Times of India
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
Quietly, US military opens up to Sikhs
AFP,  Sep 25, 2010, 04.31pm  IST










WASHINGTON: Growing up near the air force base in _Dayton_ 
(http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/Dayton) , Ohio, Tejdeep  Singh Rattan 
knew he 
wanted to serve in uniform. When the military discouraged  him, he persisted 
but 
again got a cold shoulder. 

When he was turned away  a third time, Rattan - an observant _Sikh_ 
(http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/search?q=Sikh)  with a  turban and 
beard 
- became suspicious. 

"I was, like, I don't know what's  going on," he said. "I was very 
introverted at the time. I never felt the need  to fight back. But I said I 
really 
want to do this, and you guys are sending me  out again and again." 

The 31-year-old is now _US Army_ 
(http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/search?q=US Army)   Captain Rattan, 
since July the head dentist at the Fort 
Drum base in _New York_ (http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/New-York) 
.  

In what appears to be a quiet shift, the _US  military_ 
(http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/search?q=US military)  since last 
year has allowed 
Rattan and two other Sikhs to serve  while retaining their turbans and beards, 
which are required by their faith.  

Rattan and another Sikh who received approval last year - Captain  
Kamaljeet Singh Kalsi, a doctor - said in interviews that their superiors had  
welcomed them warmly. 

Kalsi, 34, said that on his first day of training  at Fort Sam Houston in 
Texas, a first sergeant pulled him out of the crowd and  told the soldiers 
about the Sikh's long ordeal to enlist. 

"These were  his words: 'The Army is made up of different shades of green, 
and if you have  any objection to him being here, you need to tell me now,'" 
Kalsi said. "It was  great; everybody clapped." 

The US Sikh community - estimated at more  than half a million - suffered 
hate crimes after the September 11, 2001 attacks  by assailants who falsely 
associated the religion founded in _India_ 
(http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/India)  with _al-Qaeda_ 
(http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/Al-Qaeda)  leader  Osama bin Laden. 

"I think the only way for that perception to be  eliminated is when young 
Sikhs come up and say: I want to serve in the  military," Rattan said. 

"For me, I said whatever it takes, I'm going to  fight this thing - I'm 
going to serve. Maybe if nothing else comes out of it,  people will know who 
Sikhs are," he said. 

Sikhs have a historic military  culture and have long kept their articles 
of faith in the militaries of Britain,  _Canada_ 
(http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/Canada)  and India.  

Small numbers of Sikhs for years served in the US armed forces without  
incident. But in the 1980s, the post- _Vietnam  War military_ 
(http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/search?q=Vietnam War military)  moved 
to increase 
conformity and banned displays of religious  identity for new recruits. 

The Supreme Court in 1986 upheld the  military's right to prohibit a Jewish 
officer from wearing a yarmulke. In  response, Congress approved a law 
requiring the military to approve soldiers'  religious apparel if it is "neat 
and conservative." 

Army spokesman  George Wright said that it evaluated each Sikh soldier's 
request based on  "unique facts and individual circumstances." 

"It is the Army's policy to  accommodate religious practices as long as the 
practice will not have an adverse  impact on military necessity," Wright 
said. 

But lawyers for the men  believe the US military has developed guidance - a 
general guideline, but short  of an official policy - to accommodate Sikhs. 

Most recently, the Army on  August 30 accommodated a new recruit, Simran 
Preet Singh Lamba, after initially  denying him. Lawyers closely watched his 
case as he will undergo rank-and-file  training and is not in the medical 
field. 

"I think the Army, and Defense  Department more broadly, took nine months 
to take this decision because it was a  big decision," said Amandeep Sidhu, a 
Sikh American lawyer whose firm McDermott  Will & Emery represents the men 
pro bono. 

Sidhu voiced hope that  eventually the army would "go that one step further 
and amend the uniform  regulation in a way that would allow Sikhs to serve 
without having to  automatically go through the extraordinary hoops." 

Critics have in the  past argued that the military needs to ensure 
conformity and that easing rules  could be a slippery slope with precedent for 
other 
issues. President Barack  Obama's administration is cautiously moving to 
allow gays to serve openly in the  military, a hot-button political issue. 

Sikh activists have enlisted the  help of the US Congress. Forty-one House 
members and six senators wrote to  Defense Secretary Robert Gates last year 
to voice concern after Kalsi and Rattan  initially heard they could not be 
accommodated. 

"No one should have to  choose between his religion and service to our 
country," said Representative  Carolyn Maloney, a Democrat of New York. 

Harsimran Kaur, legal director  of The Sikh Coalition, a rights advocacy 
group, hoped that pressure from  Congress and closed-door talks with the 
military would bring an official change  in policy. 

"A lawsuit is always a means of last resort as it  automatically puts both 
sides in an adversarial posture," she said. "We would  very much hope that 
the Army makes this change on its own, because we want them  to understand 
it's in their best interest as well." 

"It shows folks  abroad that the United States and the US Army practice 
what they preach, that we  not only tolerate religious diversity and freedom of 
religious, but we celebrate  it," she said. 

Captain Kalsi, who recently graduated from training and  will soon start 
serving as an emergency doctor at Fort Bragg in North Carolina,  said that 
religious tolerance "goes to the core of being an American."  

And for Sikhs, the military "is in our blood," said Kalsi, whose father,  
grandfather and great-grandfather served in the Indian or British militaries. 
 

"I want to be able to pass this on," Kalsi said. "I want my son who's  now 
a year-and-a-half old to someday say - yeah, I'm fifth-generation military." 
 

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