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Right To Education (RTE) Gives Birth to a New Scam

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Right to Education (RTE) continues to haunt the non-minority private schools across the nation. The problems and corruption related to RTE are already exposed in our previous articles. Under the RTE act, 25% seats from all private non-minority (aided or unaided) schools are reserved for children from underprivileged socio-economic backgrounds. The government reimburses fees of these students. Cases of corruption and malpractices in the root level of RTE have drawn out the real face of RTE, which is hidden behind the facade of social justice.

RTE has given birth to a new scam, where in order to get admissions under the RTE quota parents have started producing fake documents to show that they belong to Economically Weaker Section (EWS).

Troubling Documentary Reveals Kairana like Hindu Exodus in Heart of Delhi

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Documentary

A troubling new documentary has revealed that a Hindu exodus similar to that in Kairana, West UP is currently underway in the Sundar Nagri area of the national capital, Delhi.

The documentary was created by Ravijot Singh, a video blogger, poet and speaker, and posted on his YouTube Channel with the title Truth of Sunder Nagri – Are Hindu’s at risk?’ The 20 minute documentary can be seen below – 

Colonialism to Star Dot Star Colonialism: A Contracting Universe

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(This article is being presented as a 4-part series. It talks about the various forms of colonialism which thrive even today)

Part 1: Colonialism is Dead. Long Live Star-Dot-Star Colonialism?

Unguarded slips reveal an inner mindset. The Queen of England’s comment on Chinese rudeness was one such. And then there was one from Marc Andreessen. Andreessen, founder of Netscape and a Director at Facebook, was miffed when authorities in Bharat did not accept a Facebook proposal on grounds that it compromised net neutrality. In an exchange in twitter-world, Andreessen’s tweet termed anti-Colonialism as an ‘economic catastrophic for the Indian people for decades’ (see box below).

MarcAndreessen

In the time and space between this tweet and its panic stricken deletion by Andreessen, a veritable storm blew up. Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook founder, applied some balm to calm things down. He issued politically correct comments and laced up sugary references to Indian ‘history and culture’. The incident got swept under the car­­pet in an attention deficit world.

It does not stop at mere slips that emerge out of a façade of political correctness. There are outright apologists too. In his article, ‘Revisiting the British Raj’, in Swarajya Magazine, Jaitirth Rao states that Lord Curzon and Lord Irwin were more worthy than Baba Kharak Singh and Kasturba Gandhi. He goes on to paint Lord Curzon as the saviour of Historical Monuments of Bharat by enacting the Preservation of Ancient Monuments Act of 1904 which he says was instrumental in protecting ancient monuments of Bharat (this itself is scrutinized later). Elsewhere, Rao suggests that we should have a balanced  look at British Rule. To rub salt further, he adds that such a balance would indicate a maturity that is lacking now. He conveniently attributes this imbalance to the leftists who have been perhaps the mildest critics of colonial rule. This is a red herring too. What he really desires is that the current efforts to correct our history should be kind to the colonizers: his comments come at a time when the influence of Leftists is on the wane and an emerging narrative detailing the perspective of Bharat is being developed.

These comments and incidents deserve a closer scrutiny and perhaps a deeper understanding of the Colonial forces at play.

Firstly what these incidents reveal is a mindset prevailing amongst many policy decision makers in government, politicians, bureaucracy, international bodies, business, social bodies, think tanks that span a vast , visible and vocal section of society, but by no means is it universal. This mindset is an integral part of an ecosystem that rationalizes, legitimizes and strengthens colonialism in different flavours, shapes, sizes and creates new forms when old colonial games have played out their life.

The term Star-dot-Star Colonialism is used in this article to cover all forms of past, existing and yet to be manifested colonialism. The prefix Star-dot-Star (*.*), a term familiar to computer geeks, refers to all forms of colonialism including post-colonial institutions which are merely sophisticated ways to apply paint lipstick to a colonial pig that has proliferated everywhere.

Star-dot-Star colonialism is a Win-Lose paradigm where the underlying rules ultimately crystallize into a Heads-I-win-Tails-you-lose scenario for the colonized classes. There is no win-win in any form of Star-dot-Star colonialism even though all initiatives of Star-dot-Star Colonialism are packaged to appear so whenever they are released in new versions. The Colonizers have developed great expertise, institutions and elaborate methods to confuse the lay public and ultimately inflict great damage on their targets.

Consider four examples from a large number of documented articles, books and accounts of our forefathers a mere four to eight generations ago:

(a) The creation of the Forest Department in Colonial British India in 1864 was presented as an outstanding effort to save forests. In practice, it accelerated the depletion of forests with ‘lip service to principles of sustainable harvest’[1]. Adivasis and tribals were isolated from their sources of sustenance, timber exploited, species hunted and sacred groves withered. This form of colonialism marginalized adivasis and tribal communities in one stroke, affecting the livelihood of millions and dismantling a large knowledge base of sustainable forestry that had been in existence for thousands of years. There were a series of wars fought between the British colonizers and tribals from the Malpahariya conflicts right upto the struggles of Lakshman Naik in Orissa in 1942. Ironically, the displaced and dispossessed tribal victims of such policies who had been living in mutual interdependency with agricultural and urbanised societies of Bharat from time immemorial are now represented as victims of Hindu ‘oppression’ by a leftist academia while the colonizers are depicted as saviours who worked against Hindu ‘caste’ oppression![2] It is also rather strange that Dr. Ambedkar, the Architect of the Constitution, and a champion of the oppressed chose to keep such an oppressive Act essentially intact in the new Constitution. Thus the forest dwellers felt that no material change had occurred despite Independence.

GlobalEnvHistory
Source: The Globalization of Environmental Crisis –By Jan Oosthoek, Barry K. Gills pp 15. As taken from http://bit.ly/GllznOfEnvCrisesBook

b) A narrow, rigid Intellectual Property interpretation became the framework to ensure high profits in the Pharmaceutical Industry internationally. All other possible win-win forms are brow-beaten into submission and obscurity by the ferocity of opposition from ‘experts’ orchestrated for this very task. Bharat is an exception and a victim of this: it was ostracised and also a victim of active piracy of bio-resources and traditional knowledge. A Traditional Knowledge Digital Library “… expert group estimated that, annually, some 2,000 patents relating to Indian medicinal systems were being erroneously granted by patent offices around the world”[3]. The countries which champion rigid IP interpretations and have populations facing high medical costs, have well established barriers to pharmaceutical generics and a healthcare crisis.

