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Hinduism in Bangladesh

Hinduism is the second largest religious affiliation in People's Republic of Bangladesh, as according to the 2022 Census of Bangladesh, approximately 13.1 million people responded that they were Hindus, constituting 7.95% out of the total population of 165.15 million people.[4][5] In terms of population, Bangladesh is the third-largest Hindu populated country of the world, just after the neighboring republics of India and Nepal in the subcontinent. Hinduism is the second-largest religion in 61 out of 64 districts of Bangladesh, but there is no Hindu majority district in Bangladesh.

Bangladeshi Hindus
baṅladeśi hindura
বাংলাদেশী হিন্দুরা
Dhakeshwari National Temple, one of the important Hindu temples.
Total population
13,130,109 (2022 Census)
(7.95% of the country's population) [1]
Regions with significant populations
All over Bangladesh, predominantly in Sylhet Division, Chittagong Division and Khulna Division
Sylhet Division1,581,820 (13.5%)
Khulna Division2,419,010 (11.52%)
Rangpur Division1,874,904 (12.98%)
Chittagong Division3,072,733 (16.65%)
Dhaka Division2,721,416 (4.97%)
Rajshahi Division1,081,584 (5.85%)
Religions
Hinduism (majority)[2]
Tribal religions identified as Hindus (minority)[3]
Languages
Sanskrit (Sacred)
Bangla and other tribal languages

The Government of Bangladesh proclaimed that it is dedicated to ensuring the safety and security of the Hindu minority community, after attacks on Hindu temples during religious pujas, Hindu communities, temples, mandirs, and pandals in recent years.[6][7][8][9]

Culture edit

In nature, Bangladeshi Hinduism closely resembles the forms and customs of Hinduism practiced in the neighboring Indian state of West Bengal, with which Bangladesh (at one time known as East Bengal) was united until the partition of India in 1947.[10] The vast majority of Hindus in Bangladesh are Bengali Hindus.[11]

Goddess (Devi) – usually venerated as Durga or Kali – is widely revered, often alongside her consort Shiva.[12] The worship of Shiva has generally found adherents among the higher castes in Bangladesh.[13][14] Worship of Vishnu (typically in the form of his Avatars or incarnation Rama or Krishna[citation needed]) more explicitly cuts across caste lines by teaching the fundamental oneness of humankind in spirit.[14] Vishnu worship in Bengal expresses the union of the male and female principles in a tradition of love and devotion.[15][14] This form of Hindu belief and the Sufi tradition of Islam have influenced and interacted with each other in Bengal.[14] Both were popular mystical movements emphasizing the personal relationship of religious leaders and disciples instead of the dry stereotypes of the Brahmins or the Ulama.[14][16] As in Bengali Hindu practice, worship of Vishnu frequently occurs in a small devotional society (shomaj).[14] Both use the language of earthly love to express communion with the divine.[14][17] In both traditions, the Bengali language is the vehicle of a large corpus of mystical literature of great beauty and emotional impact.[14]

In Bangladeshi Hinduism ritual bathing, vows, and pilgrimages to sacred rivers, mountains, and shrines are common practices.[14] An ordinary Hindu will worship at the shrines of Muslim pirs, without being concerned with the religion to which that place is supposed to be affiliated.[14][18] Hindus revere many holy men and ascetics conspicuous for their bodily mortifications.[14] Some believe that they attain spiritual benefit merely by looking at a great holy man.[14] Durga Puja, held in September–October, is the most important festival of Bangladeshi Hindus and it is widely celebrated amongst Bangladeshi Hindus. Thousands of pandals (mandaps) are set up in various cities, towns, and villages to mark the festival. Other festivals are Kali Puja, Janmashtami, Holi, Saraswati Puja, Shivratri and Rathayatra, the most popular being the century-old Dhamrai Rathayatra.

The principle of ahimsa is expressed in almost universally observed rules against eating beef.[14] By no means are all Bangladeshi Hindus vegetarians, but abstinence from all kinds of meat is regarded as a "higher" virtue.[14] The Priestly Caste Brahmin (pronounced Brahmon in Bengali) Bangladeshi Hindus, unlike their counterparts elsewhere in South Asia, eat fish and chicken.[14] This is similar to the Indian state of West Bengal, where Hindus also consume fish, eggs, chicken, and mutton. There are also some vegetarians as well. There are also non-Bengali Hindus in Bangladesh, majority of the Hajong, Rajbongshi people and Tripuris in Bangladesh are Hindus.[19]

Demographics edit

 
Map of percentage of Bangladeshi Hindus by Upazila or Sub-district (2011 Census)
Percentage and population of Hinduism in Bangladesh
Year Percentage (%) Hindu Population Total population Notes
1901 33.00 9,546,240 28,927,626 Eastern Bengal region
1911 31.50 9,939,825 31,555,363 Before partition
1921 30.60 10,176,030 33,254,607
1931 29.40 10,466,988 35,604,189
1941 28.00 11,759,160 41,999,221
1951 22.05 9,239,603 42,062,462 During Pakistani rule
1961 18.50 9,379,669 50,804,914
1974 13.50 9,673,048 71,478,543 After independence of Bangladesh
1981 12.13 10,570,245 87,120,487
1991 10.51 11,178,866 106,315,583
2001 9.60 11,822,581 123,151,871
2011 8.54 12,299,940 144,043,697
2022 7.95 13,130,109 165,158,616

Source: Census of India 1901-1941, Census of East Pakistan 1951-1961, Bangladesh Government Census 1974-2022[20][21][22][23]

 
Statue of Hindu Goddess Saraswati, Dhaka University

According to the 2001 Bangladesh census, there were around 11.82 million Hindus in Bangladesh constituting 9.6% of the population, which at the time was 123.15 million.[24] The Bangladesh 2011 census states, that approximately 12.73 million people responded that they were Hindus, constituting 8.54% of the total 149.77 million.[25] While 2022 Census of Bangladesh, put the number of Hindus in Bangladesh at 13.1 million out of total 165.1 million population, thus constituting 7.95% of the population.[1] According to a report published by a local daily newspaper of Bangladesh, the Hindu population in the country has reduced by nearly one million between 2001 and 2011 period.[26] The reduction mainly happened in nine districts – Bhola, Barisal, Jhalokati, Pirojpur, Bagerhat, Narail, Gopalganj, Rajbari and Manikganj.[27] The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom have said that Hindus constitute merely 7% of the population in Bangladesh as per as the latest 2016 figures.[28] Hindus in Bangladesh in the late 2000s were almost evenly distributed in all regions, with large concentrations in Gopalganj, Dinajpur, Sylhet, Sunamganj, Mymensingh, Khulna, Jessore, Chittagong and parts of Chittagong Hill Tracts. In the capital city of Dhaka, Hindus are the second-largest religious community after the Muslims and the largest concentration of Hindus can be found in and around Shankhari Bazaar of the old city.

In 2013, Amnesty International reported that the rise of more explicitly Islamist political formations in Bangladesh during the 1990s had resulted in many Hindus being intimidated or attacked, and that fairly substantial numbers were leaving the country for India.[29]

In 1901, Hindus constituted 33% of the population of what is now Bangladesh.[30] In 1941, about 28% of the population were Hindus. Their proportion declined to 22% in 1951 after the Partition of India in 1947, as Hindus migrated from East Bengal to India. Wealthy Hindus who migrated lost their land and assets through the East Bengal Evacuees Act. Poor and middle-class Hindus who were left behind were targets of discriminatory new laws. At the outbreak of the 1965 India-Pakistan war, the Defense of Pakistan Ordinance, and later the Enemy (Custody and Registration) Order II, labeled Hindus as the "enemy" and expropriated their property.[31][32] The 1974 census of Bangladesh showed that the population of Hindus had fallen to 13.5%. Even after independence, the Hindus were branded "Indian stooges" and untrustworthy citizens.[31]

Since 1971, the Hindu percentage has continued to decline, forming 8.5% of the population as of 2011. The fall in the share of total population has been attributed to outward migration, and the fertility rate for Hindus remaining consistently lower than Muslims (2.1 versus 2.3 as of 2014).[30] The bengali genocide of 1971 also disproportionately targetted Hindus.[33]

Hindu population by administrative divisions edit

Hindu Population across divisions of Bangladesh (2011)[34]
Division Hindu Population Total population Percentage (%)
Barisal 761,779 8,325,666 9.23
Chittagong 2,005,004 2,8423,019 7.05
Dhaka 2,485,910 36,433,505 6.82
Khulna 2,030,309 15,687,759 12.94
Mymensingh 464,232 10,990,913 4.22
Rajshahi 1,081,584 18,484,858 5.85
Rangpur 2,086,148 15,787,758 13.21
Sylhet 1,391,911 9,910,219 14.05

According to the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics report, Khulna division has the highest decline in Hindu population of (1.33%) from 2011-22 period. In 2011, 12.85% of the population of the division were Hindus. This rate has come down to 11.52% in 2022. Among the eight divisions, Khulna has the third highest Hindu population. According to the 2022 census, Sylhet division has the highest Hindu population of 13.5%, but the ratio was 14.05% in 2011. In Rangpur division, the Hindu population has decreased from 13.21% in 2011 to 12.98% in 2022. Mymensingh division has the lowest percentage of people belonging to the Hindu community at (3.92%) as of 2022.[35]

Hindu Population across districts of Bangladesh (2011)[34]
District Hindu population Total population Percentage (%)
Barguna 68,678 892,781 7.69
Barisal 271,706 2,324,310 11.69
Bhola 61,162 1,776,795 3.44
Jhalokati 68,572 682,669 10.04
Patuakhali 105,496 1,535,584 6.87
Pirojpur 186,165 1,113,257 16.72
Bandarban 13,137 388,335 3.38
Brahmanbaria 211,899 2,840,498 7.46
Chandpur 145,551 2,416,018 6.02
Chittagong 861,494 7,616,352 11.31
Comilla 258,105 5,387,288 4.79
Cox's Bazar 97,648 2,289,990 4.26
Feni 83,773 1,437,371 5.83
Khagrachhari 103,195 613,917 16.81
Lakshmipur 59,417 1,729,188 3.44
Noakhali 140,541 3,108,083 4.52
Rangamati 30,244 595,979 5.07
Dhaka 566,368 12,043,977 4.70
Faridpur 180,366 1,912,969 9.43
Gazipur 176,582 3,403,912 5.19
Gopalganj 353,794 1,172,415 30.18
Kishoreganj 158,538 2,911,907 5.44
Madaripur 141,097 1,165,952 12.10
Manikganj 130,095 1,392,867 9.34
Munshiganj 114,655 1,445,660 7.93
Narayanganj 144,105 2,948,217 4.89
Narsingdi 125,769 2,224,944 5.65
Rajbari 106,974 1,049,778 10.19
Shariatpur 41,330 1,155,824 3.58
Tangail 246,237 3,605,083 6.83
Bagerhat 270,874 1,476,090 18.35
Chuadanga 26,514 1,129,015 2.35
Jessore 310,184 2,764,547 11.22
Jhenaidah 167,880 1,771,304 9.48
Khulna 525,727 2,318,527 22.68
Kushtia 56,792 1,946,838 2.92
Magura 164,578 918,419 17.92
Meherpur 7,870 655,392 1.20
Narail 134,594 721,668 18.65
Satkhira 351,551 1,985,959 17.70
Jamalpur 38,832 2,292,674 1.69
Mymensingh 183,026 5,110,272 3.58
Netrokona 207,430 2,229,642 9.30
Sherpur 34,944 1,358,325 2.57
Bogra 205,333 3,400,874 6.04
Chapai Nawabganj 66,602 1,647,521 4.04
Joypurhat 80,696 913,768 8.83
Naogaon 287,919 2,600,157 11.07
Natore 103,747 1,706,673 6.08
Pabna 73,487 2,523,179 2.91
Rajshahi 122,394 2,595,197 4.72
Sirajganj 147,514 3,097,489 4.76
Dinajpur 583,313 2,990,128 19.51
Gaibandha 167,897 2,379,255 7.06
Kurigram 135,484 2,069,273 6.55
Lalmonirhat 174,558 1,256,099 13.90
Nilphamari 293,385 1,834,231 15.99
Panchagarh 163,404 987,644 16.54
Rangpur 258,684 2,881,086 8.98
Thakurgaon 309,423 1,390,042 22.26
Habiganj 352,407 2,089,001 16.87
Maulvibazar 471,974 1,919,062 24.59
Sunamganj 319,376 2,467,968 12.94
Sylhet 248,154 3,434,188 7.23

