Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
After more than a decade, Punjab Cultural Centre to open this fall
It's taken more than a decade, a few trips to the drawing board and a major move but the Punjab Cultural Centre is expected to open this fall.
"It took so long because we wanted to do it right," said Amarjeet Warraich, president of the Manitoba Sikh and Cultural Seniors Centre Inc. "This is a community project, so we have to listen to everybody."
People didn't like the original location, a lot near Sisler High School the city gave them for $1 back in 2001.
"The community was telling us that, for the amount of money we're going to have to spend, it wouldn't be a good site for this purpose."
Fundraising for the $7.5-million domed building stalled.
"This is a place we intend to use for a long time, so we have to have everybody on side to do such a big project," said Warraich. In 2008, they decided to buy the former Brooklands Collegiate on King Edward for $900,000 and renovate and expand it.
Now that they're at a bigger site at a better location, the community is on side, he said. They just need more cash. Tonight, the cultural centre is holding a major fund-raising dinner with Canada's Public Safety Minister and senior Manitoba MP Vic Toews as the keynote speaker.
"We need to raise about $1.3 million all together to complete this project," Warraich said. It's going to cost close to $8.5 million. The centre, located on Route 90 and a bus route, will have a gym and playing fields, a banquet hall large enough to accommodate big Sikh weddings, a seniors centre, a day-care centre and classrooms for newcomers.
"It's one stop for everybody," said Warraich.
It will open just in time to serve the city's swelling Punjabi population, he said.
"When I came 40-plus years ago, we only had a few families," said Warraich who owns the Maryland Hotel.
"We used to rush over and say hello whenever you saw someone from back home," he laughed.
Seeing someone from Punjab in Winnipeg is no longer a rarity, he said. "Now there are over 10 (Punjabi) grocery stores."
Winnipeg's Punjab Cultural Centre will be the biggest in Canada, and people across the country have pitched in to see it happen, said Warraich. They've raised tens of thousands of dollars in Vancouver, Toronto and Alberta, he said.
"Our culture is so interconnected," he said. People who used to live in Winnipeg or have elderly relatives living in the city wanted to pitch in and get the centre built, said Warraich.
"It is going to be a real jewel for the community."
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition March 31, 2012 J12
- Back to Top
- Return to South Asia
-
Africa is one complex and gloriously unmanageable 'theme' to choose to kick off our 2012 series, Our City Our World, which is why it took up the whole newspaper on Jan. 18.
-
Hard-working Chinese immigrants, once banned, have risen to the highest echelons of Manitoba.
-
German immigrants have played a surprisingly large role in the development of the province.
-
Arriving in Manitoba in the 1870s unprepared for a brutal winter, Icelandic settlers and their descendants have left their mark on our province.
-
Industrious Italians rose from peasant roots and adapted to Canadian society by mastering L’art d’arrangiarsi (the art of getting by).
-
It used to be the only time Prairie folks met Spanish-speaking people was when they vacationed down south. More often now, they're the people next door.
-
When the first Middle East families immigrated to Manitoba, mosques were unheard of and even yogurt was exotic. But now all that has changed.
-
A booming Filipino community nearly 60,000 strong has transformed Manitoba.
-
As the city's Indo-Canadian population experiences dramatic growth, its pioneers recall their warm Winnipeg welcome.
-
Scarred by Holodomor, the Ukrainian community helped shape Winnipeg's cultural mosaic.
-
Manitoba's history is built on a foundation provided by settlers from the U.K., who came here seeking better lives.
Related Items
Poll
Most Popular South Asia
- After more than a decade, Punjab Cultural Centre to open this fall
- He travels the world looking for Lost Prizes
- Profiles of our South Asian community
- Recognize yoga's Hindu roots
- It's an Indo (hyphen) world
- She turned her passion into a successful business
- Hindu centre teems with diverse activity
- Arranged marriages misunderstood in the West
- Warm heart, great success
- Finding Ganga in the Assiniboine
- After more than a decade, Punjab Cultural Centre to open this fall
- Our City, Our World: South Asian equation
- Profiles of our South Asian community
- Arranged marriages misunderstood in the West
- After more than a decade, Punjab Cultural Centre to open this fall
- It's an Indo (hyphen) world
- She turned her passion into a successful business
- Recognize yoga's Hindu roots
- Warm heart, great success
- Our City, Our World: South Asian equation
- He travels the world looking for Lost Prizes
- Hindu centre teems with diverse activity
Ads by Google











You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
Have Your Say
New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010.