property.”

Community support as a coping mechanism has played a vital role. 

In the Indianapolis FedEx shooting last year, the lack of acknowledgment by the authorities of bias as a possible motive left the community in distress. 

“The fact that the entire community came together — there’s comfort in that you’re not alone,” Inni Kaur said. “In events like these, there’s not much you can say. But your presence counts as this community thrives and prospers and mourns and celebrates together.

“We have no control over the events that take place around us,” she added. “We have control over the way we process and deal with them.”

But one of the major causes of the community being targeted is a severe lack of awareness. 

Kiran Kaur said that SALDEF conducted a study called “Turban Myths” with Stanford University in the aftermath of the Oakcreek, Wisconsin, gurudwara mass shooting in August 2012 in which six people were fatally shot. The study found that “a vast majority of Americans do not know who Sikhs are.” 

“It’s pretty shocking, and there’s so much work to be done as a community,” Kaur said. “The starting point is to get people to know who you are. And do they understand our unfortunate history of being targeted because of our religion and religious articles of faith? I think there’s so much to unpack, and that’s where at times, the work can seem daunting, but it is extremely necessary.” 

In the aftermath of the Indianapolis FedEx shooting last year, Kaur said that SALDEF held informational training as part of their liaising efforts between government agencies — like the local law enforcement agency, the FBI and community members — to raise awareness and help the community feel safer. 

“The first thing that we did (was) to hear community members’ stories and understand what they were experiencing and what they saw,” she said. 

“We focused on Sikh awareness, how to interact with the Sikh American community and build relationships, and our experiences over the years, specifically post 9/11. … Part of this is for the law enforcement officers to understand the Sikh American experience because a lot of what we know intuitively — the hate that the community has experienced — may not be so apparent to those in the law enforcement or the FBI if they are not familiar with our experiences.” 

Underreporting as hate crimes rose 

Kiran Kaur said there is likely a significant undercount in the number of anti-Sikh hate crimes.

“Unfortunately, we have seen a rise in hate crimes through the pandemic and underreporting,” she said. “People are often not necessarily comfortable coming forward.”

In 2020, SALDEF conducted a national survey. The key findings were that most Sikh Americans had experienced hate and discrimination, with 60% of children experiencing bullying at schools. 

“And we know that the number of reported cases is nowhere near that,” Kaur said. “Often, hate crimes are reported through the police departments around the country, but that reporting isn’t mandatory. So, when you have the reporting that isn’t mandatory, a lot of times it doesn’t get reported simply because people are not filling up the paperwork.”

And even though the Biden administration passed the Jabara-Heyer NO HATE Act last year as part of the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act, it isn’t enough, she said. 

“I think it is a good step in correcting an issue, but it’s not a perfect solution,” Kaur said. “It sets up systems that make it easier to report, and in some cases, it emphasizes those requirements. It goes further than any other act in addressing the issue of the potential undercount.

“SALDEF has invested in community outreach to ensure people feel comfortable in reporting,” Kiran noted. 

The way forward 

The community is mobilizing and creating spaces to address these issues. 

“These incidents are traumatic,” Kiran Kaur said, but the next generation is mobilizing and getting involved. “We’ve seen organizers come together, in Queens and even around the country.” 

Japneet Singh emphasized this generational difference. “When our elders came to this country, it was about surviving, being accepted, and working hard so that their kids can get to good schools,” Singh said. “But now, it’s about holding people accountable in our generation.

“If you’re coming to our community and are asking for our votes, our donations, what are you going to do for us?” 

The community members are trying to build toward better representation and are looking for a seat at the table. 

“We need to demand better from our city and state governments,” Singh said.

“For the first time, we have five Sikh men running for positions,” he explained, “because if we don’t take care of the community, no one will.

Manmeet Sahni is an independent journalist from New Delhi based in New York. She writes about politics, human rights, inequality and social movements. Her bylines have appeared in Documented, The Article and others, and she is an alumna of the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University.