Web link: http://bit.ly/WIPOArticleOnTKDL
Web link: http://bit.ly/WIPOArticleOnTKDL

(c) Climate related negotiations show that developed countries stall emission norms being applied to them and yet they label countries like Bharat as spoil sports despite Bharat contributing 3% to global greenhouse gases while having 16% of the world population[4] – in contrast to the US contributing 27% of global greenhouse gases with about 5% of the world population. The pattern of blaming the victims and allowing the real culprits to get away continues in all forms of Star-dot-Star colonialism.

Climate

(d) In his article referenced earlier, Jaitirth Rao mentions the Preservation of Ancient Monuments Act of 1904 sponsored by Lord Curzon. This merits a closer look. Contrary to what Rao points out, the Act was a blatant piece of legislation which put the onus of preservation on owners, ensured the Centre’s rights to acquire or even be ‘gifted’[5] Ancient Monuments or Assets and appropriate land and other areas by declaring properties as Ancient. The law had provisions that allow intervention like possession of assets on the basis of a mere apprehension. In recent times, Iraq was invaded and occupied on the apprehension that it ‘might be having’ weapons of mass destruction. Presumptive clauses such as this and how many properties could be defined as ‘Ownerless’ under Section 4[6] of this Act and  appropriated by the Centre gave sanction for abuse. Ironically and as a consequence, there are more manuscripts and antiques to be found in the British Museum than the Indian National Museum: and much of this was facilitated under this Act. This Act was instrumental in removing live sacred practices as was an integral part of ancient shrines from the physical monument. Thus the worship at the inner sanctum sanctorum at Shringeri or at Mahabalipuram was ceased as soon as these places were taken up by the Archaeological Society of India[6] set up for this purpose. The parallels of this with the fate of the forest dweller Adivasis affected by the establishment of the Forest Department mentioned earlier is striking.

In the same article, Jaitirth Rao credits the British for giving us a ‘united’ nation. It is comically ironical to discuss this today when UK is itself faced with Brexit challenges, demands for the breaking away of Wales, Scotland and a call for an independent City-Country of London. Either Rao’s gratefulness to the British is misplaced or we are indeed immature and unbalanced in stating that Sardar Patel stitched together a united Bharat by bringing 576 princely states to give us the map of Bharat as we know it now. Rao conveniently forgets to mention that British had actually given us on the 15th of August, 1947, a moth eaten political reality with amputated, bleeding limbs and a lopped off head –which was attached to Bharat and a part which is under illegal Pakistani colonial occupation. The myth being fashionably perpetuated about the British uniting Bharat must be examined with facts as the political map of the set-up pre-1947[7] and a current map[8] of Bharat shows:

BharatMap

Bharat is mature and balanced enough to keep relationships with other countries and civilizations cordial and mutually beneficial in the present despite the sordid past. But to do so, one does not have to airbrush the terrible, gut wrenching misdeeds of colonizers – just one example is pictured alongside[9] – and paint the occupation as if

British Colonialism
Bengal famine engineered by British; Picture source [9]

colonizers had come with oodles of goodies for the ‘barbaric’ masses. This is an error the colonizers and their enablers make – perhaps because they are yet to give up their colonial mindset or paradoxically, are neither balanced nor mature enough to see the brutal reality of what the common man was faced with during colonial rule. Worse, it makes the real victims appear to be terrible culprits and terrible culprits look like benign benefactors.

With so much distortion in the narratives, it is no surprise that the colonial mindset finds its way into many assumptions in plush corporate boardrooms – from strategy to product design to supply-chain management to human resource decisions. It oozes into investment decisions for private capital allocation. It flows into developmental policies in multilateral bodies. It shapes institutional programs. It warps perceptions and policies on Agriculture, Food, Water, Education, Urban Planning, Rural Development, Forestry and much more.

Fears, Uncertainties and Doubts (FUDs) are deliberately created to present challenges to ‘humanity’ by new versions of colonialism that create new win-lose scenarios. All current or emerging waves of colonialism appear as Saviours. Simultaneously, older hapless victims of earlier phases of Colonialism are faulted. Thus colonial historians depict Hindus as oppressors – a case of painting the real victims as the designated ‘villains’ in their narratives while British and other Colonizers are the agents of ‘progress’. This is why every school child today can effortlessly rattle off the ‘evils’ of Hinduism – Caste, Suttee, Dowry, Untouchability, Dalits, Adivasis and the ‘benefits’ of Colonialism – ‘unification’ of the country, English Language, ‘Education’, Railways, Technology, Science and ‘Institutions’. At the same time, they are hard pressed to remember anything positive about Hindus or Bharat’s living knowledge systems or their methods or the excesses and impact of Colonial policy on our people. It is this imbalance that Jaitirth Rao (and others – he shows up as an example in this case only) should spend his energies and intelligence around rather than the other way around – for that is the shocking reality elites in colonized countries have avoided.

In the next part, we shall examine the conditions that have made Star-dot-Star colonialism prevalent. We look at the key drivers that make normal human beings into becoming conditioned Pavlovian cogs in mechanisms organized  to inflict slavery and pseudo-slavery, destruction of family & social structures, and creating trade & financial regimes that help perpetuate this win-lose asymmetry.

End of Part 1

[1] Buchy, 1993 as quoted in The Globalization of Environmental Crisis –By Jan Oosthoek, Barry K. Gills pp 15.  Ref: http://bit.ly/GllznOfEnvCrisesBook.

[2] Many adivasi heroes like Birsa Munda, Kanhu Santhal, Tantya Bhil, Lakshman Naik, Ambul Reddi, Thalakkal Chandu are ignored in the official text books which hide the colonial wars against tribals. Also see: Tribal Contemporary Issues: Appraisal and Intervention – Ramaṇikā Guptā , p 14 (http://bit.ly/TrblCntpryIss-RGupta)

[3] Source: http://www.wipo.int/wipo_magazine/en/2011/03/article_0002.html ; India set up the Traditional Knowledge Digital Library (TKDL) in 2001 and since then it has recorded over 2 million traditional medicines to prevent their appropriation by modern day methods of asset appropriation.

[4]  See: http://time.com/4138055/india-paris-talks-climate-change/ for a view explaining India’s position.

