Sikhism in Canada

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Sikhism in Canada
Sikhisme au Canada
A Gurdwara in Edmonton, Alberta
Total population
771,790[1]
2.12% of the total Canadian population (2021)
Regions with significant populations
Ontario300,435 (2.14%)
British Columbia290,870 (5.92%)
Alberta103,600 (2.48%)
Manitoba35,470 (2.71%)
Quebec23,345 (0.28%)
Religions
Sikhism
Languages
Canadian EnglishPunjabi
Canadian FrenchHindiUrdu
Related ethnic groups
Sikh Population History in Canada[a]
YearPop.±%
1901 95—    
1911 1,758+1750.5%
1921 849−51.7%
1931 1,173+38.2%
1941 1,465+24.9%
1951 2,040+39.2%
1961 5,000+145.1%
1971 35,730+614.6%
1981 67,715+89.5%
1991 147,440+117.7%
2001 278,410+88.8%
2011 454,965+63.4%
2021 771,790+69.6%
Source: Statistics Canada
[8]: 2–3 [9][10]: 572–573 [11]: 788 [12]: 6–7 
[13]: 272 [14]: 2 [15]: 484 [16][17]
[18][19][1]

Sikhism in Canada has nearly 800,000 adherents who account for 2.1% of Canada's population as of 2021, forming the country's fastest-growing and fourth-largest religious group.[1] The largest Sikh populations in Canada are found in Ontario, followed by British Columbia and Alberta.[1] As of the 2021 Census, more than half of Canada's Sikhs can be found in one of four cities: Brampton (163,260),[20] Surrey (154,415),[21] Calgary (49,465),[22] and Edmonton (41,385).[23]

Canada is home to the largest national Sikh proportion in the world (2.1%), and also has the second-largest Sikh population in the world, after India. British Columbia has the third-largest Sikh proportion (5.9%) amongst all global administrative divisions, behind only Punjab and Chandigarh in India. British Columbia, Manitoba, and Yukon hold the distinction of being three of the only four administrative divisions in the world with Sikhism as the second most followed religion among the population.[b]

History[edit]

Early immigration[edit]

Kesur Singh, a Risaldar Major in the British India Army, is credited with being the first Sikh settler in Canada.[26] He was amongst a group of Sikh officers who arrived in Vancouver on board Empress of India in 1897.[27] They were on the way to Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee. Sikhs found employment in laying the tracks of the Canadian Pacific Railway, in lumber mills and mines. Though they earned less than white workers, they made enough money to send some of it to India and make it possible for their relatives to immigrate to Canada.

Punjabi Sikhs in Whitehorse, Yukon, April 1906
Sikhs in Vancouver, 1908

A notable moment in early Sikh history in Canada was in 1902 when settlers first arrived in Golden, British Columbia to work at the Columbia River Lumber Company.[28] This was a theme amongst most early Punjabi Sikh settlers in Canada to find work in the agricultural and forestry sectors in British Columbia.[29] Punjabi Sikhs became a prominent ethnic group within the sawmill workforce in British Columbia almost immediately after initial arrival to Canada.[30]

The early settlers in Golden built the first Gurdwara (Sikh Temple) in Canada and North America in 1905,[31][32] which would later be destroyed by fire in 1926.[33] The second Gurdwara to be built in Canada was in 1908 in Kitsilano (Vancouver), aimed at serving a growing number of Punjabi Sikh settlers who worked at nearby sawmills along False Creek at the time.[34] The Gurdwara would later close and be demolished in 1970, with the temple society relocating to the newly built Gurdwara on Ross Street, in South Vancouver.

As a result, the oldest existing Gurdwara in Canada today is the Gur Sikh Temple, located in Abbotsford, British Columbia. Built in 1911, the temple was designated as a national historic site of Canada in 2002 and is the third-oldest Gurdwara in the country. Later, the fourth Gurdwara to be built in Canada was established in 1912 in Victoria on Topaz Avenue, while the fifth soon was built at the Fraser Mills (Coquitlam) settlement in 1913, followed a few years later by the sixth at the Queensborough (New Westminster) settlement in 1919,[35][36][37] and the seventh at the Paldi (Vancouver Island) settlement, also in 1919.[38][39][40][41]

Sikhs next to CPR, Vancouver, c. 1905–1914

Early Sikh pioneers also settled in the Abbotsford area in 1905 and originally worked on farms and in the lumber industry.[42] By 1906, there were about 1,500 Sikh workers living in Canada, among about 5,000 East Indians in total.[citation needed] Although most of the immigrants from South Asia at the time were Sikhs, local ignorance of Eastern religions led to them frequently being assumed to be Hindus. About 90% of these Sikhs lived in British Columbia. While Canadian politicians, missionaries, unions and the press were opposed to Asian workers[43] British Columbia industrialists were short of labour and thus Sikhs were able to get an early foothold at the turn of the 20th century in British Columbia.

Sikh man on rail platform next to Canadian Pacific rail car, British Columbia, c. 1905–1914

As with the large numbers of Japanese and Chinese workers already present in Canada, many white workers resented those immigrants and directed their ill-will toward the Sikhs, who were easily recognized by their beards and turbans. Punjabis were accused of having a caste system, an idea that goes against the foundations of Sikhism. They were portrayed as being riddled with trachoma and as being unclean in general. To strengthen these racist characterizations, a song called White Canada Forever was created. All this eventually led to a boat of Sikhs arriving in Vancouver being sent to Victoria.[citation needed] In 1907, the year that Buckam Singh came to British Columbia from Punjab at the age of fourteen, race riots broke out in Vancouver between Whites and Asians (Chinese and Japanese). Punjabis were initially also targeted but “sent attacking white mobs fleeing” as majority of the Punjabis were former soldiers of the Sikh regiment and Punjab regiments, many of whom even after retirement and migrating to Canada, kept their service muskets and bayonets and at the minimum, daggers and swords in their households, often ceremonial religious swords which had been kept as sidearms during war.[44][45]

Most of the Sikhs in Canada in 1907 were retired British army veterans and their families.[46] These Punjabis had proved themselves as loyal soldiers in the British colonies in Asia and Africa. However, the Canadian Government did not prevent the use of the illegal scare tactics being used to monitor immigration and prevent Sikhs from seeking employment, and this soon resulted in the cessation of all Indian immigration to Canada. The Canadian Prime Minister, Sir Wilfrid Laurier claimed that Indians were unsuited to life in the Canadian climate. However, in a letter to the viceroy, The Earl of Minto, Sir Wilfred voiced a different opinion, stating that the Chinese were the least adaptable to Canadian ways, whereas Sikhs, which he mistakenly referred to as Hindus, were the most adaptable. Nevertheless, 1,072 Sikhs left for California in 1907. In the same year, the Khalsa Diwan society was set up in Vancouver with branches in Abbotsford, New Westminster, Fraser Mills, Duncan Coombs and Ocean Falls.

Sikhs attending a funeral outside Vancouver, c. 1914

In 1908, Indians were asked by the Canadian Government to leave Canada voluntarily and settle in British Honduras; it was stated that the "Mexican" climate would better suit Indians. A Sikh delegate was sent to what is now Belize and stayed in the British colony for some time before returning. Upon his return, he advised not only Sikhs, but also the members of other Indian religious groups, to decline the offer, maintaining that conditions in Latin America were unsuitable for Punjabis, although they might be more amenable to South Indians. In 1908, 1,710 Sikhs left British Columbia for California. The first plans to build a temple were made in 1908. After a property was acquired, the settlers carried lumber from a local mill on their backs up a hill to construct a gurdwara.[42]

Sikh and Caucasian men on rail platform next to Canadian Pacific rail car, British Columbia, c. 1905–1914

William Lyon Mackenzie King (not yet the Canadian Prime Minister) visited London and Calcutta to express the Canadian view of Indian immigration. As a result, the Indian Government stopped advertising facilities and employment opportunities in North America. This invoked the provisions of Emigration Act of 1883 which stopped Sikhs from leaving Canada. The Canadian Government passed two laws, one providing that an immigrant had to have 200 dollars, a steep increase from the previous requirement of 20 dollars, the other authorizing the Minister of the Interior to prohibit entry into Canada to people not arriving from their birth-country by continuous journey and through tickets purchased before leaving the country of their birth or citizenship. These laws were specifically directed at Punjabis and resulted in their population, which had exceeded 5,000 people in 1911, dropping to little more than 2,500.

Sikhs at a lumber camp in British Columbia, c. 1914

The Immigration Act, 1910 came under scrutiny when a party of 39 Indians, mostly Sikhs, arriving on a Japanese ship, the Komagata Maru, succeeded in obtaining habeas corpus against the immigration department's order of deportation. The Canadian Government then passed a law intended to keep labourers and artisans, whether skilled or unskilled, out of Canada by preventing them from landing at any dock in British Columbia. As Canadian immigration became stricter, more Indians, most of them Sikhs, travelled south to the United States of America.

The Gur Sikh Temple opened on February 26, 1911; Sikhs and non-Sikhs from across British Columbia attended the ceremony and a local newspaper reported on the event. It was the third Gurdwara to open - after Golden (1905) and Kitsilano (1908) - not only in North America, but also anywhere in the world outside of South Asia, and as the oldest existing Gurdwara in Canada in the contemporary age has since become a national historical landmark and symbol, the only Gurdwara to have similar status outside India. The Khalsa Diwan Society subsequently built Gurdwaras in Vancouver and Victoria.[47] The first and only Sikh settlement in Canada, Paldi, British Columbia was established as a mill town in 1916.[48]

Though the objectives of the Khalsa Diwan Society were religious, educational and philanthropic, problems connected to immigration and racism loomed in its proceedings. Alongside the Sikh Diwan, other organizations were set up to counteract the policies of the immigration authorities. The United India League operated in Vancouver, and the Hindustani Association of the Pacific Coast opened in Portland, Oregon. Gurdwaras became storm centres of political activity. The Ghadar Party was founded in America in 1913 by Sikhs who had fled to California from British Columbia as a consequence of Canadian immigration rules. Despite originally being directed at the racism encountered by Sikhs in the Sacramento Valley and in Sacramento itself, it eventually moved to British Columbia. Thousands of Ghadar journals were published with some even being sent to India.

Komagata Maru incident[edit]

Sikhs aboard Komagata Maru, 1914. Gurdit Singh wearing light coloured suit, white beard, left foreground.

In 1908, a series of ordinances were passed by the federal government, by which Indian immigrants entering Canada had to have 200 Canadian dollars (vs. 25 for Europeans). They also had to arrive directly from the area of birth/nationality- even though there was no direct route between India and Canada. Because of this legislation, in 1914, a Japanese ship called Komagata Maru chartered by a Sikh businessman which sailed from Hong Kong to Vancouver (with multiple stops) was not allowed to dock at the final port. The ship, which had 376 passengers (340 Sikhs), had to spend over 2 months offshore and only 20 former Canadian residents were allowed to disembark.[49] In 1914, Buckam Singh moved to Toronto. Also in 1914, Gurdit Singh Sandhu, from Sarhali, Amritsar, was a well-to-do businessman in Singapore who was aware of the problems that Punjabis were having in getting to Canada due to exclusion laws. He initially wanted to circumvent these laws by hiring a boat to sail from Calcutta to Vancouver. His aim was to help his compatriots whose journeys to Canada had been blocked. In order to achieve his goal, Gurdit Singh purchased the Komagata Maru, a Japanese vessel. Gurdit Singh carried 340 Sikhs, 24 Muslims, and 12 Hindus in his boat to Canada.

