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Location: PAHS >
Society News
Punjabi American Festival Celebrates Cultural Heritage of Sacramento Valley’s
Largest South Asian Population
PRWeb
Yuba City, CA May 26, 2003
More than 10,000 people on Sunday celebrated and shared their Punjabi roots
during the 9th Annual Punjabi American Festival.
The Ninth Annual Punjabi American Festival treated more than 10,000 festival
goers to a diverse selection of cultural heritage, including world-class
entertainment and mouth watering food. Held at the Yuba-Sutter Fairgrounds on
Sunday May 25th, and sponsored by the Punjabi American Heritage Society of Yuba
City, the festival is a way for those with Punjabi roots to celebrate and share
their culture.
Upon entering the festival grounds, one could not help but notice the flowing
native dresses and colorful turbans, which added to the cosmopolitan air of the
fairgrounds. Walking the grounds, participants enjoyed the tantalizing tastes of
the exotic foods of Northern India along with Punjabi clothing, jewelry, art,
books and more.
Inside the Fairgrounds auditorium, life in Punjab was depicted through a photo
exhibit by Professor Janmeja Singh Johl and a painting exhibition by Jarnail
Singh. In another auditorium, three educational documentaries in English were
shown to the diverse crowd, including Mistaken Identity, Punjabi Village and
Roots in the Sand.
The Punjabi American Heritage Society was founded in 1993 with the purpose of
creating a better understanding amongst different people living in this area and
to educate our children about their ancestral roots. In the past ten years, many
events have been organized to improve awareness and to educate fellow Americans.
Throughout the day, from the opening of the fairgrounds, hundreds of local
performing artists, including students from California schools, colleges and
universities, performed traditional Punjabi dances such as Bhangra, Giddha,
Malwai Giddha, Bengali and Gujarati. There were also guest performances by
Scottish and Hispanic performers. The festival ended on a high note, highlighted
by internationally acclaimed artist, Harbhajan Singh Mann while Manmohan Singh,
Bollywood movie director, was honored for his work on the latest Punjabi movie:
Jee Ayaan Nu.
Punjabis have roots in the Punjab region between India and Pakistan. Punjabis
come from all faiths. While a majority of Punjabis in the USA adhere to the Sikh
religion, many wearing a Sikh turban and beard, other Punjabis are of Muslim,
Hindu, or Christian faiths.
Punjabis were the first group of people from South Asia to start migrating to
the United States more than a century ago. Between 1903-1908, Punjabis primarily
worked on the Western Pacific Railways in Northern California. And two thousand
Punjabis worked on a 700-mile road between Oakland and Salt Lake City, which
today is modern interstate 80.
The growing network of railroad lines brought increased agricultural activity to
large areas of the Sacramento Valley. Because of their agricultural experience
from the Punjab Indus Valley, which historians acknowledge was one of the first
civilizations to invent agriculture, Punjabis started moving into farming jobs.
Today Punjabis play a vital role in the agricultural industry of the entire
Central and Sacramento Valley's, and make up a majority of the South Asian
population while also working in all kinds of businesses and professions.
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