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- [[Fort Mcmurray Sikh Society]] Fort Mcmurray, Alberta T9K I K7 [[Sri Guru Singh Sabha Society Edmonton]] - 4504 - Millwoods Road South, Edmonton 465 - 22108 KB (1,164 words) - 20:34, 21 October 2022
- [[Image:Abbotsford Sikh temple built 1911-1.jpg|thumb|300px|right|{{cs|'''Abbotsford Sikh Temple built 1911'''}}]] '''Abbotsford’s 1911 Gurdwara: A National Historic site'''12 KB (1,881 words) - 20:09, 4 January 2011
- ...m loot by foreigners, etc. The association started two newspapers, Pardesi Khalsa in Punjabi and Svedesh Sevak in Urdu. These activities awakened the Indian ...y but, on learning that it was being misappropriated, discontinued it. The Society soon collapsed. No sum ever reached the Ghadr party. The Ghadr movement, as14 KB (2,215 words) - 18:03, 21 March 2007
- ...ter of the Anglo-Sanskrit High School, Bhera. He was vice-principal of the Khalsa College at Amritsar when he received the rites of initiation at the hands o ...hing at the Sikh women's college. He served as principal of the Guru Nanak Khalsa College from 1917-19. For a brief spell he also worked as principal of Teac36 KB (6,269 words) - 03:28, 21 April 2008
- ...m loot by foreigners, etc. The association started two newspapers, Pardesi Khalsa in Punjabi and Svedesh Sevak in Urdu. These activities awakened the Indian ...y but, on learning that it was being misappropriated, discontinued it. The Society soon collapsed. No sum ever reached the Ghadr party. The Ghadr movement, as15 KB (2,452 words) - 04:20, 16 August 2009
- ...outpost, but as a worker community. It could not resemble Punjabi village society, especially in the absence of women, children and older men. If one overloo ...the homeland. Immigrant workers who were isolated from mainstream Canadian society made ready audiences for compatriot activists. In work camps in British Col59 KB (9,510 words) - 19:40, 27 October 2022