Komagata Maru (furthest ship on the left)

When the ship arrived in Canada, it was not allowed to dock. The Conservative Premier of British Columbia, Richard McBride, issued a categorical statement that the passengers would not be allowed to disembark. Meanwhile, a "Shore Committee" had been formed with the participation of Hussain Rahim and Sohan Lal Pathak. Protest meetings were held in Canada and the USA. At one, held in Dominion Hall, Vancouver, it was resolved that if the passengers were not allowed off, Indo-Canadians should follow them back to India to start a rebellion (or Ghadar). The shore Committee raised $22,000 dollars as an instalment on chartering the ship. They also launched a test case legal battle in the name of Munshi Singh, one of the passengers. Further, the Khalsa Diwan Society (founded 1907 to manage Vancouver's gurudwara) offered to pay the 200 dollar admittance fee for every passenger, which was denied.[49]

On July 7, the full bench of the Supreme Court gave a unanimous judgment that under new Orders-In-Council it had no authority to interfere with the decisions of the Department of Immigration and Colonization. The Japanese captain was relieved of duty by the angry passengers, but the Canadian government ordered the harbour tug Sea Lion to push the ship out on its homeward journey. On July 19, the angry passengers mounted an attack. Next day the Vancouver newspaper The Sun reported: "Howling masses of Hindus showered policemen with lumps of coal and bricks... it was like standing underneath a coal chute".

Private Buckam Singh gravestone, annual Sikh Remembrance Day service, Mount Hope Cemetery, Kitchener, Ontario 2012

The Komagata Maru arrived in Calcutta, India on September 26. Upon entry into the harbour, the ship was forced to stop by a British gunboat and with the passengers subsequently being placed under guard. The ship was then diverted approximately 27 kilometres (17 miles) to Budge Budge, where the British intended to put them on a train bound for Punjab. The passengers wanted to stay in Calcutta, and marched on the city, but were forced to return to Budge Budge and re-board the ship. The passengers protested, some refusing to re-board, and the police opened fire, killing 20 and wounding nine others. This incident became known as the Budge Budge Riot. Gurdit Singh managed to escape and lived in hiding until 1922. He was urged by Mohandas Gandhi to give himself up as a true patriot. He was imprisoned for five years.

First World War[edit]

Private Buckam Singh attestation papers, World War I

Buckam Singh enlisted with the Canadian Expeditionary Force in the spring of 1915.[50] Buckam Singh was one of the earliest known Sikhs living in Ontario at the time as well as one of only 9 Sikhs known to have served with Canadian troops in the First World War. Private Buckam Singh served with the 20th Canadian Infantry Battalion in the battlefields of Flanders during 1916. Here, Buckam Singh was wounded twice in battle and later received treatment at a hospital run by one of Canada's most famous soldier poets the Doctor Lt. Colonel John McCrae.

While recovering from his wounds in England, Private Buckam Singh contracted tuberculosis and spent his final days in a Kitchener, Ontario military hospital, dying at age 25 in 1919. His grave in Kitchener is the only known First World War Sikh Canadian soldier's grave in Canada. Despite being forgotten for ninety years and never getting to see his family again, Buckam Singh is now being celebrated as not only a Sikh hero, but a Canadian hero.[51]

Growing government support[edit]

The Mayo Lumber Co. offices stand next to the train tracks in Paldi, British Columbia, late 1920s

Due to immigration restrictions, South Asians were not able to bring their relatives from India to Canada. Therefore, they resorted to illegal means to bring them to Canada. This was through the Washington-British Columbia border. When the Canadian Government became aware of the happenings along the borderline, they tightened immigration regulations and South Asian men who stayed even three days longer outside of Canada were denied entrance for violating the three-year limit.

In 1937, a controversy surfaced with there being almost three hundred illegal South Asian immigrants in BC. The case was investigated by the RCMP who had eventually solved the case. The Canadian government, however, decided to take this as an opportunity to negotiate with India and refused to deport illegal Sikh immigrants. In fact, the Canadian government pushed the Sikhs into gaining residency in Canada.

During the 1940s, South Asians in Canada began to establish their livelihoods despite deep social and economic disturbances. Unemployment was common and the average British Columbian's wage had dropped over 20 percent. White employers were willing to accept Asian workers, this produced insecurities amongst the mainstream community of British Columbia. The result of this was a British Columbia minimum wage law, a law that was ultimately flawed. 25 percent of the employees would be paid 25 percent less and these were invariably Asians. South Asians continued to live under one roof and in extensive families; this support helped them during the Depression period.[52]

In 1943, a twelve-man delegation including members of the Khalsa Diwan Society presented the case of South Asian voting rights to Premier Hart. They said that without the ability to vote, in Canada they were nothing more than second-class citizens. The Premier then made it so that South Asians in British Columbia that had fought in World War II would be granted voting rights, this law was passed in 1945. By 1947, all South Asians had the right to vote due to the Sikh Khalsa Diwan Society. In 1944, a Khalsa Diwan Society survey showed there to be 1,756 Canadian Sikhs with 98% of them (1,715) living in British Columbia, the initial major port of immigration for Canadian Sikhs.[53][54][55]: 131–132 

Sikh Canadians by settlement/municipality (1944)[55]: 131–132 [56]: 11–54 [57][58][59][60]
Settlement/municipality Province Sikh population %
Vancouver British Columbia 462 0.17%
Victoria British Columbia 338 0.77%
Paldi[c][61][62] British Columbia 115 19.83%
Queensborough British Columbia 103 3.82%
Hillcrest[c] British Columbia 54
Honeymoon Bay[c] British Columbia 47
Fraser Mills British Columbia 44 7.97%
Kelowna British Columbia 44 0.86%
North Vancouver British Columbia 43 0.48%
Youbou[c] British Columbia 42
Barnet[d] British Columbia 39
Kamloops British Columbia 39 0.65%
Duncan[c] British Columbia 30 1.37%
Ladner British Columbia 27 2.9%
Abbotsford British Columbia 26 4.63%
Sproat Lake British Columbia 26
Great Central[e] British Columbia 22
Mission British Columbia 19 0.7%
Port Moody British Columbia 19 1.26%
Agassiz British Columbia 17 1.32%
Calgary Alberta 16 0.02%
Port Alberni British Columbia 16 0.89%
Port Hammond British Columbia 16
Bloedel[f] British Columbia 15
Mohawk British Columbia 14
Toronto Ontario 12 0%
Cloverdale British Columbia 11 0.58%
Timberland[g][c] British Columbia 10
Chilliwack British Columbia 9 0.24%
Sahtlam[c] British Columbia 9
Shawnigan Lake[c] British Columbia 9
Haney British Columbia 8
Sardis British Columbia 8
Cariboo British Columbia 7
Chemainus British Columbia 7
Grand Forks British Columbia 7 0.56%
Langley Prairie British Columbia 5 0.06%
Ladysmith[c] British Columbia 4 0.23%
Montreal Quebec 3 0%
Sinclair Mills British Columbia 2
Coaldale Alberta 1 0.35%
Nanaimo British Columbia 1
Total Population British Columbia 1,715 0.21%
Total Population Canada 1,756 0.01%

It was in the 1950s that major immigration to Ontario would start to occur. The celebration of the birth of Guru Nanak was first celebrated in 1954 after a group of Sikhs from England arrived because of the liberalization of the laws due to the acts of the Khalsa Diwan Society. The construction of many gurdwaras had an immense effect on the Sikh population in Ontario.[64] Following the founding of the East Indian Welfare Association by Sikhs, the first ever Sikh was elected to a city council in Mission, B.C. It was reported the following year that there were 2148 Sikhs in Canada.[65]

Landmark political achievements[edit]

A significant event in Sikh-Canadian history occurred in 1950 when 25 years after settling in Canada and nine years after moving to British Columbia from Toronto, Naranjan "Giani" Singh Grewall became the first Sikh individual in Canada and North America to be elected to public office after successfully running for a position on the board of commissioners in Mission, BC against six other candidates.[66][67][68][69][70] Grewall was re-elected to the board of commissioners in 1952 and by 1954, was elected to become mayor of Mission.[66][69][70]

"Thank you all citizens of Mission City [...] It is a credit to this community to elect the first East Indian to public office in the history of our great dominion. It shows your broad-mindedness, tolerance and consideration.".[68]

— Notice by Naranjan Singh Grewall in the local Mission newspaper following his election to public office, 1950

A millwright and union official, and known as a sportsman and humanitarian philanthropist as well as a lumberman, Grewall eventually established himself as one of the largest employers and most influential business leaders in the northern Fraser Valley, owned six sawmills and was active in community affairs serving on the boards or as chairman of a variety of organizations, and was instrumental in helping create Mission's municipal tree farm.[66][68][69][70][71] With strong pro-labour beliefs despite his role as a mill-owner, after a scandal embroiled the provincial Ministry of Forestry under the-then Social Credit party government, he referred to holders of forest management licenses across British Columbia as Timber Maharajahs, and cautioned that within a decade, three or four giant corporations would predominantly control the entire industry in the province, echoing similarities to the archaic zamindar system in South Asia.[69][71] He later ran unsuccessfully for the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (the precursor of today's New Democratic Party) in the Dewdney riding in the provincial election of 1956.[70][71]

While by the 1950s, Sikh-Canadians had gained respect in business in British Columbia primarily for their work in owning sawmills and aiding the development of the provincial forestry industry, racism still existed especially in the upper echelons of society.[69][72] As such, during the campaign period and in the aftermath of running for MLA in 1956, Grewall received personal threats, while the six mills he owned along with his house were all set ablaze by arsonists.[72][h] One year later, on July 17, 1957, while on a business trip, he was suspiciously found dead in a Seattle motel, having been shot in the head.[h][i][72][73] Grewall Street in Mission was named in his honour.[74]

“Every kid in the North Fraser, who thinks he or she is being discriminated against, should read the Grewall story and the challenges he faced.”.[h]

— Former B.C. premier Dave Barrett on Naranjan Singh Grewall

New era[edit]

Khalsa Darbar Gurdwara, Ontario
Small town Gurdwara in Merritt, British Columbia
Guru Nanak Gurdwara, North Delta, British Columbia

In the 1960s and 1970s, tens of thousands of skilled Sikhs, some highly educated, settled across Canada, especially in the urban corridor from Toronto to Windsor. As their numbers grew, Sikhs established temporary gurdwaras in every major city eastward to Montréal, with the first gurdwara in Eastern Canada being made in 1965. These were followed in many instances by permanent gurdwaras and Sikh centres.

Most cities now have several gurdwaras, each reflecting slightly different religious views, social or political opinions. Through them, Sikhs now have access to a full set of public observances. Central among these are Sunday prayer services, and in many communities the prayers are followed by langar (a free meal) provided by members of the sangat (governing council of holy men) and the congregation. Near the end of the decade in 1979, the Canadian Sikhs, now more racially diverse, celebrated the 500th birthday of Guru Amar Das to mark the start of the annual Nagar Kirtan's, which would occur in Canada every year following. The Khalsa Diwan Society grew to a much larger amount during the immigration boom of this period. To celebrate the centennial birthday of the guru, the Khalsa Diwan Society purchased an adjoined building which included a school, museum, daycare and Gurdwara and named it after Guru Amar Das.

In the early 1980s, the Khalsa Diwan Society grew slightly more and built a sports complex. Canada would also have its first officially registered Sikh organization, the Federation of Sikh Societies of Canada in the early 1980s. In the months prior to Operation Blue Star, Sikh seats were granted to the University of British Columbia and the University of Toronto. The launching of Operation Bluestar enraged many Sikhs in Canada, who had left their homeland long ago in search of better prospects.[65][75]

In 1986, following the British Columbia provincial election, Moe Sihota became the first Sikh-Canadian to be elected to provincial parliament. Sihota, who was born in Duncan, British Columbia in 1955, ran as the NDP Candidate in the riding of Esquimalt-Port Renfrew two years after being involved in municipal politics, as he was elected as an Alderman for the city of Esquimalt in 1984.

