Family of fallen US Sikh marine demands apology from Trump

The father and the sister of Late Corporal Gurpreet Singh say they are hurt by Donald Trump's treatment of parents of late Captain Humayun Khan.

Nirmal Singh and Manpreet Kaur

Nirmal Singh (R) and Manpreet Kaur (L), the father and sister of Late Corporal Gurpreet Singh. Source: The Sacramento Bee

The family of a fallen American Sikh soldier says they are hurt by Republican presidential candidate, Donald Trump’s treatment of the parents of late Army Captain Humayun Khan.

The father and sister of Marine Corporal Gurpreet Singh who died in Afghanistan five years ago, has spent much of the past week watching the immigrant parents of the late captain spar with Trump.

“It hurts. I don’t know why. It’s like they’re playing political games with a Gold Star family,” says 55-year-old Nirmal Singh.

Many military families around the country have been surprised by Trump’s criticism of the parents of the late Army Capt. Humayun Khan after they endorsed Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton and castigated Trump at the Democratic National.
“Am I not allowed to respond? Hillary voted for the Iraq war, not me,” Trump wrote on Twitter about the Khans earlier this week after implying that the soldier’s mother did not speak out at the convention because of her Muslim faith.
Nirmal Singh noted that he’s often met other immigrants when he gets in touch with Marines. Among the Central Valley’s Iraq and Afghanistan casualties, fallen troops hail from Cambodia, Colombia, Laos, Mexico and Vietnam

 “Religion does not matter. They love their country. That’s why they go and they should be respected,” Singh said.
Nirmal Singh and Manpreet Kaur
Nirmal Singh (R), father of Late Corporal Gurpreet Singh, and Manpreet Kaur (L), sister. Source: The Sacramento Bee
Corporal Singh’s sister Manpreet said her own mother would perhaps stand silent at the mention of her late brother, like Capt Humayun’s mother did. She said it was insulting to talk about her the way Trump did.

 “When (Trump) said something about (Capt. Khan’s) mother, that insulted my mother,” said Cpl. Singh’s 28-year-old sister, Manpreet Kaur.

It hurts. I don’t know why. It’s like they’re playing political games with a Gold Star family.
The Singhs believe Trump should apologise to the Khans.

They said they’ve always felt welcome among the Marines and other military families they’ve met over the years.

At a 2013 ceremony, the Marines posthumously awarded Cpl. Singh a Bronze Star for the valour he showed on combat patrols in the last two weeks of his life. The Singhs were touched that members of his unit took the time to learn about their Sikh heritage and paid tribute to their culture in the medal ceremony.





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3 min read
Published 4 August 2016 2:06pm
Updated 4 August 2016 2:14pm
By Shamsher Kainth

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