Sikhism in the United States

Last updated
Sikhism in the United States Flag of the United States.svg
Khanda (Sikh Symbol).svg
San Jose Gurdwara Sahib (2448909577).jpg
Total population
~280,000–500,000
0.08% of the total American population (2020 est.)
Languages
American EnglishPunjabi
American SpanishIndian EnglishHindiUrduSindhi
Related ethnic groups

American Sikhs form the country's sixth-largest religious group. [1] While the U.S. Census does not ask about religion, [2] 70,697 Americans (or

Contents

Sikhism is a religion, originating from medieval India (predominantly from the Punjab region of modern-day India and Pakistan) which was introduced into the United States during the 19th century. While most American Sikhs are Punjabi, the United States also has a number of non-Punjabi converts to Sikhism. [20] Sikh men are typically identifiable by their unshorn beards and turbans (head coverings), articles of their faith. Following the 9/11 terrorist attacks, and subsequent other terrorism related activities by Islamic groups, Sikhs have often been mistaken as Muslims or Arabs, and have been subject to several hate crimes, including murders. [21] [22] Sikh temples have also been targets of violence due to being mistaken for mosques. A 2012 shooting at a Sikh temple in Oak Creek, Wisconsin garnered national and international attention, with then President Obama ordering flags to be half-staffed at all federal buildings.

History

First immigrants

The Stockton gurdwara, the oldest in the U.S., opened on October 24, 1912. The Sikh Temple in Stockton, California, 1915.jpg
The Stockton gurdwara, the oldest in the U.S., opened on October 24, 1912.

Sikhs have lived in the United States for more than 130 years. The first Sikh immigrants to the United States started to arrive in the second half of the 19th century, when poor economic conditions in British India drove many Indians to emigrate elsewhere. Most Sikh immigrants to the United States came from the province of Punjab and came to the U.S. to work on agricultural farms in California, travelling via Hong Kong to Angel Island. [24]

In the years just after 1900, hundreds of Sikhs had arrived to work in the lumber mills of Bellingham, Washington. In 1907, 400–500 white men, predominantly members of the Asiatic Exclusion League, attacked the Sikhs' homes in what is now known as the Bellingham riots. This quickly drove the East Indian immigrants out of the town. [25] [26] [27]

Some Sikhs worked in lumber mills of Oregon or in railroad construction and for some Sikhs it was on a railway line, which allowed other Sikhs who were working as migrant laborers to come into the town on festival days. [28] [ unreliable source? ]

A big effect on Sikh migration to the western states occurred during World War I and World War II, where Sikhs were recruited by the British Indian Army to serve for them. Sikhs fought bravely during these wars and began to live in England after their serving period. Among the Sikhs who already lived in America prior to the wars, many Sikhs joined them, mainly during World Wars I and II. Among those who served in the US military include Bhagat Singh Thind in World War I.

The first Sikh gurdwara established in the U.S. was the Gurdwara Sahib Stockton, in Stockton, California, which was established in 1912 by Wasakha Singh Dadehar and Jawala Singh. [29]

Discrimination after the September 11 attacks

Sikhs of America parade float at the 2016 Martin Luther King Day parade in Midtown Houston USASikhMLKDayParade2016Houston.jpg
Sikhs of America parade float at the 2016 Martin Luther King Day parade in Midtown Houston
Houston Sikh Community at the 2016 Martin Luther King Day parade in Midtown Houston HoustonSikhMLKDayParade2016Houston.jpg
Houston Sikh Community at the 2016 Martin Luther King Day parade in Midtown Houston

As a result of the September 11 attacks, some Sikh Americans have become subject to discrimination, often from individuals who mistakenly believe that they are Arab or Muslim.

