logo
'In shock': British Indians mourn crash victims at London vigil

'In shock': British Indians mourn crash victims at London vigil

Reuters14-06-2025
LONDON, June 14 (Reuters) - Dozens of members of Britain's Indian community gathered at a Hindu temple in London on Saturday for a vigil mourning the victims of this week's Air India crash, many of whom had personal connections to the temple.
Leaders from the Hindu, Sikh, Jain, Muslim, Parsi, Zoroastrian and other communities offered their prayers, as those in attendance, hands folded, recited chants.
A representative of Britain's King Charles read out a message from him and offered Christian prayers.
Rajrajeshwar Guruji, head of the Siddhashram Hindu temple in Harrow, likened the grief of those who lost family members in the crash of the London-bound flight to the wait for a loved one's return from an endless journey.
"They're just waiting and waiting, now they are not going to come back again," he said in an interview.
Guruji, who comes from the state of Gujarat where the plane crashed, said the temple had helped family members in Britain get information about their loved ones.
"Some of the members ... I have spoken to them, and ... they don't have the words," he said. "They are in shock."
Britain has one of the largest Indian communities outside India, with nearly 1.69 million people - or 3.1% of the population - identifying as ethnically Indian.
"We believe that everyone who is born has to go one day. But I hope nobody goes the way these ... passengers, as well as the medical students, have gone," said Harrow Mayor Anjana Patel, who lost a family member.
Only one of the 242 passengers and crew on board survived the crash, while others were killed when the plane struck a medical college's hostel.
Patel told Reuters that the council was offering grief counselling.
"We just cannot bear how people must be feeling," she said.
Jyotsna Shukla, 66, said her son's childhood friend was on the plane with his wife and three children.
"I feel very bad because he was so young," she said, before breaking down into tears.
Among those killed was Vijay Rupani, a former chief minister of Gujarat, who had visited the temple.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Unholy row at King Charles' church deepens after choir blasted for ‘having no knowledge of singing'
Unholy row at King Charles' church deepens after choir blasted for ‘having no knowledge of singing'

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Unholy row at King Charles' church deepens after choir blasted for ‘having no knowledge of singing'

THE King's church choir makes an unholy din, a damning report claims. There was 'no knowledge of music or singing technique' at practice sessions and it needed to 'aspire to higher standards' to sing for royalty, an 18-month investigation concluded. 4 4 4 The claims have added to turmoil at Sandringham's 500-year-old St Mary Magdalene Church, where the Royal Family gather for a Christmas Day service. The 16-page report, seen by The Sun, was commissioned by the King's chaplain, the Rev Paul Williams, amid a dispute with the choir's director of music, Dr Claire Stewart. It highlights a 'limited repertoire' and suggests setting out a 'musical vision' for the volunteer choir with leadership based on 'outstanding skill set, dynamic risk-taking, motivation and aspiration'. The inquiry was carried out by Tansy Castledine, director of music at Peterborough Cathedral Despite the criticisms, she said the choir was enthusiastic and 'extremely dedicated'. But one parishioner said: 'The report is a hatchet job filled with corporate jargon. 'This is a Norfolk village church — not Westminster Abbey.' Others have rallied around Dr Stewart, currently on sick leave. The Sun previously revealed King Charles was made aware of the church row and had been asked to intervene. The Diocese of Norwich has been approached for comment. End of an era as King Charles AXES royal train after 150 years as cost of keeping iconic vehicle going hits £1.2m a year 4

Things aren't quite as rosé as surveys make out
Things aren't quite as rosé as surveys make out

