1To-day there is no more discontented community in India than the Sikhs.
2The lieutenant in command of the Sikhs presently rode up to him.
3We took him to a place which the Sikhs had already prepared.
4There were some deadly combats between the mutinous sepoys and the Sikhs.
5The Sikhs respect him as much as the Tibetans respect their Dalai-Lama.
6Describes Mrs. Gandhi's troubles with the Sikhs, who want a separate nation.
7Then the Sikhs commenced to move slowly forward towards the enemy, cheering.
8One of them, referring to a religious festival of the Sikhs, ran:
9The Sikhs herded the prisoners, old alligator-eyes among them, into another corner.
10Sadhu-Nanaka must not be confounded with Guru-Nanaka, a leader of the Sikhs.
11Had the Sikhs no apprehensions with respect to our intentions on Lahore?
12This question was asked by the official publication of the Sikhs in Vancouver.
13The Sikhs are a minority in India, though a majority in Punjab itself.
14Then he turned and instructed the Sikhs in their own language.
15The Sikhs, who are a reformed Hindoo sect, hold Hurdwar in especial reverence.
16The Sikhs picked that up and followed us into the street.