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Sikh group orders students to grow long hair, beards
NEW DELHI: Sikh students in Indiaâs capital are not allowed to cut their hair or trim their beards if they want to study at schools and colleges run by their community, a governing body official said on Wednesday.
The Sikh faith stipulates that men and women must wear their hair long and men must not shave or trim facial hair. Observant Sikh males in India mostly wear their long hair tied in a turban. However, several younger followers have started cutting and trimming their hair and beards.
âSikh students who want to enroll in educational institutes managed by the Delhi Sikh Gurudwara Management Committee must follow the tenets of the faith,â said Kulwinder Singh, the organisationâs law officer. The organisation runs more than 30 schools and colleges in New Delhi and its suburbs. This is the first ruling of its kind in India, Singh said.
Guru Nanak, who broke away from Hinduism, Indiaâs dominant religion, founded Sikhism in the 15th century. He preached the equality of races and genders, and the rejection of image-worship and the caste system. Sikhs consist of less than 2 percent of Indiaâs nearly 1.1 billion people, the vast majority of who are Hindus.
NEW DELHI: Sikh students in Indiaâs capital are not allowed to cut their hair or trim their beards if they want to study at schools and colleges run by their community, a governing body official said on Wednesday.
The Sikh faith stipulates that men and women must wear their hair long and men must not shave or trim facial hair. Observant Sikh males in India mostly wear their long hair tied in a turban. However, several younger followers have started cutting and trimming their hair and beards.
âSikh students who want to enroll in educational institutes managed by the Delhi Sikh Gurudwara Management Committee must follow the tenets of the faith,â said Kulwinder Singh, the organisationâs law officer. The organisation runs more than 30 schools and colleges in New Delhi and its suburbs. This is the first ruling of its kind in India, Singh said.
Guru Nanak, who broke away from Hinduism, Indiaâs dominant religion, founded Sikhism in the 15th century. He preached the equality of races and genders, and the rejection of image-worship and the caste system. Sikhs consist of less than 2 percent of Indiaâs nearly 1.1 billion people, the vast majority of who are Hindus.