Anti-minority sentiments rising in India
Violence is spreading across India by extremist Hindu groups.
This violence is opening the door
for a rise in sectarian attacks in various Indian states.
Extremist groups were able to clamp
down on religious minorities, impose an extremist cultural pattern on them, and
ignore the cultural specificities of different groups in a country known for
its multiculturalism.
Suspending prayers
Extremist Hindu groups have
continued to organize protests in conjunction with every Friday prayer for
several months now.
These protests aim at disrupting
prayers in public places in the Indian capital, New Delhi.
The same groups noisily demand a
halt to prayers in empty plots of land, car parks and courtyards outside factories
and markets.
Muslims have to perform their
prayers in the open because of the lack of mosques in most Indian states.
Extremist Hindu groups chant slogans
and park their vehicles in the streets to prevent Muslims from entering the
places designated for prayers.
They harass Muslim worshippers and demonize
them by describing them as 'Pakistani', in reference to a country that has been
an archrival of India for many years now.
The Sikh minority tried to open
their places of worship for Muslims to pray in them.
However, they had to back down after
angry Hindus protested against them.
Hindu groups have often been
implicated in the brutal killing of members of the Muslim minority after
accusing them of slaughtering cows. Soon, however, it becomes clear that this
was not the case.
These groups are spread in the
states ruled by the extremist Bharatiya Janata
Party, where 20 extremist Hindu formations, most likely consisting of
unemployed youths, allied themselves with the Sanyukt Hindu Sangarsh Samiti
which is known for its extremism against religious minorities.
Meanwhile, The New York Times
published a report recently about Indian authorities responding to extremist
Hindu pressure.
The authorities, according to the
newspaper, launched campaigns in the western part of the country against egg-selling
carts in implementation of the extremist religious edicts of some of those
groups.
It cited an example that occurred in
the city of Ahmedabad, in which municipal workers chased carts in a crowded
neighborhood of the city and seized their gadgets, while the vendors ran or
watched their things being confiscated helplessly.
These hard-line groups are
constantly raising their demands against the minorities.