Papers Session In-person November Annual Meeting 2025

Creative Approaches to Teaching Sikhi through a Decolonial Frame

Monday, 12:30 PM - 2:30 PM | Marriott Copley Place, Suffolk (Third… Session ID: A24-231
Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)

The Sikh Studies Unit, Teaching Religion Unit, and Transformative Scholarship and Pedagogy Unit invite scholars, educators, activists, and community leaders to submit papers for a possible co-sponsored panel on "Creative Approaches to Teaching Sikhi through a Decolonial Frame." This panel aims to explore innovative and transformative methods for teaching Sikh history, philosophy, and practices by challenging colonial narratives and embracing decolonial perspectives. We seek contributions that highlight creative pedagogical strategies, curriculum development, and community engagement that centre Sikh voices and experiences, fostering a more inclusive and accurate understanding of Sikhi. We welcome papers that address, but are not limited to, the following themes and topics: a) Decolonising Sikh History and Narratives, b) Innovative Pedagogical Strategies, c) Curriculum Development, d) Community Engagement and Empowerment. 

Papers

This paper introduces creative, decolonial approaches to teaching Sikhi in Religious Education (RE), drawing on findings from the Teaching Sikhi in RE project and innovative media such as RE Podcast: The One About Sikhi (Season 3, Episode 4). Survey data from 106 RE teachers reveals uneven coverage of Sikhi, low confidence, and limited engagement with Sikh communities. We explore strategies that centre lived experience and challenge colonial framings, including co-created resources, virtual Gurdwara visits, and storytelling through podcasts. Recommendations focus on embedding insider perspectives, promoting diversity within Sikhi, and fostering partnerships between educators and Sikh communities to ensure inclusive and transformative Religious Education.

Decolonizing pedagogy is a crucial endeavor for the discipline of religious studies to undertake to better understand and explore religious traditions that have long been understood through a colonial lens, such as Sikhi. Fortunately, Sikh scholars continue to  provide indigenous perspectives on the dynamic development of Sikhi as a religious, cultural, and politically sovereign empire; yet a successful course focused on decolonizing pedagogy must do more than emphasize scholarship within a tradition.  This paper focuses on the successful implementation of a recently developed decolonizing teaching method, Interfaith Community-Advised Pedagogy (ICAP), in which courses are co-taught between religious studies faculty and members of minority religious traditions to gain first-hand knowledge about how religions are lived.  After we (a religious studies professor and Sikh activist) collaborated on the ICAP framework, our class was able to engage with indigenous scholarship, build rapport with a Sikh community, and effectively center Sikh sovereignty with students.

This presentation explores how engaged learning and experiential pedagogies of seva (selfless service), simran (meditative reflection and contemplation), sakhi (storytelling), shabd (song/word) and sangat (community engagement) can function as decolonial practices to transform the self in relation to community, past, present, and future. Through student engagement in the course Sikhism: Sage Warrior and collaborations with grassroots initiatives led by activists, artists, and musicians, I will examine the ways in which the afore mentioned pedagogical approaches can provide a transformative framework for student learning and collective well-being. 

Audiovisual Requirements
LCD Projector and Screen
Play Audio from Laptop Computer
Tags
#Sikh
#Sikhism
#Teaching Religion
#pedagogy
#music
#sovereignty
#Decolonial theory
#Devotional singing
# Kirtan
#ethnomusicology
#music
#sikhism