Hinduism in Bangladesh by decades[4]

Year Percent Increase
1901 33% -
1911 31.5%

-1.5%

1921 30.6%

-0.9%

1931 29.4%

-1.2%

1941 28%

-1.4%

1951 22%

-6%

1961 18.5% -3.5
1974 13.5% -5
1981 12.1% -1.4
1991 10.5% -1.6
2001 9.6% -0.9%
2011 8.54% -1.06%
2022 7.95% -0.59%

The Hindu population in what is now Bangladesh has consistently decreased as a percentage of the population, from 28% in 1941 to 13.5% at the time of Bangladesh's founding in 1974, and reducing further to 7.9% in 2022.[23][36][37] Bangladesh Census authority have found that since from the last 50 years, about 7.5 million (75 lakhs) Hindus have left the country due to religious persecution and discrimination.[38] As per as 2016 official figures, it is estimated that Hindu population have came down to a mere 7%.[39]

Persecution edit

Malaun (from Arabic ملعون, meaning "accursed") is a pejorative term for Bengali Hindus, most commonly used in Bangladesh by Bengali Muslims.[40][41][42][43] Hindus and others have been regularly and systematically persecuted, such as during the Bangladesh genocide, Bangladesh Liberation War and numerous recurring massacres of civilians[44][45][46][47][48][49][50] where rapes is also used as weapon.[51][52] Active perpetrators of genocide, ethnic cleansing and rapes of Hindus in Bangladesh include the Pakistani Military,[48] Al Badr,[53][54] Al Sham,[55] East Pakistan Central Peace Committee,[56] Razakars,[57] Muslim League,[58] Jamaat-e-Islami,[58] and the Urdu-speaking Biharis.[58] According to the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF), Hindus are among those persecuted in Bangladesh, with hundreds of cases of "killings, attempted killings, death threats, assaults, rapes, kidnappings, and attacks on homes, businesses, and places of worship" on religious minorities in 2017.[59] The 'Vested Property Act' previously named the 'Enemy Property Act' has seen up to 40% of Hindu land get snatched away forcibly. Hindu temples in Bangladesh have also been vandalised.[60] The Pakistani census has found that the Hindu population in East Pakistan declined drastically from 28% in 1941 to 22% in 1951. The 1946 Noakhali massacre, occurring before the partition, and the 1950 East Pakistan riots, which took place after the Partition of Bengal, were among the most severe anti-Hindu riots in the region's history.[61]

1971 genocide edit

Between the 1961 and 1974 censuses, the Hindu population increased by only 300,000, from 9.3 million to 9.6 million, while the Hindu percentage declined from 18.5% to 13.5%.[62] The Hindu population was significantly impacted by the 1964 East Pakistan riots and 1971 East Pakistan genocide, which primarily targeted Bengali Hindus.[63] An estimated 10 million East Pakistanis sought refuge in India, with 80% being Hindus. Approximately 8 million Hindus fled to various parts of India during the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War to escape persecution by Pakistani armies and Islamic militias. After Independence, it was discovered that 1.5 million Hindus remained in India, while the remaining 6.5 million returned to Bangladesh.[64] Additionally, an estimated 3.1 million Hindus who were already residing in Bangladesh chose to remain during the turmoil and survived the atrocities. It is estimated that between 300,000 to 3 million people were killed during the Bangladesh Liberation War, with 300,000 to 400,000 Bengali women being raped, with the majority of victims being Hindus.[65]

Projections edit

Future population edit

Historical Hindu Population
YearPop.±%
1901 9,546,240—    
1911 9,939,825+4.1%
1921 10,176,030+2.4%
1931 10,466,988+2.9%
1941 11,759,160+12.3%
1951 9,239,603−21.4%
1961 9,379,669+1.5%
1974 9,673,048+3.1%
1981 10,570,245+9.3%
1991 11,178,866+5.8%
2001 11,822,581+5.8%
2011 12,730,651+7.7%
2022 13,130,109+3.1%
Source: God Willing: The Politics of Islamism in Bangladesh by Ali Riaz, p. 63[1]

From 1964 to 2013, around 11.3 million Hindus left Bangladesh due to religious persecution and discrimination, as stated by Dhaka university economist Abul Barkat. On average 632 Hindus left the country each day and 230,612 annually as reported by him.[66]

From his 30-year-long research, Barkat found that the exodus mostly took place during military governments after independence.[67] Barkat also state's: that there should have been 28.7 million Hindus in the year 2013 instead of 12.2 million", Or, to put it another way, Hindus should have accounted for 16-18% of Bangladesh's population, not 9.7% as they do currently.[68] According to the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom, Hindus constitute merely 7% of the population in Bangladesh as per as the latest 2016 figures.[69]

According to the Pew Research Center, Bangladesh will have 14.47 million Hindus by 2050 who will comprise 7.3% of the country's population.[70] Another theory suggest that Bangladesh will have at least 180-200 million population by 2050,[71] out of which there will be around 8.51-9.25 million Hindus living in this nation, thus constituting only 4% after the beginning of half-century.[72] On average, annually 230,612 Hindus were leaving Bangladesh for India permanently. So between (2024-2050), It is estimated that 5,995,912 Hindus will leave the country if current immigration rates continue further.[73]

Future Hindu population of Bangladesh
Year Total Population Hindu population Percentage
2020 168,180,000 13,790,000 8.2%
2030 183,430,000 14,490,000 7.9%
2040 193,550,000 14,710,000 7.6%
2050 198,219,000 14,470,000 7.3%
Source:[70][74][75]

Missing population edit

With migration into West Bengal, the 1947 partition of Bengal significantly altered religious demographics in the eastern segment of the province, which later became Bangladesh. Violence also saw an uptick in the 1950s and 1960s in what had then become East Pakistan (present-day-Bangladesh), leading to large numbers of upper caste Bengali Hindus migrating to West Bengal, Assam and Tripura with official Indian Government records indicating 2,519,557 (Hindu) refugees crossed into India from East Bengal between 1941 and 1951.[76]

Utilizing demography studies and other methods over a 55-year period from 1947 to 2001, professor Sachi Dastidar of the State University of New York calculates that well over 49 million Hindus are missing today from Bangladesh.[77][78][79] According to a report published by a local daily newspaper of Bangladesh, the Hindu population in the country has reduced by 1 million between 2001 and 2011 period.[80][81] Ergo in the absence of partition in 1947 and other events that followed, It is estimated the present-day Bangladeshi hindu population would be approximately 63.13 million or 28%, well above the current population of 12.73 million or 8.5%, as reported in the Bangladesh 2011 census.[77][78][82][80][81]

"Population of East Bengali refugees and their descendants living across different Indian states"
State Population Citation
Andaman and Nicobar Islands 100,000 [83]
Assam 7,500,000 [84]
Tripura 2,200,000 [85]
Uttarakhand 200,000 [86]
West Bengal 30,000,000 [87]
Total 40,000,000 [88]

After the 1960s, most of the migration was lower caste – a trend that has continued to till this day. As per a BJP estimate, Bangladeshi Hindu immigrants are a significant presence in 75 Assembly constituencies – making up approximately a fourth of the state's seats.[89]

Starting from the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, the BJP has made the issue of Hindu Bangladeshi immigrants a core part of its strategy in West Bengal.[90] An estimation shows that around 30 million Bangladeshi origin low-caste Hindu refugees live in different parts of West Bengal specially in southern districts namely North 24 Parganas, South 24 Parganas, Nadia and other smaller pockets of North and South Bengal, they are having an influence in over 70 assembly constituencies and are eagerly waiting to acquire Indian citizenship through CAA which was passed by Indian parliament in 2019 year for the purpose of granting them citizenship (if their religion is Hinduism, Sikhism, Jainism) as a promise criteria made by BJP in the election campaign of West Bengal earlier before the passage of that bill.[91][92][93] An estimation shows that Assam has around 2 million Bangladeshi Hindus living in different parts of the state and are struggling to acquire Indian citizenship just like their counterparts in neighbouring West Bengal.[94] The BJP hopes to wean away a large chunk of Bengali settlers who took refuge in Tripura from Bangladesh (former East Pakistan). The influx of the Bengali Hindus increased during the Bangladesh Liberation War and around at that time of (1971), India have received 10 million refugees from East Pakistan- mostly 80% being Hindus, and after Bangladesh become independent, nearly 1.5 million of Bengali Hindu refugees decided to stay back in India particularly in West Bengal and other North Eastern states majorly in Assam and Tripura.[95][96][97][98] Census data show the population of Tripura's 19 Scheduled Tribes dropped from 63.77% in 1881 to 31.78% in 2011. This is attributed to the migration of 6.10 lakh Bengalis – the figure almost equal to the State's total population in 1951 – from East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) between 1947 and 1971.[99] At present, there are around 2.2 million Bengali Hindus in Tripura (moslty having Eastern Bangladeshi origin), making them the largest ethnic group in the State, constituting around 60 per cent of the state population.[100][101]

Population controversies edit

The official number of Hindus living in Bangladesh is about 13.1 million or say 7.9% as per as 2022 census conducted by Bangladesh government authority.[1] However, at certain times different leaders as well as Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics have given different estimates. Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies (BIDS) have found that 4.67 million people, which is about 2.75% of country's total population, were have not been counted by the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (BBS) for 2022 census. Moreover, around 2.75% of undercount was reported in the case of Muslims against 2.68% of followers of other religions.[102] At the same time, Indigenous activists of Bangladesh have claimed that Ethnic minorities have been undercounted in Bangladesh's latest census.[103]

Number of Hindus residing in Bangladesh (1998-2022 est.)
Source/claimed by Population (%) Year of claimed Reference
Claimed by State Government of Bangladesh 20,160,000 (16%) 1998 [104]
Claimed by Rabindranath Trivedi, President of Human Rights Congress for Bangladesh Minorities (HRCBM) 22,260,000 (15%) 2010 [105]
Claimed Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics 15,500,000 (10.3%) 2014 [106]
Claimed Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics 17,000,000 (10.7%) 2016 [106]
Claimed by Ravindra Ghosh, Chairman of Bangladesh Hindu Janajagruti Samiti 18,000,000 (11.04%) 2019 [107]
Claimed Bangladesh Government Official Website (Introduction) 18,150,000 (12.1%) (Unknown) [108]
Claimed by KMSS leader Akhil Gogoi 19,000,000 (11.65%) 2019 [109]
2019 report on International religious freedom: Bangladesh (US State Dept) 15,280,000 (10%) 2019 [110]
Claimed by Bangladesh grand Hindu alliance leader Govindo Pramanik 25,000,000 (15.7%) 2019 [111]
Claimed by The Statesman Newspaper 19,560,000 (12%) 2021 [112]
Claimed by Bangladesh Information Minister Muhammad Hasan Mahmud 20,000,000 (12.1%) 2022 [113]

Hindu Temples edit

Hindu temples and shrines are more or less distributed all across the country. The Kantaji Temple is an elegant example of an 18th-century temple. The most important temple in terms of prominence is the Dhakeshwari National Temple, located in Dhaka. This temple along with other Hindu organizations arranges Durga Puja and Krishna Janmaashtami very prominently.[citation needed] The other main temples of Dhaka are the Ramakrishna Mission, Ramna Kali Temple, Joy Kali Temple, Laxmi Narayan Mandir, Swami Bagh Temple and Siddheswari Kalimandir.[114]

Many Hindu temples have suffered from the implementation of the Vested Property Act through which land and moveable property has been confiscated by agents acting on behalf of successive governments.[115][better source needed]

Hindu marriage law edit

 
A typical Bangladeshi Hindu wedding.

