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SIKH Jatinderpal Singh Bhullar has become the first soldier to guard the Queen wearing a turban instead of a bearskin hat.
The 25-year-old, who joined the Scots Guards this year, has been given permission to wear the religious headdress outside Buckingham Palace.
He was seen standing guard and parading outside the palace for the first time this morning.
The Sun told earlier this month how the former bricklayer, from Birmingham, broke 180 years of tradition.
He is not the first Sikh to take part in guarding Buckingham Palace but others wore traditional bearskin hats.
At the time, he said: Conducting public duties in my turban is a great honour.
I am very proud to be a member of the Household Division, and to be the first Sikh guardsman to mount guard in a turban will be the best thing in my life, especially as a member of the Scots Guards.
But he has reportedly been mocked by comrades, though no complaint has been made. It came as some in the Scots Guard have claimed the whole company will look ridiculous if one member does not wear a bearskin.
David Cuthill, one retired officer, told a newspaper: It should be the regiment first and religion second. A Guardsman is not a Guardsman if hes not wearing a bearskin.
Hundreds of years of tradition should be protected. I appreciate his predicament but if all the other Guardsmen are in bearskins and he is in a turban, it is going to look ridiculous.
But CO Lt Col Robert Howieson praised Bhullar, saying: He will be a welcome addition. The precedent for Sikh soldiers wearing turbans on parade was set long ago.
Guardsman Bhullars dad Surinder, 47, from Slough, Berks, said recently: He deserves respect and he will stay strong. That includes wearing his turban instead of a bearskin, no matter what other soldiers say. He is observing his religion
Read more: Sikh soldier Jatinderpal Singh Bhullar becomes first to guard Queen in turban | The Sun |News
The 25-year-old, who joined the Scots Guards this year, has been given permission to wear the religious headdress outside Buckingham Palace.
He was seen standing guard and parading outside the palace for the first time this morning.
The Sun told earlier this month how the former bricklayer, from Birmingham, broke 180 years of tradition.
He is not the first Sikh to take part in guarding Buckingham Palace but others wore traditional bearskin hats.
At the time, he said: Conducting public duties in my turban is a great honour.
I am very proud to be a member of the Household Division, and to be the first Sikh guardsman to mount guard in a turban will be the best thing in my life, especially as a member of the Scots Guards.
But he has reportedly been mocked by comrades, though no complaint has been made. It came as some in the Scots Guard have claimed the whole company will look ridiculous if one member does not wear a bearskin.
David Cuthill, one retired officer, told a newspaper: It should be the regiment first and religion second. A Guardsman is not a Guardsman if hes not wearing a bearskin.
Hundreds of years of tradition should be protected. I appreciate his predicament but if all the other Guardsmen are in bearskins and he is in a turban, it is going to look ridiculous.
But CO Lt Col Robert Howieson praised Bhullar, saying: He will be a welcome addition. The precedent for Sikh soldiers wearing turbans on parade was set long ago.
Guardsman Bhullars dad Surinder, 47, from Slough, Berks, said recently: He deserves respect and he will stay strong. That includes wearing his turban instead of a bearskin, no matter what other soldiers say. He is observing his religion
Read more: Sikh soldier Jatinderpal Singh Bhullar becomes first to guard Queen in turban | The Sun |News