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Muhammad Khurshid Khan: Muslim Cleans Shoes In Shrines To Atone For Beheading Of Sikh By Islamists

By SEBASTIAN ABBOT and ASIF SHAHZAD 04/13/12 11:59 AM ET AP

Muslim Atones
In this picture taken on Wednesday, April 11, 2012 Pakistan's deputy attorney general Muhammad Khurshid Khan, left, collects shoes of Sikh pilgrims gathered at Panja Sahab for three-day religious congregation in Hasan Abdal, 45 kilometers (30 miles) from Islamabad, Pakistan. Over the past two years, Pakistan's deputy attorney general Muhammed Khurshid Khan has traveled to Sikh shrines in Pakistan and India, volunteering to polish shoes, clean bathrooms, cook meals and do other chores to atone f

HASAN ABDAL, Pakistan -- Thousands of Indian pilgrims barely registered the man in the orange bandanna and Ray-Ban sunglasses taking their shoes and storing them in wooden cubbyholes before they entered the Sikh shrine in this town in northwest Pakistan.

The unassuming 62-year-old tending to the shoes is a top government lawyer and devout Muslim. At the shrine, he is on an unusual solo quest – taking on menial jobs to atone for the beheading of a Sikh by Islamist militants.

Over the past two years, Muhammed Khurshid Khan has traveled to Sikh shrines in Pakistan and India, volunteering to polish shoes, clean bathrooms, cook meals and do other chores. Such service is known as "seva" – selfless service – in Sikhism, and it holds a special place in the faith.

Attacks against Sikhs, Christians and Hindus have spiked in Pakistan in recent years as the Taliban and their allies gained strength. Atrocities by Muslim extremists against religious minorities now are so common that they rarely illicit more than routine condemnation by officials, much less collective contrition or shame.

In helping Sikhs, Khan is reaching out to an extremely small minority in predominantly Muslim Pakistan – the government estimates there are 30,000 Sikhs in the country of 190 million people.

"I have a desire to serve the Sikh community because my community has done them serious harm, and that hurts me," said Khan, taking a break from his work at the shrine in Hasan Abdal, 45 kilometers (30 miles) northwest of the capital, Islamabad.

Khan, one of two dozen deputy attorney generals in Pakistan, began his mission in 2010 after militants kidnapped three Sikhs returning from Afghanistan to their homes in Pakistan. The militants demanded some $240,000 – an amount the families could not afford. Two of the captives were freed in a commando raid, but 30-year-old Jaspal Singh had already been beheaded.

"That news pierced my heart," said Khan. "How could Muslims do such harm to such a peaceful community?"

A day after Singh was beheaded, Khan went to the dead man's home in the northwest city of Peshawar to offer condolences. He sat on the floor with Singh's relatives, but they became wary once they realized Khan was a government official.

Khan then visited a Sikh shrine in Peshawar and asked religious leaders if he could perform seva to atone for the beheading. After two weeks his request was approved, and for the next four months he went to the shrine in Peshawar every day after work, polishing worshippers' shoes for hours.

Handling the shoes of devotees is considered a particularly worthy form of seva because it shows humility and a belief that all people, rich and poor, are equal in the eyes of God.

"When I was permitted to do seva, that day felt like the happiest day of my life," said Khan.

He said he initially hid his quest from his family because he worried they would be embarrassed and ask him to stop, but they are now supportive. He also avoided media interviews until a reporter reminded him that Islam tells followers to publicize good deeds as an example to others.

"My message is love and peace," said Khan, who also visits Hindu temples and Christian churches to reinforce that religious minorities should be protected. "These minorities have been living here for centuries."

Khan has not contacted the beheaded Sikh's family since just after the killing.

Harnam Singh said his slain brother left a widow and four young children and the family has trouble making ends meet.

"We appreciate what Khan is doing because it shows solidarity with the Sikh community," said Harnam Singh. "It would also be good if someone could provide some help for the family because they are facing serious problems."

Sikhism was founded in the 15th century by Guru Nanak Dev in the Punjab region of South Asia, which was divided between India and Pakistan in 1947 when the countries gained independence from the British empire. There are about 20 million Sikhs in India.

