Can Sikh women wear helmets for safety, DSGMC asks Akal Takht
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Days after Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit disagreed with her Transport department's undertaking to the Delhi High Court that it was willing to change rules and make it mandatory for women to wear helmets while riding two-wheelers, the Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee (DSGMC) has asked the Akal Takht, the supreme religious and temporal seat of Sikhism, to decide whether Sikh women should be allowed to wear helmets in the interest of safety.
The DSGMC move to step beyond religious compulsions on grounds of safety follows the Transport department's submission that it was willing to change provisions in the Delhi Motor Vehicles Rules that exempted women from wearing helmets. But Dikshit differed, saying the rule making it optional for women pillion riders to wear helmets was formulated in 1999 on requests by a particular community — she didn't name the Sikhs — and that exemption couldn't be withdrawn so easily.
Bhajan Singh Walia, Senior Vice President of DSGMC, told Newsline that they have approached the Akal Takht to take a call, given the safety issue involved.
"Essentially, the High Court's decision is in totality for all men and women in view of safety of people travelling on busy and dangerous Delhi roads. But our religion absolutely prohibits people from wearing any form of a cap, and wearing a helmet (a form of cap) goes against the tenets of our religion," Walia said.
"Our religious texts have given elaborate details about the way we should preserve our kesh (hair). Our hair can't be trimmed, cut or even clipped. If at all one has to preserve his/her hair, it has to be done in a proper turban," he said.
"But the scenario is different today. And here we are talking about the safety of people, irrespective of religion or gender. The decision of the Akal Takht would be binding, we have sought their guidance, they are the supreme authority on all religious matters," Walia said.
... contd.
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