Times

timean hour ago

  • Times

Things aren't quite as rosé as surveys make out

A new survey by a hospitality group has found that a third of British men would prefer a glass of rosé to a pint and I've never heard such a load of old cobblers in my life. I've never known a man even order a glass of rosé, let alone prefer it to a pint. My men friends know their way around a wine list, and they're well aware that rosé these days can be great, not the cheap sugary swill of 30 years ago. Given the choice, though, they'll still only drink red or white and, if they're in a pub, it will always, always be a pint. British men who prefer rosé? Really? I've been fed some lines by men in my time, but they obviously save their best for people conducting surveys. Broadly speaking, I am an idiot with few useful skills, none of them transferable. Most of the time that's fine but oh, this week, how I wished I could sew. Trying to get curtains altered turned out to be a feat of endurance spanning three weeks, four seamstresses and five counties. I've got the best-travelled curtains in Christendom and all because I can't sew. They half-heartedly tried to teach it at school, but do they bother with it at all any more? They're probably busy teaching citizenship, or self-care, or however they fill the time between maths and English. It's not that I need to make a ballgown. I don't yearn to go on The Great British Sewing Bee. I'd just like some basic sewing skills and I suspect most people my age don't have any. I can't hem a skirt, or darn a moth hole, let alone shorten curtains. I can swim and I can touch-type but it turns out that, just occasionally, more skills might be useful. Who knew? News from the high street is usually grim, but Mountain Warehouse is thriving. It has just posted record revenue and has plans to open dozens more stores across the country and so, being incurably curious, I went to investigate. The windows promised a 15 per cent discount for anyone with a festival ticket, and you don't get that at Manolo Blahnik. As for inside, what joyful mysteries are these? A 'Summit Mummy', half price in the sale, regular length, three seasons? Literally no clue. But it was the bottles of something called Tent Proofer that blew my little mind. I do not often think about tents. I learnt that they should be avoided at all costs after a week at Girl Guide camp, and nothing in the years since has persuaded me otherwise. But if I were pushed, I would assume they arrived weatherproof, because that is the point of a tent, is it not? A tent that isn't weatherproof isn't fit for purpose. It's like a colander with no holes. Yet apparently tents need proofing, just like expensive suede shoes, and I find this oddly reassuring. They sell quick-dry trousers, too, which could be just the thing if you spill your rosé. Maybe I'm not so very different from a Mountain Warehouse customer after all. Scraping into the Royal Academy with my nieces, the day before the Summer Exhibition closed, we looked forward to what the critics said was a vintage year for art. There wasn't a single thing we'd have taken home, let alone paid for. If you want to wake up to paintings of burnt-out buildings or photos of derelict, rubbish-strewn landscapes it was indeed a vintage year. If your taste runs to 101 menacing, disembowelled white rats arranged in a circle on the floor, yours for £85,000, you must be sorry you missed it. The best thing we bought was the rosé we drank as we wandered round. And no, we would not have preferred a pint. As a novice wooden floor owner, I have two questions: how do you clean it and what do you wear to walk on it? Hot water and detergent will wash it, but also destroy it. Vacuuming, as the installer suggests, only dusts it. Shoes would be ruinous, but socks are lethal. So?

I've lost my family because I cheated on my wife instead of sorting out our problems
I've lost my family because I cheated on my wife instead of sorting out our problems

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

I've lost my family because I cheated on my wife instead of sorting out our problems

