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Persecution of Hindus

Hindus have experienced both historical and ongoing religious persecution and systematic violence, in the form of forced conversions, documented massacres, genocides, demolition and desecration of temples, as well as the destruction of educational centres.

Definition of persecution

Divya Sharma, a sociologist and law scholar, establishes that religious persecution is the "systematic mistreatment of people (individual or group) due to their religious beliefs".[1] Persecution is any systematic mistreatment where the victims experience "suffering, harassment, fear, pain, imprisonment, internment".[2] In cases of religious groups, persecution denies or limits religious freedoms. This includes state supported acts such as destroying or defacing religious icons and buildings, or targeting properties shared by a religious community during peace or war.[3]

Mohamed S.M. Eltayeb, writing on "the definition and understanding of internal persecution among Muslims" in the present time, states that "In its common usage, the term 'religious persecution' is used to describe a particularly serious situation of discrimination where a campaign or program is initiated to harass, intimidate, and punish a group because of its religious or moral beliefs."[4] Specifically, "religious persecution constitutes a situation of gross violations of the freedom of thought, conscience, and religion or belief where there is a consistent pattern of gross violations of the right to freedom of religion that includes violations of the right to life, personal integrity or personal liberty."[5] The distinction with religious intolerance is that the latter in most cases is in the sentiment of the population, which may be tolerated or encouraged by the state, while religious persecution and discrimination "signify active state policy and action".[6] Denial of civil rights on the basis of religion without denying the freedom of religion is most often described as religious discrimination, rather than religious persecution.[6]

Medieval India

Parts of India have been subject to Muslim rule from the period of Muhammad ibn Qasim till the fall of the Mughal Empire. While there is a tendency to view the Muslim conquests and Muslim empires as a prolonged period of violence against Hindu culture,[note 1] in between the periods of wars and conquests, there were harmonious Hindu-Muslim relations in most Indian communities,[8] and the Indian population grew during the medieval Muslim times. No populations were expelled based on their religion by either the Muslim or Hindu kings, nor were attempts made to annihilate a specific religion.[8]

According to Romila Thapar, with the onset of Muslim rule all Indians, higher and lower caste were lumped together in the category of "Hindus". While higher-caste Indians regarded lower castes to be impure, they were now regarded as belonging to a similar category, which partly explains the belief among many higher caste Indians "Hinduism in the last one thousand years has been through the most severe persecution that any religion in the world has ever undergone." Thapar further notes that "The need to exaggerate the persecution at the hands of the Muslim is required to justify the inculcation of anti-Muslim sentiments among the Hindus of today."[9] Hindutva-allies have even framed the Muslim violence against Hindu expressions of faith as a "Hindu Holocaust".[10]

Romila Thapar states that the belief in a severe persecution in the last millennium brushes away the "various expressions of religious persecution in India prior to the coming of the Muslims and particularly between the Śaiva and the Buddhist and Jaina sects". She questions what persecution means, and if it means religious conversions, she doubts that conversions can be interpreted as forms of persecution. According to Thapar, it is quite correct to mention that Muslim iconoclasts destroyed temples and the broke images of Hindus but it should also be mentioned that Muslim rulers made donations to Hindu sects during their rule.[9]

David Lorenzen asserts that during the Islamic rule period there was state-sponsored persecution against Hindus, yet it was sporadic and directed mostly at Hindu religious monuments.[11] According to Deepa Ollapally, the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb was clearly discriminatory towards Hindu and all other non-Muslims, displaying an "unprecedented level of religious bigotry", but perhaps this was a consequence of the opposition he faced from a number of his family members.[12] During the medieval span, she states, "episodes of direct religious persecution of Hindus were rare", as were communal riots between Hindus and Muslims.[13]

Destruction of religious architecture

According to André Wink, the mutilation and destruction of Hindu religious idols and temples were an attack on Hindu religious practice,[14][note 2] and the Muslim destruction of religious architecture was a means to eradicate the vestiges of Hindu religious symbols.[15] Muslim texts of this period justify it based on their contempt and abhorence for idols and idolators in Islamic thought.[15][note 3] Peter Jackson notes that the Muslim historians of the medieval era viewed the creation and expansion of Islamic Sultanates in Hindustan as "holy war" and a religious conquest, characterizing Muslim forces as "the army of Islam" and the Hindus as infidels.[18][19] According to Jackson, these records need to be interpreted and relied upon with care given their tendencies to exaggerate. This was not a period of "uncompromising iconoclasm", states Jackson. Cities that quickly surrendered to the Islamic army, says Jackson, "got a better deal" for their religious monuments.[18]

According to Richard Davis, targeting sacred temples was not unique to Muslim rulers in India. Some Hindu kings too, prior to the formation of first Islamic sultanates in India, expropriated sacred idols from temples and took it back to their capitals as a political symbol of victory. However, the sacred temples, icons and the looted image carried away was still sacred and treated with respect by the victorious Hindu king and his forces, states Richard Davis. There is hardly any evidence of "mutilation of divine images and intentional defilement" of Hindu sacred icons or temples by armies in control of Hindu rulers. The evidence that is available suggests that the victorious Hindu kings undertook significant effort to house the expropriated images in new, grand temples within their kingdom.[20] According to Wink, Hindu destruction of Buddhist and Jain places of worship took place before the 10th-century, but the evidence for such 'Hindu iconoclasm' is incidental, too vague, and unconvincing.[21] According to Wink, mutilation and defilement of sacred icons is rarely evidenced in Hindu texts, in contrast to Muslim texts on the Islamic iconoclasm in India.[22] Hindu temples were centres of political resistance which had to be suppressed.[21]

Effect on Hindu learning

Despite unfavourable treatment under the Muslim rule, Brahmanical education continued and was also patronised by rulers like Akbar and others. Bukka Raya I, one of the founders of Vijaynagar Empire, had taken steps to rehabilitate Hindu religious and cultural institutions which suffered a serious setback under Muslim rule.[23] Buddhists centres of learning decayed, leading to the rise to prominence of Brahmanical institutions.

A lot of Vedantic literature got translated into these languages between the 12th and 15th centuries.[24]

Muhammad bin-Qasim

Muslim conquests in the Indian subcontinent began in early 8th century CE with a Muhammad ibn Qasim-led army. This campaign is narrated in the 13th-century surviving manuscript of Chach Nama by Bakr Kūfī, which was claimed to be based on an earlier Arabic record.[25]

The Chachnama mentions temple demolitions, mass executions of resisting Sindhi forces and the enslavement of their dependents; kingdoms ruled by Hindu and Buddhist kings were attacked, their wealth plundered, tribute (kharaj) settled and hostages taken, often as slaves to Iraq.[26][27] According to Wink, a historian specializing in Indo-Islamic period in South Asia, these Hindus were given the choice to either convert to Islam and join the Arab armies, or be sealed (tattooing the hands) and pay Jizya (a tax).[28] The Chach Nama and evidence in other pre-11th century Persian texts suggests that these Hindu Jats also suffered restrictions and discrimination as non-Muslims, as was then usual elsewhere for the non-Muslim subjects (ahl adh-dhimma) per the Islamic law (Sharia), states Wink.[28]

Yohanan Friedmann however finds that Chachnama holds most of the contemporary religious as well as political authority to have collaborated with the invaders, and those who promptly surrendered were not only gifted with huge sums of money but also entrusted to rule conquered territories.[29] Friedmann also notes that bin-Qasim "gave his unqualified blessing to the characteristic features of the society"—he reappointed every deposed Brahmin (of Brahmanabad) to their jobs, exempted them from Jizya, allowed holding of traditional festivals, and granted protection to temples but enforced the caste-hierarchy with enhanced vigor, drawing from Sharia, as evident from his treatment of Jats.[29] Overall, Friedmann concludes that the conquest, as described in the Chach Nama, did "not result in any significant changes in the structure of Indian society".[29]

According to Johnson and Koyama, quoting Bosworth, there were "certainly massacres in the towns" in the early stages of campaign against pagan Hindus in Sind, but eventually they were granted dhimmi status and peace treaties were made with them.[30]

After the conquest of Sindh, Qasim chose the Hanafi school of Islamic law which stated that, when under Muslim rule, people of Indic religions such as Hindus, Buddhists, and Jains are to be regarded as dhimmis (from the Arab term) as well as "People of the Book" and are required to pay jizya for religious freedom.[31]

The historicity of Chachnama has been questioned. Francesco Gabrieli considers the Chach Nama to be a "historical romance" which was "a late and doubtful source" for information about bin-Qasim and must be carefully sieved to locate the facts; on such a reading, he admired bin-Qasim's proclamations concerning "principle of tolerance and religious freedom".[32]Peter Hardy takes a roughly similar stance and lenses the work as a work of "political theory". Manan Ahmed Asif criticizes the very premises of recovering portions of Chachnama as a historical chronicle of Muslim conquest; he argues that the site and times of production dictated its entire content, and that it must be read in entirety, as an original work in the genre of "political theory" where history is creatively extrapolated with romantic fiction to gain favor in the court of Nasiruddin Qabacha.[33] Wink states that some scholars treat Chachnama and other Muslim texts of its era, as "largely pseudo-history". He concurs that the skepticism about each individual source is justified and Chachnama is part fiction.[34][35] Wink adds, taken together the common elements in these diverse sources suggest that Hindus were treated as dhimmis and targeted for certain discriminatory measures prescribed in the Sharia, as well as entitled to protection and limited religious freedoms in a Muslim state.[34]

Early sultanates (11th–12th century)

Muslim texts of that period are replete with iconoclast rhetoric, descriptions of mass-slaughter of Hindus, and repeats ad nauseam about "the army of Islam obtain[ing] abundant wealth and unlimited riches" from the conquered sites.[36] The Hindus are described in these Islamic texts as infidels, Hindustan as war zone ("Dar-al-Harb"), and attacks on pagan Hindus as a part of a holy war (jihad), states Peter Jackson.[37] However, states Wink, this killing was not systematic and "was normally confined to the fighting men" though the wars and episodes of routine violence did precipitate a great famine with civilian casualties in tens of thousands.[36] The pervasive and most striking feature of the Arabic literature on Sind and Hind of the 11th to 13th-century is its constant obsession with idol worship and polytheism in the Indian subcontinent.[38][39] There is piecemeal evidence of iconoclasm that began in Sind region, but the wholesale and more systematic onslaught against major Hindu religious monuments is evidenced in North India.[40]

Richard Eaton, Sunil Kumar, Romila Thapar, Richard H. Davis and others argue that these iconoclastic actions were not primarily driven by religious zeal, but were politically strategic acts of destruction in that temples in medieval India were sites associated with sovereignty, royal power, money, and authority.[41][42][43][44] According to Wink, the iconoclasm was a product of "religious, economic and political" and the practice undoubtedly escalated due to the "vast amount of immobilized treasure" in these temples.[40] As the Indo-Islamic conquests of the 11th and 12th-centuries moved beyond Panjab and the Himalayan foothills of the northwest into the Ganges-Yamuna Doab region, states Andre Wink, "some of the most important sacred sites of Indian culture were destroyed and desecrated,"[36] and their broken parts consistently reused to make Islamic monuments.[40][note 4] Phyllis Granoff notes that "medieval Indian religious groups faced a serious crisis as invading Muslim armies sacked temples and defaced sacred image".[46]

The 11th and 12th-century additionally witnessed the rise of irregulars and then Banjara-like groups who adopted Islam. These were "marauding bands" who caused much suffering and destruction in the countryside as they searched for food and supplies during the violent campaign of Ghurids against Hindustan.[47] The religious icons of Hindus were one of the targets of these Islamic campaigns.[38]

The 11th to 13th-century period did not witness any systematic attempts at forced conversions of Hindus into Muslims, nor is there evidence of widespread Islamicization in al-Hind that emerged from the violent conquest. The political power shifted from Hindu kings to Muslim sultans in conquered areas. If some temples were not destroyed in these areas, it did result in a loss to Hindu temple building patronage and an uprooting of Hindu sacred geography.[48]

The second half of the 13th-century witnessed raids on Hindu kingdoms by Muslim forces controlling the northwest and north India, states Peter Jackson.[49] These did not lead to sustained persecution of the Hindus in the targeted kingdoms, because the Muslim armies merely looted the Hindus, took cattle and slaves, then left. The raids caused suffering, yet also rallied the Islamic faithfuls and weakened an infidel prince by weakening his standing among his Hindu subjects.[49] These raids were into Rajput kingdoms, those in central India, Lakhnawti–Awadh, and in eastern regions such as Bihar.[50]

Numerous Islamic texts of that era, states Wink, also describe "forced transfer of enslaved Indian captives (ghilman-o-jawari, burda, sabaya), specially women and children" over the 11th-century from Hindustan.[36][51]

Delhi Sultanate (13th–16th century)

The Delhi Sultanate started in the 13th-century and continued through the early 16th-century, when the Mughal conquest replaced it. Jackson states that the Delhi Sultans of this period saw themselves first and foremost as Islamic rulers for the "people of Islam".[52] They were emphatically not "sultan of the Hindus". The Muslim texts of the Delhi Sultanate era treated Hindus with disdain, remarking "Hindus are never interesting in themselves, but only as converts, as capitation tax payers, or as corpses".[52] These medieval Muslim rulers were "protecting and advancing the Islamic faith", with two Muslim texts of this period remarking that the Sultan had a duty "eradicate infidelity and humiliate his Hindu subjects".[52]

According to Jackson, some of the conquered Hindu subjects of the Delhi Sultanate served these Sultans were "doubtless usually slaves". These Hindus built the mosques of this era as well as developed the Indo-Islamic architecture, some served the court in roles such as treasurers, clerks, minting of new coins, and others. These Hindus were not persecuted, instead some were rewarded with immunities and tax exemptions.[53] Additionally, captured Hindu slaves were added as infantry troops in the Sultanate's army for their campaign against other Hindu kingdoms.[53] Some Sultans adopted Indian customs such as ceremonial riding of elephants by kings, thus facilitating the public perception of the new monarch. This suggest that the Sultans cultivated some Hindus to serve their aims, rather than indiscriminately persecute every Hindu.[53]