[5] The act of getting things ‘gifted’ has been used in many cases of colonial appropriation. The most famous act of such coercive ‘gifting’ was the appropriation of the Kohinoor Diamond.

[6] A discussion mentioning the separation of the sacred from Sanskrit and the adoption of Temples by ASI that made worship impossible can be seen in this Youtube discussion featuring Rajeev Malhotra: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pAdrrmjDZm8

[7] Map source: http://www.worldstatesmen.org/India-princely-states.gif

[8] Map Source: http://www.mapsofworld.com/india/india-political-map.html

[9] Picture taken from http://worldobserveronline.com/2014/08/20/bengal-famine-british-engineered-worst-genocide-human-history-profit/

Note: There was a minor typo in the original article published on 5 July which has now been corrected. “It is oozes..” has been changed to “It oozes..”

“Terrorists killed her for being a Hindu,” says kin of Tarishi Jain, 19 year old Murdered in Dhaka Attack

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Tarishi Jain

Tarishi Jain was just 19, a young adult enrolled in an economics course with one of the top colleges in the world, and with everything to look forward to in life. Like most urban Hindus/Indics she was most likely brought up believing the Sanskrit maxim ‘sarv dharm sambhav‘ popularly mis-interpreted as ‘all religions are equal’.  Religion most likely played a peripheral role in her life. Tragically, this young girl’s life was brutally snuffed out sometime in the wee hours of Saturday by other young adults like her – well educated and hailing from privileged backgrounds, with one crucial difference – her murderers were fanatical followers of the religion they were born into, Islam.

As per this news report,

“Sometime before 6 am on Saturday when 19-year-old Tarishi Jain’s phone went dead, her father Sanjiv Jain, who had been waiting outside Gulshan Cafe through most of the night after he got to know that heavily armed terrorists had stormed the restaurant in upscale Dhaka and were butchering guests, got a call.

It was from his daughter, cowering inside a toilet with two of her friends, Faraaz Ayaz Hossain and Abinta Kabir, hiding from the rat-tat-tat of gunfire outside the washroom’s door. ” Terrorists have entered the restaurant,” she told her father, who was planning just a day earlier to bring his wife and two children to Firozabad in UP for a short holiday before Tarishi headed back to the US where she was an Economics undergraduate at the University of California. “I am very afraid and not sure whether I will be able to come out alive. They are killing everyone here.

It had been a long and harrowing night for Sanjiv as he gathered with dozens of anxious family and friends of those huddled in the cafe to know how the bloody strike on innocent and unarmed men and women would end. By the time the terrorists were neutralised, 20 people, mostly foreigners and among them Tarishi – the only Indian among the casualties – had died.

Tarishi was a recipient of an internship with a Bangladesh bank through the Institute for South Asia Studies at her university in California.”

Tarishi’s father runs a garment business in Bangladesh for the last 15-20 years. After graduating from the American school, Dhaka she had moved to the US for higher studies.

Tarishi was killed because she was a kafir (one who disbelieves, an infidel, non-Muslim) Quoting a rescued hostage, the Daily Star, a Bangladesh daily reported those who could recite a verse from the Quran were spared and the others were tortured before being killed. 

The earlier media report goes on to add –

“Her brother Sanchit, who has done his engineering from Canada, had landed in Delhi a day earlier so that the family of four, along with mother Tulika, could all head to Firozabad — where Sanjiv’s three brothers Rakesh, Rajiv and Ajit have a flourishing trade in glass — on Saturday. That family reunion was never to be. At the Jains’ Suhag Nagar home in Firozabad, there is both anger and deep grief. “We don’t want her to be cremated in the land where she was brutally murdered. Terrorists killed her for being a Hindu,” Sanjiv’s younger brother Rakesh Mohan Jain told TOI.”

The Softening of the Hindu mind

Over the last 100 years, Hindus, especially English educated ones, have gradually drifted away from their religio-cultural roots. They have started believing the secularist propaganda fed by the Nehruvian school that their religion is intrinsically backward, regressive and anti-modern. To make matters worse, Hindus have been led to believe that Abrahamic religions like Islam and Christianity (which are organized, well funded and aggressively proselytizing  global religions) are more egalitarian and accessible, and that being minorities in Bharat followers of these religions are always at risk of persecution by the orthodox Hindu majority.

Our media is at the forefront of this well-oiled propaganda machinery, and hence events like the murder of Mohammed Akhlak in Dadri are incessantly portrayed as brute Hindu majority attacking the defenceless innocent Muslim minority, disregarding the fact that Akhlak had stolen and killed a calf (an illegal act in UP, as in 24 out of 29 states of the Union of Bharat) which inflamed passions leading to his unfortunate lynching.

But Tarishi’s murder will get a fraction of the coverage that Akhlak did – in any case, reference to the fact that Tarishi was brutally hacked to death only because she was a Hindu and not a Muslim will be muted at best. Another fact that will be suppressed is that most of the terrorists involved in the Dhaka atrocity were well-educated Bangladeshi Muslims from well to-do families. And that most Muslims continue to deny that IS (Islamic State) derives its legitimacy from authentic Islamic sources.

In fact, taqiya (Islamic doctrine of deception) artists like Shahid Siddiqui continue to deflect attention from IS and blame the usual trinity of CIA, Mossad and RAW for defaming Muslims by ‘staging’ attacks like the recent Florida shooting.


Till the time a critical mass of Hindus acknowledge the harsh reality that they are completely misinformed and unaware of the danger posed by Abrahamic religions like Islam and Christianity (and their communist allies in Bharat), they will continue to bleed, both literally and figuratively. We cannot rely on educated & ‘moderate’ Muslims to introspect and reform their religion – we will have to play an equal part in the debate.

Tarishi Jain

Bangladesh Under Siege by Islamists

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Bangladesh Under Siege

Bangladesh is a nation which is over 90% Muslim, where Islam is recognized as the state religion, and Islamists dominate socio-political life to such an extent that Hindus have fallen from 22% of the total population in 1951 to less than 8% today. Yet Bangladesh is not ‘Islamic enough’ for outfits like Islamic State, Al Qaeda in the Indian Sub-continent, Jamaat-ul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB), Jamaat-e-Islami (JeI), and JeI’s electoral alliance partner Bangladesh Nationalist Party (also the nation’s chief Opposition party).

