1,724,081 research outputs found

    Simran Sethi

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    Overview: In partnership with the Sustainable Living Festival, Simran Sethi shares her wisdom on food, sustainability and climate change with the Wheeler Centre. The good news for the human among us (i.e. everyone) is that her approach is both passionate and imperfect. For example, she eats – and ‘loves’ – meat, despite her status as a high-profile environmental journalist and educator. She believes we’re trapped in a poisonous cycle of judgement, when we should be putting our energy into doing our individual best, whether that’s reflected in our supermarket shopping or the way we eat and cook at home. It’s not just up to the big corporations to create change, she says: we all contributed to the environmental catastrophe we face, and it’s on all of us to do something about it. This is a chance to get ideas on we can each do our part, in ways that are eminently manageable, to combat climate change and promote sustainability – in our everyday lives. &nbsp

    Simran Chugani, University of Minnesota, 2022 Program Oral Interpretation Event

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    Video of Simran Chugani\u27s presentation for the final round of the Program Oral Interpretation event for the 2022 American Forensic Association National Speech Tournament hosted by the University of Nebraska Lincoln

    Simran Chugani, University of Minnesota, 2022 Communication Analysis Event

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    Video of Simran Chugani\u27s presentation for the final round of the Communication Analysis Event for the 2022 American Forensic Association National Speech Tournament hosted by the University of Nebraska Lincoln

    Sikh Community Activist Simran Jeet Singh: After Wisconsin Attack, I Refuse to Live in Fear

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    As memorials are held to remember the Sikh worshipers shot dead at a Wisconsin temple, we’re joined by Simran Jeet Singh, a Sikh community activist and doctoral candidate in religion at Columbia University. In response to Sunday’s shooting, he posted a commentary called, As a Sikh-American I Refuse to Live in Fear and Negativity. Singh writes: Although it will be important to understand what motivated the violence, this should not color the inspiration behind our own reactions. We should draw from our American and Sikh traditions by continuing to respond with love and compassion. Let us stand up together and turn the tragedy in Wisconsin into a turning point for our nation. We also speak with Don Walker, a reporter for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel covering the Sikh temple shooting

    Nām Simran in the Sikh Religion

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    This essay explores the many varieties of the meditative practice of nām simran, or “remembering the divine name,” as it is practiced in contemporary Sikh traditions. This practice includes silent repetition and loud chanting and can be conducted both as an individual contemplation or a communal worship. The devotional emphasis precludes the regulation of strict techniques, but technical elements, such as cross-legged posture, regulated breathing and the adjustment of recitation to the heartbeat, are common. The sacred words used are valued not only for their semantic properties, but also for what they are capable of doing. Although the Sikh scripture Guru Granth Sahib describe the ultimate goal as liberation from rebirth, nām simran is in practice widely seen as a means to procure a variety of protective and moral rewards and to sustain and develop devotion, in line with the focus on selfless devoutness.</p

    Simran Minhas, DO 2020

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    Philadelphia DO Class of 2020 portrait.https://digitalcommons.pcom.edu/portraits_2020/1165/thumbnail.jp

    Nostalgic Neverland

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    Nostalgic Neverland is an original piece of writing that highlights the desire to stay a child forever. Along with the research part of the project is an original poem with a creative aspect to it. Simran Puri emphasizes on why Peter Pan inspires her and the poem is from the point of view of one who lives in Neverland and why they want to live there. Simran Puri wants her readers to resonate with her piece as most share the feeling of not wanting to grow up

    The Light We Give: Sikh Wisdom for Cultivating Empathy and Justice

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    Growing up in South Texas, Dr. Simran Jeet Singh and his brothers confronted racism daily. As a turbaned, bearded, brown-skinned Sikh, he continued to face prejudice and hate in college and beyond. Simran chose to be defined not by the negativity that often surrounded him but by the Sikh teachings of love and justice that he grew up with. Delving deep into these core tenets of Sikh wisdom, he has sought to embrace an outlook that guides us to see the good in everyone and to forge a path of positivity, connection, and service—a way of life that so many of us are seeking in today’s world. We all say that we choose love over hate. But when tested, we realize that it’s easier said than done and that our empathy for others is not rooted deeply enough. As a turbaned and bearded Sikh man, Simran has been subjected to racism his whole life. He has been working on the frontlines of hate violence for more than a decade. And yet, he has managed to avoid falling into the toxic trap of hate and anger. In this lecture, drawing on his recent book The Light We Give, he will draw from his personal experiences and from hate incidents he has witnessed firsthand to share the wisdom he has gained on what it really takes to choose love over hate. Simran Jeet Singh, Ph.D., is the Executive Director of the Religion & Society Program at the Aspen Institute and the author of the national bestseller The Light We Give: How Sikh Wisdom Can Transform Your Life (Riverhead, Penguin Random House). Simran\u27s thought leadership on bias, empathy, and justice extends across corporate, university, and government settings. He is an Atlantic Fellow for Racial Equity with Columbia University and the Nelson Mandela Foundation, a Soros Equality Fellow with the Open Society Foundations, a Visiting Lecturer at Union Seminary, and a Senior Advisor on Equity and Inclusion for YSC Consulting, part of Accenture. Organized and hosted by the Interfaith Fellows Program of the Jay Phillips Center for Interreligious Studies at the University of St. Thomas and the Minnesota Multifaith Network in collaboration with the Lutheran Center for Faith, Values, and Community at St. Olaf College and the Interfaith Institute at Augsburg University. Cosponsored by Minnesota Multifaith Network, and the Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, the College of Arts and Sciences, the Diversity Activities Board (DAB), and the Department of Theology at the University of St. Thomas. Funded, in part, by generous grants from the Arthur Vining Davis Foundations, the Jay and Rose Phillips Family Foundation of Minnesota, and the Center for Faculty Development at the University of St. Thomas

    Access to Data and Compute using Service Workbench: Repository of example code for AIM-AHEAD

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    &lt;p&gt;Initial release to register repository DOI on Zenodo&lt;/p&gt

    AUDIT KEUANGAN ATAS PENJUALAN DAN PIUTANG USAHA PADA PT. SIMRAN JAYA

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    AUDIT KEUANGAN ATAS PENJUALAN DAN PIUTANG USAHA PADA PT. SIMRAN JAY
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