Balbir Singh Sodhi, a gas station owner, was killed on September 15, 2001, due to being mistaken for a Muslim. In a 2011 report to the United States Senate, the Southern Poverty Law Center reported several assaults and incidents of arson at Sikh temples after September 11. All were labeled as hate crimes that resulted from the perpetrators' misconceptions that their targets were Muslim. [30] In August 2012, a Sikh temple in Oak Creek, Wisconsin, was the site of a shooting, leading to six Sikh individuals being killed. [31] On May 7, 2013, an elderly Sikh man was attacked with an iron bar in Fresno, California, in a possible hate crime. [32] On September 21, 2013, Prabhjot Singh, a Sikh professor was attacked in Harlem, New York, by a group of 20-30 men who branded him as "Osama bin Laden" and Terrorist". [33]

A 2007 survey of Sikh students by the Sikh Coalition found that three out of four male students interviewed "had been teased or harassed on account of their religious identity." [34] In 2014, the Sikh Coalition released a national report on the bullying of Sikh children in American schools. The report found that 55.8% of Sikh students surveyed in Indianapolis reported being bullied, while 54.5% of Sikh students surveyed in Fresno, California, reported being bullied. [35] According to the surveys, Sikh students wearing turbans are twice as likely to be bullied as the average American child.

Converts

In the 1960s, due to increased Indian immigration and rising interest in Indian spirituality in the American counterculture, a number of non-Punjabi Americans began to enter 3HO. Prominent in this trend was Yogi Bhajan, leader of the Sikh-related movement 3HO (Healthy, Happy, Holy Organization), whose Los Angeles temple was the first to introduce non-Punjabi Americans to Sikhism. [20]

Demography

Occupations

Bhagat Singh Thind v. United States

A gathering of British veterans who served in the Union Army during the American Civil War; a Sikh is present among them (c. 1917) CivilWarLondanBranch.jpg
A gathering of British veterans who served in the Union Army during the American Civil War; a Sikh is present among them (c. 1917)
A Sikh-American U.S. Army officer (2010) CaptRattansikh.jpg
A Sikh-American U.S. Army officer (2010)

Sikhs have served in the United States military at least as far back as the early 20th century, when one Bhagat Singh Thind, who though not a citizen joined the United States Army and served in World War I. Thind requested citizenship at the end of the war, being granted and revoked twice, before finally being naturalized in 1936. [36] Far larger numbers of Sikhs served in World War II, and all American wars following.

The ability of observant Sikhs to serve in the American military has, since 1985, been compromised by a discontinuation of exemptions to uniform standards which previously allowed Sikhs to maintain their religiously mandated beards and turbans while in uniform. [37] As of 2010, a Sikh doctor, Kamaljeet S. Kalsi, and dentist, Tejdeep Singh Rattan, are the only Sikh officers to be permitted to serve in uniform with beard and turban. [38] In addition, Simranpreet Lamba was permitted to enlist, with exemption to wear his turban and beard, in 2010 due to his knowledge of Punjabi and Hindi. [39]

Military

In the federal appeals court in Washington, a preliminary injunction allowed two Sikh men to enter the military recruit training wearing a turban as it was considered an article of religion. The military recruits Milaap Singh Chahal and Jaskirat Singh sued the Marine Corps in April 2022 due to violation of the first amendment which allows the freedom of religion. The branch that they were a part of declined full religious exemption. [40]

Policing

In 2016, the New York City Police Department (NYPD) began to allow turbans, subject to standards compatible with unimpeded performance of duty. [41] In 2015, Sandeep Dhaliwal became the first Deputy Sheriff in Texas to wear a turban on duty (Harris County Sherriff's Office). He was shot and killed from behind in 2019 while conducting a routine traffic stop on the Copperbrook subdivision in Houston Texas. [42]

In 2019, the Houston Police Department changed their rules to allow beards and turbans, joining 25 other law enforcement agencies. [43]

Professionals

Many Sikhs started life in America working in lumber mills, mines, and as farm laborers, with many eventually becoming landowners. Many early Sikh immigrants were restaurant owners. In 1956, Dalip Singh Saund became the first Asian Indian-born person to be elected to the United States House of Representatives.

