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'''RANBIR KAUR - FIRST SIKH GIRL TO JOIN US ARMY '''  
'''RANBIR KAUR - FIRST SIKH GIRL TO JOIN US ARMY '''  


Born a US citizen Ranbir Kaur was the first Sikh girl to join the United Sates National Guard, which she did when she was only  17 years old. Normally 18 years of age is the minimum allowed, but with a parent's permission enlistment at 17 is allowed. Now 21  Ranbir Kaur  made headlines in 2003 after becoming the first Sikh girl to join the astimated 200,000 women serving in the branches of the US military.  
Born a US citizen Ranbir Kaur was the first Sikh girl to join the California National Guard, which she did when she was only  17 years old. Normally 18 years of age is the minimum allowed, but with her parent's permission she enrolled at 17, two days after her birthday. Now 21  Ranbir Kaur  made headlines in 2003 after becoming the first Sikh girl to join the estimated 200,000 women serving in the branches of the US military who are the fist women ever to be playing an essential part in the battlefields of Iran and Afganistan.  


Born in Nijjran village of Jalandhar district, the young warrior reached the US as a seven year old after her father Mahan Singh, a Jat Sikh who now  grows grapes in California's  San Joaquin Valley, hoping for a brighter  financial future for his family managed to secured a US green card in 1990.  
Born in Nijjran village of Jalandhar district, the young warrior reached the US as a seven year old after her father Mahan Singh, a Jat Sikh who now  grows grapes in California's  San Joaquin Valley, hoping for a brighter  financial future for his family managed to secured a US green card in 1990.  

Revision as of 23:00, 6 August 2008

RANBIR KAUR - FIRST SIKH GIRL TO JOIN US ARMY

Born a US citizen Ranbir Kaur was the first Sikh girl to join the California National Guard, which she did when she was only 17 years old. Normally 18 years of age is the minimum allowed, but with her parent's permission she enrolled at 17, two days after her birthday. Now 21 Ranbir Kaur made headlines in 2003 after becoming the first Sikh girl to join the estimated 200,000 women serving in the branches of the US military who are the fist women ever to be playing an essential part in the battlefields of Iran and Afganistan.

Born in Nijjran village of Jalandhar district, the young warrior reached the US as a seven year old after her father Mahan Singh, a Jat Sikh who now grows grapes in California's San Joaquin Valley, hoping for a brighter financial future for his family managed to secured a US green card in 1990.

Brought up in the very isolated town of Earlimart, California her brush with military uniforms dates back to 2001 when she was a freshman (9th grader) in a high school at Delano, the closest city.

In 2003, she faced the ire of local white supremacists, who posted spam e-mails, suggesting that she had only 'signed up' in an attempt to gain citizenship easily. They hadn't even bothered to find out that she was already a US citizen. The young girl set about proving her detractors wrong through hard training.

During the 2005 Katrina hurricane which devastated the US Gulf Coast and New Orleans, the devout Sikh Kaur was instrumental in recovering the Guru Granth Sahib after the New Orleans gurudwara was submerged.

The organisation, United Sikhs, had sought her assistance and Ranbir got everybody moving after she announced that the living Guru of the Sikhs was under water. Against a background of looting and random gunfire, US Air Force rescue experts David Cruz and Tom Bausmas were able to rescue the scriptures in an operation that lasted 22 hours.

After serving in Afganistan Ranbir was reassigned to Iran were last year she was injured. She was returned to the States for a four week recovery period. She has returned to complete her tour of duty with her ubit in Iran.