August 2020 \ Diaspora News \ FOCUS—AMERICA
FIRST ‘OBSERVANT’ SIKH GRADUATES

At a ceremony with President Donald Trump ...

  • Ms Anmol Narang

At a ceremony with President Donald Trump, Anmol Narang has become the first “observant” Sikh to graduate from the US Military Academy. Narang was among about 1,100 cadets who graduated in June at the premier institution’s campus in West Point in New York with the rank of 2nd lieutenant. “I am showing other Sikh Americans that any career path is possible for anyone willing to rise to the challenge,” Narang said in a statement released through the coalition. Although Sikh men have graduated from West Point, the Sikh Coalition described her in a press release as “the first observant Sikh” to graduate from the institution.

This was because she was not required to compromise her faith as past Sikh graduates had been required to under the regulations since discarded. She did not have to cut her hair as women are exempt from the personal grooming regulations which forced her Sikh predecessors to violate the religious rules against cutting their hair and beard. “While 2nd Lt Narang required no accommodation for her articles of faith, her exemplary service to date underscores how diversity and pluralism remain core strengths of the US military and the country as a whole,” the coalition said.

Sikh men have now received an exemption and there are currently at least two men studying at the academy who are allowed to keep their beard and hair uncut under new regulations. US Army Captain Simratpal Singh, a 2010 West Point graduate who had been required to cut his hair under the regulations at that time, said: “I am immensely proud of 2nd Lt Narang for seeing her goal through and, in doing so, breaking a barrier for any Sikh American who wishes to serve. “The broader acceptance of Sikh service members among all of the service branches, as well as in top tier leadership spaces like West Point, will continue to benefit not just the rights of religious minority individuals, but the strength and diversity of the US Military.” Singh won a court case challenging the Army ban on Sikhs keeping their hair and beard uncut leading to the change in rules.




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