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More than half of Sikh students experience bullying in US

March 18, 2014 08:49 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 02:03 am IST - Washington

Majority of Sikh children, just over 50 per cent, endure school bullying. And the numbers are worse for turbaned Sikh children. File photo.

Over half of Sikh students experience widespread bullying in U.S. schools which is more than double the national rate, according to a new report.

The report ‘Go Home Terrorist: A Report on Bullying Against Sikh American School Children’ is based on survey of over 500 Sikh students, and interviewed 50 Sikh students in four states: Massachusetts, Indiana, Washington, and California.

“We found that the majority of Sikh children, just over 50 per cent, endure school bullying. And the numbers are worse for turbaned Sikh children,” said the report of the Sikh Coalition, which was released at the Capitol Hill last week.

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“Over two-thirds, or 67 per cent, reported that they are bullied in school. The word ‘widespread’, particularly as it applies to turbaned Sikh youth, is not an exaggeration,” it said.

According to the National Center for Education Statistics, 32 per cent of all students ages 12 to 18 report that they are bullied in school.

According to the report, Sikh children shared how they are called ‘bin Laden’ or ‘terrorist’ or told to ‘Go back to their country’. Classmates make fun of their turbans and even try to forcibly remove them, it said.

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Clearly, the extraordinary rates of bullying Sikh American school children endure is not happening in a vacuum.

The period since 9/11 has been particularly difficult for Sikh Americans and their children, the report said.

Noting that the government, teachers, and school administrators are not powerless to stop Sikh children from being bullied, the Sikh Coalition urged the U.S. Congress to prioritise passage of the Safe Schools Improvement Act.

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