For the last few years, Bangladesh has been fighting a grim war with Islamists of various hues who are opposed to even the bare minimum rule of law which allows minorities like Hindus, Buddhists etc the freedom to practise their religion. And events over this weekend should leave no one in doubt that Bangladesh today is under siege by Islamists; it is a nation on the brink and the warning bells should be ringing loud and clear in Bharat and the rest of the world.

The Need to Promote Hindu Identity

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Emerging Hindu Voice Hindu Unity Hindu Counter-Hegemony Hindu Identity Kashmir Hindu Consolidation Hindu nations Deracination hindutva

If you do not value your own tradition, other people will not value it either, however important it may be. If you do not have any real conviction as to the relevance of your spiritual path for the entire world, no one else will either, even if the path that they follow is much more limited.

Hindu Dharma is the planet’s representative of Sanatana Dharma, the universal tradition of cosmic knowledge and Self-realization. It shows us how to discover the entire universe as a manifestation of our own deepest Self and consciousness. Such a profound view of life is almost unheard of in any other religion, science or philosophy.

Yet after many centuries of foreign rule and sustained forceful efforts to convert them, Hindus have lost much of the confidence and breadth of thought that goes along with Sanatana Dharma. They may appreciate their own particular guru, sect or sampradaya, but seldom recognize the common background tradition of Sanatana Dharma and its overall supreme value.

The Issue of Hindu Identity

As Hindu Dharma is formulated as a universal tradition, Hindus can be too quickly inclusive of other spiritual and religious formulations, even those trying to convert them. Hindus do not assert their identity; in fact, they are often apologetic about it. I have heard a number of Hindus state when asked about their religion, “I am a Hindu but I accept all the other religions also.” This is usually said, one should note, without such Hindus having actually studied other religions in any detail.

To preserve Sanatana Dharma for all humanity, a strong Hindu identity must prevail – first in Bharat and then globally – affording Hindus the confidence to learn about, practice and share their vast tradition. Unfortunately, Hindu identity is compromised in the world, even in Bharat. It has been making a revival in the recent decades of the Hindu movement, but still has far to go. Even today we find some who follow Hindu traditions like Yoga, Vedanta, Vaishnavism or Shaivism, stating that they are not Hindus.

Others claim that Hindu is just a geographical term. What do you tell Hindu children in the West – who certainly cannot be called Hindus in the geographical sense – when they are asked about their religion? If the term Hindu is not appropriate to use, what term is better? There is no other religious box they can mark that can substitute for it, when they are asked to fill out common information forms about their background. Western society recognizes their religion as Hindu and relates to it accordingly.

Having Hindu Dharma accepted as a religion in the West affords many benefits to Hindus, socially and politically, which cannot be underestimated, extending to marriage, institutions, education and other social and legal protections. Whatever qualifications one may have about the accuracy of the Hindu word, one must accept that it is how Sanatana Dharma is best represented in common discourse in the world today.

Hindu Dharma and Tolerance

Hindu Dharma is tolerant by nature of its universal teaching. Hindus do not become intolerant by saying that they are Hindus, but instead help make others aware of the vast scope and relevance of Hindu Dharma. To say “I am a Hindu”, is a way of breaking down religious barriers and taking humanity back to its common spiritual origins in the great seers and yogis of ancient times. Hindus should be proud of their identity and their preservation of Sanatana Dharma that other peoples and cultures have lost and replaced with more limited beliefs.

Unfortunately, Bharat’s leftist media intentionally gives the impression that even to call oneself Hindu is intolerant and communal, but to call yourself Christian or Islamic is progressive and tolerant. Yet the fact is that Hindus are still targeted for humiliation and conversion by those who follow exclusive and intolerant forms of Christianity and Islam – and this is occurring regularly throughout Bharat itself! It is not that Hindus have a comparable predatory agenda and funding to convert non-Hindus!

How do you tolerate someone, whose primary principle is that “we will not tolerate you.” How do you include someone in a universal vision of truth, who has a contrary exclusive view and considers that truth belongs to their prophet, book or deity alone and all others are either false or inferior?

Such convictions are not simply personal or intellectual but allied with global missionary movements and global jihad. Saudi Arabia funded Madrasas, which are now spread throughout Africa and Asia and are the main education centers globally for Islam, certainly do not teach an honoring of Hindu Dharma. Nor do the Catholic Church or Evangelical Christians respect Hindu Dharma and its extraordinary yogic and philosophical teachings.

Uniqueness of Hindu Dharma

Hindu Dharma cannot be simply equated with other religions  – particularly conversion and belief-oriented traditions – as simply one path among many, with all being part of one happy family of the world’s great religions. The goal of Hindu Dharma is God realization and Self-realization. This is not the goal of western religions, though there may be rare mystics among them who are oriented in this direction because it is the ultimate goal of all human life.

Hindu Dharma is inclusive of all sincere religious and spiritual practices. It can accept use of images or non-use of images, elaborate rituals or no rituals, devotional worship or a purely philosophical approach. Hindu Dharma is a spiritual art and science that seeks to preserve and make available to all sincere seekers all genuine approaches to the universal truth and happiness, which vary at an individual level according to spiritual growth and karma.

Indeed, there is probably a greater variety of spiritual and religious views within Hindu Dharma than in all other religions of the world combined. That is how Hindu Dharma reflects its origin in the idea of Sanatana Dharma – a universal and eternal path that is perpetually renewed. Sanatana Dharma cannot be sustained or preserved without a Hindu identity that honors it and remains rooted in its ancient origins. Its corpus of knowledge and wealth of history requires a tremendous effort to uphold in every generation.

Hindu Dharma’s profound teachings about the universal nature of consciousness will not reach the world unless Hindus are willing to make the effort to share and express them. Hindus should honor their identity in this universal Vedic tradition of spiritual knowledge, and promote it for the benefit of all humanity. Otherwise the loss will be irreparable for everyone and for many centuries to come.

“Swatantryaveer” Savarkar – Iconic Revolutionary’s Honor Restored at ‘Andaman’ By Modi Govt

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On May 28, 2016 when Bharat was celebrating another successful year of PM Modi’s ever progressive administration, a unique ceremony was unfolding hundreds of miles from its shores at ‘Central Cellular Jail’ of Port Blair in Andaman Islands.

Savarkar
Unveiling of Savarkar Jyot by Amit Shah, President of BJP and other dignitaries

On this day, in presence of Amit Shah, President of BJP and other dignitaries, the long awaited honor of one of Bharat’s greatest freedom fighters– Vinayak Damodar Savarkar, popularly known as Swatantryaveer Savarkar was once again being restored.