Hindu family law governs the personal life of Hindus in Bangladesh. There is no known limit for the number of wives a Hindu man can take in Bangladesh so polygamy for Hindu man is legal in Bangladesh.[116]

"Under Bangladesh Hindu (civil) law, men may have multiple wives, but there are officially no options for divorce," the report said.

Women are also prohibited from inheriting property under the civil laws for Hindus, the report said.

A survey conducted during the year by Research Initiatives in Bangladesh and MJF showed that 26.7 percent of Hindu men and 29.2 percent of Hindu women would like to obtain a divorce but did not do so because of existing laws.[117]

Community issues edit

The Hindu community has many similar issues as the predominantly Muslim community of Bangladesh. These include women's rights, dowry, poverty, unemployment, and others. Issues unique to the Hindu community include maintenance of Hindu culture and temples in Bangladesh. Small sects of Islamists constantly try to politically and socially isolate the Hindus of Bangladesh.[118] Because Hindus of Bangladesh are scattered across all areas (except in Narayanganj), they cannot unite politically. However, Hindus became sway voters in various elections. Hindus have usually voted in large mass for Bangladesh Awami League and communist parties, as these are the only parties which have a nominal commitment to secularism;[119] the alternatives are the increasingly pro-Islamist centrist parties such as the Bangladesh Nationalist Party and Jatiya Party (which both incorporate Muslim identity into their version of Bangladeshi nationalism) or the outright Islamist Jamaat-e-Islami Bangladesh (an offshoot of the Pakistan-based Jamaat-e-Islami) which seeks to establish Islamic law under which there would be separate provisions for Hindus as non-Muslims. However, Hindus, in general, maintain cordial relationships with liberal Muslims and they even participate in each other's festivals such as Durga Puja and Eid al-Fitr.[citation needed]

Bangladesh Liberation War atrocities (1971) edit

The Bangladesh Liberation War resulted in one of the largest genocides of the 20th century. While estimates of the number of casualties were 200,000–3,000,000, it is reasonably certain that Hindus bore a disproportionate brunt of the Pakistan Army's onslaught against the Bengali population of what was East Pakistan.[121] The Pakistani Army killed many Bengali Hindus during the Liberation War, and most of the Bengali Hindu-owned businesses were permanently destroyed. The historic Ramna Kali Temple in Dhaka and the century-old Rath at Dhamrai were demolished and burned down by the Pakistani Army.[123]

The initial post-independence period (1972–75) edit

In the first constitution of the newly independent country, secularism and equality of all citizens irrespective of religious identity were enshrined.[124] On his return to liberated Bangladesh, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman in his first speech to the nation, specifically recognized the disproportionate suffering of the Hindu population during the Bangladesh Liberation War. On a visit to Kolkata, India in February 1972, Mujib visited the refugee camps that were still hosting several million Bangladeshi Hindus and appealed to them to return to Bangladesh and to help to rebuild the country.[125]

Despite the public commitment of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and his government to re-establishing secularism and the rights of non-Muslim religious groups, two significant aspects of his rule remain controversial as relates to the conditions of Hindus in Bangladesh.[126] The first was his refusal to return the premises of the Ramna Kali Mandir, historically the most important temple in Dhaka, to the religious body that owned the property. This centuries-old Hindu temple was demolished by the Pakistan army during the Bangladesh Liberation War, and around one hundred devotees were murdered. Under the provisions of the Enemy Property Act, it was determined that ownership of the property could not be established as there were no surviving members to claim inherited rights, and the land was handed over to the Dhaka Club.[127][128]

Secondly, state-authorized confiscation of Hindu owned property under the provisions of the Enemy Property Act was rampant during Mujib's rule, and as per the research conducted by Abul Barkat of Dhaka University, the Awami League party of Sheikh Mujib was the largest beneficiary of Hindu property transfer in the past 35 years of Bangladeshi independence.[129] This was enabled considerably because of the particular turmoil and displacement suffered by Bangladeshi Hindus, who bore the disproportionate burnt of the Pakistan army's genocide, as well documented by international publications such as Time magazine and the New York Times, and by the declassified Hamoodur Rahman Commission report. This caused much bitterness among Bangladeshi Hindus, particularly given the public stance of the regime's commitment to secularism and communal harmony.[130][131]

Zia and Ershad regimes (1975–1990) edit

President Ziaur Rahman abandoned the constitutional provision for secularism and began to introduce Islamic symbolism in all spheres of national life (such as official seals and the constitutional preamble). Zia brought back the multi-party system thus allowing organizations such as Jamaat-e-Islami Bangladesh (an offshoot of the Islamist Jamaat-e-Islami in Pakistan) to regroup and contest elections.

In 1988 President Hussein Mohammed Ershad declared Islam to be the State Religion of Bangladesh. Though the move was protested by students and left-leaning political parties and minority groups, to this date neither the regimes of the BNP or Awami League has challenged this change and it remains in place.[132]

In 1990, the Ershad regime was widely blamed for negligence (and some human rights analysis allege active participation) in the anti-Hindu riots following the Babri Mosque incident in India, the largest communal disturbances since Bangladesh independence, as a means of diverting attention from the rapidly increasing opposition to his rule.[133][134] Many Hindu temples, Hindu neighbourhoods and shops were attacked and damaged including, for the first time since 1971, the Dhakeshwari temple. The atrocities were brought to the West's attention by many Bangladeshis, including Taslima Nasrin and her book Lajja which translated into English means "shame".[135]

Return to democracy (1991–2008) edit

 
Hindu festival in Bangladesh.

Immediately after the Bangladesh Nationalist Party and its Islamic fundamentalist allies came to power in the October 2001 elections, ruling coalition activists attacked Hindus on a large scale in retribution for their perceived support of the opposition Awami League. Hundreds were killed, many were raped, and thousands fled to India.[136] The events were widely seen as a repercussion against the razing of the Babri Mosque in India.[137]

Prominent political leaders frequently fall back on "Hindu bashing" in an attempt to appeal to extremist sentiment and to stir up communal passions. In one of the most notorious utterances of a mainstream Bangladeshi figure, the immediate past Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, while the leader of the opposition in 1996, declared that the country was at risk of hearing "uludhhwani" (a Hindu custom involving women's ululation) from mosques, replacing the azan (Muslim call to prayer) (e.g., see Agence-France Press report of 18 November 1996, "Bangladesh opposition leader accused of hurting religious sentiment").[138]

After the election of 2001, when a right-wing coalition including two Islamist parties (Jamaat-e-Islami Bangladesh and Islami Oikya Jote) led by the pro-Islamic right wing Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) came to power, many minority Hindus and liberal secularist Muslims were attacked by a section of the governing regime. Thousands of Bangladeshi Hindus were believed to have fled to neighbouring India[139] to escape the violence unleashed by activists sympathetic to the new government. Many Bangladeshi Muslims played an active role in documenting atrocities against Hindus during this period.[138][140]

The new government also clamped down on attempts by the media to document alleged atrocities against non-Muslim minorities following the election. Severe pressure was put on newspapers and other media outside of government control through threats of violence and other intimidation. Most prominently, the Muslim journalist and human rights activist Shahriyar Kabir was arrested on charges of treason on his return from India where he had been interviewing Hindu refugees from Bangladesh; this was by the Bangladesh High Court and he was subsequently freed.[141]

The fundamentalists and right-wing parties such as the BNP and Jatiya Party often portray Hindus as being sympathetic to India, and transferring economic resources to India, contributing to a widespread perception that Bangladeshi Hindus are disloyal to the state. Also, the right-wing parties claim the Hindus to be backing the Awami League.[29] As widely documented in international media, Bangladesh authorities have had to increase security to enable Bangladeshi Hindus to worship freely following widespread attacks on places of worship and devotees.[142]

After bombings in Bangladesh by the Islamic fundamentalists, the government has taken steps to strengthen the security during various minority celebrations, especially during Durga Puja and Rathayatra.[143]

In October 2006, the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom published a report titled 'Policy Focus on Bangladesh,' which said that since its last election, 'Bangladesh has experienced growing violence by religious extremists, intensifying concerns expressed by the country's religious minorities'. The report further stated that Hindus are particularly vulnerable in a period of rising violence and extremism, whether motivated by religious, political or criminal factors, or some combination. The report noted that Hindus had multiple disadvantages against them in Bangladesh, such as perceptions of dual loyalty concerning India and religious beliefs that are not tolerated by the politically dominant Islamic Fundamentalists of the BNP. Violence against Hindus has taken place "in order to encourage them to flee in order to seize their property". The previous reports of the Hindu American Foundation were acknowledged and confirmed by this non-partisan report.[144][145]

On 2 November 2006, USCIRF criticized Bangladesh for violence against minority Hindus. It also urged the Bush administration to get Dhaka to ensure the protection of religious freedom and minority rights before Bangladesh's next national elections in January 2007.[144][145]

Sheikh Hasina era (2008–present) edit

In 2013, the International Crimes Tribunal indicted several Jamaat members for war crimes against Hindus during the 1971 Bangladesh atrocities. In retaliation, violence against Hindu minorities in Bangladesh was instigated by the Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami.[146]

BJHM (Bangladesh Jatiya Hindu Mahajote) claimed in its report that in 2017, at least 107 people of the Hindu community were killed and 31 fell victims to enforced disappearance 782 Hindus were either forced to leave the country or threatened to leave, and besides this, 23 were forced to get converted into other religions and at least 25 Hindu women and children were raped, while 235 temples and statues were vandalized during the year. The total number of atrocities happened with the Hindu community in 2017 is 6474.[147]

During the 2019 Bangladesh elections, eight houses belonging to Hindu families on fire in Thakurgaon alone.[148] In April 2019, two idols of Hindu goddesses, Lakshmi and Saraswati, have been vandalized by unidentified miscreants at a newly constructed temple in Kazipara of Brahmanbaria.[149] In the same month, several idols of Hindu gods in two temples in Madaripur Sadar Upazila which were under construction were desecrated by miscreants.[150]

In 2021, many temples and houses of Hindus were broken and vandalized after an attack on them on Narendra Modi visit to Bangladesh by Hefazat-e-Islam and other radical groups as anti-Modi protests.[151][152][153] Similarly, there were attacks on Hindus in 2020, after some of them supported France after the Murder of Samuel Paty.[154] In the October of the same year there had been a severe communal violence in Bangladesh against the Bengali Hindus, after the video of Quran desecration at the Durga Puja pandals was spread in which more than 120 Hindu temples were vandalized and nearly 7 Hindus were killed.[155][156] It was described by The New York Times as "worst communal violence in years".[157]

According to Dr. Abul Barkat, no Hindus will be left in Bangladesh 30 years from now if the current rate of “exodus” continues as on an average 632 people from the minority community leave the Muslim-majority country each day. From 1964 to 2013, around 11.3 million Hindus left Bangladesh due to religious persecution and discrimination which means on an average 632 Hindus left the country each day and 230,612 annually, he said at the book launch ceremony at the Dhaka University (DU).[158]

Political representation edit

Even after the decline of the Hindu population in Bangladesh from 13.5% in 1974, just after the independence, Hindus were at around 11.2% of the population in 2001 according to government estimates following the census. However, Hindus accounted for only thirty two members of the 300 member parliament following the 2001 elections through direct election; this went up to thirty five following a by-election victory in 2004. Of the 50 seats reserved for women that are directly nominated by the Prime Minister, only four were allotted to a Hindu. The political representation is not at all satisfactory and several Hindu advocacy groups in Bangladesh have demanded a return to a communal electorate system as existed during the Pakistan period, to enable a more equitable and proportionate representation in parliament, or a reserved quota since the persecution of Hindus has continued since 1946.[159]

