Haq and history

 

In the early 1900s, the booming lumber industry in Port Moody attracted the first wave of Sikh immigrants to the area as workers. By 1905, 45 Sikh men had arrived in British Columbia, and six found employment at the Emerson Mill in Port Moody. The mill owner was impressed with their strong work ethic and advertised for more Sikh workers, leading to other mills hiring them. Initially, Sikh immigrants faced no immigration laws or regulations and found work quickly. However, as they were paid an average of $1.95 a day, compared to the $2.25 a day of workers of European descent, many employers began hiring Sikh workers due to their lower wages. This resulted in resentment and racial tensions towards Sikhs, leading to discrimination, physical abuse, layoffs, evictions, and eventually changes to immigration laws that restricted the number of Sikhs entering Canada.

Women and children under eighteen were also restricted from entering Canada, with only nine Sikh women migrating to British Columbia between 1904 and 1920. This left many Sikh men alone in small lodgings without their families. Despite this, the Sikh men in Port Moody made efforts to join and contribute to their new community. They were well-known to the local children and taught them to swim and wrestle. One man, Khartar Singh, would dive off the Queen Street wharf to impress onlookers. While Singh worked at the Thurston-Flavelle mill, his diving skills were believed to come from working as a pearl diver.

Upon arriving in Port Moody, Sikhs brought traditional beliefs and celebrations. In 1905, Bhai Arjan Singh brought the Sikh Holy book Siri Guru Granth Sahib Ji to Canada. The scriptures were kept at a residence in Port Moody, where the local community would gather. Eventually, a small Sikh temple was erected behind the original Royal Bank on Clarke Street, featuring a decorated altar. The Sikh members often welcomed other locals to join them in prayer. Following their customs, whenever a community member passed away, the group would gather and cremate their loved ones using unwanted wood collected from nearby mills. The celebration of life lasted for several days. In addition, the Sikh community always offered aid to those in need, exemplified during the 1914 incident of the Komagata Maru being stranded in Vancouver Harbour, where members of the Port Moody Sikh community rallied together to collect and provide food, water, medication, and financial assistance.

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hope meets action: echoes through the black continuum