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12 - Why the English like turbans: multicultural politics in British history

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 February 2011

David Feldman
Affiliation:
Birkbeck College, University of London
Jon Lawrence
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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One day in June 1967, Tarsem Sandhu, a 23-year-old Sikh living in Wolverhampton, turned up for work as a corporation bus driver. He had been at home unwell for the previous three weeks and during that period he had decided to dedicate himself more determinedly to Sikhism. Kesh – uncut and knotted hair – is one of the five symbols of Sikh identity introduced by Guru Gobind at the end of the seventeenth century. Accordingly, Sandhu now refrained from shaving and from cutting his hair. By the time he returned to work he was wearing both a turban and a beard. Although Sandhu's appearance conformed to Sikh prescription, his turban departed from the regulation uniform prescribed for bus drivers by the Wolverhampton Transport Committee and his beard transgressed an informal agreement between the local branch of the Transport and General Workers Union and the Committee that employees should be clean-shaven. Sandhu's manager immediately suspended him from work without pay.

The ban on Wolverhampton bus crews wearing beards and turbans initiated a two-year-long dispute that reverberated far beyond the town itself, both in Britain and India. The Sikhs' repertoire of protest involved lobbying and letter-writing as well as public demonstrations. The visible high point of their campaign occurred in March 1968 when 4,000 Sikhs marched silently through Wolverhampton. They were opposed by Wolverhampton Corporation and by its transport committee in particular, by managers in the corporation's transport department, as well as by the local leadership of the Transport and General Workers Union.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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