Facing IS, last embattled Sikhs, Hindus leave Afghanistan
Afghanistan’s
dwindling community of Sikhs and Hindus is shrinking to its lowest levels. With
growing threats from the local Islamic State affiliate, many are choosing to
leave the country of their birth to escape the insecurity and a once-thriving
community of as many as 250,000 members now counts fewer than 700.
The
community’s numbers have been declining for years because of deep-rooted
discrimination in the majority Muslim country. But, without what they say is
adequate protection from the government, the attacks by the Islamic State group
may complete the exodus.
“We are no
longer able to stay here,” said a member of the tiny community, who asked to be
identified only by his last name, Hamdard, out of fear he may be targeted for
speaking out. Hamdard said seven relatives of his, including his sister,
nephews, and son-in-law were killed by Islamic State gunmen in an attack on the
community’s temple in March, which killed 25 Sikhs.
Hamdard
said that fleeing his homeland is as difficult as leaving a mother behind.
Still, he joined a group of Sikhs and Hindus who left Afghanistan last month
for India, from where they will eventually move on to a third country.
Although
Sikhism and Hinduism are two distinct religions with their own holy books and
temples, in Afghanistan the communities are interwoven, having been driven into
a kinship by their tiny size, and they both gather under one roof or a single
temple to worship, each following their own faith.
The
community has suffered widespread discrimination in the conservative Muslim
country, with each government “threatening us their own way,” said Hamdard,
whose home was seized by warlords after the U.S. invasion in 2001, forcing him
to live in one of two Sikh temples in the Afghan capital of Kabul.
Under
Taliban rule in the late 1990s, Sikhs and Hindus were asked to identify
themselves by wearing yellow armbands, but after a global outcry, the rule was
not enforced. Also driving the exodus is the inability to reclaim Sikh homes,
businesses and houses of worship that were illegally seized years ago.
Hindu
temples in Kabul’s old city were destroyed during brutal fighting between rival
warlords from 1992-96. The fighting drove out scores of Hindu and Sikh Afghans.
Aside from
the March attack by IS gunmen, a 2018 Islamic State suicide attack in the city
of Jalalabad killed 19 people, most of them Sikhs, including a longtime leader
who had nominated himself for the Afghan parliament.
“Suffering big fatalities for a small
community is not tolerable,” said Charan Singh Khalsa, a leader of the Sikh
community living abroad, who declined to say where he was living out of fear
for his safety. He left Afghanistan after his brother was kidnapped and killed
in an attack by gunmen in Kabul two years ago. He said the last three years
have been the worst period for all Afghans, but especially so for Sikhs and
Hindus.
Community
leaders have slammed recent governments for failing to step up security in the
face of the IS threat.
Afghanistan’s
government in 2010 decided to dedicate a chair in the national assembly to
religious minorities, and there have since been two Sikh representatives.
But Khalsa
called these posts “symbolic”. He criticized the government for taking too long
to grant political representation powers to the community and for failing to
“provide security to our places of worship.”
A senior
Sikh community leader told The Associated Press that the group is in
negotiations with the government over its security needs and the repairing of
the temple after it was destroyed in March’s attack. The community leader spoke
on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the
negotiations with the media.
At a press
conference last month, President Ashraf Ghani’s spokesman, Sediq Sediqqi, said
that members of the Afghan Sikh and Hindu community will return once peace is
restored. The president’s office did not respond to a request for comment from
the AP, but other Afghan officials have pledged to assist the community.
“We will
use all our facilities to provide security to the people,” Interior Ministry
spokesman Tariq Arian said, without elaborating. “We are committed and
responsible for their (Sikhs and Hindus) mental and personal security.”
It is not
clear what kind of security measures are being discussed, nor when they might
be seen on the ground.
Until
then, the community’s flight is accelerating, with large numbers of Sikhs and
Hindus continuing a recent trend of seeking asylum in India, which has a Hindu
majority and a large Sikh population.
In August,
a group of 176 Afghan Sikhs and Hindus went to India on special visas. They
were the second batch since March, with the first 11 members arriving in India
in July.
Khalsa
said that a group of Afghan Sikhs and Hindus in Canada and European countries
has volunteered to sponsor the exodus of those remaining in Kabul who cannot
afford air tickets and temporary accommodation in a transit country.
Several
Canadian legislators have asked the country’s immigration ministry for a
special program for Afghan Sikh and Hindu refugees, requesting that they be
brought to safety in Canada amid the increasing security threat.
For Afghan
Sikhs, the thought of being uprooted is painful, despite the circumstances.
“It’s hard
to leave our birthplace but we have no other option,” said Hamdard.
“Afghanistan does not want us anymore.”