Today, many Sikhs are well represented in white-collar positions such as lawyers, doctors, engineers, accountants, and businesspeople. They are considered to be a successful ethnic group in line with most of the Indian community. The community has a higher level of education, as over 53% have received a bachelor's degree compared to 40% of the general population. This is also reflected in terms of income as over 75% of the community earns over $50,000 and over two-thirds of the population have incomes over $100,000. [44] [17]

Elected officials

  • Dalip Singh Saund served three terms in the United States House of Representatives between 1957 and 1963. He was the first Asian American and the first person of a non-Abrahamic faith to serve in Congress.
  • Preet Didbal was elected to the position of mayor of Yuba City, California in 2017. She is the first Sikh woman to serve as a city mayor in United States history. [45]
  • Balvir Singh was elected to the Burlington County Board of Chosen Freeholders, New Jersey on November 7, 2017. He became the first Asian-American to win a countywide election in Burlington County and the first Sikh-American to win a countywide election in New Jersey. [46]
  • City planner Satyendra Huja was elected mayor of Charlottesville, Virginia in January 2012. [47]
  • Amarjit Singh Buttar was elected in December 2001 to the Vernon, Connecticut Board of Education and won re-election in 2011. [48]
  • Ravinder Bhalla was elected mayor of Hoboken, New Jersey in November 2017. He is also the first Sikh mayor to wear a turban.
  • Satwinder Kaur became the first Sikh elected to the City Council of Kent, Washington in November 2017.
  • Manka Dhingra of Washington became the first Sikh woman elected to a state legislature in November 2017. [49]
  • Pargat S. Sandhu was elected as mayor of Galt, California on Dec 3, 2019. He became the first Sikh to be elected for City Council and Mayor for the city of Galt.
  • In November 2020, California's Sutter County and Stanislaus County became the first two America to elect turbaned Sikh supervisors (Karm Bains and Mani Grewal, respectively). [50] [51]

Geographical distribution

Members of the Sikh community of Somerville, Massachusetts Sikhs in Union Square Somerville.jpg
Members of the Sikh community of Somerville, Massachusetts

Over half of American Sikhs live in California. Most of California's Sikh population live in NorCal, especially in the Central Valley and the Bay Area. The nation's largest Sikh population is in California's Central Valley, where Punjabi is the third most spoken language after only English and Spanish. [52] Sikhs can found across the Sacramento and San Joaquin valleys, but the largest concentrations can be found in the valley's largest cities (Sacramento in the Sacramento Valley and Stockton, Fresno, and Bakersfield in the San Joaquin Valley), and in smaller communities associated with the farming of almonds, peaches, walnuts, and plums. There are also significant concentrations of Sikh Americans in the Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta and in the Bay Area near San Jose, California and Fremont, California.

In the Sacramento Valley, Yuba City and Live Oak have prominent Sikh populations, with the first Sikh arriving in Yuba City in 1906. [53] In 2020, Yuba City was home to around 10,000 Sikhs (~15% of the city's population), while Live Oak was home to around 700 Sikhs (~8% of the city's population), with most of these being Sikhs. [56] Sutter County, California as a whole is home to around 11,000 Sikhs (~11% of the county population); this makes Sutter County the most proportionally Sikh county in America. [56] Down south in the San Joaquin Valley, Livingston is home to around 2,500 Sikhs (~17% of the city's population); Livingston is the most proportionally Sikh municipality in America. [56]

The New York metropolitan area also has a significant Sikh American presence. Around 19,000 Sikhs live in New York City, with around 18,000 in Queens. [56] The Richmond Hill neighborhood of Queens is often referred to as "Little Punjab" due to its large Punjabi population. In 2020, the stretch of 101st Avenue between 111th and 123rd streets in Richmond Hill was renamed Punjab Avenue (ਪੰਜਾਬ ਐਵੇਨਿਊ) and the stretch of 97th Avenue between Lefferts Boulevard and 117th Street was renamed Gurdwara Street. [57] [58] Outside of the city, the suburbs of Hicksville in Long Island and Carteret in Central Jersey have significant Punjabi populations. In 2020, Carteret was home to around 3,000 Sikhs (~12% of the borough's population) while Hicksville was home to around 2,000 (~5% of the hamlet's population). [56]

Outside of California and the New York metropolitan area, there are significant populations of Punjabi Sikhs in Washington, Indiana, Texas, Florida, Georgia, Virginia, Maryland, Massachusetts and North Carolina. There is also a concentration of non-Punjabi converts to Sikhism in Española, New Mexico. [59]

