Co-founder says helpline takes Sikh tradition of seeking advice into 21st century
Co-founder Jaskaran Sandhu says the new Sikh helpline fills a gap by connecting community members to services and organizations they might not have known about. (CBC) |
Nov 07, 2016: A new helpline is bringing Canada's Sikh community closer to local services, organizations and advice.
The recently established Sikh Family Helpline is a non-emergency phone line that allows callers to chat confidentially with volunteers.
Co-founder Jaskaran Sandhu, who is also the director of development for the World Sikh Organization of Canada, says the idea came after speaking to Sikhs around the country.
"The Sikh community, for whatever reason, are not comfortable reaching out to mainstream institutions," he said on Metro Morning.
"There seems to be language barriers, there's cultural barriers, and in some instances there may even be financial barriers."
Helpline builds on traditional ways of seeking advice
The helpline supplements more traditional ways of seeking advice in the Sikh community.
"The first move our community usually makes is building a gurdwara, a Sikh place of worship, that tends to be not only the religious hub but also the social hub," said Sandhu.
It also fills a similar role to the tradition of a panchayat, a village counsel "where you bring your problems."
The difference, Sandhu explained, is that helpline volunteers are often better-prepared to deal with issues like domestic abuse or school bullying, because they understand Canada better than a Sikh elder might.
"[Our volunteers] include lawyers, people in the medical profession, social workers, counsellors," he said.
The helpline went live on Thursday, and Sandhu said that it "blew up" almost immediately with calls from around the country.
"We aren't reinventing the wheel — we are simply taking models that work and targeting them towards the community," he said.