Pakistani Sikh pilgrims return without visiting Hemkund Shrine

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Not too long ago, they, a group of thirty-nine Sikh pilgrims from Pakistan boarded their bus wending their way to India via the Wagah Border. 12 men, 8 women and 19 children came with dreams in their eyes and a prayer on their lips for a visit to the highest Sikh Shrine of Hemkund Sahib in the border district of Chamoli Garhwal.

7th August saw the batch checking into the Hemkund Gurudwara, at Lakshman Jhulla in Rishikesh. They were readying themselves for the journey to Ghaghariya. A five kms trek, almost at a 45 degree climb, would have brought them to edge of the crystal waters of Lokpal lake on the edge of which stands the shrine of Shri Hemkund Sahib, at 14000 feet,

Moments before they were to leave, the local authorities informed them that they could not go. Reason? Though they had the Hemkund Darshaant Visa, their visa permits them to travel up to Dehradun District and not District Chamoli where the shrine is located.

For two days, the pilgrims and the Gurudwara Shri Hemkund Sahib Trust, contact the Embassy in Delhi and concerned officials to rectify the error – but to no avail. This morning, heartbroken, the pilgrims turned around to take the long journey back home to Pakistan, while all their desires evaporated into thin air.

Speaking to team Newspost, Darshan Singh, the Manager of the Gurudwara, sounds morose: “It’s disheartening and disappointing. The young children were so excited about visiting the shrine. The older pilgrims could hardly believe their luck when they got their visas. But a bureaucratic blunder has put to rest their dreams of the pilgrimage of a lifetime!”