Annual Sikh Remembrance Day Ceremony honours Canadian Veterans

The 103-year-old military grave of Private Buckam Singh is the unique location of the annual Sikh Remembrance Day Ceremony now in it’s 15th year [in 2022]. Singh died in a military hospital in 1919 and his grave is the only military grave in Canada of a Sikh soldier from the World Wars in Canada. Photo: SIKHMUSEUM.COM

KITCHENER, Ontario: The annual Sikh Remembrance Day ceremony was held on Sunday, November 6 at the military grave of Canadian World War I hero, Private Buckam Singh, in Kitchener, Ontario, with over 200 people attending.

It is the only military grave in Canada of a Sikh soldier from the World Wars, and the ceremony is the largest annual gatherings of Sikh soldiers and veterans in North America.

“Sikhs have a long tradition of military service,” said Sandeep Singh Brar, Curator of SikhMuseum.com and the chief organizer of the annual event. “The Sikh community has organized this Remembrance Ceremony every year at the historic location of Private Buckam Singh’s military grave to remember the 117,000 Canadian soldiers, like Private Singh, that have died since we became a nation and the 83,000 Sikh soldiers of the British Indian Army that died fighting along their Canadian comrades in two World Wars.”

This year’s program featured youth from the community participating in the ceremony as well as students from the new Private Buckam Singh Public School in Brampton that opened its doors last year.

The ceremony, now in its 15th year, was attended by members of the Canadian Armed Forces, Police Services across Ontario, Royal Canadian Legion members, veterans and elected officials from federal, provincial and municipal governments.

(Info and photos: SikhMuseum.com)

(RCMP Deputy Commissioner of Specialized Policing Services Bryan Larkin was among those who laid a wreath.)

Sikh Remembrance Day Ceremony details: www.sikhmuseum.com/remember

Private Buckam Singh biography: http://www.sikhmuseum.com/buckam