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 The Noble 'Servant' Of Peshawar 


 http://www.rferl.org/content/The_Noble_Servant_Of_Peshawar/2060044.html



  June 02, 2010

     Khurshid Khan, an eminent 60-year-old lawyer and  deputy attorney general of Pakistan, wants to "heal the wounds" of the  terror-stricken minority Sikh community in that country.


So he  does an extraordinary thing at a temple in the northwestern city of  Peshawar.


Every day when he handles his work as a legal expert,  Khan visits a Sikh temple in center of the city, wraps a piece of cloth  around his head to show his respect, and sits in the doorway to shine  the shoes of Sikhs, whose community has come under frequent attack by  Taliban militants over the last few years.


Two months back,  militants in Khyber Agency abducted three Sikhs and demanded for a huge  ransom for their release. Two were eventually freed, but one, Jispal  Singh, was killed in brutal fashion and his corpse left on the roadside  in the tribal area.


"I went to offer my condolences to the  family of Jispal Singh and that was a turning point in my life," Khan  tells RFE/RL's Radio Mashaal. "I realized that as a Pashtun I should  work to 'heal their wounds' by becoming their sewadar (servant). I want  to give them a message of love and brotherhood, and that's why every day  I am here to shine their shoes."


Khan says he is himself a  landlord and doesn't even shine his own shoes at his home. But his cause  inspires him to sit on the ground on a daily basis and shine 70-80  pairs of shoes.


"I can see the light of love in their eyes for  me and my people," he maintains.


He adds that Sikhs have lived  in the area with the dominant Pashtun communities for centuries, pay  taxes, and play an important role in the economic progress of the  region. But still, he laments, we fail to protect their lives and  properties.


They are being killed and kidnapped by the Taliban  in Orakzai, Kurrum, and Khyber tribal regions, Khan says, adding that  other Pakistanis must stand by them in these critical hours and give  them a sense of oneness and brotherhood.


An estimated 28,000  Sikhs live in Pakistan, including about 10,000 who live in the tribal  region and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of the conflict-ridden country.  In May 2009, Taliban militants destroyed 11 Sikh homes in the Orakzai  tribal district after accusing them of failing to pay "taxes." The  ongoing conflict in the Buner and Swat districts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa  has displaced more than 200 families.


-- Shaheen Buneri


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