Sikh sovereignty movement in the Punjab[edit]

Support in Canada for a separate Sikh state in the Punjab increased after India's Prime Minister, Indira Gandhi, ordered an attack on the Sikh's holiest site in June 1984. The Indian army launched Operation Bluestar to evict Sikh leader Bhindranwale from occupying the Akal Takht inside the Golden Temple, the holiest shrine of Sikhs. At least 5,000 Sikhs, many of whom were followers of Bhinderwala and many who were simply visiting and caught in the fire, were killed in the operations.[76] Three months later, anti-Sikh pogroms would occur for three days from October 31 to November 3, during which an estimated 20 000 Sikhs would be murdered with the aid and support of the ruling Government. Sikh Gurdwaras would be desecrated and Sikh business would be looted, Sikh men doused in kerosene and tires flung upon their necks and burnt alive, and Sikh women gang-raped, all by Hindu mobs supported and encouraged by government officials while police looked on. In the light of these atrocities, many Sikhs wanted to separate from India into a state called Khalistan.

In Vancouver, many Sikh protests occurred. Two Sikhs entered the Indian Consulate in Vancouver and smashed all pictures of Indira Gandhi. Later in the week, Sikh protesters by the hundreds blocked the entrance to the consulate, forcing it to close, then burned the Indian national flag and an effigy of Indira Gandhi. They would spend the day chanting "Down With Gandhi" and "Gandhi is a Murderer" until the consulate had to agree to relay their demands to the Indian Government. Following their dispersion, the Sikhs spent the rest of the day mourning Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale.[77]

Following the closure at the Indian Consulate in Vancouver, a Sikh youth damaged the consulate in Toronto.[78] 700 Sikhs then protested in front of the Toronto consulate. At the Toronto consulate, Sikhs who had left Punjab and India for Canada, burned the Indian national flag. Toronto Metropolitan Police Officers were recorded saying that the unity brought in Canada at this time was miraculous.[79] 2500 Sikhs had marched in the city of Calgary following the march at the Toronto consulate.[80]

Civil unrest[edit]

In 1986, it was allowed by the Metro Toronto Police to have Sikhs wear turbans while on duty. Later that year, the Khalsa Credit Union was also established. In 1988, for the first time, the Canadian Parliament broached the topic of Operation Bluestar in regards to the Canadian Sikh population. In 1993, the Vancouver Punjabi Market was recognized as bilingual signs in English and Punjabi were established due to the high Sikh population in the area. In 1993, Sikhs were denied entry to the Royal Canadian Legion when invited to attend a Remembrance Day Parade.[81] In 1995, the Canadian government officially recognized the Vaisakhi Nager Kirtan parade.[82] Due to this, the civil unrest eventually began to fade as more and more cities outside of British Columbia and Ontario began to join in on the parades, including Montreal in 1998.[83]

2000s–present[edit]

Centennial year[edit]

In 2002, the Gur Sikh Temple was designated a national historic landmark by Prime Minister Jean Chrétien on July 26, 2002. It is the only gurdwara declared a national historic landmark outside of South Asia.[47] In 2007, the temple was completely renovated and reopened. In 2011, the Gur Sikh Temple in Abbotsford celebrated its one-hundredth birthday. To celebrate, the Government of Canada is funding the building of a museum dedicated to Canadian Sikhism. During the anniversary celebration, Prime Minister Stephen Harper gave a speech to the Punjabi Community as to how the Gur Sikh Temple is a shrine to all immigrants into Canada, not just Sikh ones. 2011 was declared the Centennial year for Canadian Sikhs.[47]

Upon the announcement, many Canadian Sikhs, regardless of race, took up Nishan Sahib (the Sikh flag) and began to protest against the Indian government, and against the execution of Rajoana, in the city of Vancouver. Other protests happened worldwide in the United Kingdom, United States, Australia, New Zealand and even India itself. Following the release of Kishori Lal, a murderer who had decapitated three innocent Sikhs with a chopper knife, the announcement led Canadian Sikhs to believe that the Indian government was targeting Sikh people.[84] In Canada, a large protest in Edmonton took place on March 25, six days prior to the pending execution. On the day before his impending execution, 5000 Sikhs walked in front of Parliament Hill in the capital city of Ottawa. That same day, an announcement was made that Rajoana's hanging would be stayed.[85]

Many members of the Canadian Parliament supported the Sikh rallies and their protests against the death penalty in India. These politicians included, but were not limited to, Justin Trudeau, Parm Gill, Jasbir Sandhu, Wayne Marston, Don Davies, Kirsty Duncan and Jim Karygiannis.[86] Around this time, a group of Skinheads called "Blood and Honour" would attack two Sikh men in Edmonton.[87]

To celebrate the 2012 Vaisakhi festival, the local Sikh community decided to sponsor a new Canadian Army Cadet Corps, which was being formed by the Department of National Defence.[88] Whilst happening on April 13 in 2012, Vaisakhi was celebrated in Vancouver on April 14. The Vancouver Sun made their estimation of the Metro Vancouver Sikh population to be at 200,000 during an article about the 2012 Vaisakhi.[89] The Vancouver Vaisakhi ended up attracting thousands of people as well as various politicians including BC Premier Christy Clark.[90] At the April 21st Surrey Vaisakhi, the Sikh peoples demonstrated support for Rajoana through various posters, with large banners calling India the world's largest democracy. The response to the support was positive.[91]

Around this time, Sikh comedians Jasmeet Singh (JusReign), and Lilly Singh (Superwoman) would gain international fame for their videos on YouTube.[92]

In May 2012, the classic Victoria Gurdwara, which was once broken down, but later rebuilt, would experience its one hundredth anniversary. It was the second Gurdwara to celebrate one hundred years in Canada after the Gur Sikh Temple in the Sikhs' Centennial Year. The Gurdwara houses over 3000 people per month.[93] It was then announced that Sikhs would be allowed to wear kirpans in Toronto courthouses.[94] In June, a Khalsa School in Brampton would be vandalized by racists who would put up signs of the Ku Klux Klan and with swastikas.[87]

NDP Party Leader Thomas Mulcair would demand justice for the 1984 Anti-Sikh Pogroms. Mulcair would demand that a full investigation be put into the riots and those harmed be compensated.[95] Soon after this statement, neo-Nazi gunman Wade Michael Page would commence a shooting at a Sikh Temple in Wisconsin, America, which would be described as a domestic terrorism act. Despite the fact that the shooting occurred outside of Canada, Canadian Sikhs would take full responsibility to spread the message of Sikhism, explain the religion, honour the dead and wounded as well as give their reactions to the shootings.[96]

Stephen Harper is pushing back at suggestions that Ottawa needs to do more about Sikh separatist activity in Canada, saying his government already keeps a sharp lookout for terrorist threats and that merely advocating for a Khalistan homeland in the Punjab is not a crime. He said violence and terrorism can't be confused with the right of Canadians to hold and promote their political views.[97]

Following, on CKNW's Philip Till Show would feature Dave Foran, a man who would demand Canadian Sikhs to lose their religious aspects, namely turbans, beards, clothes and "waddling" while walking, claiming the features to make "real" Canadians "sick".[87] Soon after, the Friends of the Sikh Cadet Corps would run into issues with the 3300 British Columbian Royal Army Cadet, over their choice of name. The resulting turmoil would put months and months of planning into disarray.[85]

The Sikhs of Canada would once again take solidarity and hospitality, much like they had done with the Rajoana situation, to support Daljit Singh Bittu and Kulbir Singh Barapind. The two had previously been arrested and abused on false charges, resulting in their most recent arrest to raise the ire of the Canadian Sikhs, who would go on to trash the policing forces in Punjab.[98]

New age[edit]

2013 was a monumental year for Sikhs as the April of that year was declared the Sikh Heritage Month by the Government of Ontario.[99] In 2014, history was made when a park in Calgary was named after Harnam Singh Hari, the first Sikh settler who was able to successfully farm on fertile land in Alberta. This happened shortly after the announcement of Quebec's Charter of Values, which threatened the use of religious items at government workplaces. This Charter was opposed by the Sikhs, Hindus, Jews, Christians, and Muslims whose symbols would be affected by the charter. In May 2014, Lieutenant Colonel Harjit Sajjan became the first Sikh to command a Canadian regiment, ironically it was the British Columbia Regiment (Duke Connaught's Own), which opposed the Komagata Maru a century prior.[100] In 2015, the Surrey Nagar Kirtan was declared the largest parade of its kind outside of India.[101] In August 2015, Corporal Tej Singh Aujla of the 39th Brigade Group, Royal Westminster Regiment became the first Sikh soldier to guard and watch over the "Tomb of the Unknown Soldier" at Canada's National War Memorial.[102] In regards to the 2015 Canadian election, it was internationally noted that in over twelve constituencies Sikh politicians were riding against each other, a highlight of the successful integration of the Sikh populace as Canadian citizens. It was also noted that of these politicians, Martin Singh was a Caucasian convert to Sikhism and potentially the first "white" Sikh to run for a constituency in the federal elections.[103]

In the 2015 Canadian election, twenty Sikh MPs were elected, the most ever. Of these, four Sikh MPs went on to become a part of the Cabinet of Canada under Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. This marked the first time the Cabinet of Canada had more Sikhs as ministers than the Cabinet of India.[104] This disparity was acknowledged by Trudeau in March 2016.[105] Of these MPs, Bardish Chagger ended up becoming the first Sikh woman to hold a post in the Cabinet of the Prime Minister. Also, MP Lt. Col. (ret.) Harjit Singh Sajjan became the first Amritdhari Sikh to hold a Cabinet position since the Sikh Empire as Minister of National Defence.[106] That same year, Punjabi became the third most spoken language of the Parliament of Canada.[107] Concurrently, many Canadian Sikhs held solidarity with the protests of Sikhs in India following the sacrilege of the Guru Granth Sahib. Many Sikh organizations in Canada held discussions on how to address the situation in regards to Canada. Many Canadian Sikh youths took to Twitter to protest the sacrilege with the hashtag #SikhLivesMatter.[108]

On April 11, 2016, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced that a formal apology for the Komagata Maru incident would finally be given after 102 years.[109]

In 2016 Dr. Mohan Singh Virick, a Punjabi Sikh doctor who served Indigenous people in Cape Breton for 50 years, donated 140 hectares (335 acres) of land to Eskasoni First Nation.[110] He also donated a building in Sydney to help house Eskasoni's growing population.[111]

On October 1, 2017, Jagmeet Singh, was elected leader of the federal New Democratic Party on the first ballot of that party's 2017 leadership race. Upon his election, Singh became the first Sikh and the first person of a visible minority group to be elected leader of a Canadian federal political party.[112] Previously, Singh had also held the distinction of being the first turban-wearing Sikh to sit as a provincial legislator in Ontario.[113]

Demography[edit]

Population[edit]

The 2017 Vaisakhi parade in the Punjabi Market neighbourhood of Vancouver, British Columbia

Unlike in South Asia and India, Sikhs have formed the main religious group among the South Asian Canadian, Indo-Canadian, and Punjabi Canadian communities from the onset of first settlement in the late 19th century into the present-day. In India, Sikhs comprise 1.72% of the population, while Hindus make up the largest religious group at close to 79.8%.