In general, Hindu subjects of Delhi Sultanate were generally accepted as people with dhimmi status, not equal to Muslims, but "protected", subject to Jizya tax and with a list of restrictions.[54] Early Sultans of the Delhi Sultanate exempted the Brahmins from having to pay Jizya, thus dividing the Hindus and placing the discriminatory tax burden entirely on the non-Brahmin strata of the Hindu society. Firuz Shah was the first to impose the Jizya on Brahmins, and wrote in his autobiography that countless Hindus converted to Islam when he issued the edict that conversion would release them of the requirement to pay Jizya.[55] This discrimination against Hindus was in force in the latter half of the 14th-century, though Jackson finds it difficult to establish if and how this was enforced outside of the major centers under Muslim control.[55]

The Muslim commanders of Delhi Sultanate regularly raided Hindu kingdoms for plunder, mulct their treasuries and looted the Hindu temples therein, states Jackson.[56] These conquests of Delhi Sultanate armies damaged or destroyed many Hindu temples. In a few instances, after the war, the Sultans let the Hindus repair and reconstruct their temples. Such instances, states Jackson, has been cited by the Indian scholar P.B. Desai as evidence of "striking degree of tolerance" by Muslim Sultans. But, this happened in frontier areas after they had recently been conquered and placed in direct Muslim rule, where the Sultan's authority was "highly precarious".[57] Within regions that was already under firm control of the Delhi Sultanate, the direct evidence of this is meagre. One example referred to is of a claimed request from the king of China to build a temple in India, as recorded by Ibn Battuta. Jackson states that it is questionable and has no corroborating evidence. Similar few examples near Delhi, such as one for Sri Krishna Bhagwan temple, cannot be verified whether they were ever built either.[57]

Some modern era Indian texts mention that Hindu and Jain temples of Delhi Sultanate era received endowments from Muslim authorities, presenting these as evidence of lack of persecution during this period. It is "not beyond the bounds of possibility" that in some instances this happened.[58] But generally, the texts and even the memoirs written by the some Sultans themselves describe how they "set about destroying new temples and replacing them with mosques", and in one case depopulated a town of Hindus and resettled Muslims there. Jackson clarifies that the evidence suggests that the destroyed temples were "new temples", and not the old one's near Delhi whose devotees were already paying regular Jizya to the Sultan's treasuries.[58] In some cases, the policies on destroying or letting Hindus worship in their old temples changed as Sultans changed.[58]

The Muslim nobles and advisors of the Sultans championed persecution of Hindus. Jackson shows how the Muslim texts of that era frequently mention themes such as the Hindu "infidels must on no account be allowed to live in ease and affluence", they should not be treated as "Peoples of the Book" and the Sultan should "at least refrain from treating Hindus with honour or permitting idolatry in the capital".[59][60] Failure to slaughter the Hindus has led to polytheism taking root. Another wazir while theoretically agreeing to these view, stated that this would not be practical given the small population of Muslims and such a policy should be deferred until Muslims were in a stronger position. If eradication of Hindus is not possible, suggested another Muslim official, then the Hindus should at least be insulted, disgraced and dishonored.[59] These views were not exceptions, rather consistent with Islamic thinking of that era and are "commonly encountered in polemical writing against the infidel in different parts of the Islamic world at different times", states Jackson.[59][61] This antagonism towards Hindus may have other general reasons, such as the fear of apostasy given the tendency of everyday Muslims to join in with Hindus as they celebrated their religious festivals. Further, the succession struggle after the death of a Sultan usually led to political maneuvering by the next Sultan, where depending on the circumstances, the victor championed either the orthodox segment of the Islamic clergy and jurists, or gave concessions to the Hindus and other groups for support when the Sultanate facing a military threat from outside.[59]

Madurai Sultanate

The army of Ala al-Din Khalji from Delhi Sultanate began their first campaign in 1310 against the Hindu kingdom in Madurai region – called Ma'bar by court historians, under the pretext of helping Sundar Pandya. According to Mehrdad Shokoohy – a scholar of Islamic studies and architectural history in Central and South Asia – this campaign lasted for a year during which Madurai and other Tamil region cities were overrun by the Muslims, the Hindu temples were demolished and the towns looted.[62] A detailed record about the campaign by Amir Khusrau the destruction and plunder.[62]

A second destructive campaign was launched by Mubarak Shah, Ala al-Din Khalji's successor. While the looted wealth was sent to Delhi, a Muslim governor was appointed for the region.[62] The governor later rebelled, founded the short lived Madurai Sultanate and renamed himself as Sultan Ahsan Shah in 1334. The successive sultans of the new Sultanate did not have the support of the regional Hindu population. The Madurai Sultanate's army, states Shokoohy, "often exercised fierce and brutal repressive methods on the local people".[63] The Sultanate faced constant battles with neighboring Hindu states and assassination by its own nobles. Sultan Sikandar Shah was the last sultan. He was killed by the invading forces of Vijayanagara Empire army in 1377.[63]

The Muslim literature of this period record the motive of the Madurai Sultans. For example, Sultan Shams al-Din Adil Shah's general is described as leaving for "holy war against the infidels and taking from them great wealth and a vast amount of booty".[64] Another record states, "he engaged in a holy war (ghaza) and killed a great number of infidels".[64] Madurai region has several Islamic shrines with tombs built during this period, such as one for Ala al-Din and Shams al-Din. In this shrine, the inner columns are irregular and vary in form showing evidence of "reused material". The "destruction of temples and the re-use of their materials", states Shokoohy, was a "practice of the early Sultanates of North India, and we may assume that this tradition was brought to the south by the sultans of Ma'bar".[65]

Indologist Crispin Branfoot said that the Madurai Sultanate "sacked and desecrated Hindu temples throughout the Tamil country", and these were restored and reconsecrated for worship by the Vijayanagara rulers.[66]

Mughal Empire

The Mughal emperor Akbar has been a celebrated unusual example of tolerance. Indologist Richard Eaton writes that from Akbar's time to today, he has attracted conflicting labels, "from a strict Muslim to an apostate, from a free-thinker to a crypto-Hindu, from a Zoroastrian to a proto-Christian, from an atheist to a radical innovator". As a youth, states Eaton, Akbar studied Islam under both Shia and Sunni tutors, but as an adult he looked back with regret on his early life, confessing that in those days he had "persecuted men into conformity with my faith and deemed it Islam". In his later years he felt "an internal bitterness, acknowledging that his soul had been 'seized with exceeding sorrow'" for what he had done before launching his campaign to "treat all Mughal subjects, regardless of religion, on a basis of legal equality before the state".[67]

Aurangzeb

The reign of Aurangzeb (1658-1707) witnessed one of the strongest campaigns of religious violence in the Mughal Empire's history. Aurangzeb is a controversial figure in modern India, often remembered as a "vile oppressor of Hindus".[68] During his rule Aurangzeb expanded the Mughal Empire, conquering much of southern India through long bloody campaigns against non-Muslims. He forcibly converted Hindus to Islam and destroyed Hindu temples.[69][70] He also re-introduced the jizya, a tax on non-Muslims,[71] which had been suspended for the previous 100 years by his great-grandfather Akbar.[72]

Aurangzeb ordered the desecration and destruction of temples when conquering new lands and putting down rebellions, punishing political leaders by destroying the temples that symbolized their power.[73][74] In 1669 he issued orders to all his governors of provinces to "destroy with a willing hand the schools and temples of the infidels, and that they were strictly enjoined to put an entire stop to the teaching and practice of idolatrous forms of worship".[75] According to Richard Eaton these orders appear to have been directed not toward Hindu temples in general, but towards a more narrowly defined "deviant group".[76] The number of Hindu temples destroyed or desecrated under Aurangzeb's rule is unclear, but may have been grossly exaggerated,[note 5] and he probably built more temples than he destroyed.[78] According to Ikram, "Aurangzeb tried to enforce strict Islamic law by ordering the destruction of newly built Hindu temples. Later, the procedure was adopted of closing down rather than destroying the newly built temples in Hindu localities. It is also true that very often the orders of destruction remained a dead letter."[79] Some temples were destroyed entirely; in other cases mosques were built on their foundations, sometimes using the same stones. Idols in temples were smashed, and the city of Mathura was temporarily renamed as Islamabad in local official documents.[75][80]

The persecution during the Islamic period targeted non-Hindus as well.[note 6] In some cases, such as towards the end of Mughal era, the violence and persecution was mutual. Hindus too attacked and damaged Muslim tombs, even when the troops had orders not to harm religious refuges of Muslims. These "few examples of disrespect for Islamic sites", states Indologist Nicholas Gier, "pale in comparison to the great destruction of temples and general persecution of Hindus by Muslims for 500 years".[82] Sources document brutal episodes of persecution. Sikh texts, for example, document their "Guru Teg Bahadur accompanying sixteen Hindu Brahmins on a quest to stop Mughal persecution of Hindus; they were arrested and commanded to convert to Islam on pain of torture and death", states Gier, "they all refused, and in November 1675, Mati Das was sawed in half, Dayal Das was boiled alive, Sati Das was burned alive, and Teg Bahadar was beheaded."[83]

European colonial rule

Portuguese Goa

During the Portuguese rule of Goa, several Hindus were coerced into accepting Christianity by the passage of laws that made it difficult for them to practice their faith (such as the ban on the practice of Sati) or harassed them under pretences or petty complaints. Other Hindus, especially the upper caste Bamonns and Chardos were convinced into accepting Christianity by offering favourable status to converts (indiacatos) and mestiços in terms of laws and jobs.[84] An Inquisition - which literally means a period of prolonged and intensive questioning, was established in 1560 by Portuguese officials in the Estado Português da Índia. The Goa Inquisition was directed against backsliding New Christians (that is, former Hindus and Muslims who had recently converted to Christianity), and it has been recorded that around 57 Goan Catholics were executed over a period of two hundred and fifty years, starting in the year 1560.[85][86] The inquisition was proposed by St. Francis Xavier, to ensure that the new converts were aware about the aspects of Christianity.[87][88]

According to Teotónio de Souza, Hindus faced some persecution along with some fortitude under the Portuguese in Goa.[89] Vicar general Miguel Vaz had written to the king of Portugal in 1543 from Goa requesting that the Inquisition be established in Goa as well. Three years later, St. Francis Xavier made a similar request in view of the Muslims in the region and some New Christians abandoning their faith. On hearing of the excesses of the Inquisition in Goa, Lourenco Pires, Portuguese ambassador at Rome, expressed his displeasure to the crown while warning that this zeal for religion was actually becoming a disservice to God and the kingdom. Again according to de Souza, the Inquisition led to the downfall of the Portuguese Empire in the East.[89]

British India

Muslim and Hindu communities in British India have lived in a delicate balance since the end of Muslim rule. Violent clashes have often appeared, and the partition of India in 1947 has only perpetuated these confrontations.

Mappila Riots (1836–1921)

Mappila Riots or Mappila Outbreaks refers to a series of riots by the Mappila (Moplah) Muslims of Malabar, South India in the 19th century and the early 20th century (c.1836–1921) against native Hindus and the state. The Malabar Rebellion of 1921 is often considered as the culmination of Mappila riots.[90] Mappilas committed several atrocities against the Hindus during the outbreak.[91][92] Annie Besant reported that Muslim Mappilas forcibly converted many Hindus and killed or drove away all Hindus who would not apostatise, totalling the driven people to one lakh (100,000).[93]

Noakhali riots

In 1946, around seven weeks after Direct Action Day (in which both Muslims and Hindus were targeted in communal attacks), violence was directed against the Hindu minority in the villages of Noakhali and Tippera in Chittagong district in East Bengal.[94][95] Rioting in the region began in the Ramganj police station area.[96] The rioting spread to the neighbouring police station areas of Raipur, Lakshmipur, Begumganj and Sandip in Noakhali and Faridganj, Hajiganj, Chandpur, Laksham and Chudagram in Tippera.[96] From 2 October, there were instances of stray killings.[97] Relief operations took place and Gandhiji visited the place on a peace mission even as threats against the Hindus continued.[98] While claims varied, the official Muslim League Bengal Government estimates of those killed were placed at a conservative 200.[99] According to Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy, 9,895 people were forcibly converted in Tippera alone.[100] Ghulam Sarwar Hossain, a religious leader who belonged to a local political party dominated by Muslims,[101] was the main organiser of the riot.[102] It was said[by whom?] that the local administration had planned the riot and that the police helped Ghulam Sarwar escape arrest.[102] A large number of victims were Namasudra (a Bengali Hindu lower caste).[103] According to a source quoting from the State Government Archives, in Naokhali 178 Hindus and 42 Muslims were killed while in Tippera 39 Hindus and 26 Muslims were killed.[104] Women were abducted and forced into marriage.[95][104]

In retaliation, Muslims were massacred in Bihar and in Garhmukteshwara in the United Provinces.[96] These attacks began between 25 and 28 October 1946 in the Chhapra and Saran districts of Bihar and then spread to Patna, Munger, Bhagalpur and a large number of scattered villages of Bihar.[96] The official estimates of the dead at that time were 445.[96]

Partition of India

Hindus, Muslims, Sikhs, and members of other religious groups, experienced severe dislocation and violence during the massive population exchanges associated with the partition of India, as members of various communities moved to what they hoped was the relative safety of an area where they would be a religious majority. Hindus were among the between 200,000 and a million who died during the rioting and other violence associated with the partition.[105]

Mirpur massacre and Rajouri massacre

The 1947 Mirpur massacre and 1947–1948 Rajouri massacre of Hindus and Sikhs in the former princely state of Jammu and Kashmir, began in November 1947, some months after the partition of India. The Rajouri Massacre ended in early 1948, when Indian troops retook the town of Rajouri.

India

The Godhra train burning on 27 February 2002 killed 59 people, including 25 women and 15 child Hindu pilgrims. In 2011, the judicial court convicted 31 people saying the incident was a "pre-planned conspiracy".[106][107][108] This event eventually led to escalation into the 2002 Gujarat riots.