The shrine in the Pakistani town of Hasan Abdal is revered because it houses what is believed to be a handprint of Sikhism's founder. This week, there was a festive atmosphere at Gurdwara Panja Sahib, a brick building adorned with arched windows and topped by a large dome. Indians, and some Pakistanis, were visiting as part of a 10-day pilgrimage to celebrate the Sikh new year.

Some worshippers filed in to listen to a religious leader read aloud from the Sikh holy book, the men cutting a particularly vivid figure in their brightly colored turbans. Others splashed holy water on themselves from a pool around the shrine and placed their hand on the founder's print impressed into a rock. Some children jumped into the pool for a swim, and hundreds of pilgrims ate donated rice and spicy fried snacks while religious music blared.

Khan surveyed the gathering from his perch behind a long wooden counter and said he hoped his actions would highlight the need to protect Pakistan's minorities.

"The message is a soft image of my religion Islam, a soft image of my country Pakistan," said Khan. "We are not terrorists."

____

Associated Press writer Riaz Khan contributed to this article from Peshawar, Pakistan.

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HASAN ABDAL, Pakistan -- Thousands of Indian pilgrims barely registered the man in the orange bandanna and Ray-Ban sunglasses taking their shoes and storing them in wooden cubbyholes before they enter...
HASAN ABDAL, Pakistan -- Thousands of Indian pilgrims barely registered the man in the orange bandanna and Ray-Ban sunglasses taking their shoes and storing them in wooden cubbyholes before they enter...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Davinci Mode
When you throw dirt, you lose ground.
08:04 AM on 05/31/2012
An example to follow... I wonder in future some american will show same kind gesture in the mosques of Afghanistan and Pakistan... to condemn US's brutality against innocent civilians.
01:06 PM on 05/28/2012
Subhanna'Allah. This man is a great example of what a Muslim is.
07:10 PM on 05/29/2012
It is always sad when innocent people are killed, regardless of who is doing the killing it should be denounced across the board - but I must say I am not one for collective guilt.
01:41 AM on 05/26/2012
When Islam extremists kill people, no one should condone this, it is a crime regardless of who you kill. But people or media rarely point out when Islam extremists kill other Muslims. Lot of suicide bombing takes places in Muslim countries where majority of the victims are Muslims, not foreigners or non Muslims. You just don't hear it because CNN or Fox won't cover it. To think Muslims are indifferent to these killings in their backyard is a misconception. Most Americans might find this surprising but America is not the first country nor the only country affected by terrorist attacks.
01:08 PM on 05/28/2012
Majority of American's are murdered by other American's. How ever the Media rarely covers all the gang violence, gang rapes, pimps beating their prostitutes to death, 300,000 people (us citizens) in America that are sex trafficed each year.
99% of the American children that are beaten sexually assulted are from the hands of American citizens. Why doesn't the media report as to why entire neighborhoods in California, Chicago and various other parts of the country are on lock down from local thugs that literally TERRORISE your communities? Why doesn't the media report on the 2,000,000 burglaries in this country and the effect it has creating massive paranoia? People who live in glass houses, certainly shouldn't throw stones.
07:13 PM on 05/29/2012
You're making the same point as I have, although I can turn on to my local news and hear about what you described.
01:56 AM on 05/21/2012
You can really say the quote "he is one in a billion".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OH canada
02:49 PM on 05/25/2012
and we can say you're ignorant by design
05:01 AM on 06/29/2012
Not true, It's 1 in 190, 000, 000 (The population of Pakistan).
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special38x2
Live, Love, & Laugh
08:16 PM on 05/13/2012
Proof that good people exist everywhere...perhaps there is some hope...
05:02 AM on 06/29/2012
And if some muslims kill him for doing that, then there is no more hope.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fireart
I got mine the hard way.
09:31 PM on 04/30/2012
Did the guy get his head back? Do the kids have a father? Does the wife have a husband? Is the family living in poverty? Is anyone supporting the family because of the travesty?
12:06 PM on 04/25/2012
I just cried
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BilaalUSA
As-Salāmu `Alaykum (السلام عليكم)
04:26 PM on 04/22/2012
It would be inappropriate and downright silly of me to ask white people to apologize for slavery as it was practiced here in America or for the actions of groups like the KKK. I don’t recall young white Servicemen apologizing to parents who lost their children in the Oklahoma City bombing due to the action of an Army Veteran. In Islam, we are all accountable for our own actions. Christians should not have to publicly condemn Adolf Hitler any more than I need to disavow bin Laden. Also, an apology would mean that there is something about my religion that brings about terrorism when in fact it epitomizes peaceful coexistence as practiced by actual Muslims all over the world. Though the Torat, Bible, Quran and other scriptures have passages that speak on self defence, one must read into the contextual and historical factors, such as moral conduct in the face of an enemy during wartime etc. Besides, even when Muslims as individuals or groups do apologize, it’s seen as a rare occurrence because deep down inside, all muslims cheer terrorism. I learned long ago to just let people believe what they want of me and my religion. I have enough SELF-respect to handle it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fireart
I got mine the hard way.
09:23 PM on 04/30/2012
How do you spin like that and not break your neck? Muslims apologize? When, while dancing in the street? White people did apologize to the blacks by giving them their freedom and afdirmative action. It was black prople that captured their own and sold them as slaves, have the blacks apologized to themselves? I dont think so.
03:44 PM on 05/28/2012
Where are the black's 40 acres and a mule? Why did it take until the 1960's for them to get their civil rights to vote? Why to date 1 in 6 black men go to prison? Why is it the black communities have the worst education system's in the union? Is this all accidental? come on now.
I am not as petty as yourself to attempt to make this a race thing. Muslim's fyi come in all shades and colors. I myself, I am white Non arab, and American born. I have red necks in my family. Go figure.
I suppose on the same token, When American's apologize for funding Israel that has systematically stolen occuipied land that does NOT belong to them, and Israel actually returns the land which we know will NEVER happen. Then speak about 'Muslim's'. Until then you're another typical ignorant. What a pity.
03:45 PM on 05/28/2012
Ameen Ahki,
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04:19 PM on 04/19/2012
Whaat!!?? There is not atonement for this.
GWBear
Reality focused educated progressive
02:18 PM on 04/19/2012
Well, all you haters who constantly ask for signs an examples of good Muslims: here he is!