Until the 1950s, Sikhs formed up to 95% of the entire South Asian Canadian population,[2]: 4  declining to 31.5% of the total South Asian Canadian population by 1981.[3]: 40  The Sikh proportion among the South Asian Canadian community declined further to 29.7% in 2001;[114][115] in the same year, Sikhs represented 34% of the total Indo-Canadian population.[116] In 2021, Sikhs made up 29.6% of the total South Asian Canadian population,[117] a slight increase over the 2011 proportion of 28.5%.[118]

Generation status[edit]

Most Canadian Sikhs are immigrants.

Sikh Canadian generation status (2021)
Generation status 2021[1]
Pop. %
First generation 538,670 69.79%
Second generation 219,425 28.43%
Third generation or more 13,695 1.77%
Total 771,790 2.12%

Immigration status[edit]

The proportion of non-permanent residents amongst Sikh Canadians has risen rapidly in recent years, primarily due to the surge in the number of Punjabi international students studying in Canadian colleges. Most of the students plan to eventually become permanent residents.

Sikh Canadian immigrant status (2001−2021)
Immigrant status 2021[119] 2011[19] 2001[120]
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Non-immigrants[j] 236,400 30.63% 162,670 35.75% 98,655 35.44%
Immigrants[k] 415,465 53.83% 284,610 62.56% 176,045 63.23%
Non-permanent residents[l] 119,925 15.54% 7,685 1.69% 3,720 1.34%
Total 771,790 2.12% 454,965 1.38% 278,410 0.94%

Ethnicity[edit]

As of the 2021 Canadian census, there were 771,790 Sikh Canadians, forming 2.12% of the total population;[1] the same census indicated that the vast majority (761,960 persons or 98.73%) of Sikh Canadians are of South Asian origin.[117]

Sikh Canadian panethnic groups (2001−2021)
2021
[1][117]
2011
[118]
2001
[121]
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
South Asian 761,960 98.73% 447,330 98.32% 272,220 97.78%
Southeast Asian[m] 2,390 0.31% 2,805 0.62% 1,935 0.7%
European[n] 2,310 0.3% 1,545 0.34% N/A N/A
Middle Eastern[o] 515 0.07% 295 0.06% 360 0.13%
African 165 0.02% 220 0.05% 170 0.06%
Indigenous 160 0.02% 295 0.06% N/A N/A
East Asian[p] 105 0.01% 65 0.01% 350 0.13%
Latin American 35 0.005% 110 0.02% 25 0.01%
Other/multiracial 4,145 0.54% 2,285 0.5% 655 0.24%
Total 771,790 100% 454,965 100% 278,410 100%

Sex ratio[edit]

Sikh Canadian sex ratio (1921−2021)
Sex 2021[1] 2011[19] 2001[6] 1981[16] 1931[12]: 6–7 [q] 1921[10]: 572–573 [q]
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Male 394,345 51.09% 229,435 50.43% 141,115 50.69% 34,965 51.64% 956 81.5% 830 97.76%
Female 377,445 48.91% 225,530 49.57% 137,295 49.31% 32,745 48.36% 217 18.5% 19 2.24%
Total 771,790 2.12% 454,965 1.38% 278,410 0.94% 67,715 0.28% 1,173 0.01% 849 0.01%

Geographical distribution[edit]

Geographical Distribution of Sikhs in Canada as per the 2021 Canadian census

Prominent Sikh neighbourhoods exist in many of Canada's major cities, and their suburbs.[122]

Provinces/territories[edit]

According to the 1981 Canadian census, 1991 Canadian census, 2001 Canadian census, the 2011 Canadian census, and the 2021 Canadian census, the number of Sikhs living in each of the Canadian provinces and territories is as shown in the following table. Additionally, the number of Sikh Canadians in 1944, as measured by a Khalsa Diwan Society survey, is also shown. Finally, the number of "Sikhs and Hindus" in the 1931, 1921, and 1911 censuses is shown, with most of these being Sikhs.

Sikh Canadians by province and territory (1911−2021)
Province/territory 2021[1] 2011[19] 2001[18] 1991[17] 1981[16] 1944
[55]: 131–132 [123][124]
1931[11]: 788 [12]: 6–7 [q] 1921[10]: 572–573 [q] 1911[8]: 2–3 [9][q]
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Ontario 300,435 2.14% 179,765 1.42% 104,785 0.93% 50,085 0.5% 16,645 0.2% 12 0% 2 0% 3 0% 1 0%
British Columbia 290,870 5.92% 201,110 4.65% 135,305 3.5% 74,545 2.3% 40,940 1.51% 1,715 0.21% 1,139 0.16% 819 0.16% 1,730 0.44%
Alberta 103,600 2.48% 52,335 1.47% 23,470 0.8% 13,550 0.54% 5,985 0.27% 17 0% 27 0% 10 0% 23 0.01%
Manitoba 35,470 2.71% 10,200 0.87% 5,485 0.5% 3,495 0.32% 1,685 0.17% 2 0% 3 0% 1 0%
Quebec 23,345 0.28% 9,275 0.12% 8,220 0.12% 4,525 0.07% 1,785 0.03% 3 0% 1 0% 11 0% 1 0%
Saskatchewan 9,035 0.82% 1,650 0.16% 500 0.05% 565 0.06% 220 0.02% 2 0% 3 0% 0 0%
Nova Scotia 4,730 0.49% 390 0.04% 270 0.03% 330 0.04% 275 0.03% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0%
New Brunswick 1,780 0.23% 20 0% 90 0.01% 45 0.01% 50 0.01% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0%
Prince Edward Island 1,165 0.77% 10 0.01% 0 0% 65 0.05% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0%
Newfoundland and Labrador 850 0.17% 100 0.02% 130 0.03% 130 0.02% 65 0.01% [r] [r] [r] [r] [r] [r]
Yukon 385 0.97% 90 0.27% 105 0.37% 40 0.14% 50 0.22% 0 0% 0 0% 2 0.02%
Northwest Territories 110 0.27% 20 0.05% 45 0.12% 60[s] 0.1%[s] 10[s] 0.02%[s] 0[s] 0%[s] 0[s] 0%[s] 0[s] 0%[s]
Nunavut 10 0.03% 10 0.03% 10 0.04%
Canada 771,790 2.12% 454,965 1.38% 278,410 0.94% 147,440 0.55% 67,715 0.28% 1,756 0.01% 1,173 0.01% 849 0.01% 1,758 0.02%

British Columbia[edit]

Sikh settlement in the Queensborough neighbourhood of New Westminster, 1931
Gur Sikh Temple, Abbotsford
Gurmukhi language sign board at Vancouver International Airport

British Columbia is home to the highest proportion of Sikhs in the country and also most of the longest established Sikh communities. Although Sikhs can be found in most towns and cities within the province - most are concentrated in the Lower Mainland. Historically, the highest concentrations of Sikhs in British Columbia existed in rural regions throughout the province, including Vancouver Island, the interior, and the north.

Gur Sikh Temple is located in Abbotsford. It is the oldest Sikh gurdwara building in North America that is still standing.[125] In 1975 the Khalsa Diwan Society of Abbotsford separated from the parent organization in Vancouver, as the title of the Abbotsford gurdwara was transferred to the separated entity. The Abbotsford Sikhs wanted to have local control over their gurdwara.[126]

Sikhism is the second largest religion in the Vancouver metropolitan area where they form 8.5% of the total population, according to the 2021 census.

In 2011 28,235 persons in the Abbotsford-Mission metropolitan area stated that they were of the Sikh religion, making up 16.9% of the population.[127] Of all metropolitan areas in Canada, Abbotsford had the highest Sikh percentage in 2011.[128] This was an increase over the 2001 census when 16,780 persons in the Abbotsford-Mission metropolitan area stated that they were of the Sikh religion.

Sikh Canadians by metropolitan areas in British Columbia (1981−2021)
Metropolitan area 2021[1][129] 2011[19] 2001[18] 1991[130][131] 1981[132][133]
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Vancouver CMA 222,165 8.52% 155,945 6.84% 99,005 5.03% 49,625 3.13% 22,390 1.79%
Abbotsford–Mission CMA 41,665 21.69% 28,235 16.94% 16,780 11.57% 6,525 5.86%
Victoria CMA 5,160 1.33% 3,645 1.08% 3,470 1.13% 2,990 1.05% 1,980 0.86%
Kelowna CMA 4,200 1.92% 1,875 1.06% 990 0.68% 600 0.54% 305 0.4%
Prince
George
CA
2,415 2.75% 1,385 1.67% 1,825 2.16% 1,425 2.06% 1,050 1.56%
Kamloops CMA 2,070 1.87% 1,150 1.19% 1,395 1.62% 1,065 1.59% 1,095 1.71%
Chilliwack CMA 1,675 1.5% 455 0.5% 230 0.33% 150 0.25% 145[t] 0.35%
Nanaimo CMA 1,355 1.21% 1,000 1.05% 985 1.17% 1,235 1.69% 850 1.48%
Squamish CA 1,260 5.26% 910 5.28% 1,580 10.99%
Penticton CA 780 1.69% 640 1.55% 660 1.6% 285 0.64%
Fort St. John CA 485 1.71% 55 0.21% 10 0.06% 60 0.43%
Vernon CA 485 0.74% 290 0.51% 505 0.99% 335 0.71% 220[t] 0.53%
Duncan CA 430 0.93% 645 1.53% 840 2.2% 880 3.26%
Prince Rupert CA 410 3.08% 290 2.21% 415 2.73% 365 1.99% 370[t] 2.02%
Terrace CA 390 2% 270 1.76% 345 1.74% 610 3.24% 895[t] 2.77%
Williams Lake CA 340 1.46% 365 1.99% 845 3.4% 1,145 3.32%
Courtenay CA 215 0.35% 15 0.03% 10 0.02% 15 0.03% 25[t] 0.07%
Port Alberni CA 215 0.85% 280 1.12% 435 1.73% 735 2.78% 900[t] 2.77%
Dawson Creek CA 205 1.18% 0 0% 30 0.17% 0 0%
Campbell River CA 200 0.5% 40 0.11% 370 1.1% 250 0.81%
Quesnel CA 185 0.81% 360 1.65% 720 2.97% 1,000 4.31%
Cranbrook CA 155 0.59% 0 0% 20 0.08% 35 0.22%
Salmon Arm CA 105 0.56% 15 0.09%
Trail CA 100 0.72% 65[t] 0.29%
Nelson CA 75 0.4%
Ladysmith CA 40 0.26%
Parksville CA 40 0.13% 10 0.04% 65 0.27%
Powell River CA 40 0.23% 0 0% 10 0.06% 65 0.36% 70[t] 0.36%
Kitimat CA 330 3.22% 505 4.48%

According to the 1991 census, subdivisions in British Columbia with the highest proportions of Sikhs included Fort St. James (21.6%), Quesnel (12.0%), Williams Lake (10.1%), Merritt (9.7%), Surrey (8.6%), Tahsis (8.3%), Golden (8.1%), Houston (7.0%), Abbotsford (6.2%), Lillooet (6.0%), Squamish (5.6%), and Terrace (5.4%).[17]

Subdivisions with the highest proportions of Sikhs in British Columbia as per the 2001 census included Surrey (16.3%), Okanagan-Similkameen Subdivision C[u] (15.1%), Abbotsford (13.4%), Squamish (11.2%), Cawston (10.6%), Fort St. James (10.3%), Delta (8.6%), Okanagan-Similkameen Subdivision A[v] (8.3%), Merritt (8.0%), Williams Lake (7.6%), Mackenzie (7.1%), Quesnel (7.1%), Houston (7.0%), Mission (5.1%), and New Westminster (5.1%).[121]

According to the 2011 census, subdivisions in British Columbia with the highest proportions of Sikhs included Surrey (22.6%), Abbotsford (20.0%), Okanagan-Similkameen Subdivision A[v] (16.9%), Okanagan-Similkameen Subdivision C[u] (15.7%), Delta (10.6%), Cawston (10.1%), Mission (5.9%), Okanagan-Similkameen Subdivision G[w] (5.8%), Osoyoos (5.6%), Squamish (5.4%), and Oliver (5.2%).