Despite their dwindling population in terms of overall percentage, Hindus still yield considerable influence because of their geographical concentration in certain regions. They form a majority of the electorate in at least two parliamentary constituencies (Khulna-1 and Gopalganj-3) and account for more than 25% in at least another thirty. For this reason, they are often the deciding factor in parliamentary elections where victory margins can be extremely narrow. It is also frequently alleged that this is a prime reason for many Hindus being prevented from voting in elections, either through intimidating actual voters or through exclusion in voter list revisions.[160]

Prominent Bangladeshi Hindus edit

See also edit

References edit

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Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • "Bangladesh". CIA Factbook. 17 May 2022.
  • "Bangladesh Hindus 'will not go back'". BBC News. 22 November 2001.
  • . HAF. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007.
  • . Amnesty International. Archived from the original on 13 September 2006.

hinduism, bangladesh, hinduism, west, bengal, india, hinduism, west, bengal, ethnic, main, group, bengali, hindus, hinduism, second, largest, religious, affiliation, people, republic, bangladesh, according, 2022, census, bangladesh, approximately, million, peo. For Hinduism in the West Bengal India see Hinduism in West Bengal For ethnic and main group see Bengali Hindus Hinduism is the second largest religious affiliation in People s Republic of Bangladesh as according to the 2022 Census of Bangladesh approximately 13 1 million people responded that they were Hindus constituting 7 95 out of the total population of 165 15 million people 4 5 In terms of population Bangladesh is the third largest Hindu populated country of the world just after the neighboring republics of India and Nepal in the subcontinent Hinduism is the second largest religion in 61 out of 64 districts of Bangladesh but there is no Hindu majority district in Bangladesh Bangladeshi Hindusbaṅladesi hinduraব ল দ শ হ ন দ র Dhakeshwari National Temple one of the important Hindu temples Total population13 130 109 2022 Census 7 95 of the country s population 1 Regions with significant populationsAll over Bangladesh predominantly in Sylhet Division Chittagong Division and Khulna DivisionSylhet Division1 581 820 13 5 Khulna Division2 419 010 11 52 Rangpur Division1 874 904 12 98 Chittagong Division3 072 733 16 65 Dhaka Division2 721 416 4 97 Rajshahi Division1 081 584 5 85 ReligionsHinduism majority 2 Tribal religions identified as Hindus minority 3 LanguagesSanskrit Sacred Bangla and other tribal languages The Government of Bangladesh proclaimed that it is dedicated to ensuring the safety and security of the Hindu minority community after attacks on Hindu temples during religious pujas Hindu communities temples mandirs and pandals in recent years 6 7 8 9 Contents 1 Culture 2 Demographics 2 1 Hindu population by administrative divisions 3 Persecution 3 1 1971 genocide 4 Projections 4 1 Future population 4 2 Missing population 4 3 Population controversies 5 Hindu Temples 6 Hindu marriage law 7 Community issues 7 1 Bangladesh Liberation War atrocities 1971 7 2 The initial post independence period 1972 75 7 3 Zia and Ershad regimes 1975 1990 7 4 Return to democracy 1991 2008 7 5 Sheikh Hasina era 2008 present 8 Political representation 9 Prominent Bangladeshi Hindus 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Bibliography 12 External linksCulture editIn nature Bangladeshi Hinduism closely resembles the forms and customs of Hinduism practiced in the neighboring Indian state of West Bengal with which Bangladesh at one time known as East Bengal was united until the partition of India in 1947 10 The vast majority of Hindus in Bangladesh are Bengali Hindus 11 Goddess Devi usually venerated as Durga or Kali is widely revered often alongside her consort Shiva 12 The worship of Shiva has generally found adherents among the higher castes in Bangladesh 13 14 Worship of Vishnu typically in the form of his Avatars or incarnation Rama or Krishna citation needed more explicitly cuts across caste lines by teaching the fundamental oneness of humankind in spirit 14 Vishnu worship in Bengal expresses the union of the male and female principles in a tradition of love and devotion 15 14 This form of Hindu belief and the Sufi tradition of Islam have influenced and interacted with each other in Bengal 14 Both were popular mystical movements emphasizing the personal relationship of religious leaders and disciples instead of the dry stereotypes of the Brahmins or the Ulama 14 16 As in Bengali Hindu practice worship of Vishnu frequently occurs in a small devotional society shomaj 14 Both use the language of earthly love to express communion with the divine 14 17 In both traditions the Bengali language is the vehicle of a large corpus of mystical literature of great beauty and emotional impact 14 In Bangladeshi Hinduism ritual bathing vows and pilgrimages to sacred rivers mountains and shrines are common practices 14 An ordinary Hindu will worship at the shrines of Muslim pirs without being concerned with the religion to which that place is supposed to be affiliated 14 18 Hindus revere many holy men and ascetics conspicuous for their bodily mortifications 14 Some believe that they attain spiritual benefit merely by looking at a great holy man 14 Durga Puja held in September October is the most important festival of Bangladeshi Hindus and it is widely celebrated amongst Bangladeshi Hindus Thousands of pandals mandaps are set up in various cities towns and villages to mark the festival Other festivals are Kali Puja Janmashtami Holi Saraswati Puja Shivratri and Rathayatra the most popular being the century old Dhamrai Rathayatra The principle of ahimsa is expressed in almost universally observed rules against eating beef 14 By no means are all Bangladeshi Hindus vegetarians but abstinence from all kinds of meat is regarded as a higher virtue 14 The Priestly Caste Brahmin pronounced Brahmon in Bengali Bangladeshi Hindus unlike their counterparts elsewhere in South Asia eat fish and chicken 14 This is similar to the Indian state of West Bengal where Hindus also consume fish eggs chicken and mutton There are also some vegetarians as well There are also non Bengali Hindus in Bangladesh majority of the Hajong Rajbongshi people and Tripuris in Bangladesh are Hindus 19 Demographics edit nbsp Map of percentage of Bangladeshi Hindus by Upazila or Sub district 2011 Census Percentage and population of Hinduism in Bangladesh Year Percentage Hindu Population Total population Notes 1901 33 00 9 546 240 28 927 626 Eastern Bengal region 1911 31 50 9 939 825 31 555 363 Before partition 1921 30 60 10 176 030 33 254 607 1931 29 40 10 466 988 35 604 189 1941 28 00 11 759 160 41 999 221 1951 22 05 9 239 603 42 062 462 During Pakistani rule 1961 18 50 9 379 669 50 804 914 1974 13 50 9 673 048 71 478 543 After independence of Bangladesh 1981 12 13 10 570 245 87 120 487 1991 10 51 11 178 866 106 315 583 2001 9 60 11 822 581 123 151 871 2011 8 54 12 299 940 144 043 697 2022 7 95 13 130 109 165 158 616 Source Census of India 1901 1941 Census of East Pakistan 1951 1961 Bangladesh Government Census 1974 2022 20 21 22 23 nbsp Statue of Hindu Goddess Saraswati Dhaka UniversityAccording to the 2001 Bangladesh census there were around 11 82 million Hindus in Bangladesh constituting 9 6 of the population which at the time was 123 15 million 24 The Bangladesh 2011 census states that approximately 12 73 million people responded that they were Hindus constituting 8 54 of the total 149 77 million 25 While 2022 Census of Bangladesh put the number of Hindus in Bangladesh at 13 1 million out of total 165 1 million population thus constituting 7 95 of the population 1 According to a report published by a local daily newspaper of Bangladesh the Hindu population in the country has reduced by nearly one million between 2001 and 2011 period 26 The reduction mainly happened in nine districts Bhola Barisal Jhalokati Pirojpur Bagerhat Narail Gopalganj Rajbari and Manikganj 27 The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom have said that Hindus constitute merely 7 of the population in Bangladesh as per as the latest 2016 figures 28 Hindus in Bangladesh in the late 2000s were almost evenly distributed in all regions with large concentrations in Gopalganj Dinajpur Sylhet Sunamganj Mymensingh Khulna Jessore Chittagong and parts of Chittagong Hill Tracts In the capital city of Dhaka Hindus are the second largest religious community after the Muslims and the largest concentration of Hindus can be found in and around Shankhari Bazaar of the old city In 2013 Amnesty International reported that the rise of more explicitly Islamist political formations in Bangladesh during the 1990s had resulted in many Hindus being intimidated or attacked and that fairly substantial numbers were leaving the country for India 29 In 1901 Hindus constituted 33 of the population of what is now Bangladesh 30 In 1941 about 28 of the population were Hindus Their proportion declined to 22 in 1951 after the Partition of India in 1947 as Hindus migrated from East Bengal to India Wealthy Hindus who migrated lost their land and assets through the East Bengal Evacuees Act Poor and middle class Hindus who were left behind were targets of discriminatory new laws At the outbreak of the 1965 India Pakistan war the Defense of Pakistan Ordinance and later the Enemy Custody and Registration Order II labeled Hindus as the enemy and expropriated their property 31 32 The 1974 census of Bangladesh showed that the population of Hindus had fallen to 13 5 Even after independence the Hindus were branded Indian stooges and untrustworthy citizens 31 Since 1971 the Hindu percentage has continued to decline forming 8 5 of the population as of 2011 The fall in the share of total population has been attributed to outward migration and the fertility rate for Hindus remaining consistently lower than Muslims 2 1 versus 2 3 as of 2014 30 The bengali genocide of 1971 also disproportionately targetted Hindus 33 Hindu population by administrative divisions edit Hindu Population across divisions of Bangladesh 2011 34 Division Hindu Population Total population Percentage Barisal 761 779 8 325 666 9 23 Chittagong 2 005 004 2 8423 019 7 05 Dhaka 2 485 910 36 433 505 6 82 Khulna 2 030 309 15 687 759 12 94 Mymensingh 464 232 10 990 913 4 22 Rajshahi 1 081 584 18 484 858 5 85 Rangpur 2 086 148 15 787 758 13 21 Sylhet 1 391 911 9 910 219 14 05 According to the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics report Khulna division has the highest decline in Hindu population of 1 33 from 2011 22 period In 2011 12 85 of the population of the division were Hindus This rate has come down to 11 52 in 2022 Among the eight divisions Khulna has the third highest Hindu population According to the 2022 census Sylhet division has the highest Hindu population of 13 5 but the ratio was 14 05 in 2011 In Rangpur division the Hindu population has decreased from 13 21 in 2011 to 12 98 in 2022 Mymensingh division has the lowest percentage of people belonging to the Hindu community at 3 92 as of 2022 35 Hindu Population across districts of Bangladesh 2011 34 District Hindu population Total population Percentage Barguna 68 678 892 781 7 69 Barisal 271 706 2 324 310 11 69 Bhola 61 162 1 776 795 3 44 Jhalokati 68 572 682 669 10 04 Patuakhali 105 496 1 535 584 6 87 Pirojpur 186 165 1 113 257 16 72 Bandarban 13 137 388 335 3 38 Brahmanbaria 211 899 2 840 498 7 46 Chandpur 145 551 2 416 018 6 02 Chittagong 861 494 7 616 352 11 31 Comilla 258 105 5 387 288 4 79 Cox s Bazar 97 648 2 289 990 4 26 Feni 83 773 1 437 371 5 83 Khagrachhari 103 195 613 917 16 81 Lakshmipur 59 417 1 729 188 3 44 Noakhali 140 541 3 108 083 4 52 Rangamati 30 244 595 979 5 07 Dhaka 566 368 12 043 977 4 70 Faridpur 180 366 1 912 969 9 43 Gazipur 176 582 3 403 912 5 19 Gopalganj 353 794 1 172 415 30 18 Kishoreganj 158 538 2 911 907 5 44 Madaripur 141 097 1 165 952 12 10 Manikganj 130 095 1 392 867 9 34 Munshiganj 114 655 1 445 660 7 93 Narayanganj 144 105 2 948 217 4 89 Narsingdi 125 769 2 224 944 5 65 Rajbari 106 974 1 049 778 10 19 Shariatpur 41 330 1 155 824 3 58 Tangail 246 237 3 605 083 6 83 Bagerhat 270 874 1 476 090 18 35 Chuadanga 26 514 1 129 015 2 35 Jessore 310 184 2 764 547 11 22 Jhenaidah 167 880 1 771 304 9 48 Khulna 525 727 2 318 527 22 68 Kushtia 56 792 1 946 838 2 92 Magura 164 578 918 419 17 92 Meherpur 7 870 655 392 1 20 Narail 134 594 721 668 18 65 Satkhira 351 551 1 985 959 17 70 Jamalpur 38 832 2 292 