Dear Friends:

This story is from the Telegraph London (27 03 20120.


-bhuban













Pakistan deputy attorney-general to clean shoes at Amritsar Golden Temple
Pakistan's deputy attorney-general is to clean the shoes of thousands of 
devotees at India's Golden Temple in Amritsar in 'penance' for the beheading of 
a Sikh in Peshawar two years ago.




Image 1 of 2
Pakistani Deputy Attorney General Khurshid Khan shines shoes at Gurudwara 
Rakabganj in New Delhi Photo: SANJEEV RASTOGI/ Times Of India


















By Dean Nelson, New Delhi

3:36PM BST 26 Mar 2012


9 Comments



After spending several hours polishing the shoes of worshippers at Gurdwara 
Sisganj in New Delhi on Monday, where he was part of aPakistan Supreme Court 
Bar Association delegation, Muhammad Khurshid Khan left for Amritsar, home of 
the Golden Temple and the centre of the Sikh religion, to clean thousands more.

He began his service pilgrimage after Jaspal Singh, one of three Sikh men 
kidnapped by Taliban militants in Peshawar in 2010, was murdered. The other two 
men were rescued by the Pakistani Army. Since then he has visited Sikh temples 
or Gurdwaras in Pakistan and India to declare his opposition to terrorism 
through 'sevadari' – service – to other religions

Mr Khan said he was so upset by the killing and his fear that it associated his 
own Muslim faith with terrorism that he went to sit on the steps of Peshawar's 
Gurdwara Bhai Joga Singh. He felt a sense of peace, he told The Times of India, 
and resolved to visit other places of worship, including Hindu temples and 
Christian churches to offer his help.

"I am a Muslim, not a terrorist; I am a Khan, not a terrorist; I am from 
Pakistan, but not a terrorist," he explained.

The Taliban had damaged Pakistan's 'pluralistic' heritage – there are still 
Christian, Hindu, Sikh and Jain communities throughout the country – but it was 
unfair "to tarnish a whole community for the sins of a few," he said.

He visited his local Gurdwara every day for two months, where he read the works 
of the Sikh gurus, including Guru Nanak, and polished shoes. In both India and 
Pakistan, shoes are regarded as dirty, and touching the feet of another is an 
act of self-abasement and respect.

He was on Monday night travelling from New Delhi to Amritsar after India's Sikh 
prime minister, Dr Manmohan Singh, indicated he had no objection to him 
continuing his pilgrimage at the Golden Temple.
Paramjeet Singh Sarna, president of Delhi's Sikh Gurdawara Management 
Committee, said Mr Khan's actions had moved Indian Sikhs.
"There is always this underlying impression that every Pakistani is a radical 
but people like Khurshid have changed this image. His act has a message for the 
entire humanity. Although he as an individual didn't hurt or kill anybody he 
has shown remorse for the innocent victims of the Taliban in Pakistan, 
including a Sikh, by performing community service. We are thankful to him for 
everything he has done for the minorities in Pakistan," he said






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