Showing posts with label candle light vigil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label candle light vigil. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Candle Light Vigil in memory of Slain Journalist Saleem Shahzad‏

Nothing can be more disheartening, than news of someone’s brutal murder. Saleem Shahzad, a veteran Pakistani journalist and a loud voice of reason was first abducted and than killed by the forces of dark in Pakistan.  

We never met Saleem Shahzad personally but we the members of Committee of Progressive Pakistani Canadians here in Vancouver like many others living in Pakistan and hundreds of thousands of conscious people elsewhere in this globalised and interconnected world were saddened, alarmed and got angry over this brutal killing. 

Saleem Shahzad who had just turned to 40 was a true professional investigative journalist, who wrote extensively on issues pertaining to global security, especially on Pakistani military and religious militant movements in the Muslim world. 

To protest the brutal killing of Saleem Shahzad, a father, a husband, a brother, a son and a journalist, and to wish to see Pakistan a socially progressive, politically democratic and secular country, than please come and join the Canadian Pakistanis and South Asian diaspora here to lit a candle and show support to slain Saleem Shahzad's family, Pakistani journalists and the voices of reason of civil society in Pakistan. 

The program is as under: 

Candle Light Vigil in the memory of slain journalist Saleem Shahzad 
Hum jo Tareak rahoon mein marey gaye/ We, who were slain in unlit pathways..." Faiz

7.30 pm,  Sunday, June 12, 2011 
Holland Park
(Corner of King George Boulevard and Old Yale Road)
Surrey, BC. 

Organized By
CPPC (Committee of Progressive Pakistani Canadians) 

Endorsed By
FVPC (Fraser Valley Peace Council)
SANSAD (South Asian Network for Secularism & Democracy) 
.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Today- In Rememberance - innocent victims of Jallianwala Bagh‏

April 13th, 1919 is considered and remembered as one of the most depressing and brutal event in the history of Indo-Pak subcontinent when the massacre of Jallianwala Bagh (Garden) took place in a culturally rich, holy city of Amritsar, Indian Punjab. That brutal massacre involved the killing of hundreds of unarmed, defenseless Indians men, women and children by a senior British military officer, Brigadier-General Reginald E.H. Dyer.The troops commanded by him, immediately upon entering the Bagh (Garden) opened fire without the slightest warning to the crowd to disperse and concentrating especially on the areas where the crowd was thickest.

The firing started at 17:15 and lasted for about ten to fifteen minutes. The Bagh, or garden, was bounded on all sides by brick walls and buildings and had only five narrow entrances, most of which were kept permanently locked. Since there was only one exit except for the one already manned by the troops, people desperately tried to climb the walls of the park. Some also jumped into a well inside the compound to escape the bullets.

It was determined that 1,650 rounds had plowed into the crowd of about 10,000 people and later it was officially announced by British Govt. that The killing of 379 Indians including 337 men & women, 41 young boys and a six-week-old baby and wounding of 1,200 (although the actual figure was almost certainly much higher) The wounded could not be moved from where they had fallen, as a curfew had been declared. It was a Sunday, and many neighboring village peasants with others thousands of people arrived there from various corner of the country and gathered in Jallianwala Bagh (Garden) to raise voice against the injustice that was being poured on to the people of Indian Punjab by the British Government beside to celebrate the most significant cultural, sacred and secular festival of Vaisakhi.

Like many places where great injustice has taken place, Jallianwala Bagh became a place of pilgrimage, reflection, and a symbol of what the victims stood for (or against). On 13 April 1961, the 42nd anniversary of the massacre, it was inaugurated as a memorial with a 30 foot four-sided pylon called the "Flame of Liberty." Upon each face is inscribed " In memory of the martyrs, 13 April 1919" in four languages: Punjabi, Urdu, Hindi and English.

In remembrance of that great sacrifice and in memory of innocent victims, Fraser Valley Peace Council and Taraksheel society of Canada jointly arranged a candlelight Vigil in Surrey. This event was also endorsed by renowned broadcaster and columnist Gurpreet Singh and rest of the team and management of Radio India.

Shahzad Nazir Khan Fraser Valley Peace Council. 604-613-0735