The city of Surrey, a suburb situated in the southeastern sector of the Metro Vancouver metropolitan area and the Metro Vancouver regional district, has the highest proportion of Sikhs in a subdivision in British Columbia, forming 27.5% of the population, as per the 2021 census. Within the city, Sikhs form a majority in the Newton and Whalley neighbourhoods. Surrey's Sikhs can be found in large numbers across the city, with the exception of South Surrey.

The city of Abbotsford, an exurb situated in the southwestern area of the Abbotsford-Mission metropolitan area and the Fraser Valley regional district, has the next-largest concentration of Sikhs in a subdivision in British Columbia, at 25.5% of the population, as per the 2021 census. According to the 2011 census, 16.3% of persons in Abbotsford self-identified as East Indian, and 2.3% as Punjabi.[134][failed verification] The west side of the city of Abbotsford specifically hosts a large Sikh community, forming over 60% of the population in some parts of the Clearbook and Townline Hill areas. Similar to New Westminster, the establishment of Abbotsford's Sikh community goes back generations to 1905.[42]

Following Surrey (27.5%) and Abbotsford (25.5%), subdivisions in British Columbia with the highest proportions of Sikhs as per the 2021 census included Delta (17.9%), Cawston (16.3%), Okanagan-Similkameen Subdivision A[v] (15.9%), Okanagan-Similkameen Subdivision C[u] (14.3%), Mission (8.1%), McBride (8.0%), Oliver (7.6%), Squamish (5.4%), 100 Mile House (5.3%), and New Westminster (4.8%).

In the city of Vancouver, Sikhs form over 30% of the population in the Sunset neighbourhood, with the traditional Punjabi Market being the epicentre of Vancouver's Sikh community.

Sikhs in the city of New Westminster can be found in the Queensborough area, where they are upwards of 30% of the population, and have lived since 1919.[135]

The southern half of Oliver, BC, a small town in the Okanagan Valley, also has a Sikh population above 40%.[136][137]

Sikh Canadians by subdivisions in British Columbia (1981−2021)
Subdivision Regional district Percentage
2021[138] 2011[139] 2001[140] 1991[17] 1981[141][t]
Surrey Metro Vancouver 27.45% 22.6% 16.29% 8.59% 2.7%
Abbotsford Fraser Valley 25.46% 19.97% 13.38% 6.22% 3.33%
Delta Metro Vancouver 17.93% 10.63% 8.57% 4.18% 2.11%
Cawston Okanagan–Similkameen 16.36% 10.13% 10.62% 4.41%[x] 0.82%[x]
Okanagan-Similkameen
Subdivision A
[v]
Okanagan–Similkameen 15.87% 16.89% 8.33% 0.26% 0.56%
Okanagan-Similkameen
Subdivision C
[u]
Okanagan–Similkameen 14.34% 15.68% 15.08% 0.56% 0%
Mission Fraser Valley 8.06% 5.89% 5.1% 4.79% 3.79%
McBride Fraser–Fort George 8.04% 0% 0% 0% 0%
Oliver Okanagan–Similkameen 7.56% 5.21% 4.48% 0.55% 0.9%
Squamish Squamish–Lillooet 5.35% 5.38% 11.18% 5.62% 4.75%
100 Mile House Cariboo 5.32% 0.84% 1.49% 3.71% 6.37%
New Westminster Metro Vancouver 4.8% 4.49% 5.05% 2.4% 2.07%
Okanagan-Similkameen
Subdivision G
[w]
Okanagan–Similkameen 4.58% 5.84% 1.96% 4.12%
White Rock Metro Vancouver 4.37% 0.46% 0.2% 0.42% 0.65%
Osoyoos Okanagan–Similkameen 4.27% 5.57% 0.59% 0.89% 0.38%
Langley (District) Metro Vancouver 3.95% 1.91% 1.22% 0.46% 0.72%
Langley (City) Metro Vancouver 3.73% 0.14% 0.21% 0.64% 0.34%
Prince Rupert North Coast 3.41% 2.39% 2.86% 2.23% 2.33%
Pitt Meadows Metro Vancouver 3.36% 3.16% 4.57% 3.32% 1.85%
Richmond Metro Vancouver 3.35% 3.78% 3.52% 3.57% 2.38%
Terrace Kitimat–Stikine 3.3% 2.34% 2.91% 5.43% 3.99%
Prince George Fraser–Fort George 3.2% 1.96% 2.53% 2.06% 1.77%
Williams Lake Cariboo 2.99% 3.49% 7.66% 10.08% 10.45%
Golden Columbia-Shuswap 2.95% 3.13% 4.28% 8.13% 5.54%
Saanich Capital 2.81% 2.21% 2.51% 2.17% 1.46%
Burnaby Metro Vancouver 2.81% 2.9% 2.94% 2.15% 1.51%
Merritt Thompson–Nicola 2.74% 3.84% 8.03% 9.65% 10.35%
Kelowna Central Okanagan 2.59% 1.33% 0.9% 0.66% 0.52%
Vancouver Metro Vancouver 2.54% 2.85% 2.82% 2.78% 2.36%
Fort St. John Peace River 2.31% 0.3% 0.43% 0.76%
Port Coquitlam Metro Vancouver 2.21% 2.26% 1.58% 1.63% 1.03%
Maple Ridge Metro Vancouver 2.14% 1.16% 1.11% 0.81% 0.52%
Kamloops Thompson–Nicola 2.12% 1.37% 1.74% 1.61% 1.87%
Penticton Okanagan–Similkameen 2.1% 1.75% 2.08% 0.95% 0.59%
Quesnel Cariboo 1.91% 3.61% 7.06% 12.04% 13.89%
Smithers Bulkley–Nechako 1.81% 0% 0%
Chilliwack Fraser Valley 1.71% 0.58% 0.37% 0.31% 0.41%
Dawson Creek Peace River 1.7% 0.62% 0.19% 0% 0%
Central Saanich Capital 1.57% 0.54% 0.49% 0.3% 0%
View Royal Capital 1.51% 2.7% 2.34% 2.7%
Fort St. James Bulkley Nechako 1.5% 3.07% 10.31% 21.59% 15.66%
Houston Bulkley-Nechako 1.49% 4.94% 6.98% 7.02% 5.48%
Castlegar Central Kootenay 1.43% 0.15% 0.23% 0.44%
Sechelt Sunshine Coast 1.41% 0% 0%
Nanaimo Nanaimo 1.37% 1.08% 1.32% 1.92% 1.95%
Langford Capital 1.3% 1.5% 1.29% 0.67% 0.73%
Coquitlam Metro Vancouver 1.26% 1.14% 0.88% 0.76% 0.56%
Trail Kootenay Boundary 1.25% 1.23% 0.19% 0.21%
North Saanich Capital 1.23% 0.41% 0.19% 0.31% 0.49%
North Cowichan Cowichan Valley 1.23% 2.16% 3% 3.51% 3.8%
Port Alberni Alberni–Clayoquot 1.2% 1.52% 2.42% 3.97% 4.33%
Lake Country Central Okanagan 1.09% 0.75% 0.65% 0.25% 0.13%
Summerland Okanagan–Similkameen 1.07% 0.18% 0.38% 0.22% 0.2%
Port Hardy Mount Waddington 1.04% 0.89% 0.88%
North Vancouver (City) Metro Vancouver 0.92% 0.79% 0.6% 0.89% 0.45%
Cranbrook East Kootenay 0.78% 0.19% 0.11% 0.22% 0.57%
Vernon North Okanagan 0.78% 0.48% 1.29% 1.28% 0.89%
Lake Cowichan Cowichan Valley 0.75% 2.2% 2.47% 4.02% 8.62%
Oak Bay Capital 0.68% 0.49% 0.2% 0.43% 0.12%
West Kelowna Central Okanagan 0.66% 0.8% 0.24% 0.37% 0.47%
Nelson Central Kootenay 0.65% 0.1% 0.16% 0.12% 0.11%
Duncan Cowichan Valley 0.65% 0.56% 1.46% 3.21% 1.56%
North
Vancouver (District)
Metro Vancouver 0.63% 0.51% 0.49% 0.4% 0.29%
Courtenay Comox Valley 0.61% 0.04% 0.06% 0.04% 0.06%
Campbell River Strathcona 0.57% 0.13% 1.25% 1.19% 2.39%
Fernie East Kootenay 0.57% 0.66% 0.61% 1.02%
Salmon Arm Columbia–Shuswap 0.54% 0.12% 0.07% 0.17% 0.32%
Victoria Capital 0.48% 0.41% 0.42% 0.52% 0.5%
West Vancouver Metro Vancouver 0.31% 0.27% 0.29% 0.04% 0.03%
Kitimat Kitimat–Stikine 0.24% 0.66% 3.27% 4.48% 3.1%
Port Moody Metro Vancouver 0.24% 0.55% 0.08% 0.37% 0.3%
Lillooet Squamish-Lillooet 0.86% 2.39% 6% 7.28%
Mackenzie Fraser-Fort George 0.42% 7.07% 4.58% 4.24%
Elkford East Kootenay 0.4% 1.36% 2.74% 3.22%
Tahsis Strathcona 1.56% 2.5% 8.29% 10.34%
Thompson-Nicola
Subdivision A
[y]
Thompson–Nicola 1.59% 3.54% 3.88%
Sparwood East Kootenay 0.92% 3.39% 3.48%
Montrose Kootenay-Boundary 1.41% 2.45% 0.82%
Port McNeill Mount Waddington 1.68% 1.84%

Prairies[edit]

Sikh Gurdwara in Edmonton

In Alberta, most of the province's Sikhs live in either Calgary or Edmonton. Although many are first or second generation immigrants, Sikhs have lived in Calgary since at least 1908.[142] The majority of Sikhs in Calgary are concentrated in the Northeast section of the city.[143] Sikhs form over 20% of the population in some Northeast Calgary neighbourhoods, particularly Martindale, Taradale, Coral Springs and Saddle Ridge. Most of Edmonton's Sikhs can be found in the Southeast section of the city, particularly The Meadows, and Mill Woods.[144] In The Meadows neighbourhood of Edmonton, Sikhs form over 30% of the population of Silver Berry.

The Sikh community in Manitoba is significant, at 2.7%, and largely concentrated in Winnipeg. Within Winnipeg, are established Sikh neighbourhoods in the northwest quadrant of the city, notably in The Maples and Mandalay West in the far north end of the city which are over 20% Sikh.