674 1 69 Mymensingh 183 026 5 110 272 3 58 Netrokona 207 430 2 229 642 9 30 Sherpur 34 944 1 358 325 2 57 Bogra 205 333 3 400 874 6 04 Chapai Nawabganj 66 602 1 647 521 4 04 Joypurhat 80 696 913 768 8 83 Naogaon 287 919 2 600 157 11 07 Natore 103 747 1 706 673 6 08 Pabna 73 487 2 523 179 2 91 Rajshahi 122 394 2 595 197 4 72 Sirajganj 147 514 3 097 489 4 76 Dinajpur 583 313 2 990 128 19 51 Gaibandha 167 897 2 379 255 7 06 Kurigram 135 484 2 069 273 6 55 Lalmonirhat 174 558 1 256 099 13 90 Nilphamari 293 385 1 834 231 15 99 Panchagarh 163 404 987 644 16 54 Rangpur 258 684 2 881 086 8 98 Thakurgaon 309 423 1 390 042 22 26 Habiganj 352 407 2 089 001 16 87 Maulvibazar 471 974 1 919 062 24 59 Sunamganj 319 376 2 467 968 12 94 Sylhet 248 154 3 434 188 7 23 Hinduism in Bangladesh by decades 4 Year Percent Increase 1901 33 1911 31 5 1 5 1921 30 6 0 9 1931 29 4 1 2 1941 28 1 4 1951 22 6 1961 18 5 3 5 1974 13 5 5 1981 12 1 1 4 1991 10 5 1 6 2001 9 6 0 9 2011 8 54 1 06 2022 7 95 0 59 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org The Hindu population in what is now Bangladesh has consistently decreased as a percentage of the population from 28 in 1941 to 13 5 at the time of Bangladesh s founding in 1974 and reducing further to 7 9 in 2022 23 36 37 Bangladesh Census authority have found that since from the last 50 years about 7 5 million 75 lakhs Hindus have left the country due to religious persecution and discrimination 38 As per as 2016 official figures it is estimated that Hindu population have came down to a mere 7 39 Persecution editSee also Persecution of Hindus in Bangladesh Persecution of Non Muslims in Bangladesh List of massacres in Bangladesh Bangladesh Genocide and Malaun Malaun from Arabic ملعون meaning accursed is a pejorative term for Bengali Hindus most commonly used in Bangladesh by Bengali Muslims 40 41 42 43 Hindus and others have been regularly and systematically persecuted such as during the Bangladesh genocide Bangladesh Liberation War and numerous recurring massacres of civilians 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 where rapes is also used as weapon 51 52 Active perpetrators of genocide ethnic cleansing and rapes of Hindus in Bangladesh include the Pakistani Military 48 Al Badr 53 54 Al Sham 55 East Pakistan Central Peace Committee 56 Razakars 57 Muslim League 58 Jamaat e Islami 58 and the Urdu speaking Biharis 58 According to the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom USCIRF Hindus are among those persecuted in Bangladesh with hundreds of cases of killings attempted killings death threats assaults rapes kidnappings and attacks on homes businesses and places of worship on religious minorities in 2017 59 The Vested Property Act previously named the Enemy Property Act has seen up to 40 of Hindu land get snatched away forcibly Hindu temples in Bangladesh have also been vandalised 60 The Pakistani census has found that the Hindu population in East Pakistan declined drastically from 28 in 1941 to 22 in 1951 The 1946 Noakhali massacre occurring before the partition and the 1950 East Pakistan riots which took place after the Partition of Bengal were among the most severe anti Hindu riots in the region s history 61 1971 genocide edit Between the 1961 and 1974 censuses the Hindu population increased by only 300 000 from 9 3 million to 9 6 million while the Hindu percentage declined from 18 5 to 13 5 62 The Hindu population was significantly impacted by the 1964 East Pakistan riots and 1971 East Pakistan genocide which primarily targeted Bengali Hindus 63 An estimated 10 million East Pakistanis sought refuge in India with 80 being Hindus Approximately 8 million Hindus fled to various parts of India during the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War to escape persecution by Pakistani armies and Islamic militias After Independence it was discovered that 1 5 million Hindus remained in India while the remaining 6 5 million returned to Bangladesh 64 Additionally an estimated 3 1 million Hindus who were already residing in Bangladesh chose to remain during the turmoil and survived the atrocities It is estimated that between 300 000 to 3 million people were killed during the Bangladesh Liberation War with 300 000 to 400 000 Bengali women being raped with the majority of victims being Hindus 65 Projections editFuture population edit Historical Hindu PopulationYearPop 19019 546 240 19119 939 825 4 1 192110 176 030 2 4 193110 466 988 2 9 194111 759 160 12 3 19519 239 603 21 4 19619 379 669 1 5 19749 673 048 3 1 198110 570 245 9 3 199111 178 866 5 8 200111 822 581 5 8 201112 730 651 7 7 202213 130 109 3 1 Source God Willing The Politics of Islamism in Bangladesh by Ali Riaz p 63 1 From 1964 to 2013 around 11 3 million Hindus left Bangladesh due to religious persecution and discrimination as stated by Dhaka university economist Abul Barkat On average 632 Hindus left the country each day and 230 612 annually as reported by him 66 From his 30 year long research Barkat found that the exodus mostly took place during military governments after independence 67 Barkat also state s that there should have been 28 7 million Hindus in the year 2013 instead of 12 2 million Or to put it another way Hindus should have accounted for 16 18 of Bangladesh s population not 9 7 as they do currently 68 According to the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom Hindus constitute merely 7 of the population in Bangladesh as per as the latest 2016 figures 69 According to the Pew Research Center Bangladesh will have 14 47 million Hindus by 2050 who will comprise 7 3 of the country s population 70 Another theory suggest that Bangladesh will have at least 180 200 million population by 2050 71 out of which there will be around 8 51 9 25 million Hindus living in this nation thus constituting only 4 after the beginning of half century 72 On average annually 230 612 Hindus were leaving Bangladesh for India permanently So between 2024 2050 It is estimated that 5 995 912 Hindus will leave the country if current immigration rates continue further 73 Future Hindu population of Bangladesh Year Total Population Hindu population Percentage 2020 168 180 000 13 790 000 8 2 2030 183 430 000 14 490 000 7 9 2040 193 550 000 14 710 000 7 6 2050 198 219 000 14 470 000 7 3 Source 70 74 75 Missing population edit See also East Bengali refugees Hinduism in West Bengal States of India by Bengali speakers Bengali Hindus Bengali Hindu diaspora and Bengali Hindus in Assam With migration into West Bengal the 1947 partition of Bengal significantly altered religious demographics in the eastern segment of the province which later became Bangladesh Violence also saw an uptick in the 1950s and 1960s in what had then become East Pakistan present day Bangladesh leading to large numbers of upper caste Bengali Hindus migrating to West Bengal Assam and Tripura with official Indian Government records indicating 2 519 557 Hindu refugees crossed into India from East Bengal between 1941 and 1951 76 Utilizing demography studies and other methods over a 55 year period from 1947 to 2001 professor Sachi Dastidar of the State University of New York calculates that well over 49 million Hindus are missing today from Bangladesh 77 78 79 According to a report published by a local daily newspaper of Bangladesh the Hindu population in the country has reduced by 1 million between 2001 and 2011 period 80 81 Ergo in the absence of partition in 1947 and other events that followed It is estimated the present day Bangladeshi hindu population would be approximately 63 13 million or 28 well above the current population of 12 73 million or 8 5 as reported in the Bangladesh 2011 census 77 78 82 80 81 Population of East Bengali refugees and their descendants living across different Indian states State Population Citation Andaman and Nicobar Islands 100 000 83 Assam 7 500 000 84 Tripura 2 200 000 85 Uttarakhand 200 000 86 West Bengal 30 000 000 87 Total 40 000 000 88 After the 1960s most of the migration was lower caste a trend that has continued to till this day As per a BJP estimate Bangladeshi Hindu immigrants are a significant presence in 75 Assembly constituencies making up approximately a fourth of the state s seats 89 Starting from the 2014 Lok Sabha elections the BJP has made the issue of Hindu Bangladeshi immigrants a core part of its strategy in West Bengal 90 An estimation shows that around 30 million Bangladeshi origin low caste Hindu refugees live in different parts of West Bengal specially in southern districts namely North 24 Parganas South 24 Parganas Nadia and other smaller pockets of North and South Bengal they are having an influence in over 70 assembly constituencies and are eagerly waiting to acquire Indian citizenship through CAA which was passed by Indian parliament in 2019 year for the purpose of granting them citizenship if their religion is Hinduism Sikhism Jainism as a promise criteria made by BJP in the election campaign of West Bengal earlier before the passage of that bill 91 92 93 An estimation shows that Assam has around 2 million Bangladeshi Hindus living in different parts of the state and are struggling to acquire Indian citizenship just like their counterparts in neighbouring West Bengal 94 The BJP hopes to wean away a large chunk of Bengali settlers who took refuge in Tripura from Bangladesh former East Pakistan The influx of the Bengali Hindus increased during the Bangladesh Liberation War and around at that time of 1971 India have received 10 million refugees from East Pakistan mostly 80 being Hindus and after Bangladesh become independent nearly 1 5 million of Bengali Hindu refugees decided to stay back in India particularly in West Bengal and other North Eastern states majorly in Assam and Tripura 95 96 97 98 Census data show the population of Tripura s 19 Scheduled Tribes dropped from 63 77 in 1881 to 31 78 in 2011 This is attributed to the migration of 6 10 lakh Bengalis the figure almost equal to the State s total population in 1951 from East Pakistan now Bangladesh between 1947 and 1971 99 At present there are around 2 2 million Bengali Hindus in Tripura moslty having Eastern Bangladeshi origin making them the largest ethnic group in the State constituting around 60 per cent of the state population 100 101 Population controversies edit The official number of Hindus living in Bangladesh is about 13 1 million or say 7 9 as per as 2022 census conducted by Bangladesh government authority 1 However at certain times different leaders as well as Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics have given different estimates Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies BIDS have found that 4 67 million people which is about 2 75 of country s total population were have not been counted by the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics BBS for 2022 census Moreover around 2 75 of undercount was reported in the case of Muslims against 2 68 of followers of other religions 102 At the same time Indigenous activists of Bangladesh have claimed that Ethnic minorities have been undercounted in Bangladesh s latest census 103 Number of Hindus residing in Bangladesh 1998 2022 est Source claimed by Population Year of claimed Reference Claimed by State Government of Bangladesh 20 160 000 16 1998 104 Claimed by Rabindranath Trivedi President of Human Rights Congress for Bangladesh Minorities HRCBM 22 260 000 15 2010 105 Claimed Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics 15 500 000 10 3 2014 106 Claimed Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics 17 000 000 10 7 2016 106 Claimed by Ravindra Ghosh Chairman of Bangladesh Hindu Janajagruti Samiti 18 000 000 11 04 2019 107 Claimed Bangladesh Government Official Website Introduction 18 150 000 12 1 Unknown 108 Claimed by KMSS leader Akhil Gogoi 19 000 000 11 65 2019 109 2019 report on International religious freedom Bangladesh US State Dept 15 280 000 10 2019 110 Claimed by Bangladesh grand Hindu alliance leader Govindo Pramanik 25 000 000 15 7 2019 111 Claimed by The Statesman Newspaper 19 560 000 12 2021 112 Claimed by Bangladesh Information Minister Muhammad Hasan Mahmud 20 000 000 12 1 2022 113 Hindu Temples editMain article List of Hindu temples in Bangladesh nbsp Kantajew Temple nbsp Shiva Temple Puthia Rajshahi nbsp Ramna Kali Temple Dhaka nbsp Kal Bhairab Temple at Brahmanbaria nbsp Gobinda Temple Puthia Rajshahi Bangladesh nbsp Durga Puja in Dhaka nbsp Roth Yatra procession Hindu temples and shrines are more or less distributed all across the country The Kantaji Temple is an elegant example of an 18th century temple The most important temple in terms of prominence is the Dhakeshwari National