On 2 May 2003, eight Hindus were killed by a Muslim mob at Marad beach in Kozhikode district, Kerala. One of the attackers was also killed. The judicial commission that probed the incident concluded that members of several political parties were directly involved in planning and executing the killing.[109] The commission affirmed "a clear communal conspiracy, with Muslim fundamentalist and terrorist organisations involved".[109] The courts sentenced 62 Muslims to life imprisonment for committing the massacre in 2009.[110]

There have been a number of more recent attacks on Hindu temples and Hindus by Muslim militants in India. Prominent among them are the 1998 Chamba massacre, the 2002 fidayeen attacks on Raghunath temple, the 2002 Akshardham Temple attack allegedly perpetrated by Islamic terrorist outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba,[111] and the 2006 Varanasi bombings (supposedly perpetrated by Lashkar-e-Taiba), resulting in many deaths and injuries.

North-east

In Tripura, in 2000 the National Liberation Front of Tripura (NLFT) attacked a Hindu temple and killed a spiritual leader there. They are known to have forcefully converted Hindus to Christianity.[112][113]

In Meghalaya, in 2020 the Hynniewtrep National Liberation Council (HNLC) gave an ultimatum to Bengali Hindus, from Bangladesh, to leave Ichamati and Majai regions. This was a response to a Khasi youth, identified as Lurshai Hynniewta, 35, a resident of Khliehshnong Sohra, who was attacked by non-tribals at Ichamati, died at Sohra CHC on Friday. The HNLC has seen a Hindutva connection in the killing of the Khasi youth.[114]

Punjab

The period of insurgency in Punjab around Operation Blue Star saw clashes of the Sikh militants with the police, as well as with the Hindu-Nirankari groups resulting in many Hindu deaths. In 1987, 32 Hindus were pulled out of a bus and shot near Lalru in Punjab by Sikh militants.[115] According to the former Chief Minister of Punjab, Captain Amarinder Singh, there were 35,000 Hindus killed during militancy in Punjab.[116]

Jammu and Kashmir

The Kashmiri Pandit population living in the Muslim-majority region of Jammu and Kashmir has often come under threat from Islamic militants in recent years. Historians have suggested that some of these attacks have been in retaliation for the anti-Muslim violence propagated by the Hindutva movement during the demolition of the Babri Masjid, and the 2002 Gujarat riots.[117] This threat has been pronounced during periods of unrest in the Kashmir valley, such as in 1989. In 1986, the Anantnag Riots broke out, where protesters targeted properties of Kashmiri Hindus and temples.[118] Along with the Hindus, large sections of the Muslim population have also been attacked, ostensibly for "cooperating" with the Indian state. Some authors have found evidence that these militants had the support of the Pakistani security establishment.[119][120] The incidents of violence included the Wandhama Massacre in 1998, in which 23 Kashmiri Hindus were gunned down by Muslims disguised as Indian soldiers.[121] Many Kashmiri Non-Muslims have been killed and thousands of children orphaned over the course of the conflict in Kashmir. The 2000 Amarnath pilgrimage massacre was another such incident where 30 Hindu pilgrims were killed en route to the Amarnath temple.[122]

In the Kashmir region, approximately 300 Kashmiri Pandits were killed between September 1989 and 1990 in various incidents.[123] In early 1990, local Urdu newspapers Aftab and Al Safa called upon Kashmiris to wage jihad against India and ordered the expulsion of all Hindus choosing to remain in Kashmir.[123] In the following days masked men ran in the streets with AK-47 shooting to kill Hindus who would not leave.[123] Notices were placed on the houses of all Hindus, telling them to leave within 24 hours or die.[123]

As of 2005, it is estimated that between 250,000 and 300,000 pandits have migrated outside Kashmir since the 1990s[124][123] due to persecution by Islamic fundamentalists in the largest case of ethnic cleansing since the partition of India.[125] The proportion of Kashmiri Pandits in the Kashmir valley has declined from about 15% in 1947 to, by some estimates, less than 0.1% since the insurgency in Kashmir took on a religious and sectarian flavour.[126]

Many Kashmiri Pandits have been killed by Islamist militants in incidents such as the Wandhama massacre and the 2000 Amarnath pilgrimage massacre.[127][128][129][130][131] The incidents of massacring and forced eviction was termed ethnic cleansing by Kanchan Gupta.[123]

In October 2021, three terrorists shot a Kashmiri pandit school teacher and a Sikh school principal after checking their identity cards and segregating them from their Kashmiri Muslim colleagues in a government run school. Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba affiliated TRF claimed responsibility of the killings.[132]

Bangladesh

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.[133] 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.[134]

There have been several instances where Hindu refugees from Bangladesh have stated that they were the victims of torture and intimidation.[135][136][137] A US-based human rights organisation, Refugees International, has claimed that religious minorities, especially Hindus, still face discrimination in Bangladesh.[138]

A minor party, Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami, openly calls for 'Talibanisation' of the state.[139] Journalist Hiranmay Karlekar, writing in 2005 when Jamaat was part of the coalition government, described Talibanisation as impossible to stop, but said the country was not on the brink of it, and the overwhelming majority of society would fight against it tooth and nail.[140]

Bangladeshi feminist Taslima Nasrin's 1993 novel Lajja deals with the anti-Hindu riots and anti-secular sentiment in Bangladesh in the wake of the Demolition of the Babri Masjid in India. The book was banned in Bangladesh, and helped draw international attention to the situation of the Bangladeshi Hindu minority.

In October 2006, the USCIRF 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 countries 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 with respect to India and religious beliefs that are not tolerated by the politically dominant Islamic Fundamentalists of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party. Violence against Hindus has taken place "in order to encourage them to flee in order to seize their property".[141] On 2 November 2006, USCIRF criticised Bangladesh for its continuing persecution of minority Hindus. It also urged the Bush administration to get Dhaka to ensure protection of religious freedom and minority rights before Bangladesh's next national elections in January 2007.[141]

On 6 February 2010, Sonargaon temple in Narayanganj district of Bangladesh was destroyed by Islamic fanatics. Five people were seriously injured during the attack.[142] Temples were also attacked and destroyed in 2011.[143]

In 2013, the International Crimes Tribunal indicted several Jamaat members for war crimes against Hindus during the 1971 Bangladesh genocide. In retaliation, violence against Hindu minorities in Bangladesh was instigated by the Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami. The violence included the looting of Hindu properties and businesses, the burning of Hindu homes, rape of Hindu women and desecration and destruction of Hindu temples.[144]

On 28 February 2013, the International Crimes Tribunal sentenced Delwar Hossain Sayeedi, the Vice President of the Jamaat-e-Islami to death for the war crimes committed during the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War. Following the sentence, activists of Jamaat-e-Islami and its student wing Islami Chhatra Shibir attacked the Hindus in different parts of the country. Hindu properties were looted, Hindu houses were burnt into ashes and Hindu temples were desecrated and set on fire.[145][146] While the government has held the Jamaat-e-Islami responsible for the attacks on the minorities, the Jamaat-e-Islami leadership has denied any involvement. The minority leaders have protested the attacks and appealed for justice. The Supreme Court of Bangladesh has directed the law enforcement to start suo motu investigation into the attacks. US Ambassador to Bangladesh express concern about attack of Jamaat on Bengali Hindu community.[147][148] The violence included the looting of Hindu properties and businesses, the burning of Hindu homes, rape of Hindu women and desecration and destruction of Hindu temples.[144] According to community leaders, more than 50 Hindu temples and 1,500 Hindu homes were destroyed in 20 districts.[149]

According to the BJHM report in 2017 alone, 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. Besides, 23 were forced to get converted into other religions. At least 25 Hindu women and children were raped, while 235 temples and statues vandalized during the year. The total number of atrocities happened with the Hindu community in 2017 is 6474.[150] During the 2019 Bangladesh elections, eight houses belonging to Hindu families on fire in Thakurgaon alone.[151]

In April 2019, two idols of Hindu goddesses, Lakshmi and Saraswati, were vandalized by unidentified miscreants at a newly constructed temple in Kazipara of Brahmanbaria.[152] In the same month, several idols of Hindu gods in two temples in Madaripur Sadar upazila which were under construction were desecrated by miscreants.[153] In October 2021 several Hindu temples, including an ISKCON center and homes belonging to Hindu community, across Bangladesh were vandalized and set on fire by a Muslim mob of over 10,000 protesters, and clashes were reported in at least 10 of the 64 districts, after an allegation of a Quran being placed on the lap of Hanuman during the Durga Puja religious ceremony.[154] In Haziganj Upazila at least 4 were killed and 24 injured when police opened fire on a mob trying to attack the local temple there. According to Gobinda Chandra Pramanik, the secretary-general of the Bangladesh National Hindu Mahajote, at least 17 temples had been attacked and more than 100 people had been wounded. Shibu Prasad Roy, member of the organizing committee of the Durga Puja festival, says, "At first 15 to 20 people, aged between 14 and 18 years old, came to attack our temple in Cumilla. After that, the number increased to hundreds of people." Various reports suggests that the growing attack against the Hindu minority community in Bangladesh has been partly fueled by misinformation spread through social media.[155][156] Asif Nazrul mentions that, hundreds of homes belonging to the Hindu community were burned due to a fake Facebook post alleging an insult to Islam by a Hindu in 2016, including a few dozen Buddhist temples destroyed by a Muslim mob in Cox's Bazar after a rumor circulated that a Buddhist had insulted the Quran. A report by The Economic Times alleged that, Jamaat-e-Islami were behind the attacks.[155][156][157][158][159]

The cohorts of the ruling party Awami League and Chhatra League are often found affiliated in such attacks on Hindu communities followed by communal violence.[160][161] Even in most of the cases officials found them masterminds behind the attacks to achieve political advantages.[162][163]

Pakistan

1971 Bangladesh genocide

During the 1971 Bangladesh genocide there were widespread killings and acts of ethnic cleansing of civilians in Bangladesh (then East Pakistan, a province of Pakistan), and widespread violations of human rights were carried out by the Pakistani Army, which was supported by political and religious militias during the Bangladesh Liberation War. The violence began on 26 March 1971 with the launch of Operation Searchlight,[164] as West Pakistan (now Pakistan) began a military crackdown on the Eastern wing (now Bangladesh) of the nation.[165] During the nine-month-long Bangladesh War for Liberation, members of the Pakistani military and supporting pro Pakistani Islamist militias from Jamaat-e-Islami party[166] killed between 200,000 and 3,000,000[167][168][169] people and raped between 200,000 and 400,000 Bengali women,[169][170] according to Bangladeshi and Indian sources,[171] in a systematic campaign of genocidal rape.[172][173] The actions against women were supported by Pakistan's religious leaders, who declared that Bengali women were gonimoter maal (Bengali for "public property").[174] As a result of the conflict, a further eight to ten million people, mostly Hindus,[175] fled the country to seek refuge in neighbouring India. It is estimated that up to 30 million civilians were internally displaced[169] out of 70 million.[176] During the war, there was also ethnic violence between Bengalis and Urdu-speaking Biharis.[177] Biharis faced reprisals from Bengali mobs and militias[178] and from 1,000[179] to 150,000[180][181] were killed.

In Bangladesh, the atrocities are identified[by whom?] as a genocide. Time magazine reported in 1971 that "The Hindus, who account for three-fourths of the refugees and a majority of the dead, have borne the brunt of the Muslim military's hatred."[182]

United States government cables noted that Hindus were specific targets of the Pakistani army.[183][184] Notable massacres included the Jathibhanga massacre, the Chuknagar massacre, and the Shankharipara massacre.[185] More than 60% of the Bengali refugees who fled to India were Hindus.[186][187] It has been alleged[by whom?] that this widespread violence against Hindus was motivated by a policy to purge East Pakistan of what was seen as Hindu and Indian influences.[188][189]

According to R.J. Rummel, late professor of political science at the University of Hawaii,

The genocide and gendercidal atrocities were also perpetrated by lower-ranking officers and ordinary soldiers. These "willing executioners" were fueled by an abiding anti-Bengali racism, especially against the Hindu minority. "Bengalis were often compared with monkeys and chickens. Said General Niazi, 'It was a low lying land of low lying people.' The Hindus among the Bengalis were as Jews to the Nazis: scum and vermin that [should] best be exterminated. As to the Moslem Bengalis, they were to live only on the sufferance of the soldiers: any infraction, any suspicion cast on them, any need for reprisal, could mean their death. And the soldiers were free to kill at will. The journalist Dan Coggin quoted one Pakistani captain as telling him, "We can kill anyone for anything. We are accountable to no one." This is the arrogance of Power.[190]

The Bangladesh Liberation War (1971) resulted in one of the largest genocides of the 20th century. While estimates of the number of casualties was 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. 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 Muslim military hatred."[191] 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 80% 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 their peak in India was close to 10 million. Given that the Hindu population in East Pakistan was around 11 million in 1971, this suggests that up to 8 million, or more than 70% of the Hindu population had fled the country. 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 Muslim army" (by "Muslim army", meaning the Pakistan Army, which had targeted Bengali Muslims as well), (Newsday, 29 April 1994).