States and territories

Sikh Americans by state or territory (2020) [19] [54] [55]
State or territory Sikh aloneSikh alone or in any combinationTotal Sikh population (DERIVED ESTIMATE) [60]
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Flag of Alabama.svg Alabama 2941163
Flag of Alaska.svg Alaska 3416
Flag of Arizona.svg Arizona 4035492,177
Flag of Arkansas.svg Arkansas 2246182
Flag of California.svg California 25,03736,975146,614
Flag of Colorado.svg Colorado 2233341,324
Flag of Connecticut.svg Connecticut 2603591,424
Flag of Delaware.svg Delaware 6988349
Flag of Washington, D.C.svg District of Columbia 71975
Flag of Florida.svg Florida 4215952,359
Flag of Georgia (U.S. state).svg Georgia 3905482,173
Flag of Hawaii.svg Hawaii N/AN/A00
Flag of Idaho.svg Idaho 81144
Flag of Illinois.svg Illinois 8401,2835,087
Flag of Indiana.svg Indiana 1,2831,7186,812
Flag of Iowa.svg Iowa 3361242
Flag of Kansas.svg Kansas 99174690
Flag of Kentucky.svg Kentucky 2546182
Flag of Louisiana.svg Louisiana 5686341
Flag of Maine.svg Maine N/AN/A2391
Flag of Maryland.svg Maryland 7341,0124,013
Flag of Massachusetts.svg Massachusetts 4526002,379
Flag of Michigan.svg Michigan 9811,4655,809
Flag of Minnesota.svg Minnesota 74115456
Flag of Mississippi.svg Mississippi 77116460
Flag of Missouri.svg Missouri 75131519
Flag of Montana.svg Montana 0416
Flag of Nebraska.svg Nebraska 4728
Flag of Nevada.svg Nevada 1472821,118
Flag of New Hampshire.svg New Hampshire 1436143
Flag of New Jersey.svg New Jersey 2,7153,88815,417
Flag of New Mexico.svg New Mexico 1837147
Flag of New York.svg New York 5,5877,94331,496
Flag of North Carolina.svg North Carolina 2063611,431
Flag of North Dakota.svg North Dakota N/AN/A00
Flag of Ohio.svg Ohio 5698873,517
Flag of Oklahoma.svg Oklahoma 4248190
Flag of Oregon.svg Oregon 2042851,130
Flag of Pennsylvania.svg Pennsylvania 7591,0984,354
Flag of Puerto Rico.svg Puerto Rico N/AN/A00
Flag of Rhode Island.svg Rhode Island N/AN/A312
Flag of South Carolina.svg South Carolina 4297385
Flag of South Dakota.svg South Dakota 014
Flag of Tennessee.svg Tennessee 4873289
Flag of Texas.svg Texas 1,9182,71810,777
Flag of Utah.svg Utah 6292365
Flag of Vermont.svg Vermont 3312
Flag of Virginia.svg Virginia 1,1571,7136,792
Flag of Washington.svg Washington 3,0024,36717,316
Flag of West Virginia.svg West Virginia 6728
Flag of Wisconsin.svg Wisconsin 1853561,412
Flag of Wyoming.svg Wyoming N/AN/A312
Flag of the United States.svg United States48,32170,697280,329

Counties

Sikh Americans by county (2020) [19] [54] [55]
County State Sikh aloneSikh alone or in any combinationTotal Sikh population (DERIVED ESTIMATE) [61]
Pop. % Pop. % Pop. %
Fresno Flag of California.svg California 3,6035,29721,004
Queens Flag of New York.svg New York 3,1104,45617,669
San Joaquin Flag of California.svg California 2,7584,02615,964
Sacramento Flag of California.svg California 2,5954,01515,920
Alameda Flag of California.svg California 2,5823,68914,628
Santa Clara Flag of California.svg California 2,2003,07812,205
King Flag of Washington.svg Washington 2,0032,90011,499
Sutter Flag of California.svg California 1,9902,81211,150
Kern Flag of California.svg California 1,3952,2078,751
Nassau Flag of New York.svg New York 1,4322,1378,474
Los Angeles Flag of California.svg California 1,1171,7106,781
Stanislaus Flag of California.svg California 1,0581,5956,325
Middlesex Flag of New Jersey.svg New Jersey 1,1221,5536,158
Contra Costa Flag of California.svg California 8391,3045,171
Merced Flag of California.svg California 6991,0274,072
Placer Flag of California.svg California 5368593,406
Harris Flag of Texas.svg Texas 6068363,315
Orange Flag of California.svg California 5557813,097
Riverside Flag of California.svg California 4336712,661
San Bernardino Flag of California.svg California 4096302,498
Collin Flag of Texas.svg Texas 4276182,451
Solano Flag of California.svg California 4526142,435
Fairfax Flag of Virginia.svg Virginia 4365712,264
Wayne Flag of Michigan.svg Michigan 3595582,213
Bergen Flag of New Jersey.svg New Jersey 4175532,193
Maricopa Flag of Arizona.svg Arizona 3935432,153
Johnson Flag of Indiana.svg Indiana 4035342,117
Loudoun Flag of Virginia.svg Virginia 3435242,078
Cook Flag of Illinois.svg Illinois 3285202,062
Snohomish Flag of Washington.svg Washington 3134921,951
Total Flag of the United States.svg United States48,32170,697280,329