Sikh Canadians by metropolitan areas in the Prairies (2001−2021)
Metropolitan area Province 2021[1][129] 2011[19] 2001[18]
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Calgary CMA Alberta 56,060 3.83% 30,420 2.54% 13,320 1.41%
Edmonton CMA Alberta 44,440 3.18% 20,425 1.79% 9,405 1.01%
Winnipeg CMA Manitoba 33,435 4.08% 9,885 1.38% 5,320 0.8%
Regina CA Saskatchewan 4,455 1.82% 930 0.45% 290 0.15%
Saskatoon CMA Saskatchewan 3,365 1.08% 610 0.24% 175 0.08%
Grande Prairie CA Alberta 510 0.81% 225 0.41% 330 0.9%
Brandon CA Manitoba 430 0.82% 105 0.2% 15 0.04%
Medicine Hat CA Alberta 405 0.54% 195 0.27% 0 0%
Thompson CA Manitoba 400 3.1% 80 0.63% 95 0.72%
Lethbridge CMA Alberta 335 0.28% 80 0.08% 35 0.05%
Wood Buffalo CA Alberta 310 0.42% 260 0.39% 60 0.14%
Red Deer CMA Alberta 285 0.29% 125 0.14% 110 0.17%
Steinbach CA Manitoba 275 1.56% 0 0%
Prince Albert CA Saskatchewan 235 0.54% 0 0% 0 0%
Winkler CA Manitoba 220 0.68%
Lloydminster CA Alberta-
Saskatchewan
200 0.56% 25 0.08% 10 0.05%
Portage la Prairie CA Manitoba 150 1.17% 0 0% 0 0%
Yorkton CA Saskatchewan 130 0.67% 0 0% 0 0%
Moose Jaw CA Saskatchewan 115 0.34% 0 0% 30 0.09%
North Battleford CA Saskatchewan 115 0.61% 0 0% 0 0%
Swift Current CA Saskatchewan 80 0.44% 0 0% 0 0%
Okotoks CA Alberta 75 0.25% 60 0.25%
Strathmore CA Alberta 75 0.53% 0 0%
Weyburn CA Saskatchewan 60 0.51%
Estevan CA Saskatchewan 35 0.28% 0 0% 10 0.08%
Canmore CA Alberta 35 0.23% 0 0%
Camrose CA Alberta 30 0.16% 0 0% 0 0%
Wetaskiwin CA Alberta 25 0.21% 0 0% 20 0.18%
Lacombe CA Alberta 20 0.15% 0 0%
Brooks CA Alberta 15 0.1% 10 0.04% 0 0%
High River CA Alberta 15 0.11% 50 0.39%
Sylvan Lake CA Alberta 15 0.09% 0 0%
Cold Lake CA Alberta 90 0.65% 10 0.04%

Ontario and Quebec[edit]

Sikh communities are found in most cities and towns in Southern Ontario, while few are found living north of Barrie.

The Greater Toronto Area is home to the second largest community of Sikhs in Canada, after the Vancouver-Abbotsford area of British Columbia. Sikhs in Toronto traditionally lived in the Rexdale neighbourhood of Etobicoke, and Armadale in Scarborough. An older established Sikh community can be found in Malton, Mississauga as well, where Sikhs form nearly 25% of the population.[145] Over half of Ontario's Sikhs can be found in Brampton, where they account for 19% of the city's total population.[146] While Sikhs can be found living in all parts of Brampton, they form upwards of 35% of the population in the neighbourhoods of Churchville, Springdale and Castlemore.

Quebec is home to a more educated, upper-middle class Sikh community. Virtually the entire Sikh population of Quebec is found in the Montreal area. In the Montreal area, working class Sikhs are found in Park Extension, while wealthier Sikh families can be found in Dollard-des-Ormeaux, Vaudreuil-Dorion, and LaSalle, Quebec.

Sikh Canadians by metropolitan areas in Ontario and Quebec (2001−2021)
Metropolitan area Province 2021[1][129] 2011[19] 2001[18]
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Toronto CMA Ontario 244,240 3.98% 159,910 2.9% 90,590 1.95%
Montreal CMA Quebec 22,990 0.55% 9,210 0.25% 7,935 0.23%
Kitchener–
Cambridge–
Waterloo
CMA
Ontario 12,295 2.16% 3,720 0.79% 2,510 0.61%
Hamilton CMA Ontario 9,590 1.24% 5,920 0.84% 3,655 0.56%
Ottawa–
Gatineau
CMA
Ontario-
Quebec
6,730 0.46% 3,445 0.28% 2,645 0.25%
Windsor CMA Ontario 4,340 1.04% 1,900 0.6% 1,630 0.53%
London CMA Ontario 4,265 0.8% 745 0.16% 515 0.12%
St. Catharines
Niagara CMA
Ontario 2,170 0.51% 205 0.05% 275 0.07%
Oshawa CMA Ontario 1,550 0.38% 460 0.13% 460 0.16%
Barrie CMA Ontario 1,260 0.6% 185 0.1% 95 0.06%

Metropolitan areas[edit]

10 largest Sikh Canadian populations by metropolitan areas (1981−2021)
Metropolitan area 2021[138] 2011[19] 2001[18] 1991[17][130][131] 1981[132][133][141]
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Toronto CMA, Ontario 244,240 3.98% 159,910 2.9% 90,590 1.95% 41,450 1.07% 11,620 0.39%
Vancouver CMA, British Columbia 222,160 8.52% 155,945 6.84% 99,005 5.03% 49,625 3.13% 22,390 1.79%
Calgary CMA, Alberta 56,055 3.83% 30,420 2.54% 13,320 1.41% 6,075 0.81% 2,505 0.43%
Edmonton CMA, Alberta 44,440 3.18% 19,555 1.79% 9,405 1.01% 6,480 0.78% 2,730 0.42%
Abbotsford-Mission CMA, British Columbia 41,665 21.69% 28,235 16.94% 16,780 11.57% 6,525 5.88% 2,530[t] 3.45%
Winnipeg CMA, Manitoba 33,435 4.08% 9,885 1.38% 5,320 0.8% 3,290 0.51% 1,570 0.27%
Montréal CMA, Quebec 22,990 0.55% 9,210 0.25% 7,935 0.23% 3,880 0.13% 1,555 0.06%
Kitchener-Cambridge-Waterloo CMA, Ontario 12,295 2.16% 3,720 0.79% 2,510 0.61% 1,180 0.33% 870 0.31%
Hamilton CMA, Ontario 9,590 1.24% 5,920 0.84% 3,655 0.56% 2,240 0.38% 1,290 0.24%
Ottawa–Gatineau CMA, Ontario/Quebec 6,730 0.46% 3,445 0.28% 2,645 0.25% 1,575 0.17% 605 0.08%
Canada 771,790 2.12% 454,965 1.38% 278,410 0.94% 147,440 0.55% 67,715 0.28%

Subdivisions[edit]

10 largest Sikh Canadian populations by subdivisions (1991−2021)
Subdivision 2021[138] 2011[139] 2001[140] 1991[17]
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Brampton, Ontario 163,260 25.11% 97,790 18.76% 34,510 10.64% 8,635 3.7%
Surrey, British Columbia 154,415 27.45% 104,720 22.6% 56,330 16.29% 20,905 8.59%
Calgary, Alberta 49,465 3.83% 28,565 2.64% 13,200 1.52% 6,055 0.86%
Edmonton, Alberta 41,385 4.15% 19,555 2.46% 9,240 1.41% 6,305 1.03%
Abbotsford, British Columbia 38,395 25.46% 26,145 19.97% 15,225 13.38% 5,300[z] 6.21%
Winnipeg, Manitoba 32,510 4.41% 9,800 1.51% 5,285 0.87% 3,250 0.53%
Mississauga, Ontario 24,505 3.44% 23,995 3.39% 23,425 3.84% 12,560 2.72%
Toronto, Ontario 21,545 0.78% 20,405 0.79% 22,565 0.92% 15,665 0.69%
Delta, British Columbia 19,235 17.93% 10,495 10.63% 8,255 8.57% 3,695 4.18%
Vancouver, British Columbia 16,535 2.54% 16,815 2.85% 15,200 2.82% 12,935 2.78%

Electoral districts[edit]

20 largest Sikh Canadian populations by federal electoral district
Federal electoral district Province/territory 2021[138] Member of Parliament[aa] Party
Pop. %
Surrey—Newton British Columbia 62,340 51.47% Sukh Dhaliwal Liberal
Brampton East Ontario 53,030 40.44% Maninder Sidhu Liberal
Brampton West Ontario 39,495 24.4% Kamal Khera Liberal
Surrey Centre British Columbia 36,070 27.74% Randeep Sarai Liberal
Calgary Skyview Alberta 34,850 21.97% George Chahal Liberal
Brampton North Ontario 31,785 25.59% Ruby Sahota Liberal
Fleetwood—Port Kells British Columbia 30,380 24.5% Ken Hardie Liberal
Brampton South Ontario 28,290 21.91% Sonia Sidhu Liberal
Edmonton Mill Woods Alberta 23,945 19.17% Tim Uppal Conservative
Abbotsford British Columbia 19,820 18.35% Ed Fast Conservative
Mission—Matsqui—Fraser Canyon British Columbia 19,355 19.51% Brad Vis Conservative
Delta British Columbia 19,270 17.61% Carla Qualtrough Liberal
Cloverdale—Langley City British Columbia 18,745 14.46% John Aldag Liberal
Winnipeg North Manitoba 14,230 14.24% Kevin Lamoureux Liberal
Mississauga—Malton Ontario 13,945 12% Iqwinder Gaheer Liberal
Dufferin—Caledon Ontario 12,120 8.56% Kyle Seeback Conservative
Vancouver South British Columbia 10,775 9.98% Harjit Sajjan Liberal
Brampton Centre Ontario 10,660 10.27% Shafqat Ali Liberal
Edmonton—Wetaskiwin Alberta 9,930 4.79% Mike Lake Conservative
South Surrey—White Rock British Columbia 9,410 8.07% Kerry-Lynne Findlay Conservative

Surrey—Newton and Brampton East are the only national electoral districts outside of Punjab where Sikhism is the most followed religion.

Memorials[edit]

NCdt Tejvinder Toor, OCdt Saajandeep Sarai and OCdt. Sarabjot Anand represent Royal Military College of Canada at Private Buckham Singh grave, an annual Sikh Remembrance Day service which is held at Mount Hope Cemetery in Kitchener, Ontario.

Sikh Remembrance Day[edit]

Since 2009, Sikh members of the Canadian Forces (CF) have attended the annual Sikh Remembrance Day service which is held at the Mount Hope Cemetery in Kitchener, Ontario. This cemetery holds the only military grave in Canada belonging to a Sikh soldier, Private Buckham Singh who fought in World War I. In 2012, NCdt Tejvinder Toor, OCdt Saajandeep Sarai & OCdt Sarabjot Anand represented Royal Military College of Canada at the event in uniform.[147]

Celebrations[edit]

Nagar Kirtan[edit]

Khalsa Day celebration

Various Nagar Kirtan celebrations happen in Canada, with most starting in British Columbia. In British Columbia, various places celebrate the Nagar Kirtan, though it is mainly celebrated in the cities of Vancouver and Surrey. In Vancouver, the Nagar Kirtan, is used to celebrate the Visakhi and the birth of Khalsa. Various Canadian Sikhs, of various ethnic origins, are present in the parade, which usually happens on Easter Weekend. In Abbotsford, the celebration happens on Labour Day Weekend and is commemorated in the celebration of the Parkash Divas of the Guru Granth Sahib Ji. The parade in Abbotsford takes place near the Kalgidar Durbar.

