[Most recently, the death of a
50-year-old farmer by a group of about 200 people over rumors that he was eating beef
has brought policies under Modi's India into the spotlight again.]
Protesters from the student wing of a Hindu nationalist group stage a rally. (AP) |
Most recently, the death of a
50-year-old farmer by a group of about 200 people over rumors that he was eating beef
has brought policies under Modi's India into the spotlight again.
Some of the recent flash
points:
The beef ban in Maharashtra and the mob lynching of a
Muslim man over meat
The death of Mohammad Akhlaq,
the Muslim man murdered for allegedly eating beef, has sparked fierce debate in
India . To many Hindus, cows are
sacred and eating beef is taboo, but the fervor over eating beef has never been
so volatile in secular India . Writer
Shekhar Gupta called the killing “a chilling turning point in
our politics" and a rise in "Hindu supremacist mob mentality"
that Modi's party "won't unequivocally condemn or disown.”
Months before the infamous
mob killing, the BJP government in the western state of Maharashtra banned the sale of beef because the cow is worshipped as a
holy animal by many Hindus. Muslims dominate the meat industry in many parts of
the country. “This is a political decision,” said Mohammed Aqil Qureshi, president of
the Buffalo Traders Welfare Association in New Delhi . “They want to gratify the
Hindus and harass the Muslims.” There have been calls for a national beef ban as well.
In July, India hanged Yakub Memon, a Muslim
accountant convicted of helping plan bombings in 1993 in
Mumbai that killed 257 people. Manycritics,
including the Muslim lawmaker Asaduddin Owaisi, opposed the execution saying
that there were other non-Muslim convicts waiting in the death row that were
given clemency. More than 15,000 Muslims joined Memon’s funeral procession in Mumbai.
A call to increase birth rates to 'protect Hindu religion'
Sakshi Maharaj, a lawmaker from
the ruling Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), said that Hindu
women must have at least four children each to keep up with the
growth in the population of Muslims in India . "The concept of four
wives and 40 children will not work in India and the time has come
when a Hindu woman must produce at least four children in order to protect
Hindu religion," Maharaj said. Muslim account for about 14 percent of India 's more than 1.2 billion
people.
The drive to convert Muslims, Christians to Hinduism
The Vishwa Hindu Parishad (or
the World Hindu Council, which is associated Modi’s party) launched a program
called “Gharwapsi” (or Homecoming) to urge India’s Muslims and Christians to
convert to Hinduism, which they said was the religion of their ancestors. The
controversial debate began in December 2014 when more than 50
impoverished Muslim families in a slum in the northern city of Agra attended a simple ceremony at
which they were asked by a Hindu priest to chant and throw offerings
into the holy fire in front of some Hindu idols.
Celebrating Godse, the man who killed Mahatma Gandhi
In December 2014, Maharaj again
fueled anger when he called the assassin of India ’s revered freedom leader
Mahatma Gandhi a “patriot.”
Gandhi was killed by Nathuram Godse, a firebrand Hindu activist who accused
Gandhi of being very tolerant of Muslims and of “appeasing” them. Godse is
widely known for his extreme anti-Muslim views. Maharaj later retracted
the statement.
Declaring a Hindu national scripture
At an event in New Delhi last year, Foreign Minister
Sushma Swaraj said the Hindu scripture Bhagwad Gita must be declared a “national
scripture.” Another BJP politician, Manohar Lal Khattar, the chief minister of
the northern Haryana state said Bhagwad Gita is considered more important than India ’s secular Constitution.
Love jihad
Members of the World Hindu
Council launched a campaign last year urging Hindu families to be on guard
against what they called “love jihad”
– romantic relationships between young Hindus and Muslims. They accused Muslim
men of coercing Hindu women into love in order to convert them to Islam.
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