Temple located in Dhaka This temple along with other Hindu organizations arranges Durga Puja and Krishna Janmaashtami very prominently citation needed The other main temples of Dhaka are the Ramakrishna Mission Ramna Kali Temple Joy Kali Temple Laxmi Narayan Mandir Swami Bagh Temple and Siddheswari Kalimandir 114 Many Hindu temples have suffered from the implementation of the Vested Property Act through which land and moveable property has been confiscated by agents acting on behalf of successive governments 115 better source needed Hindu marriage law editFurther information Bengali Hindu wedding nbsp A typical Bangladeshi Hindu wedding Hindu family law governs the personal life of Hindus in Bangladesh There is no known limit for the number of wives a Hindu man can take in Bangladesh so polygamy for Hindu man is legal in Bangladesh 116 Under Bangladesh Hindu civil law men may have multiple wives but there are officially no options for divorce the report said Women are also prohibited from inheriting property under the civil laws for Hindus the report said A survey conducted during the year by Research Initiatives in Bangladesh and MJF showed that 26 7 percent of Hindu men and 29 2 percent of Hindu women would like to obtain a divorce but did not do so because of existing laws 117 Community issues editThe Hindu community has many similar issues as the predominantly Muslim community of Bangladesh These include women s rights dowry poverty unemployment and others Issues unique to the Hindu community include maintenance of Hindu culture and temples in Bangladesh Small sects of Islamists constantly try to politically and socially isolate the Hindus of Bangladesh 118 Because Hindus of Bangladesh are scattered across all areas except in Narayanganj they cannot unite politically However Hindus became sway voters in various elections Hindus have usually voted in large mass for Bangladesh Awami League and communist parties as these are the only parties which have a nominal commitment to secularism 119 the alternatives are the increasingly pro Islamist centrist parties such as the Bangladesh Nationalist Party and Jatiya Party which both incorporate Muslim identity into their version of Bangladeshi nationalism or the outright Islamist Jamaat e Islami Bangladesh an offshoot of the Pakistan based Jamaat e Islami which seeks to establish Islamic law under which there would be separate provisions for Hindus as non Muslims However Hindus in general maintain cordial relationships with liberal Muslims and they even participate in each other s festivals such as Durga Puja and Eid al Fitr citation needed Bangladesh Liberation War atrocities 1971 edit Main articles Bangladesh Liberation War 1971 Bangladesh atrocities and Operation Searchlight The Bangladesh Liberation War resulted in one of the largest genocides of the 20th century While estimates of the number of casualties were 200 000 3 000 000 it is reasonably certain that Hindus bore a disproportionate brunt of the Pakistan Army s onslaught against the Bengali population of what was East Pakistan 121 The Pakistani Army killed many Bengali Hindus during the Liberation War and most of the Bengali Hindu owned businesses were permanently destroyed The historic Ramna Kali Temple in Dhaka and the century old Rath at Dhamrai were demolished and burned down by the Pakistani Army 123 The initial post independence period 1972 75 edit In the first constitution of the newly independent country secularism and equality of all citizens irrespective of religious identity were enshrined 124 On his return to liberated Bangladesh Sheikh Mujibur Rahman in his first speech to the nation specifically recognized the disproportionate suffering of the Hindu population during the Bangladesh Liberation War On a visit to Kolkata India in February 1972 Mujib visited the refugee camps that were still hosting several million Bangladeshi Hindus and appealed to them to return to Bangladesh and to help to rebuild the country 125 Despite the public commitment of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and his government to re establishing secularism and the rights of non Muslim religious groups two significant aspects of his rule remain controversial as relates to the conditions of Hindus in Bangladesh 126 The first was his refusal to return the premises of the Ramna Kali Mandir historically the most important temple in Dhaka to the religious body that owned the property This centuries old Hindu temple was demolished by the Pakistan army during the Bangladesh Liberation War and around one hundred devotees were murdered Under the provisions of the Enemy Property Act it was determined that ownership of the property could not be established as there were no surviving members to claim inherited rights and the land was handed over to the Dhaka Club 127 128 Secondly state authorized confiscation of Hindu owned property under the provisions of the Enemy Property Act was rampant during Mujib s rule and as per the research conducted by Abul Barkat of Dhaka University the Awami League party of Sheikh Mujib was the largest beneficiary of Hindu property transfer in the past 35 years of Bangladeshi independence 129 This was enabled considerably because of the particular turmoil and displacement suffered by Bangladeshi Hindus who bore the disproportionate burnt of the Pakistan army s genocide as well documented by international publications such as Time magazine and the New York Times and by the declassified Hamoodur Rahman Commission report This caused much bitterness among Bangladeshi Hindus particularly given the public stance of the regime s commitment to secularism and communal harmony 130 131 Zia and Ershad regimes 1975 1990 edit President Ziaur Rahman abandoned the constitutional provision for secularism and began to introduce Islamic symbolism in all spheres of national life such as official seals and the constitutional preamble Zia brought back the multi party system thus allowing organizations such as Jamaat e Islami Bangladesh an offshoot of the Islamist Jamaat e Islami in Pakistan to regroup and contest elections In 1988 President Hussein Mohammed Ershad declared Islam to be the State Religion of Bangladesh Though the move was protested by students and left leaning political parties and minority groups to this date neither the regimes of the BNP or Awami League has challenged this change and it remains in place 132 In 1990 the Ershad regime was widely blamed for negligence and some human rights analysis allege active participation in the anti Hindu riots following the Babri Mosque incident in India the largest communal disturbances since Bangladesh independence as a means of diverting attention from the rapidly increasing opposition to his rule 133 134 Many Hindu temples Hindu neighbourhoods and shops were attacked and damaged including for the first time since 1971 the Dhakeshwari temple The atrocities were brought to the West s attention by many Bangladeshis including Taslima Nasrin and her book Lajja which translated into English means shame 135 Return to democracy 1991 2008 edit nbsp Hindu festival in Bangladesh Immediately after the Bangladesh Nationalist Party and its Islamic fundamentalist allies came to power in the October 2001 elections ruling coalition activists attacked Hindus on a large scale in retribution for their perceived support of the opposition Awami League Hundreds were killed many were raped and thousands fled to India 136 The events were widely seen as a repercussion against the razing of the Babri Mosque in India 137 Prominent political leaders frequently fall back on Hindu bashing in an attempt to appeal to extremist sentiment and to stir up communal passions In one of the most notorious utterances of a mainstream Bangladeshi figure the immediate past Prime Minister Khaleda Zia while the leader of the opposition in 1996 declared that the country was at risk of hearing uludhhwani a Hindu custom involving women s ululation from mosques replacing the azan Muslim call to prayer e g see Agence France Press report of 18 November 1996 Bangladesh opposition leader accused of hurting religious sentiment 138 After the election of 2001 when a right wing coalition including two Islamist parties Jamaat e Islami Bangladesh and Islami Oikya Jote led by the pro Islamic right wing Bangladesh Nationalist Party BNP came to power many minority Hindus and liberal secularist Muslims were attacked by a section of the governing regime Thousands of Bangladeshi Hindus were believed to have fled to neighbouring India 139 to escape the violence unleashed by activists sympathetic to the new government Many Bangladeshi Muslims played an active role in documenting atrocities against Hindus during this period 138 140 The new government also clamped down on attempts by the media to document alleged atrocities against non Muslim minorities following the election Severe pressure was put on newspapers and other media outside of government control through threats of violence and other intimidation Most prominently the Muslim journalist and human rights activist Shahriyar Kabir was arrested on charges of treason on his return from India where he had been interviewing Hindu refugees from Bangladesh this was by the Bangladesh High Court and he was subsequently freed 141 The fundamentalists and right wing parties such as the BNP and Jatiya Party often portray Hindus as being sympathetic to India and transferring economic resources to India contributing to a widespread perception that Bangladeshi Hindus are disloyal to the state Also the right wing parties claim the Hindus to be backing the Awami League 29 As widely documented in international media Bangladesh authorities have had to increase security to enable Bangladeshi Hindus to worship freely following widespread attacks on places of worship and devotees 142 After bombings in Bangladesh by the Islamic fundamentalists the government has taken steps to strengthen the security during various minority celebrations especially during Durga Puja and Rathayatra 143 In October 2006 the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom published a report titled Policy Focus on Bangladesh which said that since its last election Bangladesh has experienced growing violence by religious extremists intensifying concerns expressed by the country s religious minorities The report further stated that Hindus are particularly vulnerable in a period of rising violence and extremism whether motivated by religious political or criminal factors or some combination The report noted that Hindus had multiple disadvantages against them in Bangladesh such as perceptions of dual loyalty concerning India and religious beliefs that are not tolerated by the politically dominant Islamic Fundamentalists of the BNP Violence against Hindus has taken place in order to encourage them to flee in order to seize their property The previous reports of the Hindu American Foundation were acknowledged and confirmed by this non partisan report 144 145 On 2 November 2006 USCIRF criticized Bangladesh for violence against minority Hindus It also urged the Bush administration to get Dhaka to ensure the protection of religious freedom and minority rights before Bangladesh s next national elections in January 2007 144 145 Sheikh Hasina era 2008 present edit In 2013 the International Crimes Tribunal indicted several Jamaat members for war crimes against Hindus during the 1971 Bangladesh atrocities In retaliation violence against Hindu minorities in Bangladesh was instigated by the Bangladesh Jamaat e Islami 146 BJHM Bangladesh Jatiya Hindu Mahajote claimed in its report that in 2017 at least 107 people of the Hindu community were killed and 31 fell victims to enforced disappearance 782 Hindus were either forced to leave the country or threatened to leave and besides this 23 were forced to get converted into other religions and at least 25 Hindu women and children were raped while 235 temples and statues were vandalized during the year The total number of atrocities happened with the Hindu community in 2017 is 6474 147 During the 2019 Bangladesh elections eight houses belonging to Hindu families on fire in Thakurgaon alone 148 In April 2019 two idols of Hindu goddesses Lakshmi and Saraswati have been vandalized by unidentified miscreants at a newly constructed temple in Kazipara of Brahmanbaria 149 In the same month several idols of Hindu gods in two temples in Madaripur Sadar Upazila which were under construction were desecrated by miscreants 150 In 2021 many temples and houses of Hindus were broken and vandalized after an attack on them on Narendra Modi visit to Bangladesh by Hefazat e Islam