Vaisakhi[edit]

Vaisakhi celebrations happen in both British Columbia and Ontario, with many including a Nagar Kirtan parade. In Ontario, the Vaisakhi celebrations are reported to get bigger and bigger in terms of festivities and attending populace every year. Many Sikh academies and institutes also participate in the Ontario parades, such as the Akal Academy Brampton. While the Nagar Kirtan in the Ontario Vaisakhi celebration starts at the Malton Gurudwara and ends at the Sikh Spiritual Centre, festivities go on until the Rexdale Gurudwara is reached, it is organized annually by the Ontario Gurdwara Committee. Nagar Kirtan parades also take place in Alberta. Both the cities of Calgary and Edmonton hold them around the May long weekend.[148]

Education[edit]

Punjabi is the native language of the Sikh faith; it is spoken commonly throughout both converts and Indo-Canadians. There is a large population of Sikh people in the city of Surrey; this has led to the availability of a course in the Punjabi language in the fifth grade using the British Columbia Punjabi Language Curriculum. In specific schools in the city of Abbotsford, the Punjabi language too is available as a course that can be taken following the fifth grade in elementary school levels.[149] For Abbotsford, however, when the curriculum was suggested to a more mainstream stray of schools, controversy was brought up, despite Punjabi being Abbotsford's second largest language. Many comments brought up were those who stated that only English and French should be taught in the district and that the costs to parents would be high, as always these comments were believed to be racially driven due to other secondary languages being taught for free in the district.[150]

Controversy[edit]

Kirpan cases[edit]

Various controversies have arisen involving the sacred Sikh dagger, the Kirpan. Most of these cases have taken place in the Canadian province of Quebec.

Quebec Legislature[edit]

In February 2011, the Quebec National Assembly banned religious daggers, of which the kirpan was included. Upon the announcement, Canadian Sikh Liberal MP Navdeep Bains revealed his surprise and anger as he had worn the kirpan to the Supreme Court of Canada and the United States Congress without any trouble. The ban sparked a small debate amongst the Canadian Legislatures and news programs as well as backlash from the World Sikh Organization.[151] Following this was a vote that the kirpan be banned from all parliamentary buildings including the House of Commons of Canada. The vote happened in favour of the kirpan, despite fierce opposition from the Bloc Québécois.[152]

Montreal schools[edit]

In the 2006 Supreme Court of Canada decision of Multani v. Commission scolaire Marguerite‑Bourgeoys the court held that the banning of the kirpan in a school environment offended Canada's Charter of Rights and Freedoms, nor could the limitation be upheld under s. 1 of the Charter, as per R. v. Oakes. The issue started when a 12-year-old schoolboy dropped a 20 cm (8-inch) long kirpan in school. School staff and parents were very concerned, and the student was required to attend school under police supervision until the court decision[153] was reached. In September 2008, Montreal police announced that a 13-year-old student would be charged after he allegedly threatened another student with his kirpan. However, while he was declared guilty of threatening his schoolmates, he was granted an absolute discharge for the crime on April 15, 2009.[154]

Calgary Telus controversy[edit]

The World Sikh Organization representative Jasbeer Singh, who had involvement in the Multani Kirpan case, represented the WSO who had called on the Calgary Telus Convention Center for an apology on another kirpan case. In the Calgary stadium, a Gurdas Mann concert in 2009 had to be shut down after Sikh ticket holders had refused to remove their kirpans. Jasbeer was reportedly furious due to the case having occurred after it was proven that the kirpan was allowed to legally be worn in public areas due to the Multani v. Commission scolaire Marguerite-Bourgeoys case. Concert promoter Nirmal Dhaliwal revealed his intent on suing the centre due to the lack of revenue brought by the case.[155]

Turban cases[edit]

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police came under fire when they refused to let turbaned Canadian Sikh officers join their service. In doing so they had indefinitely banned all RCMP officers from wearing a turban, requiring them to wear the standard and traditional RCMP headdress. The ban was a result of the activism of a petition leader named Herman Bittner,[156] who maintained that he was preserving history rather than discriminating. The ban was lifted in 1990 and turbaned Sikh officers were permitted to join the RCMP.[157]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ In the absence of official census data for Sikhs during the 1901, 1941, and 1951 censuses, the populations detailed are 95% of the total South Asian Canadian population enumerated in each respective census, based on the quote "From 1904 to the 1940s, 95% of all South Asian immigrants to Canada were Sikhs from the Punjab region of India.", taken from page 4 of the book "A Social History of South Asians in British Columbia".[2]: 4 

    Figures for 1961 and 1971 use a falling decadal average of the Sikh proportion of the total South Asian Canadian between 95% in 1951,[2] compared with 31.5% in 1981.[3]: 40  This results in Sikhs forming 73.8% of the total South Asian Canadian population in 1961 and forming 52.6% of the total South Asian Canadian population in 1971. The total South Asian Canadian population in the 1961 census was 6,774 persons,[4]: 5  and 67,925 persons in the 1971 census.[5]: 2 

    Immigration data collected on the 2001 and 2011 census indicate there were 1,290 Sikh immigrants in Canada in 1961,[6] and 9,655 Sikh immigrants in Canada in 1971,[7] an undercount as this did not include the native-born population.

