NRI Sarabjit Aurora donated
$367,000 for Sikh studies at Santa Cruz, University
San Francisco, September 10, 2007
Surinder Gill
NRI Hardit Singh Aurora donated $367,000 through the Sikh Foundation
in memory of his son to fund an endowed chair in Sikh and Punjabi
studies in the History Department.
"The Sikhs have been in California for more than 100 years,
and the Sarabjit Singh Aurora Endowed Chair in Sikh and Punjabi
Studies provides an opportunity for students to learn more about
Sikh religion, history, arts, culture and diaspora," said
Dr.
Narinder S. Kapany, chairman and founder of the Sikh Foundation.
"The chair is an excellent basis for comprehensive study
and research in Sikh studies at UC Santa Cruz.”
There are approximately 20 million Sikhs in the world today,
with significant communities living in the United States, Canada,
Australia, New Zealand, Kenya, Fiji, Thailand, Singapore, Maylaysia,
and the United Kingdom. The ancestral home of the Sikhs is the
Punjab region, divided between Pakistan and northern India. Sikhs
arrived in California more than a century ago, and their descendants
today are employed in activities ranging from high-tech entrepreneurship
in Silicon Valley to farming in the Central Valley.
"The gift will solidify UC Santa Cruz's strength in South
Asian Studies by creating an endowed chair that focuses on the
world's fifth largest religion, its history, and the history of
the Punjabi area from which the Sikh religion arose," noted
Georges Van Den Abbeele, UCSC's dean of humanities. "It will
be explored in the wider context of South Asian history and the
Sikh and Punjabi diaspora, which includes 70,000 Sikhs in California."
The Sikh Foundation previously established the first North American
chair in Sikh Studies at UC Santa Barbara in 1998. Since then,
the foundation has also funded chairs in Sikh and Punjabi studies
at UC Riverside and CSU East Bay.