Post-1971

The Hindus are one of the persecuted minority religions in Pakistan. Militancy and sectarianism has been rising in Pakistan since the 1990s, and the religious minorities such as Hindus have "borne the brunt of the Islamist's ferocity" suffering "greater persecution than in any earlier decade", states Farahnaz Ispahani – a Public Policy Scholar at the Wilson Center. This has led to attacks and forced conversion of the Hindus.[192][193][194]

The London-based Minority Rights Group and Islamabad-based International and Sustainable Development Policy Institute state that religious minorities in Pakistan such as Hindus face "high levels of religious discrimination", and "legal and social discrimination in almost every aspect of their lives, including political participation, marriage and freedom of belief".[195] Similarly, the Brussels-based Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization stated in 2019, that "religious minorities, including Hindus" have perpetually been subjected to attacks and discrimination by extremist groups and the society at large."[196]

The United States Commission on International Religious Freedoms (USCIRF) echos a similar view, stating that "extremist groups and societal actors [have] continued to discriminate against and attack religious minorities" in Pakistan.[197][198][199] The European Parliament, similarly has expressed its concerns to Pakistan of systemic persecution of minorities citing examples of attack on Hindu temples (and Christian Churches), hundreds of honor killings, citing its blasphemy laws that "make it dangerous for religious minorities to express themselves freely or engage openly in religious activities".[200] The European Parliament has adopted resolutions of concern stating that "for years Pakistan's blasphemy laws have raised global concern because accusations are often motivated by score-settling, economic gain or religious intolerance, and foster a culture of vigilantism giving mobs a platform for harassment and attacks" against its religious minorities such as Hindus.[201][202][203]

In the aftermath of the Babri Masjid demolition Pakistani Hindus faced riots. Mobs attacked five Hindu temples in Karachi and set fire to 25 temples in towns across the province of Sindh. Shops owned by Hindus were also attacked in Sukkur. Hindu homes and temples were also attacked in Quetta.[204]

Hindus in Pakistan are often treated as second class citizens, systematically discriminated and dehumanised.[205] Hindu women have also been known to be victims of kidnapping and forced conversion to Islam.[206] A member of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan claimed in 2010, though without official record, that around 20 to 25 girls from the Hindu community, along with people from other minorities like Christians, are abducted every month and forcibly converted.[207] Many Hindus are continuing to flee Pakistan even now due to persecution.[208] Krishan Bheel, a Hindu member of the National Assembly of Pakistan, came into the news recently for manhandling Qari Gul Rehman after being taunted with a religious insult.[209]

On 18 October 2005, Sanno Amra and Champa, a Hindu couple residing in the Punjab Colony, Karachi, Sindh returned home to find that their three teenage daughters had disappeared. After inquiries to the local police, the couple discovered that their daughters had been taken to a local madrassah, had been converted to Islam, and were denied unsupervised contact with their parents.[210] In January 2017, a Hindu temple was demolished in Pakistan's Haripur district.[211]

In 2005, 32 Hindus were killed by firing from the government side near Nawab Akbar Bugti's residence during bloody clashes between Bugti tribesmen and paramilitary forces in Balochistan. The firing left the Hindu residential locality near Bugti's residence badly hit.[212]

In 2006, a Hindu temple in Lahore was destroyed to pave the way for construction of a multi-storied commercial building. When reporters from Pakistan-based newspaper Dawn tried to cover the incident, they were accosted by the henchmen of the property developer, who denied that a Hindu temple existed at the site.[213] In January 2014, a policeman standing guard outside a Hindu temple at Peshawar was gunned down.[214] 25 March 2014 Express Tribune citing an All Pakistan Hindu Rights Movement (PHRM) survey said that 95% of all Hindu temples in Pakistan have been converted since 1990.[215] Pakistanis attack Hindu temples if anything happens to any mosque in neighbouring India.[204] In 2019, a Hindu temple Pakistan's southern Sindh province was vandalism by miscreants and they set fire to holy books and idols inside the temple.[216]

In July 2010, around 60 members of the minority Hindu community in Karachi were attacked and evicted from their homes following an incident of a Hindu youth drinking water from a tap near an Islamic mosque.[217][218] In January 2014, a policeman standing guard outside a Hindu temple at Peshawar was gunned down.[214] Pakistan's Supreme Court has sought a report from the government on its efforts to ensure access for the minority Hindu community to temples – the Karachi bench of the apex court was hearing applications against the alleged denial of access to the members of the minority community.[219][220][221]

In 2010 also, 57 Hindus were forced to convert by their employer as his sales dropped after Muslims started boycotting his eatable items as they were prepared by Hindus. Since the impoverished Hindus had no other way to earn and needed to keep the job to survive, hence they converted.[222]

A Pakistan Muslim League politician has stated that abduction of Hindus and Sikhs is a business in Pakistan, along with conversions of Hindus to Islam.[223] Forced conversion, rape, and forced marriages of Hindu women in Pakistan have recently become very controversial in Pakistan.[224][225]

Although Hindus were frequently soft targets in Pakistan,[226][227] the rise of Taliban forces in the political arena has particularly unsettled the already fragile situation for the minority community. Increasing persecution, ostracism from locals and lack of a social support system is forcing more and more Hindus to flee to India.[228][229] This has been observed in the past whenever the conflicts between the two nations escalated,[230] but this has been a notable trend in view of the fact the recent developments are due to internal factors almost exclusively. The Taliban have used false methods of luring, as well as the co-operation of zealots within local authorities to perpetrate religious cleansing.[231]

In 2012, a century-old temple demolished in Karachi, Pakistan, along with several houses, leaving nearly 40 Hindus homeless.[232] Following the demolition, the Pakistan Hindu Council organised a protest outside of Karachi Press Club. Prakash, one of the members of the council said "They destroyed our mandir and humiliated our gods".[232] According to local residents, the demolition team taken away the gold jewellery and crowns of the Hindu deities.[232] "They hit me with their guns when I tried to stop them. I told them to kill me instead of destroying out holy place", states, one of the residents, Lakshman.[232] According to one elderly resident, identified as Kaali Das, the area around the temple had over 150 Hindu families and due to the demolition, the families, including the children, spent the nights in the open.[232] "If you don't want us, we will go to India", screamed one of the women.[232] Maharaj Badri, who lived inside the temple, said that, "Our ancestors have been living here since independence. We are not encroachers".[232]

The rise of Taliban insurgency in Pakistan has been an influential and increasing factor in the persecution of and discrimination against religious minorities in Pakistan, such as Hindus, Christians, Sikhs, and other minorities. Hindu minorities living under the influence of the Taliban in Swat, Pakistan, were forced to wear red headgear such as turbans as a symbol of dhimmi.[228] In January 2014, in an attack on a temple, the guard was gunned down.[214]

Some Hindus in Pakistan feel that they are treated as second-class citizens and many have continued to migrate to India.[226][233] According to the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan data, just around 1,000 Hindu families fled to India in 2013.[234] In May 2014, a member of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), Dr Ramesh Kumar Vankwani, revealed in the National Assembly of Pakistan that around 5,000 Hindus are migrating from Pakistan to India every year.[235]

Many Hindu girls living in Pakistan are kidnapped, forcibly converted and married to Muslims.[236] According to the Pakistan Hindu Council, religious persecution especially forced conversions to remain the foremost reason for the migration of Hindus from Pakistan. Religious institutions like Bharchundi Sharif and Sarhandi Pir support forced conversions and are known to have support and protection of ruling political parties of Sindh.[237] According to the National Commission of Justice and Peace and the Pakistan Hindu Council (PHC) around 1000 Christian and Hindu minority women are converted to Islam and then forcibly married off to their abductors or rapists. This practice is being reported increasingly in the districts of Tharparkar, Umerkot and Mirpur Khas in Sindh.[237] According to the Amarnath Motumal, the vice chairperson of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, every month, an estimated 20 or more Hindu girls are abducted and converted, although exact figures are impossible to gather.[236] In 2014 alone, 265 legal cases of forced conversion were reported mostly involving Hindu girls.[238]

In September 2019, Hindu teacher was attacked and three Hindu temples were vandalised in Ghotki riots over blasphemy accusations.[239][240] The protestors attacked properties, including the school and vandalised three Hindu temples.[239] The Hindu principal of Sindh public school in Ghotki was accused of fake blasphemy and the school was vandalised by the religious extremists in the presence of police, states the reports.[239][240]

In 2020, the Mata Rani Bhatiyani Hindu temple in Tharparkar, Sindh was vandalised by miscreants. The miscreants desecrated the idols and set fire to holy scriptures.[241][242] Four teenagers, ages 12 and 15 years, have been arrested for theft charges of the cash collection box of the temple.[242] According to the report, every year, around 1,000 young Hindu girls, between the ages of 12 and 28, are abducted, forcibly married and converted to Islam.[241][243]

In 2020, an Islamist mob desecrated the construction site of the first Hindu temple in Islamabad-Shri Krishna Temple Islamabad.[244] Subsequently, the Pakistan government halted the construction of the temple and referred the issue to the Council of Islamic Ideology, a constitutional body set up to ensure compliance of state policy with Islamic Ideology. Punjab Assembly speaker Chaudhry Pervaiz Elahi, a member of Pakistan Muslim League - Quaid, stated that construction of the temple was " against the spirit of Islam". Jamia Ashrafia, a Lahore-based Islamic institution, issued a fatwa against the temple.[245][246]

In October 2020, Goddess Durga's idols have been vandalised, stripped down and damaged in Nagarparkar, the Sindh Province of Pakistan.[247][248] According to the reports, the incident happened after the Hindu community had performed prayers of the Hindu festival Navaratri.[247] The incident has occurred on one of the most auspicious days in the Hindu religion, when communities come together to pray to and celebrate the Goddess Durga.[247][248]

In December 2020, a mob of hundred people led by the local Muslim clerics, destroyed and set on fire a Hindu temple in Karak district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan.[249] The violent mob, arranged by the local clerics, is seen setting on fire the walls and roof of the temple on the footage report. According to the report, the rally was organised by Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (F), a Sunni Deobandi political party in Pakistan, after the speakers delivered their fiery speeches, the crowd vandalized the temple and set it ablaze and razed it to the ground.[250][249] The human rights activists based in Pakistan, and other parts of the world, condemned the violent act against the Hindu minority community.[249]

In August 2021, a Muslim mob stormed and vandalized a Hindu temple in Rahim Yar Khan, Punjab, damaging and burning down the Hindu idols at the Siddhi vinayak temple.[251][252][253][254] According to Ramesh Kumar Vankwani, the member of Hindu National Assembly, the situation in the city was tense following the desecration of the Hindu temple.[254] The negligence of the issue by the local police, states Vankwani, was very shameful.[254] An appeal was made to the chief justice of Pakistan to intervene and to take immediate action, states Vankwani.[254] "The attackers were carrying sticks, stones and bricks. They smashed the deities while raising religious slogans", said Vankwani.[255][252]

Malaysia

Approximately nine percent of the population of Malaysia are Tamil Indians, of whom nearly 90 percent are practising Hindus. Indian settlers came to Malaysia from Tamil Nadu in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Between April and May 2006, several Hindu temples were demolished by city hall authorities in the country, accompanied by violence against Hindus.[256] On 21 April 2006, the Malaimel Sri Selva Kaliamman Temple in Kuala Lumpur was reduced to rubble after the city hall sent in bulldozers.[257]

The president of the Consumers Association of Subang and Shah Alam in Selangor State has been helping to organise efforts to stop the local authorities in the Muslim dominated city of Shah Alam from demolishing a 107-year-old Hindu temple. The growing Islamization in Malaysia is a cause for concern to many Malaysians who follow minority religions such as Hinduism.[258] On 11 May 2006, armed city hall officers from Kuala Lumpur forcefully demolished part of a 60-year-old suburban temple that serves more than 1,000 Hindus. The "Hindu Rights Action Force", a coalition of several NGO's, have protested these demolitions by lodging complaints with the Malaysian Prime Minister.[259] Many Hindu advocacy groups have protested what they allege is a systematic plan of temple cleansing in Malaysia. The official reason given by the Malaysian government has been that the temples were built "illegally". However, several of the temples are centuries old.[259] According to a lawyer for the Hindu Rights Action Task Force, a Hindu temple is demolished in Malaysia once every three weeks.[260]

Malaysian Muslims have also grown more anti-Hindu over the years. In response to the proposed construction of a temple in Selangor, Muslims chopped off the head of a cow to protest, with leaders saying there would be blood if a temple was constructed in Shah Alam.[261]

Laws in the country, especially those concerning religious identity, are generally slanted towards compulsion into converting to Islam.[262]

Myanmar

 
Hindu villagers gather to identify the corpses of family members who were killed in the Kha Maung Seik massacre.

On 25 August 2017, the villages in a cluster known as Kha Maung Seik in northern Maungdaw District of Rakhine State in Myanmar were attacked by Rohingya Muslims of Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA).This was called Kha Maung Seik massacre. Amnesty International said that about 99 Hindus were killed in that day.[263][264] Due to these, many Rohingya Hindus have started identifying themselves as Chittagonian Hindus rather than Rohingyas.[265] In Myanmar and in Bangladeshi refugee camps—according to some media accounts—Hindu Rohingyas (particularly women) faced kidnapping, religious abuse and "forced conversions" at the hands of Muslim Rohingyas.[266]

Afghanistan

According to Ashish Bose – a Population Research scholar, after the 1980s, Hindus (and Sikhs) became a subject of "intense hate" with the rise of religious fundamentalism in Afghanistan.[267] Their "targeted persecution" triggered an exodus and forced them to seek asylum.[268][267] Many of the persecuted Hindus started arriving in and after 1992 as refugees in India.[267][268] While these refugees were mostly Sikhs and Hindus, some were Muslims.[267] However, India has historically lacked any refugee law or uniform policy for persecuted refugees, state Ashish Bose and Hafizullah Emadi.[267][269]

Under the Taliban regime, Sumptuary laws were passed in 2001 which forced Hindus to wear yellow badges in public in order to identify themselves as such. This was similar to Adolf Hitler's treatment of Jews in Nazi Germany during World War II[270] Hindu women were forced to dress according to Islamic hijab, ostensibly a measure to "protect" them from harassment. This was part of the Taliban's plan to segregate "un-Islamic" and "idolatrous" communities from Islamic ones.[271] In addition, Hindus were forced to wear yellow distinguishing marks, however, after some protests Taliban abandoned this policy.[272]

The decree was condemned by the Indian and United States governments as a violation of religious freedom.[273] Widespread protests against the Taliban regime broke out in Bhopal, India. In the United States, the chairman of the Anti-Defamation League Abraham Foxman compared the decree to the practices of Nazi Germany, where Jews were required to wear labels which identified them as such.[274] The comparison was also drawn by California Democrat and holocaust survivor Tom Lantos, and New York Democrat and author of the bipartisan 'Sense of the Congress' non-binding resolution against the anti-Hindu decree Eliot L Engel.[270]

