Kelly Sinoski, Vancouver Sun
Published: Friday, August 17, 2007
Passport Canada will issue an apology -- and travel documents -- to three Sikh children whose passport applications were rejected because they were wearing religious headgear.
The federal agency will also offer remedial training to passport staff to ensure a similar incident doesn't happen in the future, spokesman Fabien Lengelle said today.
"It is resolved," Lengelle said. "As soon as we became aware of the issue, we called the parents and offered corrective measures.
Lakhwinder Kaur Sidhu had mailed passport applications to Ottawa for herself and her husband along with their three children, Gurleen Kaur, 9, Ravneet Kaur, 7, and Gurmant Singh, 4, on May 15.
All five had included passport photos in which they were wearing their religious headgear.
Although Sidhu and her husband, Hardip, got their passports last week, the children's applications were denied because their photos did not meet the specifications as the wearing of a "head covering is unacceptable."
Her son was wearing a patka, which is knotted at the top to keep the hair intact, while the girls were wearing head scarves. Sikhs wear head coverings as part of their religious observance after they are baptized.
Sidhu said her husband was wearing a turban, while she was wearing a chunni.
The latest decision by Passport Canada has appeased the World Sikh Organization, which sent a letter to Foreign Affairs on Wednesday, asking that the "misunderstanding on the part of the local official" be corrected.
WSO spokesman Jasbeer Singh said the wearing of religious headgear by Sikhs is protected by the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and it's unacceptable for the passports to be rejected on those grounds.
"I feel relieved it's happened as long as CIC properly commits itself to putting in training and orientation for staff so we don't have to keep facing the same problem day in and day out," he said.
The situation put a crimp in teh Sidhu family's plans this summer. The family had planned to travel to California to visit relatives but Sidhu said Thursday they might now have to wait until winter and go to India instead.
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