First turbaned Sikh joins US Army in decades
Capt. Tejdeep Singh Rattan, a 31-year-old dentist, graduated on Monday at Fort Sam Houston after the Army made an exemption to a uniform policy that has effectively prevented Sikhs from enlisting since 1984. “I’m feeling very humbled. I’m a soldier,” he said, grinning after the ceremony as other members of the Sikh community milled about nearby. “This has been my dream.”
Capt. Rattan had to get a waiver from the Army to be allowed to serve without sacrificing the unshorn hair mandated by his faith. An immigrant from India who arrived in New York as a teenager, he said it was important for him to serve a country that has given him so many opportunities.
The US Army in 1984 eliminated an exemption that had previously allowed Sikhs to maintain their articles of faith while serving, but officials can issue individual waivers to the uniform policy after considering the effects on safety and discipline, said Army spokesman George Wright.
Only a handful of such individual religious exemptions are ever granted. Capt. Rattan and Dr Kamaljeet Singh Kalsi, who will attend basic training this summer after completing an emergency medicine fellowship, are the first Sikhs to receive exemptions in more than 25 years. Both of them offer healthcare skills that are in high demand in an Army stretched by wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
For Sikhs, the unshorn hair wrapped in a turban and beard are required to keep adherents in the natural state in which God made them, said Amardeep Singh, director of the Sikh Coalition, a New York-based advocacy group that helped the two push for Army admittance.
During training, Capt. Rattan wore a helmet over the small turban, which he doesn’t remove, and was able to successfully create a seal with his gas mask despite the beard, resolving the Army’s safety concerns, said Harsimran Kaur, the Sikh Coalition’s legal director. Capt. Rattan worked with an Army tailor to create a flash, the insignia
patch worn on soldiers’ berets, that could be affixed to his black turban, she said.
Mr Singh said allowing Sikh adherents to serve in the US Army is an important part of ensuring they are an integral part of American life. He said it also could counter prejudice. “If government can say to someone ‘You can’t serve, not for any reason that has to do with your abilities,’ that sends the wrong message,” he said. “We don’t want to be perpetual outsiders.” —AP