Since the 1990s, many Afghan Hindus have fled the country, seeking asylum in countries such as Germany.[275]

Saudi Arabia

On 24 March 2005, Saudi authorities destroyed religious items found in a raid on a makeshift Hindu shrine found in an apartment in Riyadh.[276]

United States

Hindus constitute 0.7% of the total population of the United States.[277] They are also the most affluent religious group.[278][279] Hindus in the US enjoy both de jure and de facto legal equality. However, a series of threats and attacks were committed against people of Indian origin by a street gang called the "Dotbusters" in New Jersey in 1987. The name originated from the bindi traditionally worn on the forehead by Indian women.[280]

In October 1987, a group of youths attacked Navroze Mody, an Indian man of Parsi origin, who was mistaken for a Hindu, after he had left the Gold Coast Cafe with his friend who fell into a coma. Mody died four days later. The four convicted of the attack were Luis Acevedo, Ralph Gonzalez and Luis Padilla – who were convicted of aggravated assault; and William Acevedo – who was convicted of simple assault. The attack was with fists and feet and with an unknown object that was described as either a baseball bat or a brick, and occurred after members of the group, which was estimated as being between ten and twelve youths, had surrounded Mody and taunted him for his baldness as either "Kojak" or "baldie". Mody's father, Jamshid Mody, later brought charges against the city and police force of Hoboken, New Jersey, claiming that "the Hoboken police's indifference to acts of violence perpetrated against Asian Indians violated Navroze Mody's equal protection rights" under the Fourteenth Amendment.[281] Mody lost the case; the court ruled that the attack had not been proven a hate crime, nor had there been proven any malfeasance by the police or prosecutors of the city.[281]

A few days after the attack on Mody, another Indian was beaten into a coma; this time on a busy street corner in Jersey City Heights. The victim, Kaushal Saran, was found unconscious at Central and Ferry Avenues, near a city park and firehouse, according to police reports. Saran, a licensed physician in India who was awaiting licensing in the United States, was discharged later from University Hospital in Newark.[282] The unprovoked attack left Saran in a partial coma for over a week with severe damage to his skull and brain. In September 1992, Thomas Kozak, Martin Ricciardi, and Mark Evangelista were brought to trial on federal civil rights charges in connection with the attack on Saran. However, the three were acquitted of the charges in two separate trials in 1993. Saran testified at both trials that he could not remember the incident.[283]

The Dotbusters were primarily based in New York and New Jersey and committed most of their crimes in Jersey City. Although tougher anti-hate crime laws were passed by the New Jersey legislature in 1990, the attacks continued, with 58 cases of hate crimes against Indians in New Jersey reported in 1991.[284]

On 2 January 2012, a Hindu worship center in New York City was firebombed.[285]

In late January 2019, an attack on the Swaminarayan Temple in Louisville, Kentucky, resulted in damage and Hinduphobic graffiti on the temple. A cleanup effort was later organised by the mayor to spread awareness of Hinduism and other hate crimes. An arrest of a 17-year-old was made for the hate crime days later.[286][287][288]

Trinidad and Tobago

During the initial decades of Indian indenture, Indian cultural forms were met with either contempt or indifference by the Christian majority.[289] Hindus have made many contributions to Trinidad's history and culture even though the state historically regarded Hindus as second class citizens. Hindus in Trinidad struggled over the granting of adult franchise, the Hindu marriage bill, the divorce bill, the cremation ordinance, and other discriminatory laws.[289] After Trinidad's independence from colonial rule, Hindus were marginalised by the African-based People's National Movement. The opposing party, the People's Democratic party, was portrayed as a "Hindu group", and Hindus were castigated as a "recalcitrant and hostile minority".[289] The displacement of PNM from power in 1985 would improve the situation.

Intensified protests over the course of the 1980s led to an improvement in the state's attitudes towards Hindus.[289] The divergence of some of the fundamental aspects of local Hindu culture, the segregation of the Hindu community from Trinidad, and the disinclination to risk erasing the more fundamental aspects of what had been constructed as "Trinidad Hinduism" in which the identity of the group had been rooted, would often generate dissension when certain dimensions of Hindu culture came into contact with the State. While the incongruences continue to generate debate, and often conflict, it is now tempered with growing awareness and consideration on the part of the state to the Hindu minority.[289] Hindus have been also been subjected to persistent proselytisation by Christian missionaries.[290] Specifically the evangelical and Pentecostal Christians. Such activities reflect racial tensions that at times arise between the Christianized Afro-Trinidadian and Hindu Indo-Trinidadian communities.[290]

Fiji

 
The burnt out remains of Govinda's Restaurant in Suva: over 100 shops and businesses were ransacked in Suva's central business district on 19 May

Hindus in Fiji constitute approximately 38% of the country's population. During the late 1990s there were several riots against Hindus by radical elements in Fiji. In the Spring of 2000, the democratically elected Fijian government led by Prime Minister Mahendra Chaudhry was held hostage by a guerilla group, headed by George Speight. They were demanding a segregated state exclusively for the native Fijians, thereby legally abolishing any rights the Hindu inhabitants have now. The majority of Fijian land is reserved for the ethnically Fijian community.[291] Since the practitioners of Hindu faith are predominantly Indians, racist attacks by the extremist Fijian Nationalists too often culminated into violence against the institutions of Hinduism. According to official reports, attacks on Hindu institutions increased by 14% compared to 2004. Hindus and Hinduism, being labelled the "outside others", especially in the aftermath of the May 2000 coup, have been victimised by Fijian fundamentalist and nationalists who wish to create a theocratic Christian state in Fiji. This intolerance towards Hindus has found expression in anti-Hindu speeches and destruction of temples, the two most common forms of immediate and direct violence against Hindus. Between 2001 and April 2005, one hundred cases of temple attacks have been registered with the police. The alarming increase of temple destruction has spread fear and intimidation among the Hindu minorities and has hastened immigration to neighbouring Australia and New Zealand. Organised religious institutions, such as the Methodist Church of Fiji, have repeatedly called for the creation of a theocratic Christian State and have propagated anti-Hindu sentiment.[292]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Will Durant called the Muslim conquest of India "probably the bloodiest story in history".[7]
  2. ^ Devout Hindus cherish the manifestation of the divine everywhere such as in icons, people, and sacred places.[14] Hinduism is "embedded in its sacred iconography, sacred prosopography and its sacred geography", states Wink, considered an "aid in contemplating the divine".[14] These form the fundamental structure behind Hindu pilgrimage, mythology, festivals, and community just like the other major Indian religions.[14]
  3. ^ The Muslim court historians describe the desecrated sacred cities of Hindus in demeaning terms. For example, they describe Mathura – a sacred city of Krishna tradition in Hinduism – as "the work of demons (jinn)", and refer to the sacred idols as well as their worshippers (Hindus) as "devils" (shayatin).[16] The architecture of Hindu temples underwent change under the Muslim rulers and incorporated Islamic influences. The Vrindavan temples, built under Akbar, lack ornamentation as imagery was generally prohibited.[17]
  4. ^ Some of the evidence of desecration and destruction of Hindu sacred monuments is independent of the Muslim texts of the period. It is found in Islamic monuments built during this period. As examples, the Qutb mosque in Delhi shows its "reliance on disassembled temple materials", as do the Caurasi Kambha mosque near Bharatpur, the Jami Masjid at Sultankot (also called Ukha mandir mosque), the 'idgah in Bayana.[45]
  5. ^ Number of temples destroyed:
    * Avari (2013, p. 115} citing a 2000 study, writes "Aurangzeb was perhaps no more culpable than most of the Sultans before him; they desecrated the temples associated with Hindu power, not all temples. It is worth noting that, in contrast to the traditional claim of hundreds of Hindu temples having been destroyed by Aurangzeb, a recent study suggests a modest figure of just fifteen destructions."
    * Audrey Truschke (2017). Aurangzeb: The Life and Legacy of India's Most Controversial King. Stanford University Press. ISBN 9781503602595., p.85: "Nobody knows the exact number of temples demolished or pillaged on Aurangzeb’s orders, and we never will. Richard Eaton, the leading authority on the subject, puts the number of confirmed temple destructions during Aurangzeb's rule at just over a dozen, with fewer tied to the emperor's direct commands. Other scholars have pointed out additional temple demolitions not counted by Eaton, such as two orders to destroy the Somanatha Temple in 1659 and 1706 (the existence of a second order suggests that the first was never carried out). Aurangzeb also oversaw temple desecrations. For example, in 1645 he ordered mihrabs (prayer niches, typically located in mosques) erected in Ahmedabad's Chintamani Parshvanath Temple, built by the Jain merchant Shantidas. Even adding in such events, however, to quote Eaton, "the evidence is almost always fragmentary, incomplete, or even contradictory". Given this, there were probably more temples destroyed under Aurangzeb than we can confirm (perhaps a few dozen in total?), but here we run into a dark curtain drawn across an unknown past."
    In contrast, the historian Abraham Eraly estimates Aurangzeb era destruction to be significantly higher; "in 1670, all temples around Ujjain were destroyed"; and later, "300 temples were destroyed in and around Chitor, Udaipur and Jaipur" among other Hindu temples destroyed elsewhere in campaigns through 1705.[77])
  6. ^ Avari writes, "Aurangzeb's religious policy caused friction between him and the ninth Sikh guru, Tegh Bahadur. In both Punjab and Kashmir the Sikh leader was roused to action by Aurangzeb's excessively zealous Islamic policies. Seized and taken to Delhi, he was called upon by Aurangzeb to embrace Islam and, on refusal, was tortured for five days and then beheaded in November 1675. Two of the ten Sikh gurus thus died as martyrs at the hands of the Mughals.[81]

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External links

  • Persecution of Hindus, Shri Kailasa
  • Gargan, Edward A. (11 December 1992), "The Hatreds of India; Hindu Memory Scarred by Centuries of despotic Islamic Rule", The New York Times
  •   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Hunter, William Wilson (1893), A Brief History of the Indian Peoples (PDF), Clarendon Press

