Historian and author Charles Allen takes a look around our exhibition with Harbakhsh Grewal.
Slough Cadets, UKPHA volunteers and Canadian MP Tim Uppal pose on the steps of the gallery building.
We were privileged to receiver some special guests at our exhibition.
Our exhibition 'Empire, Faith & War: the Sikhs and World War One' includes the contradictions of loyalty and betrayal.
Engaging speakers all with amazing stories to tell.
Hardit Malik, pictured here in 1917, wearing the uniform of a French Ambulance Driver.
Lt. John Smyth of the 15th Ludhiana Sikhs pictured wearing a beautifully tied turban.
South Australia’s Indian community want to march on Anzac Day to honour 15,000 of their countrymen who served alongside Australians at Gallipoli.
Hardit Singh Malik, pictured here as a 22 year old First World War flying ace in 1918 outside Balliol College, Oxford where he had been a student.
Lt. John Smyth was awarded the Victoria Cross with the 15th Ludhiana Sikhs.
Netley’s military hospital was built to service an empire’s army after the Crimean war. It stood for a century and saw two world wars before being demolished in 1966.
A new trailer for the 'Empire, Faith & War: The Sikhs and World War One' exhibition, which launches a national effort to build the biggest database on the Sikh experience during the war.
This article in the Indian Express features some wonderful stories from descendents of Sikh soldiers who fought in WW1.
A crumpled, half-torn paper certifies that Manna Singh, a sepoy in the first battalion of the 2nd Punjab Regiment, British Indian army, has been discharged of his services and been paid all his arrears.
The exhibition appeared in The Big Issue magazine, which is read by over half a million Londoners every week.
As part of the exhibition we explored the issue of the home front and the families left behind.
In the battlefield of Gallipoli, a Sikh soldier was reported as having seen a vision of Guru Gobind Singh.
Thank you to an anonymous UK donor who sent us a small cache of original photographs depicting Sikh soldiers in the Middlesex area over a century ago.
It's incorrect to see the Sikh role in World War One as one-dimensional.
Listen from 11.30 minutes onwards to hear a phenomenal bit of radio.