Places

Sikh Americans by census-designated place (2020) [19] [54] [55]
CDP State Sikh aloneTotal Sikh population (DERIVED ESTIMATE) [62]
Pop. % Pop. %
New York Flag of New York.svg New York 3,29319,104
Fresno Flag of California.svg California 2,36913,743
Yuba City Flag of California.svg California 1,75710,193
San Jose Flag of California.svg California 1,4678,511
Bakersfield Flag of California.svg California 1,3527,843
Sacramento Flag of California.svg California 9665,604
Kent Flag of Washington.svg Washington 9525,523
Union City Flag of California.svg California 8034,659
Fremont Flag of California.svg California 7994,635
Stockton Flag of California.svg California 7944,606
Manteca Flag of California.svg California 6813,951
Elk Grove Flag of California.svg California 6023,492
Carteret Flag of New Jersey.svg New Jersey 5303,075
Tracy Flag of California.svg California 4792,779
Los Angeles Flag of California.svg California 4442,576
Livingston Flag of California.svg California 4172,419
Turlock Flag of California.svg California 3792,199
Greenwood Flag of Indiana.svg Indiana 3702,147
Hicksville Flag of New York.svg New York 3632,106
Hayward Flag of California.svg California 3431,990
Ceres Flag of California.svg California 3211,862
Clovis Flag of California.svg California 3101,798
Vineyard Flag of California.svg California 2891,677
Antelope Flag of California.svg California 2861,659
Lathrop Flag of California.svg California 2831,642
Indianapolis (balance) Flag of Indiana.svg Indiana 2641,532
Fairfield Flag of California.svg California 2511,456
Roseville Flag of California.svg California 2331,352
Kerman Flag of California.svg California 2291,329
Modesto Flag of California.svg California 2061,195
Santa Clara Flag of California.svg California 2051,189
Auburn Flag of Washington.svg Washington 1981,149
Milpitas Flag of California.svg California 167969
Mountain House Flag of California.svg California 165957
Newark Flag of California.svg California 155899
Fowler Flag of California.svg California 152882
Phoenix Flag of Arizona.svg Arizona 149864
Dublin Flag of California.svg California 148859
San Diego Flag of California.svg California 144835
Fontana Flag of California.svg California 143830
Renton Flag of Washington.svg Washington 142824
Rocklin Flag of California.svg California 136789
San Ramon Flag of California.svg California 135783
Selma Flag of California.svg California 131760
Folsom Flag of California.svg California 126731
Live Oak Flag of California.svg California 124719
Jersey City Flag of New Jersey.svg New Jersey 119690
Hercules Flag of California.svg California 115667
SeaTac Flag of Washington.svg Washington 115667
Total Flag of the United States.svg United States48,321280,329

Notable Sikh Americans

1900s

2000s

Activism

  • Valarie Kaur, American activist, documentary filmmaker, lawyer, educator, and founder of the Revolutionary Love Project.
  • Simran Jeet Singh, American educator, writer, activist and Executive Director for the Aspen Institute’s Religion & Society Program
  • Arjun Singh Sethi, civil rights writer, political rights writer, human rights lawyer, and professor of law

Business

  • Ajay Banga, Indian-American business executive and president of the World Bank Group. (1981-present)
  • Gurbaksh Chahal, Internet Entrepreneur (1998-present)
  • Sant Singh Chatwal, Indian-American hotelier and businessperson (1975-present)
  • Vikram Chatwal, American hotelier and actor (2006-present)