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This article may be in need of reorganization to comply with Wikipedia s layout guidelines Please help by editing the article to make improvements to the overall structure January 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Hindus have experienced both historical and ongoing religious persecution and systematic violence in the form of forced conversions documented massacres genocides demolition and desecration of temples as well as the destruction of educational centres Contents 1 Definition of persecution 2 Medieval India 2 1 Destruction of religious architecture 2 2 Effect on Hindu learning 2 3 Muhammad bin Qasim 2 4 Early sultanates 11th 12th century 2 5 Delhi Sultanate 13th 16th century 2 6 Madurai Sultanate 2 7 Mughal Empire 2 7 1 Aurangzeb 3 European colonial rule 3 1 Portuguese Goa 3 2 British India 3 2 1 Mappila Riots 1836 1921 3 2 2 Noakhali riots 3 2 3 Partition of India 3 2 4 Mirpur massacre and Rajouri massacre 4 India 4 1 North east 4 2 Punjab 4 3 Jammu and Kashmir 5 Bangladesh 6 Pakistan 6 1 1971 Bangladesh genocide 6 2 Post 1971 7 Malaysia 8 Myanmar 9 Afghanistan 10 Saudi Arabia 11 United States 12 Trinidad and Tobago 13 Fiji 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 17 Sources 18 External linksDefinition of persecutionMain article Religious persecution Divya Sharma a sociologist and law scholar establishes that religious persecution is the systematic mistreatment of people individual or group due to their religious beliefs 1 Persecution is any systematic mistreatment where the victims experience suffering harassment fear pain imprisonment internment 2 In cases of religious groups persecution denies or limits religious freedoms This includes state supported acts such as destroying or defacing religious icons and buildings or targeting properties shared by a religious community during peace or war 3 Mohamed S M Eltayeb writing on the definition and understanding of internal persecution among Muslims in the present time states that In its common usage the term religious persecution is used to describe a particularly serious situation of discrimination where a campaign or program is initiated to harass intimidate and punish a group because of its religious or moral beliefs 4 Specifically religious persecution constitutes a situation of gross violations of the freedom of thought conscience and religion or belief where there is a consistent pattern of gross violations of the right to freedom of religion that includes violations of the right to life personal integrity or personal liberty 5 The distinction with religious intolerance is that the latter in most cases is in the sentiment of the population which may be tolerated or encouraged by the state while religious persecution and discrimination signify active state policy and action 6 Denial of civil rights on the basis of religion without denying the freedom of religion is most often described as religious discrimination rather than religious persecution 6 Medieval IndiaSee also Muslim conquests in the Indian subcontinent This article may present fringe theories without giving appropriate weight to the mainstream view and explaining the responses to the fringe theories Please help improve it or discuss the issue on the talk page March 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Parts of India have been subject to Muslim rule from the period of Muhammad ibn Qasim till the fall of the Mughal Empire While there is a tendency to view the Muslim conquests and Muslim empires as a prolonged period of violence against Hindu culture note 1 in between the periods of wars and conquests there were harmonious Hindu Muslim relations in most Indian communities 8 and the Indian population grew during the medieval Muslim times No populations were expelled based on their religion by either the Muslim or Hindu kings nor were attempts made to annihilate a specific religion 8 According to Romila Thapar with the onset of Muslim rule all Indians higher and lower caste were lumped together in the category of Hindus While higher caste Indians regarded lower castes to be impure they were now regarded as belonging to a similar category which partly explains the belief among many higher caste Indians Hinduism in the last one thousand years has been through the most severe persecution that any religion in the world has ever undergone Thapar further notes that The need to exaggerate the persecution at the hands of the Muslim is required to justify the inculcation of anti Muslim sentiments among the Hindus of today 9 Hindutva allies have even framed the Muslim violence against Hindu expressions of faith as a Hindu Holocaust 10 Romila Thapar states that the belief in a severe persecution in the last millennium brushes away the various expressions of religious persecution in India prior to the coming of the Muslims and particularly between the Saiva and the Buddhist and Jaina sects She questions what persecution means and if it means religious conversions she doubts that conversions can be interpreted as forms of persecution According to Thapar it is quite correct to mention that Muslim iconoclasts destroyed temples and the broke images of Hindus but it should also be mentioned that Muslim rulers made donations to Hindu sects during their rule 9 David Lorenzen asserts that during the Islamic rule period there was state sponsored persecution against Hindus yet it was sporadic and directed mostly at Hindu religious monuments 11 According to Deepa Ollapally the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb was clearly discriminatory towards Hindu and all other non Muslims displaying an unprecedented level of religious bigotry but perhaps this was a consequence of the opposition he faced from a number of his family members 12 During the medieval span she states episodes of direct religious persecution of Hindus were rare as were communal riots between Hindus and Muslims 13 Destruction of religious architecture According to Andre Wink the mutilation and destruction of Hindu religious idols and temples were an attack on Hindu religious practice 14 note 2 and the Muslim destruction of religious architecture was a means to eradicate the vestiges of Hindu religious symbols 15 Muslim texts of this period justify it based on their contempt and abhorence for idols and idolators in Islamic thought 15 note 3 Peter Jackson notes that the Muslim historians of the medieval era viewed the creation and expansion of Islamic Sultanates in Hindustan as holy war and a religious conquest characterizing Muslim forces as the army of Islam and the Hindus as infidels 18 19 According to Jackson these records need to be interpreted and relied upon with care given their tendencies to exaggerate This was not a period of uncompromising iconoclasm states Jackson Cities that quickly surrendered to the Islamic army says Jackson got a better deal for their religious monuments 18 According to Richard Davis targeting sacred temples was not unique to Muslim rulers in India Some Hindu kings too prior to the formation of first Islamic sultanates in India expropriated sacred idols from temples and took it back to their capitals as a political symbol of victory However the sacred temples icons and the looted image carried away was still sacred and treated with respect by the victorious Hindu king and his forces states Richard Davis There is hardly any evidence of mutilation of divine images and intentional defilement of Hindu sacred icons or temples by armies in control of Hindu rulers The evidence that is available suggests that the victorious Hindu kings undertook significant effort to house the expropriated images in new grand temples within their kingdom 20 According to Wink Hindu destruction of Buddhist and Jain places of worship took place before the 10th century but the evidence for such Hindu iconoclasm is incidental too vague and unconvincing 21 According to Wink mutilation and defilement of sacred icons is rarely evidenced in Hindu texts in contrast to Muslim texts on the Islamic iconoclasm in India 22 Hindu temples were centres of political resistance which had to be suppressed 21 Effect on Hindu learning Despite unfavourable treatment under the Muslim rule Brahmanical education continued and was also patronised by rulers like Akbar and others Bukka Raya I one of the founders of Vijaynagar Empire had taken steps to rehabilitate Hindu religious and cultural institutions which suffered a serious setback under Muslim rule 23 Buddhists centres of learning decayed leading to the rise to prominence of Brahmanical institutions A lot of Vedantic literature got translated into these languages between the 12th and 15th centuries 24 Muhammad bin Qasim Muslim conquests in the Indian subcontinent began in early 8th century CE with a Muhammad ibn Qasim led army This campaign is narrated in the 13th century surviving manuscript of Chach Nama by Bakr Kufi which was claimed to be based on an earlier Arabic record 25 The Chachnama mentions temple demolitions mass executions of resisting Sindhi forces and the enslavement of their dependents kingdoms ruled by Hindu and Buddhist kings were attacked their wealth plundered tribute kharaj settled and hostages taken often as slaves to Iraq 26 27 According to Wink a historian specializing in Indo Islamic period in South Asia these Hindus were given the choice to either convert to Islam and join the Arab armies or be sealed tattooing the hands and pay Jizya a tax 28 The Chach Nama and evidence in other pre 11th century Persian texts suggests that these Hindu Jats also suffered restrictions and discrimination as non Muslims as was then usual elsewhere for the non Muslim subjects ahl adh dhimma per the Islamic law Sharia states Wink 28 Yohanan Friedmann however finds that Chachnama holds most of the contemporary religious as well as political authority to have collaborated with the invaders and those who promptly surrendered were not only gifted with huge sums of money but also entrusted to rule conquered territories 29 Friedmann also notes that bin Qasim gave his unqualified blessing to the characteristic features of the society he reappointed every deposed Brahmin of Brahmanabad to their jobs exempted them from Jizya allowed holding of traditional festivals and granted protection to temples but enforced the caste hierarchy with enhanced vigor drawing from Sharia as evident from his treatment of Jats 29 Overall Friedmann concludes that the conquest as described in the Chach Nama did not result in any significant changes in the structure of Indian society 29 According to Johnson and Koyama quoting Bosworth there were certainly massacres in the towns in the early stages of campaign against pagan Hindus in Sind but eventually they were granted dhimmi status and peace treaties were made with them 30 After the conquest of Sindh Qasim chose the Hanafi school of Islamic law which stated that when under Muslim rule people of Indic religions such as Hindus Buddhists and Jains are to be regarded as dhimmis from the Arab term as well as People of the Book and are required to pay jizya for religious freedom 31 The historicity of Chachnama has been questioned Francesco Gabrieli considers the Chach Nama to be a historical romance which was a late and doubtful source for information about bin Qasim and must be carefully sieved to locate the facts on such a reading he admired bin Qasim s proclamations concerning principle of tolerance and religious freedom 32 Peter Hardy takes a roughly similar stance and lenses the work as a work of political theory Manan Ahmed Asif criticizes the very premises of recovering portions of Chachnama as a historical chronicle of Muslim conquest he argues that the site and times of production dictated its entire content and that it must be read in entirety as an original work in the genre of political theory where history is creatively extrapolated with romantic fiction to gain favor in the court of Nasiruddin Qabacha 33 Wink states that some scholars treat Chachnama and other Muslim texts of its era as largely pseudo history He concurs that the skepticism about each individual source is justified and Chachnama is part fiction 34 35 Wink adds taken together the common elements in these diverse sources suggest that Hindus were treated as dhimmis and targeted for certain discriminatory measures prescribed in the Sharia as well as entitled to protection and limited religious freedoms in a Muslim state 34 Early sultanates 11th 12th century Muslim texts of that period are replete with iconoclast rhetoric descriptions of mass slaughter of Hindus and repeats ad nauseam about the army of Islam obtain ing abundant wealth and unlimited riches from the conquered sites 36 The Hindus are described in these Islamic texts as infidels Hindustan as war zone Dar al Harb and attacks on pagan Hindus as a part of a holy war jihad states Peter Jackson 37 However states Wink this killing was not systematic and was normally confined to the fighting men though the wars and episodes of routine violence did precipitate a great famine with civilian casualties in tens of thousands 36 The pervasive and most striking feature of the Arabic literature on Sind and Hind of the 11th to 13th century is its constant obsession with idol worship and polytheism in the Indian subcontinent 38 39 There is piecemeal evidence of iconoclasm that began in Sind region but the wholesale and more systematic onslaught against major Hindu religious monuments is evidenced in North India 40 Richard Eaton Sunil Kumar Romila Thapar Richard H Davis and others argue that these iconoclastic actions were not primarily driven by religious zeal but were politically strategic acts of destruction in that temples in medieval India were sites associated with sovereignty royal power money and authority 41 42 43 44 According to Wink the iconoclasm was a product of religious economic and political and the practice undoubtedly escalated due to the vast amount of immobilized treasure in these temples 40 As the Indo Islamic conquests of the 11th and 12th centuries moved beyond Panjab and the Himalayan foothills of the northwest into the Ganges Yamuna Doab region states Andre Wink some of the most important sacred sites of Indian culture were destroyed and desecrated 36 and their broken parts consistently reused to make Islamic monuments 40 note 4 Phyllis Granoff notes that medieval Indian religious groups faced a serious crisis as invading Muslim armies sacked temples and defaced sacred image 46 The 11th and 12th century additionally witnessed the rise of irregulars and then Banjara like groups who adopted Islam These were marauding bands who caused much suffering and destruction in the countryside as they searched for food and supplies during the violent campaign of Ghurids against Hindustan 47 The religious icons of Hindus were one of the targets of these Islamic campaigns 38 The 11th to 13th century period did not witness any systematic attempts at forced conversions of Hindus into Muslims nor is there evidence of widespread Islamicization in al Hind that emerged from the violent conquest The political power shifted from Hindu kings to Muslim sultans in conquered areas If some temples were not destroyed in these areas it did result in a loss to Hindu temple building patronage and an uprooting of Hindu sacred geography 48 The second half of the 13th century witnessed raids on Hindu kingdoms by Muslim forces controlling the northwest and north India states Peter Jackson 49 These did not lead to sustained persecution of the Hindus in the targeted kingdoms because the Muslim armies merely looted the Hindus took cattle and slaves then left The raids caused suffering yet also rallied the Islamic faithfuls and weakened an infidel prince by weakening his standing among his Hindu subjects 49 These raids were into Rajput kingdoms those in central India Lakhnawti Awadh and in eastern regions such as Bihar 50 Numerous Islamic texts of that era states Wink also describe forced transfer of enslaved Indian captives ghilman o jawari burda sabaya specially women and children over the 11th century from Hindustan 36 51 Delhi Sultanate 13th 16th century The Delhi Sultanate started in the 13th century and continued through the early 16th century when the Mughal conquest replaced it Jackson states that the Delhi Sultans of this period saw themselves first and foremost as Islamic rulers for the people of Islam 52 They were emphatically not sultan of the Hindus The Muslim texts of the Delhi Sultanate era treated Hindus with disdain remarking Hindus are never interesting in themselves but only as converts as capitation tax payers or as corpses 52 These medieval Muslim rulers were protecting and advancing the Islamic faith with two Muslim texts of this period remarking that the Sultan had a duty eradicate infidelity and humiliate his Hindu subjects 52 According to Jackson some of the conquered Hindu subjects of the Delhi Sultanate served these Sultans were doubtless usually slaves These Hindus built the mosques of this era as well as developed the Indo Islamic architecture some served the court in roles such as treasurers clerks minting of new coins and others These Hindus were not persecuted instead some were rewarded with immunities and tax exemptions 53 Additionally captured Hindu slaves were added as infantry troops in the Sultanate s army for their campaign against other Hindu kingdoms 53 Some Sultans adopted Indian customs such as ceremonial riding of elephants by kings thus facilitating the public perception of the new monarch This suggest that the Sultans cultivated some Hindus to serve their aims rather than indiscriminately persecute every Hindu 53 In general Hindu subjects of Delhi Sultanate were generally accepted as people with dhimmi status not equal to Muslims but protected subject to Jizya tax and with a list of restrictions 54 Early Sultans of the Delhi Sultanate exempted the Brahmins from having to pay Jizya thus dividing the Hindus and placing the discriminatory tax burden entirely on the non Brahmin strata of the Hindu society Firuz Shah was the first to impose the Jizya on Brahmins and wrote in his autobiography that countless Hindus converted to Islam when he issued the edict that conversion would release them of the requirement to pay Jizya 55 This discrimination against Hindus was in force in the latter half of the 14th century though Jackson finds it difficult to establish if and how this was enforced outside of the major centers under Muslim control 55 The Muslim commanders of Delhi Sultanate regularly raided Hindu kingdoms for plunder mulct their treasuries and looted the Hindu temples therein states Jackson 56 These conquests of Delhi