It was not only a tribute to his sacrifices for Bharat, but also, to his pioneering social efforts to build a nationalistic unified society. It was also the 133rd birth anniversary of this iconic revolutionary.

Savarkar
PM Modi paying his respect to Veer Savarkar

By rededicating ‘Veer Savarkar Jyot’ on this day, PM Modi was rewriting a dark hurtful episode that created a national fire-storm, a decade earlier. Then, the Congress Minister Mani Shankar Aiyar, as an appeasement to his leadership had misguidedly removed the Plaque dedicated to Savarkar from the ‘Memorial for Bharatiya Revolutionaries’ at the Cellular Jail and replaced it with the one for Mahatma Gandhi.

The fact of the matter is, though Mahatma Gandhi was an iconic freedom fighter, he was not a revolutionary (‘Krantikaari’) nor had he ever been into Andaman’s draconic ‘kala-paani’ Jail. With this event, PM Modi also fulfilled the promise he had made to the electorates.

Port Blair Airport of Andaman Islands was already named as ‘Veer Savarkar International Airport’ by former PM Vajpayee during his administration. It is worth assessing why Savarkar has a place of reverence in Bharat’s history.

In the galaxy of Bharatiya revolutionaries, the words ‘Swatantryaveer’ and ‘Savarkar’ are almost synonymous with each other. Born on May 28, 1883, he was so much consumed with passion to liberate Bharat from British rule that at the tender age of 8, he took the oath to liberate his country with all possible means and to fight for it till the end.

While studying Law (Barrister) in London on scholarship, he not only sowed the seeds of Independence-movement among the Bharatiya students studying there, but also created an international support forum for it.

It was there that he wrote his ground-breaking famous book “1857 – First War of Independence” on an epic historic chapter of collective bravery of Princely states of Bharat to overthrow the British Raj. Savarkar, with his painstaking research, showed to the world that this entire episode which the British had derided as nothing short of a ‘Sepoy Mutiny’, was in fact the most courageous effort of gallantry to liberate the country. At the time, this book had the distinction of being proscribed (banished) by two governments, even before it was published.

This fearless patriot shook the mighty British rule in Bharat so much so that he was sentenced to two life-terms of 25 years each on trumped-up charges for his relentless activities against the British-Raj. Savarkar’s dramatic daring escape to the shores of Marseilles, France from the porthole of the ship that was to carry him to Bharat for the trial is now a part of heroic folklore.

His subsequent arrest by the British on French soil became cause-célèbre in the International Court of Law at Hague setting the stage for the then French government to topple. At his trial, where he was denied all personal representation, Savarkar, on hearing his sentence courageously rebuked the Judge with, “what makes you think that you are going to last that long in my motherland”. That is exactly what happened. Savarkar went on to live in Free Bharat for years to come.

Madanlal Dhingra, Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose, Chandra Shekhar Azad, Shaheed Bhagat Singh and scores of others took counseling and inspiration from him during the Independence Struggle. He was the first political leader to demand absolute political independence for Bharat – not just independence – as the only goal for the country’s liberation.

Savarkar remains the only Bharatiya to forfeit his degree of ‘Barrister’ because of his refusal to take the pledge of allegiance to the British throne. He was not only a gifted writer, inspiring orator, outstanding poet-dramatist, but also a comprehensive social reformer. He created an active crusade against untouchability and religious demagoguery. As a brilliant visionary, Savarkar’s prophesies of the pre-independence period are now modern-day Bharat’s stark sociopolitical realities.

Savarkar was the ultimate prince among all revolutionaries and spent a decade in Anadaman’s Cellular Jail in the most inhuman conditions. In spite of that, the British could not break his morale or his will to fight the British Raj. Within the walls of the gigantic Cellular Jail, Savarkar continued his work of eradicating untouchability and illiteracy among the prisoners to unify them.

One must read his famous book, ‘My Life Sentence’ (“Mazi Janmthep”) to know what he endured and what he achieved even in this adversity. As Savarkar’s written words, including his poems were like live-wire to ignite fire of independence in the hearts of Bharatiyas, he was denied paper, pen-pencil in the Andaman prison. Savarkar triumphed over this inconvenience by writing his poems on the prison walls by thorns and making the prisoners memorize them whenever someone was to be released.

This is how his inspiring work was transported to the underground resistance in Bharat for nationwide circulation. In this captivity, his greatest creation – 10,000 stanzas ‘Kamala- Mahakavya’ – the lengthiest poem ever written in the world – was born.

For creating a mass movement for freedom struggle, Savarkar established “Hindu Mahasabha” which became one of the leading political forces at the time.

Savarkar’s intellectualism was based solely on Science and Technology, rather than on ritualistic religious notions. Needless to say, his views, at times, were contrarian to age-old Hindu dogmas. He initiated and propagated the concept of ‘Hindutva’ as the primary identity of ‘Bharatbhoomi’, giving rise to ‘Hindu Nationalism’. He defined it, fundamentally in terms of the nation’s consciousness, its cultural soul and eternal heritage – but not in religious terms.

He gave self-esteem, national identity, and unflinching courage to ‘Bharitiya nationalists’. Not many people know that Savarkar has been a political guiding light in the life of Hon. PM Modi all along, like many generations before him. Savarkar left this mortal world on February 26, 1966 by refusing to have any food in his last days, in the best traditions of yogic Hindu philosophy.

(Disclaimer: This article represents the opinions of the Author, and the Author is responsible for ensuring the factual veracity of the content. HinduPost is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, suitability, or validity of any information, contained herein.)

My Yajna and Indology

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My Yajna and Indology Kumbh Mela Harvard धर्मान्तरण प्राचीन पुरातात्विक NGO Racket गुरुओं जाति-व्यवस्था asymmetric dialog Bharatiya Exceptionalism

I will start with a powerful analogy. Imagine, hypothetically, that the streets in your neighbourhood are very dirty. This is because garbage was being dumped by people who did not live in your neighbourhood, but were in cahoots with some neighbours of yours. You appealed to these outsiders to stop, but they kept on dumping the filth. Also, the authorities in charge of cleaning your streets were not being responsible. Garbage piled up and the resulting problems were so serious that you decided to get personally involved. You started out by wanting to work with anyone appearing to be concerned, even funding their projects. However, they took your money but did nothing.

