Sports
Mandira Bedi in midst of Sikh religious storm Chandigarh | April 11, 2007 10:15:06 PM IST
She may have turned heads with her appearance as a cricket anchor but model-cum-actress Mandira Bedi's "extraa innings" with a Sikh religious symbol has raked up a storm in the Sikh-dominated Punjab. Anti-Mandira protests were held in Ludhiana and other cities in the state after she appeared Tuesday on the ramp with a Sikh religious symbol tattooed on her bare back. Mandira sported the tattoo of "Ekom Kar" (God is one) in Gurmukhi. These are the first words of the holy Sikh scripture - the Granth Sahib. Youth Akali Dal workers held protests on the streets of industrial city Ludhiana and burnt an effigy of Mandira in a busy market there Wednesday to denounce her action. In the Sikh holy city of Amritsar, Shiromani Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee (SGPC) - the mini-parliament of Sikh religion - expressed its displeasure over Mandira using the Sikh religious symbol on her body for fashion modelling. "This action is anti-Sikh and has hurt the sentiments of millions of Sikhs. She should tender a public apology for this," SGPC president Avtar Singh Makkar said in a statement. Mandira, who has mostly lived in Mumbai, is a Sikh. She had generated controversy three years ago after she gave Sikh names to her two pet dogs saying they were her family members. After protests from the Sikh community, she had tendered an apology. Mandira, who is a successful TV personality, shot to fame after becoming a TV anchor during the 2003 Cricket world cup in South Africa. (IANS)
Viewer's Comment |
Comments Not Available |
|
| |
China sacks four officials in Tibet for endangering stability Ahsan confirms Gilani will appear before Pak SC on Feb 13 to face indictment over contempt charges Nine men jailed for London Stock Exchange bomb plot Marines posed for photo with Nazi SS symbol in Afghanistan Google manufacturing home entertainment device Obama administration urged to deploy tactics to kill Taliban leaders like al Qaeda Army chief withdraws case against Govt. in Supreme Court on age row (Update) How brain differentiates between left and right
|