Sultanate armies damaged or destroyed many Hindu temples In a few instances after the war the Sultans let the Hindus repair and reconstruct their temples Such instances states Jackson has been cited by the Indian scholar P B Desai as evidence of striking degree of tolerance by Muslim Sultans But this happened in frontier areas after they had recently been conquered and placed in direct Muslim rule where the Sultan s authority was highly precarious 57 Within regions that was already under firm control of the Delhi Sultanate the direct evidence of this is meagre One example referred to is of a claimed request from the king of China to build a temple in India as recorded by Ibn Battuta Jackson states that it is questionable and has no corroborating evidence Similar few examples near Delhi such as one for Sri Krishna Bhagwan temple cannot be verified whether they were ever built either 57 Some modern era Indian texts mention that Hindu and Jain temples of Delhi Sultanate era received endowments from Muslim authorities presenting these as evidence of lack of persecution during this period It is not beyond the bounds of possibility that in some instances this happened 58 But generally the texts and even the memoirs written by the some Sultans themselves describe how they set about destroying new temples and replacing them with mosques and in one case depopulated a town of Hindus and resettled Muslims there Jackson clarifies that the evidence suggests that the destroyed temples were new temples and not the old one s near Delhi whose devotees were already paying regular Jizya to the Sultan s treasuries 58 In some cases the policies on destroying or letting Hindus worship in their old temples changed as Sultans changed 58 The Muslim nobles and advisors of the Sultans championed persecution of Hindus Jackson shows how the Muslim texts of that era frequently mention themes such as the Hindu infidels must on no account be allowed to live in ease and affluence they should not be treated as Peoples of the Book and the Sultan should at least refrain from treating Hindus with honour or permitting idolatry in the capital 59 60 Failure to slaughter the Hindus has led to polytheism taking root Another wazir while theoretically agreeing to these view stated that this would not be practical given the small population of Muslims and such a policy should be deferred until Muslims were in a stronger position If eradication of Hindus is not possible suggested another Muslim official then the Hindus should at least be insulted disgraced and dishonored 59 These views were not exceptions rather consistent with Islamic thinking of that era and are commonly encountered in polemical writing against the infidel in different parts of the Islamic world at different times states Jackson 59 61 This antagonism towards Hindus may have other general reasons such as the fear of apostasy given the tendency of everyday Muslims to join in with Hindus as they celebrated their religious festivals Further the succession struggle after the death of a Sultan usually led to political maneuvering by the next Sultan where depending on the circumstances the victor championed either the orthodox segment of the Islamic clergy and jurists or gave concessions to the Hindus and other groups for support when the Sultanate facing a military threat from outside 59 Madurai Sultanate The army of Ala al Din Khalji from Delhi Sultanate began their first campaign in 1310 against the Hindu kingdom in Madurai region called Ma bar by court historians under the pretext of helping Sundar Pandya According to Mehrdad Shokoohy a scholar of Islamic studies and architectural history in Central and South Asia this campaign lasted for a year during which Madurai and other Tamil region cities were overrun by the Muslims the Hindu temples were demolished and the towns looted 62 A detailed record about the campaign by Amir Khusrau the destruction and plunder 62 A second destructive campaign was launched by Mubarak Shah Ala al Din Khalji s successor While the looted wealth was sent to Delhi a Muslim governor was appointed for the region 62 The governor later rebelled founded the short lived Madurai Sultanate and renamed himself as Sultan Ahsan Shah in 1334 The successive sultans of the new Sultanate did not have the support of the regional Hindu population The Madurai Sultanate s army states Shokoohy often exercised fierce and brutal repressive methods on the local people 63 The Sultanate faced constant battles with neighboring Hindu states and assassination by its own nobles Sultan Sikandar Shah was the last sultan He was killed by the invading forces of Vijayanagara Empire army in 1377 63 The Muslim literature of this period record the motive of the Madurai Sultans For example Sultan Shams al Din Adil Shah s general is described as leaving for holy war against the infidels and taking from them great wealth and a vast amount of booty 64 Another record states he engaged in a holy war ghaza and killed a great number of infidels 64 Madurai region has several Islamic shrines with tombs built during this period such as one for Ala al Din and Shams al Din In this shrine the inner columns are irregular and vary in form showing evidence of reused material The destruction of temples and the re use of their materials states Shokoohy was a practice of the early Sultanates of North India and we may assume that this tradition was brought to the south by the sultans of Ma bar 65 Indologist Crispin Branfoot said that the Madurai Sultanate sacked and desecrated Hindu temples throughout the Tamil country and these were restored and reconsecrated for worship by the Vijayanagara rulers 66 Mughal Empire The Mughal emperor Akbar has been a celebrated unusual example of tolerance Indologist Richard Eaton writes that from Akbar s time to today he has attracted conflicting labels from a strict Muslim to an apostate from a free thinker to a crypto Hindu from a Zoroastrian to a proto Christian from an atheist to a radical innovator As a youth states Eaton Akbar studied Islam under both Shia and Sunni tutors but as an adult he looked back with regret on his early life confessing that in those days he had persecuted men into conformity with my faith and deemed it Islam In his later years he felt an internal bitterness acknowledging that his soul had been seized with exceeding sorrow for what he had done before launching his campaign to treat all Mughal subjects regardless of religion on a basis of legal equality before the state 67 Aurangzeb The reign of Aurangzeb 1658 1707 witnessed one of the strongest campaigns of religious violence in the Mughal Empire s history Aurangzeb is a controversial figure in modern India often remembered as a vile oppressor of Hindus 68 During his rule Aurangzeb expanded the Mughal Empire conquering much of southern India through long bloody campaigns against non Muslims He forcibly converted Hindus to Islam and destroyed Hindu temples 69 70 He also re introduced the jizya a tax on non Muslims 71 which had been suspended for the previous 100 years by his great grandfather Akbar 72 Aurangzeb ordered the desecration and destruction of temples when conquering new lands and putting down rebellions punishing political leaders by destroying the temples that symbolized their power 73 74 In 1669 he issued orders to all his governors of provinces to destroy with a willing hand the schools and temples of the infidels and that they were strictly enjoined to put an entire stop to the teaching and practice of idolatrous forms of worship 75 According to Richard Eaton these orders appear to have been directed not toward Hindu temples in general but towards a more narrowly defined deviant group 76 The number of Hindu temples destroyed or desecrated under Aurangzeb s rule is unclear but may have been grossly exaggerated note 5 and he probably built more temples than he destroyed 78 According to Ikram Aurangzeb tried to enforce strict Islamic law by ordering the destruction of newly built Hindu temples Later the procedure was adopted of closing down rather than destroying the newly built temples in Hindu localities It is also true that very often the orders of destruction remained a dead letter 79 Some temples were destroyed entirely in other cases mosques were built on their foundations sometimes using the same stones Idols in temples were smashed and the city of Mathura was temporarily renamed as Islamabad in local official documents 75 80 The persecution during the Islamic period targeted non Hindus as well note 6 In some cases such as towards the end of Mughal era the violence and persecution was mutual Hindus too attacked and damaged Muslim tombs even when the troops had orders not to harm religious refuges of Muslims These few examples of disrespect for Islamic sites states Indologist Nicholas Gier pale in comparison to the great destruction of temples and general persecution of Hindus by Muslims for 500 years 82 Sources document brutal episodes of persecution Sikh texts for example document their Guru Teg Bahadur accompanying sixteen Hindu Brahmins on a quest to stop Mughal persecution of Hindus they were arrested and commanded to convert to Islam on pain of torture and death states Gier they all refused and in November 1675 Mati Das was sawed in half Dayal Das was boiled alive Sati Das was burned alive and Teg Bahadar was beheaded 83 European colonial rulePortuguese Goa Main article Goa Inquisition During the Portuguese rule of Goa several Hindus were coerced into accepting Christianity by the passage of laws that made it difficult for them to practice their faith such as the ban on the practice of Sati or harassed them under pretences or petty complaints Other Hindus especially the upper caste Bamonns and Chardos were convinced into accepting Christianity by offering favourable status to converts indiacatos and mesticos in terms of laws and jobs 84 An Inquisition which literally means a period of prolonged and intensive questioning was established in 1560 by Portuguese officials in the Estado Portugues da India The Goa Inquisition was directed against backsliding New Christians that is former Hindus and Muslims who had recently converted to Christianity and it has been recorded that around 57 Goan Catholics were executed over a period of two hundred and fifty years starting in the year 1560 85 86 The inquisition was proposed by St Francis Xavier to ensure that the new converts were aware about the aspects of Christianity 87 88 According to Teotonio de Souza Hindus faced some persecution along with some fortitude under the Portuguese in Goa 89 Vicar general Miguel Vaz had written to the king of Portugal in 1543 from Goa requesting that the Inquisition be established in Goa as well Three years later St Francis Xavier made a similar request in view of the Muslims in the region and some New Christians abandoning their faith On hearing of the excesses of the Inquisition in Goa Lourenco Pires Portuguese ambassador at Rome expressed his displeasure to the crown while warning that this zeal for religion was actually becoming a disservice to God and the kingdom Again according to de Souza the Inquisition led to the downfall of the Portuguese Empire in the East 89 British India Muslim and Hindu communities in British India have lived in a delicate balance since the end of Muslim rule Violent clashes have often appeared and the partition of India in 1947 has only perpetuated these confrontations Mappila Riots 1836 1921 Main article Mappila riots Mappila Riots or Mappila Outbreaks refers to a series of riots by the Mappila Moplah Muslims of Malabar South India in the 19th century and the early 20th century c 1836 1921 against native Hindus and the state The Malabar Rebellion of 1921 is often considered as the culmination of Mappila riots 90 Mappilas committed several atrocities against the Hindus during the outbreak 91 92 Annie Besant reported that Muslim Mappilas forcibly converted many Hindus and killed or drove away all Hindus who would not apostatise totalling the driven people to one lakh 100 000 93 Noakhali riots Main article Noakhali riots In 1946 around seven weeks after Direct Action Day in which both Muslims and Hindus were targeted in communal attacks violence was directed against the Hindu minority in the villages of Noakhali and Tippera in Chittagong district in East Bengal 94 95 Rioting in the region began in the Ramganj police station area 96 The rioting spread to the neighbouring police station areas of Raipur Lakshmipur Begumganj and Sandip in Noakhali and Faridganj Hajiganj Chandpur Laksham and Chudagram in Tippera 96 From 2 October there were instances of stray killings 97 Relief operations took place and Gandhiji visited the place on a peace mission even as threats against the Hindus continued 98 While claims varied the official Muslim League Bengal Government estimates of those killed were placed at a conservative 200 99 According to Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy 9 895 people were forcibly converted in Tippera alone 100 Ghulam Sarwar Hossain a religious leader who belonged to a local political party dominated by Muslims 101 was the main organiser of the riot 102 It was said by whom that the local administration had planned the riot and that the police helped Ghulam Sarwar escape arrest 102 A large number of victims were Namasudra a Bengali Hindu lower caste 103 According to a source quoting from the State Government Archives in Naokhali 178 Hindus and 42 Muslims were killed while in Tippera 39 Hindus and 26 Muslims were killed 104 Women were abducted and forced into marriage 95 104 In retaliation Muslims were massacred in Bihar and in Garhmukteshwara in the United Provinces 96 These attacks began between 25 and 28 October 1946 in the Chhapra and Saran districts of Bihar and then spread to Patna Munger Bhagalpur and a large number of scattered villages of Bihar 96 The official estimates of the dead at that time were 445 96 Partition of India See also Partition of India Hindus Muslims Sikhs and members of other religious groups experienced severe dislocation and violence during the massive population exchanges associated with the partition of India as members of various communities moved to what they hoped was the relative safety of an area where they would be a religious majority Hindus were among the between 200 000 and a million who died during the rioting and other violence associated with the partition 105 Mirpur massacre and Rajouri massacre Main articles 1947 Mirpur massacre and 1947 1948 Rajouri massacre The 1947 Mirpur massacre and 1947 1948 Rajouri massacre of Hindus and Sikhs in the former princely state of Jammu and Kashmir began in November 1947 some months after the partition of India The Rajouri Massacre ended in early 1948 when Indian troops retook the town of Rajouri IndiaSee also Insurgency in Punjab Ajmer rape case and Category Islamic terrorism in India The Godhra train burning on 27 February 2002 killed 59 people including 25 women and 15 child Hindu pilgrims In 2011 the judicial court convicted 31 people saying the incident was a pre planned conspiracy 106 107 108 This event eventually led to escalation into the 2002 Gujarat riots On 2 May 2003 eight Hindus were killed by a Muslim mob at Marad beach in Kozhikode district Kerala One of the attackers was also killed The judicial commission that probed the incident concluded that members of several political parties were directly involved in planning and executing the killing 109 The commission affirmed a clear communal conspiracy with Muslim fundamentalist and terrorist organisations involved 109 The courts sentenced 62 Muslims to life imprisonment for committing the massacre in 2009 110 There have been a number of more recent attacks on Hindu temples and Hindus by Muslim militants in India Prominent among them are the 1998 Chamba massacre the 2002 fidayeen attacks on Raghunath temple the 2002 Akshardham Temple attack allegedly perpetrated by Islamic terrorist outfit Lashkar e Taiba 111 and the 2006 Varanasi bombings supposedly perpetrated by Lashkar e Taiba resulting in many deaths and injuries North east In Tripura in 2000 the National Liberation Front of Tripura NLFT attacked a Hindu temple and killed a spiritual leader there They are known to have forcefully converted Hindus to Christianity 112 113 In Meghalaya in 2020 the Hynniewtrep National Liberation Council HNLC gave an ultimatum to Bengali Hindus from Bangladesh to leave Ichamati and Majai regions This was a response to a Khasi youth identified as Lurshai Hynniewta 35 a resident of Khliehshnong Sohra who was attacked by non tribals at Ichamati died at Sohra CHC on Friday The HNLC has seen a Hindutva connection in the killing of the Khasi youth 114 Punjab See also Insurgency in Punjab The period of insurgency in Punjab around Operation Blue Star saw clashes of the Sikh militants with the police as well as with the Hindu Nirankari groups resulting in many Hindu deaths In 1987 32 Hindus were pulled out of a bus and shot near Lalru in Punjab by Sikh militants 115 According to the former Chief Minister of Punjab Captain Amarinder Singh there were 35 000 Hindus killed during militancy in Punjab 116 Jammu and Kashmir The Kashmiri Pandit population living in the Muslim majority region of Jammu and Kashmir has often come under threat from Islamic militants in recent years Historians have suggested that some of these attacks have been in retaliation for the anti Muslim violence propagated by the Hindutva movement during the demolition of the Babri Masjid and the 2002 Gujarat riots 117 This threat has been pronounced during periods of unrest in the Kashmir valley such as in 1989 In 1986 the Anantnag Riots broke out where protesters targeted properties of Kashmiri Hindus and temples 118 Along with the Hindus large sections of the Muslim population have also been attacked ostensibly for cooperating with the Indian state Some authors have found evidence that these militants had the support of the Pakistani security establishment 119 120 The incidents of violence included the Wandhama Massacre in 1998 in which 23 Kashmiri Hindus were gunned down by Muslims disguised as Indian soldiers 121 Many Kashmiri Non Muslims have been killed and thousands of children orphaned over the course of the conflict in Kashmir The 2000 Amarnath pilgrimage massacre was another such incident where 30 Hindu pilgrims were killed en route to the Amarnath temple 122 In the Kashmir region approximately 300 Kashmiri Pandits were killed between September 1989 and 1990 in various incidents 123 In early 1990 local Urdu newspapers Aftab and Al Safa called upon Kashmiris to wage jihad against India and ordered the expulsion of all Hindus choosing to remain in