Thank you sir for your example to others.
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10:07 AM on 06/14/2012
Exactly! Here HE is! One man, one example I doubt you will see many more.
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Red Leaves
Well, well, what matters it? Believe that too.
02:18 PM on 04/19/2012
A real human being. And a real hero.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-DSVDcw6iW8&noredirect=1
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MrBwood
Religion poisons everything
01:46 AM on 04/19/2012
"Atrocities by Muslim extremists against religious minorities now are so common that they rarely illicit more than routine condemnation by officials, much less collective contrition or shame."
This is the problem. One guy doing something nice hardly makes up for the indifference of the majority of Muslims. Until this changes, nothing will improve
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fireart
I got mine the hard way.
09:24 PM on 04/30/2012
Very good post. Even a thief gives some of what he steal to a friend.
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06:15 PM on 04/17/2012
What a great thing to publish! It also reminds me of a story I read years ago about a Christian trying to show support for neighbors at the time of a family members death. He made a point of polishing all their shoes the night before the funeral. Here's two people that get the message about all being equal.
09:50 AM on 04/17/2012
I love this story! Though I don't believe in collective guilt, Khan's gesture is amazing in its symbolism. Everyone has someone whose shoes they should be shining.

I am wondering if there is a way to help Jaspal Singh's family from abroad. I wouldn't even know where to begin looking.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
The Knocker
a mind is a terrible thing to waste
12:49 PM on 04/17/2012
This article is reflective of the Islamophobes claim that all Muslims are responsible for the action of radicals amongst them. (see example below by "Greg Gorelick") Furthermore, the atone of some else sin is not an Islamic concept.
The Islamic Relief org. and other Muslims are doing humanitarian and act of good will on a daily bases, especially the children that has missing arms and limbs-  lefts orphanage and homeless by the U.S bombing campaign in the Afghanistan and Iraq and in dire need of medical supply.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fireart
I got mine the hard way.
09:28 PM on 04/30/2012
The islamic relief org? Bigger than Red Cross I bet. Probably selling the kids into slavery to buy fertilizer.
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blitznstitch
BAZINGA!!!
04:18 AM on 04/17/2012
lovely gesture...so i guess justice for the family is out of the question?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
arachne646
No more hurting people--Peace
12:01 PM on 04/18/2012
How about justice for all the innocent children killed in Iraq and Afghanistan by the US military? That's just about as relevant. This story is about one man who wanted to atone for another's sin. The commando raid probably killed the kidnappers.