Khalsa Pizza

Writing by shinda on Thursday, 29 of May , 2008

For those of you from the GTA it’s more than likely that you already know about Khalsa Pizza’s grand opening this Saturday June 28th. Like myself, you may have possibly found a flyer on your windshield after a Nagar Kirtan, a wedding or some other program. Maybe you even went to the Kirtan program last weekend that was held at the location. All the same, regardless of how you may have known about it, take this as just a reminder that the grand opening is this weekend and to go check it out. Not being a fan of Popular, Pizza Depot, or Moga’s, I do welcome a new challenger into the mix.

So this Saturday June 28th, while watching Hockey Night in Canada in Punjabi, or as you sit back and catch the possible game between the Lakers and Spurs, or even if you choose to catch the premiere of Saturday Night Fights on CBS, (where Kimbo will viciously rip through another spoon fed opponent), be sure keep Khalsa Pizza in mind for all your feasting needs.

Also goto their website KhalsaPizza.com and sign up for their newsletter to get word on special promotions and other updates.

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Category: Site of the Moment

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Hockey Night In Brampton…

Writing by shinda on Saturday, 24 of May , 2008

Looks like the CBC’s tuning into the fact that there is a huge punjabi population in Canada and is offering up game one of tonights NHL playoffs in Punjabi. Thats right, you can now listen to play by play in Punjabi. Whether you’d really want to or not is something on its own, but I’m sure we’ll be hearing a lot of, “Oh Crosby Laigiya”, “shot mari tey GOOOAL…”  or other such antidotes that many may have become accustomed to hearing after having watched Playoff games with family in the past. All the same it’s a good development for the community on the national scene, especially when you consider both broadcasters (Parminder and Harnarayan Singh) are both gursikhs.

Anyways the broadcasts will be on the following channels:

  • Shaw Digital Cable (British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba) on channel 291
  • Bell ExpressVu subscribers on channels 249 and 724;
  • Rogers Digital Cable customers in Ontario and New Brunswick on channel 460;
  • Star Choice subscribers on channel 238.

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Category: Hockey

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Cat Style KungFu

Writing by shinda on Tuesday, 20 of May , 2008

May want to bring your speakers down a notch before watching the following clip:

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Category: Uncategorized

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Assassins For Hire

Writing by shinda on Sunday, 18 of May , 2008

Check out this story in todays Toronto Star - Brampton bridegroom murdered in Punjab.

Brampton bridegroom murdered in Punjab

May 18, 2008 04:30 AM


Special to the Star
MOGA, INDIA–Jasvir Singh Dhaliwal’s wedding was meant to be a splendid countryside affair.

The deep-red cards were lettered in gold, a sign of the family’s new-found wealth and status in Canada.

Dhaliwal, a 27-year-old Brampton resident, returned to his family’s native village in India’s western state of Punjab to tie the knot on Valentine’s Day.

He had broken off with his girlfriend of four years in Canada to wed a young Punjabi woman who lived near his family’s village home.

The wedding never took place.

On Feb. 13, as Dhaliwal left a pre-wedding party with five of his relatives, a car screeched to a halt in front of his vehicle. One of its occupants emerged and sprayed Dhaliwal and a male cousin with bullets, killing both.

Dhaliwal’s death was another example, Punjab police allege, of Indo-Canadians and other Indians living abroad hiring assassins back in India to settle scores – ranging from broken hearts to perceived stains on honour and property disputes.

Indian police have issued a warrant for the arrest of the victim’s former Brampton girlfriend, Amanpal Gill, charging her with conspiracy to murder.

They have also arrested the jilted girlfriend’s Punjab-based parents, charging them with conspiracy to murder, and have issued a warrant for the arrest of her brother, Gurusewak Singh of Brampton, on a charge of murder.

Police records show he entered India shortly before the shooting and left the country shortly after.

Gurusewak Singh and the victim worked together at one time in Brampton as drivers for a trucking company.

Attempts to reach Amanpal Gill in Brampton by the Star were unsuccessful.

Ashwini Kumar, a police constable with the Indian Reserve Battalion, has been charged with first-degree murder in the case.
CONTRACT KILLINGS, called supari, have long been standard fare in Mumbai’s underworld.

Increasingly, however, ordinary non-resident Indians are turning to hired assassins to settle their scores.

“India today is a very different place,” said Gurpreet Singh Bhuller, senior superintendent of police for rural Ludhiana.

“Doaba (in central Punjab) has a long history of supari killings that started because many people from that area settled overseas, in the U.K., in America or in Canada.

“Later, when people from other parts of Punjab started going overseas, supari killings spread to those areas as well.”

In June 2000, Jassi Kaur Sidhu, an Indo-Canadian, was found with her throat slit in Punjab when her family refused to accept her love affair and marriage to a rickshaw driver.

Last month, the Punjab and Haryana High Court sentenced four of those accused in the case to life imprisonment, including the victim’s maternal uncle in Punjab and a police officer.

The victim’s mother, Malkiat Kaur, and uncle, Surjit Singh Badesha, remain free in Canada. They have been charged with conspiracy to commit murder, Indian police say, and warrants for their arrests have been issued.

The police say they have made an extradition request to Canada. Ottawa says it does not comment on individual cases for privacy reasons.

