Sikh Man Who Removed Turban To Help Injured Boy Surprised When Friendly Strangers Return The Favor

Good Karma Returns For Sikh Man Who Removed Turban To Help Injured Boy

After a 22-year-old Sikh man removed his turban to help an injured boy, a handful of friendly strangers acted quickly to return the favor.

Harman Singh, who lives in Auckland, New Zealand, heard screeching wheels and ran outside to find that Daejon Pahia had been hit by a car.

"I saw a child down on the ground and a lady was holding him. His head was bleeding, so I unveiled my turban and put it under his head," Singh told The New Zealand Herald. "I wasn't thinking about the turban. I was thinking about the accident and I just thought, 'He needs something on his head because he's bleeding.' That's my job -- to help. And I think anyone else would have done the same as me."

The turban, or dastaar, is an "integral" part of the Sikh faith that is typically only removed in the privacy of one's home, according to the Sikh Coalition.

As television news crews traveled to the Singh's home for interviews, the world saw a peek into the man's accommodations -- which were plain and lacking furniture.

Inspired by concerned comments from viewers, the staff at New Zealand television program ONE News got in touch with a local furniture store owner and surprised Singh with a truckload of new furniture for his apartment. Singh said, through tears, “This the biggest surprise of my life.”

Watch the footage of Singh's amazing surprise above.

CORRECTION: A previous version of this article misstated the name of the news station that helped Harman Singh acquire new furniture.

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