and other radical groups as anti Modi protests 151 152 153 Similarly there were attacks on Hindus in 2020 after some of them supported France after the Murder of Samuel Paty 154 In the October of the same year there had been a severe communal violence in Bangladesh against the Bengali Hindus after the video of Quran desecration at the Durga Puja pandals was spread in which more than 120 Hindu temples were vandalized and nearly 7 Hindus were killed 155 156 It was described by The New York Times as worst communal violence in years 157 According to Dr Abul Barkat no Hindus will be left in Bangladesh 30 years from now if the current rate of exodus continues as on an average 632 people from the minority community leave the Muslim majority country each day From 1964 to 2013 around 11 3 million Hindus left Bangladesh due to religious persecution and discrimination which means on an average 632 Hindus left the country each day and 230 612 annually he said at the book launch ceremony at the Dhaka University DU 158 Political representation editEven after the decline of the Hindu population in Bangladesh from 13 5 in 1974 just after the independence Hindus were at around 11 2 of the population in 2001 according to government estimates following the census However Hindus accounted for only thirty two members of the 300 member parliament following the 2001 elections through direct election this went up to thirty five following a by election victory in 2004 Of the 50 seats reserved for women that are directly nominated by the Prime Minister only four were allotted to a Hindu The political representation is not at all satisfactory and several Hindu advocacy groups in Bangladesh have demanded a return to a communal electorate system as existed during the Pakistan period to enable a more equitable and proportionate representation in parliament or a reserved quota since the persecution of Hindus has continued since 1946 159 Despite their dwindling population in terms of overall percentage Hindus still yield considerable influence because of their geographical concentration in certain regions They form a majority of the electorate in at least two parliamentary constituencies Khulna 1 and Gopalganj 3 and account for more than 25 in at least another thirty For this reason they are often the deciding factor in parliamentary elections where victory margins can be extremely narrow It is also frequently alleged that this is a prime reason for many Hindus being prevented from voting in elections either through intimidating actual voters or through exclusion in voter list revisions 160 Prominent Bangladeshi Hindus editMain article List of Bangladeshi HindusSee also edit nbsp Hinduism portal nbsp Bangladesh portal Religion in Bangladesh Hinduism by country Bengali HindusReferences edit a b c d e Census 2022 Bangladesh population now 165 million 27 July 2022 a b Lorea 2016 p 89 Schulte Droesch Lea 2018 Making place through ritual land environment and region among the Santal of Central India p 187 ISBN 978 3 11 053973 8 OCLC 1054397811 a b Population amp Housing Census 2011 Union Statistics PDF Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics March 2014 p xiii Archived PDF from the original on 3 September 2017 Retrieved 17 April 2015 Bangladesh Population 2021 Worldometer worldometers info Retrieved 4 May 2021 Bangladesh Govt committed to safety and security of Hindu minorities Information Minister Hasan Mahmud The Hindu 29 October 2022 ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 19 July 2023 Ray Shantanu Guha 1 April 2023 World silent on efforts by zealots to ethnically cleanse Hindus in Bangladesh The Sunday Guardian Live Retrieved 16 October 2023 An Unholy Omen Is Looming Over Bangladesh The Wire Retrieved 16 October 2023 Bangladesh Protection of Hindus and others must be ensured amid ongoing violence Amnesty International 18 October 2021 Retrieved 16 October 2023 Rummel 1998 p 877 Nasrin 2014 pp 67 90 Kali Puja on Saturday Dhaka Tribune 13 November 2020 Retrieved 13 February 2021 The Subaltern Deities of Bengal Are up Against Aggressive Hindutva Now The Wire Retrieved 13 February 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Rahim Enayetur 1989 Heitzman James Worden Robert L eds Hinduism Washington D C Federal Research Division Library of Congress pp 78 82 OCLC 49223313 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Mark W Muesse 2011 The Hindu traditions Internet Archive Fortress Press pp 6670 ISBN 978 0 8006 9790 7 Chari S M Srinivasa 1994 Vaiṣṇavism Its Philosophy Theology and Religious Discipline Motilal Banarsidass Publishers pp 32 33 ISBN 978 81 208 1098 3 International Journal of Hindu Studies Volumes and issues SpringerLink Retrieved 13 February 2021 Aquil Raziuddin History of a distinct culture Frontline Retrieved 13 February 2021 Refugees United Nations High Commissioner for Refworld World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples Bangladesh Adivasis Refworld Latest News Newkerala com Retrieved 25 October 2013 Bangladesh State gov Archived from the original on 27 October 2019 Retrieved 25 October 2013 Bangladesh Population Census 1991 catalog ihsn org a b Network T D G 27 July 2022 BANGLADESH S HINDU POPULATION DECREASED BY 0 59 IN A DECADE Retrieved 11 March 2023 Nagarajan Rema 22 May 2010 Door out of Dhaka The Times of India Retrieved 9 May 2021 Official Census Results 2011 page xiii PDF Bangladesh Government Archived PDF from the original on 3 September 2017 Retrieved 17 April 2015 Bangladeshi Hindus seeking safety in India Deutsche Welle Alaldulal 12 April 2014 Is this the Bangladesh we wanted Analyzing the Hindu Population Gap 2001 2011 আল ল ও দ ল ল ALAL O DULAL Retrieved 21 April 2021 As per as Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics The country s Hindu population have declined from 8 5 in 2011 to 7 in 2016 The New Indian Express a b Bangladesh Wave of violent attacks against Hindu minority Amnesty International 6 March 2013 Archived from the original on 5 November 2018 Retrieved 9 November 2015 a b Moinuddin Haider M Rahman Mizanur Kamal Nahid 2019 Hindu Population Growth in Bangladesh A Demographic Puzzle Journal of Religion and Demography 6 1 123 148 doi 10 1163 2589742X 00601003 S2CID 189978272 a b Lintner Bertil 2015 Great Game East India China and the Struggle for Asia s Most Volatile Frontier Yale University Press pp 152 153 ISBN 978 0 300 21332 4 D Costa Bina 2011 Nationbuilding Gender and War Crimes in South Asia Routledge p 100 ISBN 978 0 415 56566 0 MacDermot Niall June 1972 The Review PDF International Commission of Jurists p 34 Retrieved 29 November 2023 As far as the other three groups are concerned namely members of the Awami League students and Hindus only Hindus would seem to fall within the definition of a national ethnical racial or religious group There is overwhelming evidence that Hindus were slaughtered and their houses and villages destroyed simply because they were Hindus The oft repeated phrase Hindus are enemies of the state as a justification for the killing does not gainsay the intent to commit genocide rather does it confirm the intention The Nazis regarded the Jews as enemies of the state and killed them as such In our view there is a strong prima facie case that the crime of genocide was committed against the group comprising the Hindu population of East Bengal a b Population amp Housing Census 2011 Zila Series amp Community Series Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics Retrieved 23 July 2021 See individual Zila files for religion and population information Population of minority religions decrease further in Bangladesh 27 July 2022 Ashraf Ajaz Interview Hindus in Bangladesh have faced ethnic cleansing since 1947 Scroll in Retrieved 20 July 2021 Mithun Mahanam Bhattacharjee 14 May 2019 Reasons Behind the Forced Migration of Bangladeshi Hindu Religious Minorities to India International Journal on Minority and Group Rights 26 3 461 483 doi 10 1163 15718115 02603002 ISSN 1385 4879 S2CID 150499523 Hindus in Bangladesh decrease by 7 5 million over 50 years Census 15 November 2021 At a mere 7 per cent Bangladesh Hindus under threat says US rights activist The New Indian Express Retrieved 20 July 2021 Roy Tathagata 2002 My People Uprooted Kolkata Ratna Prakashan p 18 ISBN 81 85709 67 X Dastidar Sachi 12 April 2008 Bangladesh The Upcoming National Elections Pluralism Tolerance and the Plight of Hindu and Non Muslim Minority Need a New Direction Bangladesh Religious Freedom Extremism Security and the Upcoming National Elections United States Commission on International Religious Freedom Archived from the original on 28 August 2013 Retrieved 13 September 2013 Minorities Fear for Life and Security PDF HRCBM 12 September 2002 Retrieved 16 October 2013 Chatterjee Garga 4 March 2015 The unholy killings of Avijit Roy and Govind Pansare Daily News and Analysis Retrieved 9 March 2015 Forkan Razakar s verdict any day Dhaka Tribune 14 June 2015 Why is the mass sexualized violence of Bangladesh s Liberation War being ignored Women In The World 25 March 2016 Discovery of numerous Mass Graves Various types of torture on Women and People s Attitude PDF kean edu Crimes Against Humanity in Bangladesh scholar smu edu a b Bangladesh war The article that changed history BBC News 25 March 2010 White Matthew Death Tolls for the Major Wars and Atrocities of the Twentieth Century First Razakar camp in Khulna turns into ghost house after Liberation War www observerbd com Retrieved 26 April 2023 Sharlach Lisa 2000 Rape as Genocide Bangladesh the Former Yugoslavia and Rwanda New Political Science 22 1 92 93 doi 10 1080 713687893 S2CID 144966485 Sajjad Tazreena 2012 First published 2009 The Post Genocidal Period and its Impact on Women In Totten Samuel ed Plight and Fate of Women During and Following Genocide Transaction Publishers p 225 ISBN 978 1 4128 4759 9 Mamoon Muntassir Al Badr Banglapedia Bangladesh Asiatic Society Retrieved 4 September 2016 Sisson Richard Rose Leo E 1991 War and Secession Pakistan India and the Creation of Bangladesh University of California Press p 165 ISBN 978 0 520 07665 5 Pakistan s first two militant Islamist groups Al Badar and Al Shams by Nadeem F Paracha LUBP Archived from the original on 27 December 2015 Retrieved 29 December 2015 Karlekar Hiranmay 2005 Bangladesh The Next Afghanistan SAGE p 149 ISBN 978 0 7619 3401 1 Govt publishes list of Razakars The Daily Star 16 December 2019 a b c Kann Peter R 27 July 1971 East Pakistan Is Seen Gaining Independence But It Will Take Years The Wall Street Journal Bangladesh 2018 International Religious Freedom Report PDF Press release US State Department 2019 2004 Congressional Record Vol 150 Page H3057 17 May 2004 https amp scroll in article 847725 interview hindus in bangladesh have faced ethnic cleansing since 1947 https sundayguardianlive com opinion may no hindus left bangladesh 30 years MacDermot Niall June 1972 The Review PDF International Commission of Jurists p 34 Retrieved 29 November 2023 As far as the other three groups are concerned namely members of the Awami League students and Hindus only Hindus would seem to fall within the definition of a national ethnical racial or religious group There is overwhelming evidence that Hindus were slaughtered and their houses and villages destroyed simply because they were Hindus The oft repeated phrase Hindus are enemies of the state as a justification for the killing does not gainsay the intent to commit genocide rather does it confirm the intention The Nazis regarded the Jews as enemies of the state and killed them as such In our view there is a strong prima facie case that the crime of genocide was committed against the group comprising the Hindu population of East Bengal https timesofindia indiatimes com blogs sarkari thoughts treatment of the 1971 east bengali refugees a forgotten experience https www ushmm org genocide prevention countries bangladesh https www dhakatribune com bangladesh 10113 E2 80 98no hindus will be left after 30 years E2 80 99 No Hindus will be left after 30 years Dhaka Tribune 20 November 2016 Retrieved 9 February 2021 Bangladeshis Say Amit Shah Playing Jinnah s Game NewsClick 8 October 2019 Retrieved 9 February 2021 At a mere 7 per cent Bangladesh Hindus under threat says US rights activist The New Indian Express Retrieved 21 April 2021 a b Projected Changes in the Global Hindu Population Pew Research Center s Religion amp Public Life Project 2 April 2015 Retrieved 9 February 2021 What will Bangladesh look like in 2050 The Daily Star 14 April 2018 Retrieved 9 May 2021 Violence Against Minority Hindus in Bangladesh An Analysis vifindia org Retrieved 9 May 2021 No Hindus will be