Attempts by the Star to reach Kaur and Badesha in Maple Ridge, B.C., were unsuccessful.

Hired killers are relatively easy to find in Punjab, where unemployment, access to weapons and a sudden growth in local wealth as a result of rising property value, have fostered an underground trade in murder.

“The basic fact is there is plenty of unemployment, and we see so many luxurious things on television and cinema, and a lot of young kids are desperate to acquire those things,” noted Bhuller.

Drug use, in particular crack cocaine, is also on the rise.

Police estimate that assassins are hired for prices that run the gamut from $5,000 to $150,000.

They estimate that there have been about two dozen contract killings here since 2005.

“This sort of thing is hardly new here,” according to a Ludhiana businessman and former Sikh militant who did not want to be identified.

“People have killed in the name of honour for centuries. It’s just that now it’s not done directly by family members.”
CRIMES COMMITTED in India on behalf of non-resident Indians continue to grow in number.

One reason for such killings is a belief that the long arm of the law won’t reach perpetrators when the crimes are committed in far-off villages oceans away from the contractors’ new homes.

Canada’s Department of Justice received about 150 extradition requests from around the world last year for various types of cases but won’t give a breakdown.

The department uses a three-step process in deciding the case of a citizen or permanent resident for whom it receives an extradition request.

“After the minister of justice has made a decision based on the evidence, there is still an appeal stage,” said Christian Girouard, the department’s manager of public and media relations.

But because extradition procedures between the two countries can be so painfully slow-moving, people with a score to settle are increasingly resorting to Punjab-based killers, Indian police say.

“A lot of (non-resident Indians) feel very secure that extradition is not possible because it’s such a bureaucratic and delayed process,” said Bhuller.

“Moreover, most such transactions take place through (money transfers) leaving no proof and making it difficult to get them.”
OUTSIDE THE VIKRAJ marriage palace, a kilometre from where Jasvir Singh Dhaliwal was shot and killed, his parents talked about how they had been looking forward to back-to-back wedding ceremonies for their son, and then his sister – before assassins’ bullets turned their joy to grief.

Harjinder Kaur Dhaliwal, 59, kept her head bowed, occasionally moving a hand to wipe away tears. Her husband, 54-year-old Nirmal Singh, also spoke in hushed tones.

“I still can’t believe this has happened,” he said. “Canadian police should help us out. Our son is gone, but if they don’t catch his killer, he could do it again.”

Apparently the Assassination industry in India is thriving and doing well. Looks like a lot of it has to do with folks not being able to get jobs, and people from around here having a bit to much loot and a few to many sprained egos. Then again maybe the whole industry is starting to grow in Canada also, with the attempted assassination of Kulvir Grewal two months back.

I guess this is just another one of those growing pains and a part of the whole ghetto-ization occurring in the GTA with the South Asian community and its pockets. Reminds me of lyrics spit by Pac though still,

A seven-deuce full of niggaz goes by
Thought I was trippin the second time they rolled, by
Recognized the plates, the faces looked familiar
Everybody swear they know the nigga that’s gonna, kill ya
Don’t murder me murder me, killa a nigga in his sleep
Let me die as I rest in peace, deep
Back to these niggaz in the seven-deuce
A mac-10 out the window bout to let it loose, what could I do?
Run for cover and return fire
DIE MOTHERf**kIN DIE, hope yo’ ass fry, don’t ask why

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Category: Brampton

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Voice For the Voiceless

Writing by shinda on Wednesday, 14 of May , 2008

Carrying on from yesterdays post on immortal lyrics, heres a video I came across from a Toronto local (Kanwer Singh) that really hits on all the local social issues that have been happening over the past year.

From talking about kids these days, and the whole ghetto mentality that has engulfed many of them, to the epidemic on the West with the slaying’s of the Bibian by there husbands, and families.

Apparently this video is only a prelude to a bigger and longer documentary or so I’m told that is dropping in July of 2008, so definitely keep an eye out for that.

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Category: Sikhi, Video

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Immortal Word Play

Writing by shinda on Tuesday, 13 of May , 2008

Thanks to Harp who linked this video the other day, Most folk aren’t familiar with Immortal Technique because he hasn’t received any notable main stream recognition. For those who are familiar with him, he’s probably one of the top underground MC’s still around, who actually makes an effort to bring social issues to the forefront and focal point of his music.

Either way, check out this freestyle from earlier where he gives a special shout out to the Singhs and 84 its all pretty graphic so the normal disclaimer applies to those with sensitive ears.

It’s not his greatest track by any means, but you got love the shout out he gives..

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Category: Sikhi, Video

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One for the Rap Fans

Writing by shinda on Tuesday, 29 of April , 2008

Looks like Sarpanch Sion and company got recognized up on RealGM, the Toronto Sun and Vakeeel Sahib’s very own lobby group (FireSamMitchell.com).

Got to hand it to sarpanch sahib and his pind for making The Toronto Star and Global TV last year, and and Sun this year. Seems like the Pindu’s are making a real go at Bhatia’s super fan status.

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Category: Basketball, Random

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Author

This blog for better or worse is an extension of my procrastination and boredom. It's not intended to convince, impress or convert you to be anything more then what you already are, but if it does then more power to it. Do be warned that the time you waste on this site, will be your own and I will not in any way shape or form be held responsible in compensating you for your losses.