Entertainment

Law Enforcement

Military

  • G. B. Singh, Indian-American author and first turbaned officer in the United States Army

Politics

  • Harmeet Dhillon, American lawyer and Republican Party Official (2008-present)
  • Gurbir Grewal, American attorney and prosecutor, served the sixty-first attorney general of the State of New Jersey (2018-2021) and serving as the Director of the Division of Enforcement for the Securities and Exchange Commission (2021-present)
  • Harpreet Kaur Sandhu, Indian American politician and community activist from Richmond, California (2007–2008)
  • Balvir Singh, American teacher and Democratic politician from Burlington Township, New Jersey, serving on the Burlington County Board of County Commissioners (2018-present)
  • Kash Gill, Mayor of Yuba City, California (2009-2010) and (2013-2014)
  • Preet Didbal, Mayor of Yuba City, California (2017-2018)
  • Manka Dhingra, American attorney, Democratic politician who is represents the Party 45th legislative district, on Seattle's Eastside in King County (2017-present) and the first Sikh state senator of Washington
  • Ravinder Bhalla, American civil rights lawyer, politician, and the 39th mayor of Hoboken, New Jersey (2002-present)
  • Preet Bharara, Indian-born American lawyer and former federal prosecutor who served as the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York (2009-2017)
  • Daleep Singh, American economic advisor serving as the Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Financial Markets (2016-2017) and United States Deputy National Security Advisor for International Economics (2021-2022)
  • Uttam Dhillon, American attorney, serving as the Acting Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration (2018-2020)
  • Sabrina Singh, American political administrator serving as the Special Assistant to the President and Deputy Press Secretary for Vice President Kamala Harris in the Biden administration (2021-2022) and the Deputy Pentagon Press Secretary in the Department of Defense (2022-present)
  • Mani Grewal, Utah, Sikh Activist, served Utah State Boards including Multicultural Commission, Workforce Services and Investment Board, helped Governor draft Sikh Proclamation, celebrated Vaisakhi at the Utah Capitol Building and design a Sikh Float in the 24th July Parade of the Pioneers.

Religious Services

See also


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Punjabi Americans, are Americans whose ancestry originates wholly or partly from the Punjab region of India and Pakistan. There are over 300,000 Punjabi Americans, many of whom were Sikhs from British Punjab who first settled in California's Central Valley.

Sikhs and Sikh Americans have served in the United States military since World War I through all subsequent wars. Since the 1980s, observant Sikhs have faced difficulty in serving due to a discontinuation of exemptions to uniform standards which previously allowed Sikhs to maintain their religiously mandated beards and turbans while in uniform.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">South Asian Canadians in British Columbia</span>

The South Asian community in British Columbia was first established in 1897. The first immigrants originated from Punjab, British India, a northern region and state in modern-day India and Pakistan. Punjabis originally settled in rural British Columbia at the turn of the twentieth century, working in the forestry and agricultural industries.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sikhism in Greater Vancouver</span> Religious community

Sikhism in Greater Vancouver is one of the main religions across the region, especially among the Indo-Canadian population. The Sikh community in Vancouver is the oldest, largest and most influential across Canada, having begun in the late 19th century.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Punjabi Canadians</span> Canadian people of Punjabi descent

Punjabi Canadians number approximately 950,000 and account for roughly 2.6% of Canada's population, as per the 2021 Canadian census. Their heritage originates wholly or partly from the Punjab region of India and Pakistan.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sikhism in Japan</span>

Sikhism in Japan is a small, minority religion. There are gurdwaras located in Tokyo, Ibaraki and Kobe.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ravinder Bhalla</span> American politician (born 1974)

Ravinder Singh Bhalla, often simply called Ravi Bhalla, is an American civil rights lawyer and politician, serving as the 39th Mayor of Hoboken, New Jersey, since 2018. Prior to becoming mayor, he served on the Hoboken City Council from 2009 to 2018. In 2017, he was elected as New Jersey's first Sikh mayor. A Democrat, Bhalla is a candidate for New Jersey's 8th congressional district in the 2024 election.

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Further reading