You became so disgusted that you quit your thriving business and profession when you were at your peak, in order to devote your full-time efforts and financial resources to address this problem. You put your personal savings into an NGO which you set up for this cause.

My Yajna and Indology

Imagine further, that you encouraged the local authorities to stop the outsiders from dumping garbage. But they did nothing.

You tried to involve various other neighbourhood organizations that ought to be concerned – such as political and civic groups, temples, and so forth. After all, don’t they all like to claim how they were helping society, and always loudly seek credit? Unfortunately, however, all such groups either ignored the problems or gave you some lofty advice like: ‘our neighbourhood is strong and can handle this garbage’; or ‘this problem has always existed’; or ‘it is not your job to worry about this’; etc. There were also many who encouraged you privately and thanked you profusely, but in concrete terms they did nothing of consequence.

So finally, you decided to start cleaning the streets by yourself. You see it as a yajna to fulfil your sva-dharma or personal duty. The term ‘yajna’ as used here means an effort for a higher purpose with nothing desired in return for the effort. It is service done with the best of intentions. The results do not determine its success because the results are left to the divine; what matters is how much tapasya you put into the yajna.

Many of the outsiders, seeing you are alone, started mocking you. They branded you with names and said you are not ‘qualified’ or ‘authorized’ to do this work. They did not recognize your sincerity or acknowledge your right to keep your neighbourhood clean. They complained that you are not a member of their powerful labour union with members all over the world. But you refused to stop. So they started accusing you of overstepping your boundaries, making the absurd allegation that you are trespassing on their turf. But you are not intimidated by their aggressiveness and have still refused to quit.

Gradually, many other individuals from the public have started joining your activities and a ‘home team’ is being born. Now there is a groundswell of public opinion in your favour. People have become loud and clear in making demands. Common citizens are expressing the right to get involved and expose the system. It has become clear that some outsiders are aligned with a few corrupt neighbours, and are engaged in underhand activities. It is time to overhaul such a system.

This public support of course has made you even more unpopular amongst the powerful individuals you have exposed, and they are trying to bring you down under one pretext or another. Some corrupt media people have also become co-opted to defame you.

                                                                                             ****
Dear reader, I want you to know that the above scenario very closely parallels my 20+ years of experience in intervening in the field of Indology (the study of Bharatiya civilization). The garbage being dumped is the nonsensical material that distorts Bharatiya sanskriti (our civilization). The neighbourhood in my case is our shared mental space of ideas.

I, too, started out with many years of close engagement with some of the most elite academic centers of Indology. Eventually, I understood that many of those scholars have not only failed to remedy the problems within their field, in fact they have added further pollution in the intellectual space.

I was inspired by my guru to see this work as my sva-dharma. I transformed my life into a yajna to raise public consciousness to the best of my abilities, by actively writing within the limits of my mental, physical and material resources. This is called giving one’s ‘tana, mana, dhana’ (body, mind, material resources) as a yajna to achieve a higher purpose.

I have earlier written that I first went through a 10+ year phase of giving away a substantial part of my life-savings in order to try and win over the Indology establishment. I am reminded of Gandhi’s struggles: first he tried to work within the framework of the British Empire to negotiate a fair deal for Bharatiyas under foreign rule. Eventually, he started his ‘Quit India Movement’ when he understood that Bharatiyas must attain swaraj or self-rule and not expect justice under a system run by the colonizers.

Gandhi’s Swadeshi movement intended to help Bharatiyas regain dignity, self-sufficiency and freedom. Here I present to you another analogy. Gandhi recognized that Bharat had abundant raw cotton and a flourishing cotton weaving industry (thanks to the richness of our sanskriti, civilization). The British had begun to suggest that Bharatiya cloth was not of good quality and in order to kill Bharat’s cotton industry, they began sending the raw cotton to England to manufacture textiles which they then brought back to sell at exorbitant prices in Bharat. The garments made in England and sold in Bharat were in the Western style and not Bharatiya style. This fit the strategy to convey that Bharatiya dress, culture and language were inferior and even oppressive, and therefore should be rejected. Gandhi decided to organize the mass burning of these Western imported clothes and began a popular movement to spin khadi (Bharatiya made) cloth and garments in Bharat. In the case of my yajna, the message is that Hindus need to regain pride in our sanskriti and become the producers of knowledge rather than consumers of imported knowledge about us. Stop believing those who say that our own scholarship in Indology is inferior to Western Indology.

I have also studied the way American blacks won their swaraj. When the American Civil War was won and slavery ended, at first the blacks let the whites lead the efforts to bring racial integration. There was a period in American history called the Reconstruction Era during which it appeared that blacks were making sustainable headway. There was even a black senator, and many blacks got good jobs. Many opportunistic whites, for whom the term ‘carpetbaggers’ was coined, went to black towns as missionaries, teachers, social workers, etc. claiming to help them. But they were manipulators who wanted to keep control of the mechanisms of power, while letting backs believe they were being helped.

Blacks learned the hard way that they should not have outsourced this leadership to whites. When there was an economic downturn, new groups like the Ku Klux Klan emerged to push the blacks down. There were widespread white movements claiming that blacks had to be ‘put in their place’. It was one thing to free them from slavery, they said, but that did not mean they had become truly equal. This is the era when Jim Crow Laws were officially enacted to keep blacks under the glass ceiling.

Finally, over a period of several decades, the blacks developed their own leadership, and no longer depended on whites to lead them. This is what led to Martin Luther King Jr’s emergence. His Civil Rights Movement brought blacks into their own political power without having to compromise their distinct identity. There are important lessons here.

My ‘Indology Swaraj Movement’ started in a fashion similar to Gandhi’s movement. Gandhi did not want the British individuals to leave Bharat; they were welcome to stay. But the colonial system of governance would have to leave, and the principles and framework of dharma put in its place. The British ways had to be thrown out and replaced by Bharatiya traditions. Everyone would be welcome to participate in the new system, he said.

In a similar fashion, my swaraj movement is not meant to throw Westerners out of Indology. Rather, I want to adopt Bharatiya frameworks and let Bharatiyas and Westerners who respect sanskriti to participate in correcting the mis-information that is being developed. The African-American movement teaches us that we better have our own leaders, and all well-intended Westerners are welcome to work in such a system. So it is about having our own adhikara (authority) over who, what and how we study our culture. We do not need to apologize to Western Indologists for Bharatiya approaches being different. We offer them mutual respect; and this ‘mutual’ clause is critical.

