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‘Sikh Captain America’ Takes on Hate, Intolerance and Trump

Vishavjit Singh, a political cartoonist occasionally transforms into ‘Sikh Captain America.’

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Donald Trump wants to make America great again but ‘Sikh Captain America’ feels the presumptive Republican presidential nominee is making America ‘hate’ again.

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“Donald Trump has certainly been a candidate whose words have been alarming for someone like me, who happens to be at the front lines of bigotry in post-9/11 America,” said Vishavjit Singh, a Washington-born Sikh artist-activist in his mid-40s who occasionally transforms into ‘Sikh Captain America’.

Singh, who is a political cartoonist, on occasions transforms into a costumed soldier with a turban, who fights bigotry and champions cultural understanding through public appearances and talks.

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Vishavjit Singh, a political cartoonist occasionally transforms into ‘Sikh Captain America.’
Vishavjit Singh is also a political cartoonist. (Photo Courtesy: Youtube/Sikh Captain America)
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As the film Captain America: Civil War plays at theatres, Singh drew a stark contrast between Trump and Captain America’s alter ego, Steve Rogers – two iconic New York characters born in the 1940s.

Captain America as a character would stand in complete opposition to Donald Trump and his candidacy. Today, besides ISIS, the festering of extreme right-wing and supremacist forces at home will be targets for Captain America’s wrath.
Vishavjit Singh
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Vishavjit Singh, a political cartoonist occasionally transforms into ‘Sikh Captain America.’
Vishavjit Singh as ‘Sikh Captain America.’ (Photo Courtesy: Youtube/Sikh Captain America)
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The artist also creates cartoon campaigns, such as the Send Sikh Note To Trump postcard campaign, in which he and some of his fans send Trump a postcard every day “with a message focused on processing our anger inspired by his jingoistic madness into small kernels of humour and compassion.”

“He might be full of himself, overstuffed with his achievements with a towering skyscraper of an ego, but even deep inside him resides seeds of benevolence,” Singh said.

“I wish him well; I wish him compassion; I wish him to realise the violence of his words; I wish him a landslide loss in the elections for his own good,” he said.

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Captain America was born in New York during World War II, from the minds of Jewish creators and future comic-book legends Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, who introduced their super-soldier by having him deliver a haymaker to the jaw of a reeling Hitler.

‘Sikh Captain America’ was also born in the Big Apple for socio-political reasons, as Singh was planning to attend his first New York Comic-Con as an exhibitor in the fall of 2011.

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Some of my art is informed by my own experience on the streets of America and being targeted as an outsider – at times as a threat just based on my looks. So, I had this vision of an American superhero fighting hate and intolerance. No other superhero seemed better placed for this task – I don’t think I would have selected Superman or Batman.
Vishavjit Singh

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