  2. ^ Sikhism is the second-largest religion in British Columbia, Manitoba, and Yukon.[1] Per the 2011 Indian census, Sikhism is the largest religion in Punjab and second in Chandigarh. These are the only two Indian states/UTs where Sikhism is one of the two most common religions.[24][25]
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Located in the Cowichan Valley
  4. ^ Logging camp located between Burnaby and Port Moody.
  5. ^ Logging camp located near Port Alberni.
  6. ^ Village north of Campbell River.
  7. ^ Logging camp located near Ladysmith.[63]
  8. ^ a b c When Grewall was nominated as a candidate for the CCF party in the Dewdney riding in 1956, this drew excitement. But, according to Barrett, Grewall faced open discrimination on the campaign trail. “The former mayor knew the risk he was taking and many people were surprised he took this risk to enter the race,” said Barrett. Barrett said Grewall overcame many racial insults along the way. “Every kid in the North Fraser, who thinks he or she is being discriminated against, should read the Grewall story and the challenges he faced.” Grewall was later found dead in a Seattle motel room with a gunshot wound to the head in July of 1957. He was 47 years of age.[71]
  9. ^ After losing his MLA bid in 1956 to SoCred Labor Minister Lyle Wicks, Grewal began receiving threats. Fires were set at his mills and his house was set ablaze. On July 17, 1957, while on a business trip, Grewall was found dead in a Seattle motel. He had been shot in the head. Although local police ruled it a suicide, Grewall's family believes he was a victim of foul play. Grewall was survived by his wife and three children, who left Mission City shortly after his death. Despite the suspicious circumstances of his death, Grewall's story is more notable for his legacy of community involvement than for his untimely demise.[68]
  10. ^ Canadian citizens by birth.
  11. ^ Naturalized Canadian citizens or Canadian permanent residents.
  12. ^ Persons from another country with a usual place of residence in Canada and who have a work or study permit or who have claimed refugee status.
  13. ^ Statistic includes total responses of "Filipino" and "Southeast Asian".
  14. ^ Statistic includes all persons that did not make up part of a visible minority or an indigenous identity.
  15. ^ Statistic includes total responses of "West Asian" and "Arab".
  16. ^ Statistic includes total responses of "Chinese", "Korean", and "Japanese".
  17. ^ a b c d e Includes Hindus.
  18. ^ a b c d e f Newfoundland and Labrador did not become part of Canada until 1949.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Northwest Territories includes Nunavut, as the territory was not created until 1999.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Note: 1981 census religious breakdown for all subdivisions and census agglomerations includes an "Eastern Non-Christian" section. Estimates derived using the Sikh proportion of Eastern Non-Christian religious total from the 1991 census.
  21. ^ a b c d Rural region surrounding Oliver.
  22. ^ a b c d Rural region surrounding Osoyoos.
  23. ^ a b Rural region surrounding Keremeos.
  24. ^ a b Okanagan-Similkameen Subdivision B, including Cawston and surrounding areas
  25. ^ Rural region including and surrounding Clearwater-Vavenby.
  26. ^ Including the District of Matsqui, which was amalgamated with Abbotsford in 1995
  27. ^ Members of Parliament in bold are Sikhs.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2022-10-26). "Religion by visible minority and generation status: Canada, provinces and territories, census metropolitan areas and census agglomerations with parts". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-10-26.
  2. ^ a b c "A Social History of South Asians in British Columbia". www.saclp.southasiancanadianheritage.ca. April 2022. Retrieved 2022-09-25. From 1904 to the 1940s, 95% of all South Asian immigrants to Canada were Sikhs from the Punjab region of India.
  3. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2013-04-03). "A user's guide to 1981 census data on ethnic origin / by Walton O. Boxhill = Guide de l'utilisateur des données du recensement de 1981 sur l'origine ethnique / par Walton O. Boxhill". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-09-25.
  4. ^ Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2013-04-03). "1961 Census of Canada : population : vol. I - part 2 = 1961 Recensement du Canada : population : vol. I - partie 2. Ethnic groups". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-11-13.
  5. ^ Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2013-04-03). "1971 Census of Canada : population : vol. I - part 3 = Recensement du Canada 1971 : population : vol. I - partie 3. Ethnic Groups". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-11-13.
  6. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada. "Topic-based tabulation: Selected Demographic and Cultural Characteristics (104), Selected Religions (35A), Age Groups (6) and Sex (3) for Population, for Canada, Provinces, Territories and Census Metropolitan Areas, 2001 Census". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-11-13.
  7. ^ Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2013-05-08). "2011 National Household Survey: Data tables – Religion (108), Immigrant Status and Period of Immigration (11), Age Groups (10) and Sex (3) for the Population in Private Households of Canada, Provinces, Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 2011 National Household Survey". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2021-06-14.
  8. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2013-04-03). "Fifth census of Canada 1911 . v. 2. Religions, origins, birthplace, citizenship, literacy and infirmities, by provinces, districts and sub-districts". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2024-01-27.
  9. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (1913-01-27). "Religions of Canada for the year 1911 as enumerated under date of first June". Retrieved 2024-01-21.
  10. ^ a b c Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2013-04-03). "Sixth census of Canada,1921. v. 1. Population: number, sex and distribution, racial origins, religions". Retrieved 2024-01-21.
  11. ^ a b Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2013-04-03). "Seventh census of Canada, 1931 . v. 1. Summary". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2024-01-27.
  12. ^ a b c Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (July 2002). "Population of Canada, 1931, by religious denominations". Retrieved 2024-01-21.
  13. ^ Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2013-04-03). "Eighth census of Canada,1941 = Huitième recensement du Canada Vol. 2. Population by local subdivisions". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-09-24.
  14. ^ Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2013-04-03). "Eighth census of Canada,1941 = Huitième recensement du Canada Vol. 4. Cross-classifications, interprovincial migration, blind and deaf-mutes". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-09-24.
  15. ^ Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2013-04-03). "Ninth census of Canada, 1951 = Neuvième recensement du Canada Vol. 1. Population: general characteristics". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-09-24.
  16. ^ a b c Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2013-04-03). "1981 Census of Canada : volume 1 - national series : population = Recensement du Canada de 1981 : volume 1 - série nationale : population. Religion". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-08-25.
  17. ^ a b c d e f Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2019-03-29). "Data tables, 1991 Census R9101 - Population by Religion (29), Showing Age Groups (13) Education (20% Data) - Canada, provinces and territories, census divisions and census subdivisions". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-08-25.
  18. ^ a b c d e f Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2013-12-23). "Religion (13) and Age Groups (8) for Population, for Canada, Provinces, Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 2001 Census - 20% Sample Data". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-08-25.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2019-01-23). "2011 National Household Survey: Data tables Religion (108), Immigrant Status and Period of Immigration (11), Age Groups (10) and Sex (3) for the Population in Private Households of Canada, Provinces, Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 2011 National Household Survey". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-09-08.
  20. ^ Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2022-10-26). "Census Profile, 2021 Census of Population Profile table Brampton, City (CY) Ontario [Census subdivision] Total - Religion for the population in private households - 25% sample data". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-10-31.
  21. ^ Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2022-10-26). "Census Profile, 2021 Census of Population Profile table Surrey, City (CY) British Columbia [Census subdivision] Total - Religion for the population in private households - 25% sample data". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-10-31.
  22. ^ Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2022-10-26). "Census Profile, 2021 Census of Population Profile table Calgary, City (CY) Alberta [Census subdivision] Total - Religion for the population in private households - 25% sample data". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2022-10-31.
  23. ^ Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2022-10-26). "Census Profile, 2021 Census of Population Profile table Edmonton, City (CY) Alberta [Census subdivision] Total - Religion for the population in private households - 25% sample data". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2023-02-25.
  24. ^ "Population by religion community – 2011". The Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India. Archived from the original on 23 September 2015.
  25. ^ "Census of India 2011 - Chandigarh" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 21 August 2017. Retrieved 28 July 2017.
  26. ^ "Sikhs Celebrate Hundred Years in Canada". Toronto Star. April 12, 1997. Archived from the original on 2 May 2014. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  27. ^ "Arrivals and Departures". The Colonies and India. 5 June 1897. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  28. ^ "FIRST SIKH TEMPLE IN NORTH AMERICA". March 10, 2021. The first Sikhs came to Golden about 1902, arriving to work in the sawmill of the Columbia River Lumber Company. When the Sikhs arrived in Golden the community was in its infancy and the sawmill had recently opened. The Columbia River Lumber Company recognized the value of these tall strong men and had no problem with the men. They hired them to work in the lumberyard, planer, and sawmill. The first documented proof that we have of South Asians of the Sikh faith being residents of Golden is a copy of a telegram sent to G.T. Bradshaw, Chief of Police, New Westminster from Colin Cameron, Chief of Police, Golden, BC on July 20, 1902. It was sent collect and reads: Geha Singh of Golden sent a telegram to Santa Singh care of Small and Bucklin for one thousand dollars.
  29. ^ "Country Brief – Canada" (Archive). Ministry of Overseas Indian Affairs. p. 4/7. Retrieved on October 21, 2014. "Emigrants from India today enjoy success in all fields within the economy while there are some concentration in British Columbia in agriculture and forestry."
  30. ^ Nayar, The Punjabis in British Columbia, p. 28. "In fact, early in the twentieth century, when many Chinese and Japanese men were working in sawmills, lumber labour had become associated with ethnicity."
  31. ^ "Sikhs celebrate history in Golden". April 26, 2018. The original temple in Golden sat on a corner of a lot, in the south western area of town at the end of the street looking toward where Rona is now. The largest influx of men came from South Asia around 1905, which would be the time period that the temple in Golden would have begun services. In 1926, a fire burned the timber limits of the Columbia River Lumber Company, where the South Asian men worked.
  32. ^ "Golden's Sikh heritage recognized on new Stop of Interest sign". November 9, 2016. "We acknowledge the Gurdwara in Golden as the first in B.C., and quite likely the first in North America," said Pyara Lotay, on behalf of the local Sikh community. "We thank the B.C. government for recognizing Golden's Sikh pioneers and their place of worship with this Stop of Interest."
  33. ^ "Golden Gurdwara is recognized for its historical significance". June 7, 2017. The original temple sat on the corner of a lot, which is now owned by Gurmit Manhas, at the end of the street past the School Board Office looking towards the Rona. Plans are being put together to erect a kiosk there that would share information about the original building, the first South Asian people to Canada, the importance of the Gurdwara to the Sikh people and the history of why they left and what brought them back. The largest influx of men came from South Asia in about 1905-06, which would be the time period that the Temple would have begun services. In 1926 a fire burned the timber limits of the Columbia River Lumber Company, where all the South Asian men worked and the men left for the coast having no work to do. When the forest started to grow back the men came back and soon it was necessary to build the present Gurdwara on 13th Street South.
  34. ^ "First Sikh Temple • Vancouver Heritage Foundation".
  35. ^ "New Westminster Sikh temple celebrates 100-year anniversary". March 3, 2019. The Gurdwara Sahib Sukh Sagar is one of the oldest Sikh temples in the country and its members are celebrating the milestone anniversary by reflecting on its historic significance to the local Sikh community. The temple was actually founded more than 100 years ago when a pioneering Sikh named Bhai Bishan Singh bought a house next door to where the building is now. Singh paid $250 for the house, which served as a place of worship until the congregation grew too large. In 1919, Singh bought the neighbouring lot at 347 Wood Street and the Gurdwara Sahib Sukh Sagar was born.
  36. ^ "New Westminster Sikh temple welcomes community to celebrate its centennial anniversary". February 27, 2019. The Khalsa Diwan Society New Westminster is inviting community members to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Gurdwara Sahib Sukh Sagar in Queensborough. Since opening in 1919, the temple has become an integral part of the Queensborough and New Westminster communities, and has provided a place for Sikhs from New Westminster and the Lower Mainland to gather and to worship. "It is starting up on Thursday and it will be four days, with the main event on Sunday. It's open to anyone within the community – in Queensborough and in New West. It's to show support, learn about each other and the heritage," said Jag Sall, a member of the committee that's organizing the celebration. "I don't think a lot of people know that the Sikh community has been in Queensborough for over 100 years, and/or the gurdwara itself has been there that long. Not just the Sikh community, but other communities in Queensborough have been living there for a century."
  37. ^ "The Gurdwara of New West Shares a Century of Stories". January 23, 2020. Every Sunday in 1919, the Sikhs of Queensborough on the Fraser River would stroll over to the house of Bhai Bishan Singh for worship. Singh, like many Punjabi immigrants, settled in the New Westminster neighbourhood because he worked upriver at a sawmill. A devout Sikh, he had the holy scripture installed in his home, the Guru Granth Sahib. Singh was a bachelor and gave much of his earnings to the local Khalsa Diwan Society, which in 1908 had built B.C.'s first gurdwara, the Sikh place of worship, in Vancouver. In March 1919, Singh helped the Sikhs of New Westminster start a gurdwara of their own. For $250, Singh bought the property next door and donated it to the society. Later, he would donate his house as well.
  38. ^ "Paldi Sikh Temple in Cowichan celebrating 100 years". June 26, 2019. The town's cultural centres were the Japanese community hall and the Sikh Temple, which officially opened July 1, 1919, to coincide with Dominion Day.
  39. ^ "Sikh temple celebrates 100 years of acceptance in Vancouver Island ghost town". June 29, 2019. Paldi's Gurdwara was built in 1919 and soon became one of the most important fixtures of the community, even surviving several town fires.
  40. ^ "THE FOUNDING OF PALDI". In 1919, Mayo built a Sikh temple, or a gurdwara.
  41. ^ "PALDI: Town soaked in Sikh History". Wherever there are five or more Sikh's there will be Sikh Temple even just a spare room in some ones house. Therefore it was only that once the natural that once the mill and bunkhouses were erected the next building should be a Temple. The first official Temple in Paldi was built in 1919. On the same spot where the present Temple is located.
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  68. ^ a b c d "SOUTH ASIAN PIONEERS: NARANJAN SINGH GREWAL". May 19, 2015. Known as "Giani" to his friends, Naranjan Grewall is believed to be the first Indian ever elected to political office in North America. Grewall was born in East Punjab. He came to B.C. in 1925 and in 1941 moved to Mission City, a small mill town in the Fraser Valley. Grewall worked as a millwright at Fraser Mills and was elected a union official. He came to own and operate six sawmill companies and established himself as one of the largest employers and most influential business leaders in the area. After being in Mission for almost a decade, Grewall decided to run for political office in 1950. He competed against six other candidates in Mission's board of commissioners election.
  69. ^ a b c d e "SHAPING OUR COMMUNITY: PROMINENT INDO-CANADIAN PIONEERS". Archived from the original on 2022-08-26. Retrieved 2022-08-27. Already a popular and well-respected man, he topped the polls, beating out seven candidates in a historic victory, especially given that Indo-Canadians had only been given the right to vote three years before. While Indo-Canadians had gained respect in business, racism still existed, especially regarding elite positions in society. The Vancouver Daily Province newspaper ran an article with the headline, "First in BC and believed first East Indian in Canada to hold public office." He was re-elected in 1952, and again in 1954. The same year the Board unanimously voted to name him Chairman of the Board, which gave him similar duties and influence to that of a Mayor. During his years in public office, he continued his community involvement and large-scale business ventures. He also fought for the building of a new Mission bridge as well as against prohibitive diking taxes [...] Naranjan Singh Grewall was even more passionate about the Forestry industry. At that time, the SoCred government in provincial power was embroiled in a corruption scandal. The Minister of Forestry was suspected of giving away significant amounts of timber rights to previously declined lumber corporations, often his personal friends. Worse, the premier W.A.C. Bennet seemed to be purposefully looking the other way. This infuriated Mr. Grewall, who termed the present holders of forest management licenses "timber maharajas", believing that the current system could revert to a form of feudalism he had left behind in India.
  70. ^ a b c d "Diversity flourishes in Mission". May 12, 2017. In 1950, Naranjan Grewall became the first Hindu (as it was phrased at that time) in Canada to be elected to public office, after the voting franchise was extended to visible minority groups in 1947. In 1954, he was appointed to the position of mayor of Mission City by the board and later ran for the CCF in the Dewdney riding in 1956 [...] The two most legendary personalities from the Sikh community who graced Mission, and both employed hundreds of people, owning several large mills in the area, were Herman Braich Sr. and Naranjan Grewall.
  71. ^ a b c d "Grewall first Indo-Canadian to hold office of mayor in Canada". February 6, 2014. He was later nominated as a provincial candidate for the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) in 1956, making him also the first visible minority to run as a candidate in Canada. He was narrowly defeated by Socred Labour Minister Lyle Wicks. [...] And one of those legacies he left behind was the Mission Tree Farm. In 1958, Mission was the first municipality to be given responsibility to monitor their own forest called Tree Farm License #26. [...] During the much-heated 1956 provincial election, Grewall, as a CCF candidate, commonly addressed the issues of taxes, bridges, farmers and the forestry industry, which he claimed were being "monopolized" by a handful of large companies in the province. Grewall referred to these stakeholders as "timber maharajahs," and said the system would revert to a "form of feudalism, which I left 30 years ago."
  72. ^ a b c "Remembering Former Mission Mayor Naranjan Singh Grewal". July 14, 2017. [...] Naranjan Grewall was a polarizing figure. He was a wealthy man who gave freely and generously to worthy causes yet fought against many of the practices that were responsible for the wealth of many of the businessmen whom he rubbed shoulders with every day. He was well respected in the community of Mission and beyond – yet there were 14 suspicious fires in sawmills he was part owner of and his own house was set ablaze by an unknown arsonist. His wife was well aware of the dangers he faced although he kept his suspicions as to who was behind the threats to himself. True to his self-reliant and honorable reputation, he refused to name anyone or make any official complaints without proof. Naranjan Grewall's death which occurred on a business trip to Seattle was officially labelled a suicide. Some of his close friends went to Seattle to try and make sense of the tragedy. What they discovered only raised more questions and indicated that the police investigation was certainly very limited in scope. There were reports of a loud quarrel in his room at the Star Motel and later that same night he moved to a different motel. There was alcohol found in the same room as his body and Grewall was never known to have drank alcohol, yet the police insist that he was alone in the room at all times.
  73. ^ "Was Grewall Murdered And If Yes Then By Who?". July 15, 2017. "It's murder!" Those words of Helen Grewall were echoed by many friends of her late husband – former Mission Mayor Naranjan Singh Grewall – after his suspicious death in a Seattle hotel in the summer of 1957.
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