DEAR DEIDRE: I'VE lost my family and the chance of a happy future with the love of my life because of my stupidity. I cheated on my wife instead of sorting out our problems, and the woman I left her for dumped me because I didn't want kids with her. The harsh truth is, I've messed up everything and I have nobody to blame but myself. I'm an idiot and a coward, and don't know how to get my life back on track. I'm 47 and was married for 15 years. We had two daughters. But five years ago, our marriage went through a rocky patch. I was under a lot of stress at work and took it out on my wife. Instead of talking to her, I shut her out. When a work colleague ten years younger than me showed interest, I jumped into bed with her. My wife discovered our affair and kicked me out. My girlfriend took me in. But I didn't treat her as well as I should have done. Instead of learning from my past mistakes, I again failed to communicate properly. And when she said she wanted to have children with me, I said 'no way' and refused to discuss it. I was still reeling from the loss of being a full-time dad to my daughters. My girlfriend said she couldn't wait to be a mum, as she was heading for 40. She didn't have time to waste, so broke up with me. It was only then that I realised how much I loved her and that I did want kids with her. But it was too late. She'd moved on and started dating someone else. I still think about her all the time and want to contact her. I don't know how to move on. DEIDRE SAYS: You're learning from your mistakes, and that is the first step in moving on. Contacting your ex, who now has another partner, is looking backward rather than forward, and this won't help you – especially if she responds negatively. Your feelings for her will fade in time. Instead, look to rebuild your life and make positive changes for the future. Be the best dad you can to your daughters. Try to form a new relationship, and don't repeat the same mistakes this time. Speaking to a counsellor could also be of help to you. See my support pack, Moving On, for more advice. HAUNTED BY LOVER WHO LEFT WITH NO EXPLANATION DEAR DEIDRE: MANY years after the love of my life left me, I still can't move on. I can't even go to the area where she lives in case I bump into her. I don't want her back but I do want to be able to stop thinking about her. I'm 64 and was with her for 20 years. Our relationship was wonderful and other people said we were the perfect couple. But after her 40th birthday, things changed and she stopped being affectionate. One day, I came home from work to find a note saying she'd left. I was blindsided and devastated. That was 12 years ago. Since then, although I've had a few girlfriends, I've never found love again. I just can't let her go. She's always on my mind and her spectre follows me around. Birthdays and anniversaries are especially hard. How can I get her out of my system once and for all? DEIDRE SAYS: The way your ex left you was shocking. Although there were signs she wasn't happy, she never talked to you. As a result, you didn't get closure and still can't move forward. Sometimes, we have to find closure elsewhere. It would help you greatly to talk to a counsellor. My support pack, How Counselling Can Help, tells you how this process works. Also read my support pack Moving On. On significant dates, make sure you have an activity planned, so you're not focusing on your ex. SO MANY EXCUSES NOT TO COMMIT DEAR DEIDRE: I'M dying to make our relationship official, but the guy I'm seeing won't ask me to be his girlfriend. He says he wants to wait until 'the honeymoon period is over', which doesn't ring true to me. I'm starting to doubt whether he really likes me. I feel so insecure. We're both in our mid-twenties and have been dating for four months. I have begun to fall for him. When I asked him why we aren't official yet, he said it was because he's rushed into relationships in the past, and then it's gone horribly wrong. He says he wants to make sure we're right for each other first. That all sounds logical but I don't fully believe him. He can be kind and affectionate, but often makes excuses for why we can't meet and sometimes drops me for his friends. He says he likes me and sees a future for us, but I feel really anxious. DEIDRE SAYS: Whatever his reason – he may be scared of getting hurt so is keeping you at arm's length – he's not ready to be official yet and, unfortunately, you can't force him to change. What's important is that you're feeling unhappy and insecure. Perhaps you need to set yourself a time limit. If things haven't changed by then, and you're still not secure, then walk away. My support pack, Learning About Relationships, may be helpful to read. SICK OF PLAYING SECOND FIDDLE DEAR DEIDRE: MY partner is still allowing his ex to run his life. He doesn't seem to be able to say no to her ever, and I'm sick of being second best. He's been separated from his ex-wife for nine years, and yet he still won't divorce her, even though he says he loves me. If we have a row, he goes running back to her for advice. What should I do? I'm 38 and he's 49. We've been together for eight years but don't live together. Years before we met, he was married to a woman with whom he has two kids. He left her for someone else (a relationship that ended quickly). Recently, he came into some money and promised to take me on holiday. But his ex said he should treat his kids instead, and he agreed. He told me our trip was off. He pays maintenance for his kids already, and I don't resent that – it's the right thing to do. But he also gives his ex extra all the time, and that's not fair when it means I lose out. I'm not worried he's still in love with her, or that he's cheating on me, but I do feel she comes first. It's making me very unhappy and we're having lots of rows. Am I wrong to feel like this? DEIDRE SAYS: You're not in the wrong to want your long-term partner to put you first. It sounds like his ex still has a hold over him and perhaps he feels guilty about the end of their relationship. But that's not an excuse to make you feel second best. Try talking to him again and telling him how you feel. My support pack, Standing Up For Yourself, should help you to do this without making him defensive. It might also help you both to talk to a relationship counsellor. Make an appointment with

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store