Just as you, the reader, may or may not be the best street cleaner (in the above analogy), I may or may not be the best Indology scholar. But just as your yajna compels you to help keep the streets clean, mine compels me to do my best in developing and spreading our own discourse about our civilization.

Just as you did not evaluate your progress based on whether your activities complied with the norms of the official street cleaners, so also I evaluate myself only by the quality and quantity of public awareness I am creating. My scholarship is not meant to convince Western Indologists. Rather, my purpose is to wake up our people who are ignorant or apathetic. Gandhi’s famous ‘Hind Swaraj’ book was not any kind of academic, ‘peer-reviewed scholarship’, but his way to inform his own people on complex issues in a very simple, reader-friendly manner. I write my books with the same intention.

As in the case of Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr., when the authorities I oppose think they are winning by beating me up, actually the reverse is happening: my support base grows and many who were sitting on the fence begin to understand the injustice. I have received thousands of emails telling me how the persistent attacks on me have convinced them of the civilizational ‘kurukshetra’ (battlefield) I have been engaged in. I am personally paying the price; but I decided to sign up for this yajna as my life’s calling. I have always been inspired by the Chinese student in Tiananmen Square who stood alone in 1989 in front of the long line of Chinese tanks. Nobody knows what happened to him, but he started a youth revolution.

In US politics, the public often supports someone who can say, ‘I am not a career politician mixed up in Washington, but an outsider to the political establishment.’ Similarly, I can say: I am not a career academician mixed up in a corrupt Ivy League liberal arts system, but an outsider to that establishment.

Given my goals, it is vital to be non-ignorable. I know that this subversive strategy brings attacks against me. An intellectual kshatriya (warrior) must face attacks to do his job. Being provocative, controversial and confrontational have been the hallmarks of those who brought much needed changes. We can cite numerous examples.

This need for audacity and personal risk-taking is why I decided long ago not to focus on institution building, because that requires a certain amount of conformity and compromises. I did my institution building in business, but did not enjoy that even though I made lots of money. I would rather be the chief scientist (building provocative ideas) than the chief executive (building institutions).

I came to the USA with a meagre $50 back in 1971. My simple parents are from the economic middle-class, with high education, and even higher dharmic ideals. I achieved more professional success than I had dreamed of and made more money than I wanted, needed or felt that I deserved. So I have spent the second half of my adult life giving my resources back to society as my personal yajna. This type of yajna that fills one’s entire life for so many years, or at least the dominant portion of one’s life, is not easily understood by many people.

I wish to set the record straight on what my yajna is, and what it is not. First, let me state what is outside the scope of my yajna:

  I am not trying to solve all problems – like cleaning all the streets better than formal institutions ought to be able to do. I am setting in motion a movement that will, with the help of numerous others, lead to that kind of public institution one day.
–  I am not building any institution. I want others to build institutions. I am happy to provide paradigm-changing ideas and guidance.
  I do not see myself as ever being a big shot in some formal capacity leading any large group. My work demands greater adhyatmik (inner) efforts as I explain below.

Following are the main things that are central to my yajna:

  Primarily I am performing the yajna as I promised after some profound experiences transformed my life.
– This yajna is mostly at the adhyatmik level. Only after many years of practice did my guru allow me to start external activities. Our tradition calls for inner transformation first, which is different from the path being followed by Western Indologists.
 The primary readership for all my writings is me. I learn by the process of inner meditation and outer investigation, and by writing and rewriting. My research methodology combines three modes: inspiration from meditation, reading others’ works, and public encounters as a laboratory to get feedback and test new ideas. As long as this work helps my evolution, I am being successful. I have about 20 more books in the pipeline in various stages of development, each very different than the rest, and each a major yajna.
   The yajnas in Indology are only one small part of my overall yajna which encompasses many dimensions of life. The Indology facet just happens to be the way most people know of me, but it is not the most important one.
–   In my overall life yajna, the inner and outer are integrated, and the former must serve as the foundation for the latter.

Those who share similar ideals and wish to pursue a similar sva-dharma can join my efforts and make this a collective yajna. It is important to be clear that you would not be doing me any favour. You would be pursuing your sva-dharma aligned with my sva-dharma, and therefore we would be fellow-travellers on the same path. This is my vision of collective yajna in de-polluting the field of Indology.

Disclaimer

This article originally appeared on the site www.speakingtree.in We are grateful to the author, Shri Rajiv Malhotra, for granting permission to reproduce it on HinduPost.

Rajiv Malhotra can be contacted at:
Facebook: RajivMalhotra.Official
Webwww.RajivMalhotra.com
Twitter: @RajivMessage

 

(This article represents the opinions of the Author, and the Author is responsible for ensuring the factual veracity of the content. HinduPost will not be responsible for the accuracy, completeness, suitability, or validity of any information, contained herein.)

Hindu LKG Student Expelled from Christian School for Having a Shikha

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In an act of extreme intolerance, a Christian school in Bengaluru expelled a 3 year old LKG student just because the child had a shikha (long tuft or lock of hair on the top or back of the head) as part of his family’s Hindu religious traditions. The principal of the school, Paul D’Souza, dismissed the pleas of the boy’s father, and justified the expulsion saying that the school rules did not allow such ‘superstitious practices’.

Hindu student expelled
St. Vincent Pallotti School, Baabusaab Palya (Bengaluru) Source

The case is from St. Vincent Pallotti School, Baabusaab Palya (Bengaluru), where Vishnu BM a student of LKG was expelled on June 6. His father, Manjunath BC was called to school by the Principal Fr. Paul D’Souza  and was told that boys were not allowed to have a ‘ponytail’ in the school and his hair needs to be cut if he wants to continue studying in the school.

Manjunath’s family offers the shikha of male children to their family deity Malleshwara at a temple in Bagepalli in Chikballapur. When Manjunath tried to explain the religious significance of his son’s ponytail, as it is a family custom for them to not cut the shikha till the boy reaches the age of five after which the lock of hair is offered to their family deity, the Principal refused to understand and told the father not to hold such ‘superstitious beliefs’.

“I requested the principal to allow us to keep it, but he was adamant. He said he would not allow Vishnu or us, his parents, to enter the school premises,” said Manjunath. “He returned the fees of Rs 43,000 and sent us out of the school. I fell at the principal’s feet, pleading with him to let my son continue, but he refused,” said Manjunath.