left in Bangladesh after 30 years professor The Hindu PTI 22 November 2016 ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 22 April 2021 Alam Nurul Barkat e Khuda 2011 Demographics of Muslims and Non Muslims in Bangladesh Demography India 40 1 163 174 via ResearchGate Religions in Bangladesh PEW GRF globalreligiousfutures org Retrieved 22 April 2021 Homepage home iitk ac in Retrieved 21 April 2021 a b Ethnic cleansing of Hindus on rise in Bangladesh The New Indian Express Retrieved 21 April 2021 a b OHCHR Home https www ipf org in EncycPDF Bangladesh Book final english India Policy Foundation a b Bangladeshi Hindus seeking safety in India Deutsche Welle 7 June 2016 Retrieved 4 May 2021 a b Alaldulal 12 April 2014 Is this the Bangladesh we wanted Analyzing the Hindu Population Gap 2001 2011 alalodulal org Retrieved 21 April 2021 https www ipf org in EncycPDF Bangladesh Book final english India Policy Foundation View Andamans are paradise keep that a secret The Economic Times 3 September 2022 ISSN 0013 0389 Retrieved 3 May 2024 https www thenewsweb in india bengali speaking voters may prove crucial in the second phase of assam poll https www dailypioneer com 2017 sunday edition bjp eyes 22 m bengali hindus in tripura quest html https nickledanddimed com 2021 08 09 bengali community of uttarakhand issues concerns and fears text The 20state 20of 20Uttarakhand 20hosts Government 20led 20by 20Indira 20Gandhi https www firstpost com explainers matuas west bengal caa implementation bjp lok sabha elections 13747996 html https timesofindia indiatimes com city kolkata over 1cr bengali refugees living outside bengal articleshow 67348291 cms https scroll in article 845354 why hindu immigrants from bangladesh are a key component of the bjps west bengal expansion strategy Daniyal Shoaib Why Hindu immigrants from Bangladesh are a key component of the BJP s West Bengal expansion strategy Scroll in Retrieved 21 April 2021 Lahiri Ishadrita 22 February 2021 Explained Why The Matua Vote Is Crucial For Bengal Elections TheQuint Retrieved 21 April 2021 Bengal polls Matua MP says his community wants CAA to be implemented waiting to hear from Shah The New Indian Express Retrieved 21 April 2021 TMC BJP jostle for SC ST refugee vote banks in Bengal ahead of Assembly polls in 2021 Deccan Herald 7 November 2020 Retrieved 21 April 2021 20 lakh Bangladeshi Hindus to become Indians if Citizenship Bill is passed KMSS The Free Press Journal Retrieved 21 April 2021 IIT Kanpur https home iitk ac in ArticlePDF Hindu Genocide in East Pakistan When Indira Gandhi said Refugees of all religions must go back Watch video Times Now Retrieved 21 April 2021 A home far from home The Hindu 30 July 2000 Archived from the original on 4 May 2016 Retrieved 6 September 2021 Ayoob Mohammed 15 March 2018 Explaining 1971 The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 4 May 2021 Karmakar Rahul 27 October 2018 Tripura where demand for Assam like NRC widens gap between indigenous people and non tribal settlers The Hindu ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 21 April 2021 BJP eyes 2 2 m Bengali Hindus in Tripura quest The Pioneer Retrieved 21 April 2021 Tripura election 2018 What prompted Bengali majority Tripura to forgive BJP India News The Times of India Retrieved 21 April 2021 46 7 lakh people undercounted in latest census BIDS The Business Standard 6 February 2023 Retrieved 11 March 2023 Presse AFP Agence France Ethnic Minorities Missing From Census Say Bangladesh Activists www barrons com Retrieved 11 March 2023 Background Notes Bangladesh November 1997 U S Department of State Retrieved 11 March 2023 Door out of Dhaka The Times of India 22 May 2010 Retrieved 11 March 2023 a b Bangladesh s Hindus number 1 7 crore up by 1 p c in a year report The Hindu PTI 23 June 2016 ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 9 May 2021 Atrocities on Hindus in Bangladesh Now 1 8 crore Hindu Bengali citizens of Bangladesh are ready to go to India said Ravindra Ghosh Chairman of Bangladesh Hindu Janajagruti Samiti Retrieved 9 May 2021 Bangladesh An Introduction Ministry of Foreign Affairs Protests across Assam over Citizenship Amendment Bill The Hindu PTI 6 December 2019 ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 9 May 2021 https www state gov reports ba Web results 2019 Report on International Religious Freedom Bangladesh As per as Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics there are around 2 5 crore Hindus living in the country constituting 15 7 per cent of the population as of 2019 year Apn news Service Statesman News 27 November 2021 Migration Muddle The Statesman Retrieved 11 March 2023 As per Bangladesh Information Minister There are about two crore Hindus living in Bangladesh and in 2022 about 33 000 Durga Puja pandals have been organized throughout the nation telegraphindia Top 10 Hindu Temple in Bangladesh Oldest And Biggest Travel Mate 11 September 2019 Retrieved 22 April 2021 Feldman Shelley 22 April 2016 The Hindu as Other State Law and Land Relations in Contemporary Bangladesh South Asia Multidisciplinary Academic Journal 13 doi 10 4000 samaj 4111 ISSN 1960 6060 Bangladesh Family code Archived from the original on 18 May 2019 Retrieved 10 June 2009 Hindus can practice polygamy in Bangladesh forbidden to divorce remarry Business Standard IANS 16 August 2017 Retrieved 9 February 2021 ब ग ल द श म हद पर व र क हमल वर पर ह क र रव ई स श ल Dainik Jagran ব ল দ শ আওয ম ল গ এর গঠনতন ত র Constitution of Bangladesh Awami League in Bengali Archived from the original on 29 July 2017 Retrieved 21 November 2016 Murshid 2018 p 21 120 2 Pakistan The Ravaging of Golden Bengal Time Vol 98 no 5 2 August 1971 Archived from the original on 11 March 2007 Retrieved 25 October 2013 An article in Time magazine dated 2 August 1971 stated The Hindus who account for three fourths of the refugees and a majority of the dead have borne the brunt of the Moslem military s hatred 122 Senator Edward Kennedy wrote in a report that was part of United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations testimony dated 1 November 1971 Hardest hit have been members of the Hindu community who have been robbed of their lands and shops systematically slaughtered and in some places painted with yellow patches marked H All of this has been officially sanctioned ordered and implemented under martial law from Islamabad In the same report Senator Kennedy reported that 60 of the refugees in India were Hindus and according to numerous international relief agencies such as UNESCO and World Health Organization the number of East Pakistani refugees at its peak in India was close to 10 million The Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Sydney Schanberg covered the start of the war and wrote extensively on the suffering of the East Bengalis including the Hindus both during and after the conflict In a syndicated column The Pakistani Slaughter That Nixon Ignored he wrote about his return to liberated Bangladesh in 1972 Other reminders were the yellow H s the Pakistanis had painted on the homes of Hindus particular targets of the Pakistani army Newsday 29 April 1994 Nasrin 2014 pp 78 79 Nasrin 2014 pp 91 92 Benkin 2014 pp 879 881 Rummel 1998 pp 67 74 Krishnaswami Aiyangar Sakkottai 1921 South India and her Muhammadan invaders London H Milford Oxford University Press OCLC 5212194 Bangladesh slammed for persecution of Hindus rediff com Retrieved 13 February 2021 Gupta Jyoti Bhusan Das 2007 Science Technology Imperialism and War Pearson Education India p 733 ISBN 978 81 317 0851 4 Discrimination against Bangladeshi Hindus Report rediff com Retrieved 22 February 2021 Mujtaba Syed Ali 2005 Soundings on South Asia Sterling Publishers Pvt Ltd p 100 ISBN 978 1 932705 40 9 Bandyopadhyay 2004 pp 89 90 Bangladesh Parliament Votes To Make Islam State Religion The New York Times 8 June 1988 Retrieved 25 October 2013 Primary Report Hrcbm org 31 October 1990 Retrieved 25 October 2013 South Asia Afghanistan PDF United States House Committee on International Relations Archived from the original PDF on 29 December 2006 Nasrin 2014 Ramananda Sengupta 22 March 2006 The truth about Bangladesh s Hindus Rediff com Retrieved 25 October 2013 Analysis Fears of Bangladeshi Hindus BBC News 19 October 2001 Retrieved 25 October 2013 a b Bangladesh State gov Retrieved 25 October 2013 India state warns of Bangladesh refugees BBC News 15 November 2001 Retrieved 25 October 2013 Bangladesh Hindu atrocities documented BBC News 8 November 2001 Retrieved 25 October 2013 Bangladesh scribe arrest illegal BBC News 12 January 2002 Retrieved 25 October 2013 Security fears for Hindu festival BBC News 8 October 2002 Retrieved 25 October 2013 Business amp Financial News U S amp International Breaking News Reuters Reuters Archived from the original on 31 March 2007 Retrieved 22 February 2021 a b Bangladesh slammed for persecution of Hindus Rediff com Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 25 October 2013 a b Original USCIRF Report United States Commission on International Religious Freedom PDF Uscirf gov Archived from the original PDF on 28 September 2011 Retrieved 25 October 2013 Bangladesh Wave of violent attacks against Hindu minority Press releases Amnesty International Archived from the original on 9 March 2013 Retrieved 8 March 2013 BJHM 107 Hindus killed 31 forcibly disappeared in 2017 Dhaka Tribune 6 January 2018 Archived from the original on 29 March 2019 Retrieved 30 October 2019 Hindu houses under arson attack ahead of Bangladesh elections The Statesman 28 December 2018 Archived from the original on 20 April 2019 Retrieved 30 October 2019 Hindu idols vandalized in Brahmanbaria Dhaka Tribune 8 April 2019 Retrieved 30 October 2019 Hindu idols desecrated in Madaripur Dhaka Tribune 26 April 2019 Retrieved 30 October 2019 Extremist Islamist group s supporters attack 70 80 Hindu houses in Bangladesh Police India Today Retrieved 22 April 2021 Bangladesh violence spreads after PM Modi s visit attacks on Hindu temples train Times of India The Times of India Retrieved 22 April 2021 Hardline Hefazat e Islam supporters attack Hindu village in Bangladesh Report Hindustan Times 18 March 2021 Retrieved 22 April 2021 Hindu homes attacked in Bangladesh over rumours about alleged Facebook post slandering Islam The Hindu PTI 2 November 2020 ISSN 0971 751X Retrieved 22 April 2021 Seven dead after violence erupts during Hindu festival in Bangladesh The Guardian 16 October 2021 Retrieved 21 November 2021 Police Comilla resident Iqbal placed the Quran on a Puja idol Dhaka Tribune 20 October 2021 Retrieved 21 November 2021 Hasnat Saif Mashal Mujib 15 October 2021 Bangladesh Strengthens Security as Violence Targets Hindu Festival The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 21 November 2021 In 30 years there would be no Hindus in Bangladesh 21 November 2016 Home Noakhali Noakhali Noakhalinoakhali webs com Archived from the original on 11 April 2012 Retrieved 25 October 2013 Hindu areas in Ctg still out of listing The Daily Star Retrieved 16 August 2016 Bibliography edit Nasrin Taslim 2014 Lajja Penguin Books ISBN 9 789 351 18643 4 OCLC 1132343651 Benkin Richard L 2014 A Quiet Case of Ethnic Cleansing The Murder of Bangladesh s Hindus Akshaya Prakashan ISBN 9 788 188 64352 3 Rummel Rudolf J 1998 Statistics of Democide Genocide and Mass Murder Since 1900 LIT Publications ISBN 9 783 825 84010 5 Ahmed Babu Chowdhury Nazly 2005 Alam Md Shafiqul ed Selected Hindu Temples of Bangladesh University of Michigan UNESCO Dhaka ISBN 9 789 843 21778 3 Murshid Ghulam 25 January 2018 Bengali Culture Over a Thousand Years Niyogi Books ISBN 978 93 86906 12 0 Bandyopadhyay Sekhar 19 August 2004 Caste Culture and Hegemony Social Dominance in Colonial Bengal SAGE Publications ISBN 978 0 7619 9849 5 Lorea Carola 11 August 2016 Folklore Religion and the Songs of a Bengali Madman A Journey Between Performance and the Politics of Cultural Representation BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 32471 8 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hinduism in Bangladesh nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Hinduism in Bangladesh Bangladesh CIA Factbook 17 May 2022 Bangladesh Hindus will not go back BBC News 22 November 2001 HAF Report Summary on Bangladeshi Hindus HAF Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Bangladesh minority report Amnesty International Archived from the original on 13 September 2006 Portals nbsp Bangladesh nbsp Hinduism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hinduism in Bangladesh amp oldid 1222047949, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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