Since June 7, Manjunath has gone to more than a dozen schools in the city , but hasn’t been able to get a seat as admissions are closed. Manjunath pointed out, “We will have to wait for another year to admit our son in LKG in some other school.”

When Fr. Paul D’Souza was asked about this incident, he said, “I told him not to hold such superstitious beliefs. Following such practices is against our school rules, we can’t have different rules for different children.”

Christian Exclusivism and Intolerance towards Hindu Dharma

Calling Hindu Dharma and its socio-religious customs as “superstition” is a an old tactic used by Christians, especially the missionaries and priestly class which runs most convents/Christian schools in Bharat. Can Principal Paul D’Souza explain why keeping a shikha is superstition, but central tenets of the Christian faith are not? Below is a sample of some of these core Christian beliefs which can easily be called superstitions as per D’Souza’s standards –

  • A dead Jesus got resurrected
  • Wine is turned into the ‘blood of God/Jesus’ – and Christians think they are drinking the blood of Jesus/God during Church service!
  • Pouring water over your head in Baptism removes ‘original sin’
  • That Jesus had to incarnate to save mankind because Adam and Eve ate an apple (because a snake, without a human voice-box, convinced Eve to do so) and cursed humanity to hell.
  • Even if you are like Hitler and manage to say you are very sorry for your sins before you die, you will go to heaven!
  • ‘Idol worshippers’ like Hindus will go to hell for eternity- trillion, trillions of years in tortuous hellfire – irrespective of any good deeds they did.
  • ‘God’ created the heaven and the earth in six days, starting with darkness and light on the first day, and ending with the creation of mankind on the sixth day. God then rests on, blesses and sanctifies the seventh day. And all this ‘creation’ work of the Earth and the entire Universe was done around 10,000 years ago (there is even a ‘Insititue for Creation Research’ established in US by fundamentalist Christians!)

Christians see Hindu Dharma as a religion based on myths and superstitions; in one of our previous articles you can see how Christian parents in US found “Yoga incompatible with Christian spirituality”. Yoga, which is a Hindu practice that has spread across the world promoting good health and peace of mind, was found unacceptable by these American parents just because of the gesture of ‘Namaste’.

Christian missionary schools in Bharat have a long history of persecuting Hindu students for showing even the slightest attachment to their socio-religious practices. This blog captures the harsh reality of the regular injustices faced by Hindu students – from being made to stand in the sun and forced to rub mehandi from their hands, to being fined for lighting diyas during Diwali. One can imagine the inferiority complex ingrained in these young minds due to such denigration of their beliefs.

Administrative Apathy Towards the Hindu parents

The State Government education authorities which clamp down heavily on Hindu run schools for any alleged violation of the draconian  RTE are mute over this flagrant human rights violation of a Hindu child and his family.

“We will check and the department will decide on the course of action in a couple of days. We are waiting for a complaint from the parents,” was the standard bureaucratese offered by K Anand, primary education director, department of public instruction.

Apathy of Hindu Society towards such Persecution

But in the end the buck stops with Hindus themselves. Unless we learn how to stand up and oppose the discrimination and persecution we face at the hands of Abrahamists (Christian and Islamic fundamentalists), communists and garden-variety secularists, such incidents will not end.  Lets assume the student who was expelled was a young Sikh boy wearing a patka/turban or a Muslim girl wearing a hijab? Would it be just the concerned parents taking up cudgels or the entire community would have stepped forward?

The answer is not comforting, but we must face up to the hard reality that Hindus lack the consciousness to see the larger design against them, their traditions, and their civilizational way of life. Bharat is a Hindu majority nation only in numbers; our core institutions like media, executive, judiciary are either apathetic to Hindu sensitivities or actively opposed to them. This battle has to be fought by ordinary Hindus. Of course, acts like RTE which openly discriminate against Hindu run schools and incentivize admissions to Christian schools also have to be fought tooth and nail.

It’s a shame that little Vishnu has suffered a loss of one whole academic year, due to this unjust expulsion. It is time that Hindu parents woke up to this reality and start questioning the wisdom of sending their wards to Christian schools where the children might end up getting psychologically scarred for life.

Hindu Reporter in Pakistan Forced to Drink from Separate Glass in Office

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Hindu Reporter

Stories of discrimination and ill-treatment against Hindus in Pakistan are not new and another such case has come to light where a Hindu reporter in Pakistan was asked to drink water from a separate glass after his Muslim colleagues found out his religion.

The irony is that such incidents are happening even in the Muslim holy month of of Ramzan, which is supposed to be a time for piety, fasting and remembering the Almighty. Incidentally, another such incident of extreme intolerance took place in Pakistan a few days back where an old Hindu man was assaulted by a Pakistani cop for eating in public just before the Iftar evening meal.

As per Pakistani newspaper The Express Tribune, Sahib Khan Oad a senior reporter with the Government news agency Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) has been barred from drinking water in the same glass and sharing utensils with other Muslim staff.

Oad hails from Dadu district in Sindh province and has completed his Masters from Quaid-e-Azam University Islamabad. He is now pursuing MPhil in mass communication from Sindh University. He was initially appointed as a reporter in APP Islamabad and was transferred to Hyderabad and then Karachi in April this year.

He explained, “Actually my name contains the word ‘Khan’ so everyone in the office initially thought I was Muslim.” The discriminatory attitude started soon after his younger son, Raj Kumar, visited his office and everyone found out that he was Hindu. “The bureau chief asked me to separate my drinking water glass in the office because some colleagues had reservations.”

Since Ramazan started, Oad’s work environment worsened. He is not allowed to sit at the same dining table at the time of Iftar and senior colleagues have suggested he bring his own plates and glasses if he wants to eat in the office. “I have now bought a separate glass and plate for the office,” he said.

Pakistan Institute of Labour Education and Research (Piler), an organisation that works for labour rights, has written a letter to federal information minister Pervaiz Rashid against the discriminatory attitude. “We are really shocked to know that a bureau chief of a government news agency  has pressurised a reporter to drink in a separate glass because he is Hindu,” wrote Piler executive director Karmat Ali.

Such incidents show the disparaging outlook of Muslim masses towards Hindus in Pakistan in general. It also breaks the myth that there is no untouchability in Islam and that it promotes universal brotherhood between humans.