Kashmir 123 In the following days masked men ran in the streets with AK 47 shooting to kill Hindus who would not leave 123 Notices were placed on the houses of all Hindus telling them to leave within 24 hours or die 123 As of 2005 it is estimated that between 250 000 and 300 000 pandits have migrated outside Kashmir since the 1990s 124 123 due to persecution by Islamic fundamentalists in the largest case of ethnic cleansing since the partition of India 125 The proportion of Kashmiri Pandits in the Kashmir valley has declined from about 15 in 1947 to by some estimates less than 0 1 since the insurgency in Kashmir took on a religious and sectarian flavour 126 Many Kashmiri Pandits have been killed by Islamist militants in incidents such as the Wandhama massacre and the 2000 Amarnath pilgrimage massacre 127 128 129 130 131 The incidents of massacring and forced eviction was termed ethnic cleansing by Kanchan Gupta 123 In October 2021 three terrorists shot a Kashmiri pandit school teacher and a Sikh school principal after checking their identity cards and segregating them from their Kashmiri Muslim colleagues in a government run school Pakistan based Lashkar e Taiba affiliated TRF claimed responsibility of the killings 132 BangladeshSee also Hinduism in Bangladesh and List of massacres in Bangladesh 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 133 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 134 There have been several instances where Hindu refugees from Bangladesh have stated that they were the victims of torture and intimidation 135 136 137 A US based human rights organisation Refugees International has claimed that religious minorities especially Hindus still face discrimination in Bangladesh 138 A minor party Bangladesh Jamaat e Islami openly calls for Talibanisation of the state 139 Journalist Hiranmay Karlekar writing in 2005 when Jamaat was part of the coalition government described Talibanisation as impossible to stop but said the country was not on the brink of it and the overwhelming majority of society would fight against it tooth and nail 140 Bangladeshi feminist Taslima Nasrin s 1993 novel Lajja deals with the anti Hindu riots and anti secular sentiment in Bangladesh in the wake of the Demolition of the Babri Masjid in India The book was banned in Bangladesh and helped draw international attention to the situation of the Bangladeshi Hindu minority In October 2006 the USCIRF 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 countries 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 with respect to India and religious beliefs that are not tolerated by the politically dominant Islamic Fundamentalists of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party Violence against Hindus has taken place in order to encourage them to flee in order to seize their property 141 On 2 November 2006 USCIRF criticised Bangladesh for its continuing persecution of minority Hindus It also urged the Bush administration to get Dhaka to ensure protection of religious freedom and minority rights before Bangladesh s next national elections in January 2007 141 On 6 February 2010 Sonargaon temple in Narayanganj district of Bangladesh was destroyed by Islamic fanatics Five people were seriously injured during the attack 142 Temples were also attacked and destroyed in 2011 143 In 2013 the International Crimes Tribunal indicted several Jamaat members for war crimes against Hindus during the 1971 Bangladesh genocide In retaliation violence against Hindu minorities in Bangladesh was instigated by the Bangladesh Jamaat e Islami The violence included the looting of Hindu properties and businesses the burning of Hindu homes rape of Hindu women and desecration and destruction of Hindu temples 144 On 28 February 2013 the International Crimes Tribunal sentenced Delwar Hossain Sayeedi the Vice President of the Jamaat e Islami to death for the war crimes committed during the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War Following the sentence activists of Jamaat e Islami and its student wing Islami Chhatra Shibir attacked the Hindus in different parts of the country Hindu properties were looted Hindu houses were burnt into ashes and Hindu temples were desecrated and set on fire 145 146 While the government has held the Jamaat e Islami responsible for the attacks on the minorities the Jamaat e Islami leadership has denied any involvement The minority leaders have protested the attacks and appealed for justice The Supreme Court of Bangladesh has directed the law enforcement to start suo motu investigation into the attacks US Ambassador to Bangladesh express concern about attack of Jamaat on Bengali Hindu community 147 148 The violence included the looting of Hindu properties and businesses the burning of Hindu homes rape of Hindu women and desecration and destruction of Hindu temples 144 According to community leaders more than 50 Hindu temples and 1 500 Hindu homes were destroyed in 20 districts 149 According to the BJHM report in 2017 alone 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 Besides 23 were forced to get converted into other religions At least 25 Hindu women and children were raped while 235 temples and statues vandalized during the year The total number of atrocities happened with the Hindu community in 2017 is 6474 150 During the 2019 Bangladesh elections eight houses belonging to Hindu families on fire in Thakurgaon alone 151 In April 2019 two idols of Hindu goddesses Lakshmi and Saraswati were vandalized by unidentified miscreants at a newly constructed temple in Kazipara of Brahmanbaria 152 In the same month several idols of Hindu gods in two temples in Madaripur Sadar upazila which were under construction were desecrated by miscreants 153 In October 2021 several Hindu temples including an ISKCON center and homes belonging to Hindu community across Bangladesh were vandalized and set on fire by a Muslim mob of over 10 000 protesters and clashes were reported in at least 10 of the 64 districts after an allegation of a Quran being placed on the lap of Hanuman during the Durga Puja religious ceremony 154 In Haziganj Upazila at least 4 were killed and 24 injured when police opened fire on a mob trying to attack the local temple there According to Gobinda Chandra Pramanik the secretary general of the Bangladesh National Hindu Mahajote at least 17 temples had been attacked and more than 100 people had been wounded Shibu Prasad Roy member of the organizing committee of the Durga Puja festival says At first 15 to 20 people aged between 14 and 18 years old came to attack our temple in Cumilla After that the number increased to hundreds of people Various reports suggests that the growing attack against the Hindu minority community in Bangladesh has been partly fueled by misinformation spread through social media 155 156 Asif Nazrul mentions that hundreds of homes belonging to the Hindu community were burned due to a fake Facebook post alleging an insult to Islam by a Hindu in 2016 including a few dozen Buddhist temples destroyed by a Muslim mob in Cox s Bazar after a rumor circulated that a Buddhist had insulted the Quran A report by The Economic Times alleged that Jamaat e Islami were behind the attacks 155 156 157 158 159 The cohorts of the ruling party Awami League and Chhatra League are often found affiliated in such attacks on Hindu communities followed by communal violence 160 161 Even in most of the cases officials found them masterminds behind the attacks to achieve political advantages 162 163 PakistanMain article Persecution of Hindus in Pakistan See also Hinduism in Pakistan 2014 Larkana temple attack 2019 Ghotki riots and 2020 Karak temple attack 1971 Bangladesh genocide See also 1971 Bangladesh genocide and Operation Searchlight During the 1971 Bangladesh genocide there were widespread killings and acts of ethnic cleansing of civilians in Bangladesh then East Pakistan a province of Pakistan and widespread violations of human rights were carried out by the Pakistani Army which was supported by political and religious militias during the Bangladesh Liberation War The violence began on 26 March 1971 with the launch of Operation Searchlight 164 as West Pakistan now Pakistan began a military crackdown on the Eastern wing now Bangladesh of the nation 165 During the nine month long Bangladesh War for Liberation members of the Pakistani military and supporting pro Pakistani Islamist militias from Jamaat e Islami party 166 killed between 200 000 and 3 000 000 167 168 169 people and raped between 200 000 and 400 000 Bengali women 169 170 according to Bangladeshi and Indian sources 171 in a systematic campaign of genocidal rape 172 173 The actions against women were supported by Pakistan s religious leaders who declared that Bengali women were gonimoter maal Bengali for public property 174 As a result of the conflict a further eight to ten million people mostly Hindus 175 fled the country to seek refuge in neighbouring India It is estimated that up to 30 million civilians were internally displaced 169 out of 70 million 176 During the war there was also ethnic violence between Bengalis and Urdu speaking Biharis 177 Biharis faced reprisals from Bengali mobs and militias 178 and from 1 000 179 to 150 000 180 181 were killed In Bangladesh the atrocities are identified by whom as a genocide Time magazine reported in 1971 that The Hindus who account for three fourths of the refugees and a majority of the dead have borne the brunt of the Muslim military s hatred 182 United States government cables noted that Hindus were specific targets of the Pakistani army 183 184 Notable massacres included the Jathibhanga massacre the Chuknagar massacre and the Shankharipara massacre 185 More than 60 of the Bengali refugees who fled to India were Hindus 186 187 It has been alleged by whom that this widespread violence against Hindus was motivated by a policy to purge East Pakistan of what was seen as Hindu and Indian influences 188 189 According to R J Rummel late professor of political science at the University of Hawaii The genocide and gendercidal atrocities were also perpetrated by lower ranking officers and ordinary soldiers These willing executioners were fueled by an abiding anti Bengali racism especially against the Hindu minority Bengalis were often compared with monkeys and chickens Said General Niazi It was a low lying land of low lying people The Hindus among the Bengalis were as Jews to the Nazis scum and vermin that should best be exterminated As to the Moslem Bengalis they were to live only on the sufferance of the soldiers any infraction any suspicion cast on them any need for reprisal could mean their death And the soldiers were free to kill at will The journalist Dan Coggin quoted one Pakistani captain as telling him We can kill anyone for anything We are accountable to no one This is the arrogance of Power 190 The Bangladesh Liberation War 1971 resulted in one of the largest genocides of the 20th century While estimates of the number of casualties was 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 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 Muslim military hatred 191 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 80 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 their peak in India was close to 10 million Given that the Hindu population in East Pakistan was around 11 million in 1971 this suggests that up to 8 million or more than 70 of the Hindu population had fled the country 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 Muslim army by Muslim army meaning the Pakistan Army which had targeted Bengali Muslims as well Newsday 29 April 1994 Post 1971 The Hindus are one of the persecuted minority religions in Pakistan Militancy and sectarianism has been rising in Pakistan since the 1990s and the religious minorities such as Hindus have borne the brunt of the Islamist s ferocity suffering greater persecution than in any earlier decade states Farahnaz Ispahani a Public Policy Scholar at the Wilson Center This has led to attacks and forced conversion of the Hindus 192 193 194 The London based Minority Rights Group and Islamabad based International and Sustainable Development Policy Institute state that religious minorities in Pakistan such as Hindus face high levels of religious discrimination and legal and social discrimination in almost every aspect of their lives including political participation marriage and freedom of belief 195 Similarly the Brussels based Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization stated in 2019 that religious minorities including Hindus have perpetually been subjected to attacks and discrimination by extremist groups and the society at large 196 The United States Commission on International Religious Freedoms USCIRF echos a similar view stating that extremist groups and societal actors have continued to discriminate against and attack religious minorities in Pakistan 197 198 199 The European Parliament similarly has expressed its concerns to Pakistan of systemic persecution of minorities citing examples of attack on Hindu temples and Christian Churches hundreds of honor killings citing its blasphemy laws that make it dangerous for religious minorities to express themselves freely or engage openly in religious activities 200 The European Parliament has adopted resolutions of concern stating that for years Pakistan s blasphemy laws have raised global concern because accusations are often motivated by score settling economic gain or religious intolerance and foster a culture of vigilantism giving mobs a platform for harassment and attacks against its religious minorities such as Hindus 201 202 203 In the aftermath of the Babri Masjid demolition Pakistani Hindus faced riots Mobs attacked five Hindu temples in Karachi and set fire to 25 temples in towns across the province of Sindh Shops owned by Hindus were also attacked in Sukkur Hindu homes and temples were also attacked in Quetta 204 Hindus in Pakistan are often treated as second class citizens systematically discriminated and dehumanised 205 Hindu women have also been known to be victims of kidnapping and forced conversion to Islam 206 A member of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan claimed in 2010 though without official record that around 20 to 25 girls from the Hindu community along with people from other minorities like Christians are abducted every month and forcibly converted 207 Many Hindus are continuing to flee Pakistan even now due to persecution 208 Krishan Bheel a Hindu member of the National Assembly of Pakistan came into the news recently for manhandling Qari Gul Rehman after being taunted with a religious insult 209 On 18 October 2005 Sanno Amra and Champa a Hindu couple residing in the Punjab Colony Karachi Sindh returned home to find that their three teenage daughters had disappeared After inquiries to the local police the couple discovered that their daughters had been taken to a local madrassah had been converted to Islam and were denied unsupervised contact with their parents 210 In January 2017 a Hindu temple was demolished in Pakistan s Haripur district 211 In 2005 32 Hindus were killed by firing from the government side near Nawab Akbar Bugti s residence during bloody clashes between Bugti tribesmen and paramilitary forces in Balochistan The firing left the Hindu residential locality near Bugti s residence badly hit 212 In 2006 a Hindu temple in Lahore was destroyed to pave the way for construction of a multi storied commercial building When reporters from Pakistan based newspaper Dawn tried to cover the incident they were accosted by the henchmen of the property developer who denied that a Hindu temple existed at the site 213 In January 2014 a policeman standing guard outside a Hindu temple at Peshawar was gunned down 214 25 March 2014 Express Tribune citing an All Pakistan Hindu Rights Movement PHRM survey said that 95 of all Hindu temples in Pakistan have been converted since 1990 215 Pakistanis attack Hindu temples if anything happens to any mosque in neighbouring India 204 In 2019 a Hindu temple Pakistan s southern Sindh province was vandalism by miscreants and they set fire to holy books and idols inside the temple 216 In July 2010 around 60 members of the minority Hindu community in Karachi were attacked and evicted from their homes following an incident of a Hindu youth drinking water from a tap near an Islamic mosque 217 218 In January 2014 a policeman standing guard outside a Hindu temple at Peshawar was gunned down 214 Pakistan s Supreme Court has sought a report from the government on its efforts to ensure access for the minority Hindu community to temples the Karachi bench of the apex court was hearing applications against the alleged denial of access to the members of the minority community 219 220 221 In 2010 also 57 Hindus were forced to convert by their employer as his sales dropped after Muslims started boycotting his eatable items as they were prepared by Hindus Since the impoverished Hindus had no other way to earn and needed to keep the job to survive hence they converted 222 A Pakistan Muslim League politician has stated that abduction of Hindus and Sikhs is a business in Pakistan along with conversions of Hindus to Islam 223 Forced conversion rape and forced marriages of Hindu women in Pakistan have recently become very controversial in Pakistan 224 225 Although Hindus were frequently soft targets in Pakistan 226 227 the rise of Taliban forces in the political arena has particularly unsettled the already fragile situation for the minority community Increasing persecution ostracism from locals and lack of a social support system is forcing more and more Hindus to flee to India 228 229 This has been observed in the past whenever the conflicts between the two nations escalated 230 but this has been a notable trend in view of the fact the recent developments are due to internal factors almost exclusively The Taliban have used false methods of luring as well as the co operation of zealots within local authorities to perpetrate religious cleansing 231 In 2012 a century old temple demolished in Karachi Pakistan along with several houses leaving nearly 40 Hindus homeless 232 Following the demolition the Pakistan Hindu Council organised a protest outside of Karachi Press Club Prakash one of the members of the council said They destroyed our mandir and humiliated our gods 232 According to local residents the demolition team taken away the gold jewellery and crowns of the Hindu deities 232 They hit me with their guns when I tried to stop them I told them to kill me instead of destroying out holy place states one of the residents Lakshman 232 According to one elderly resident identified as Kaali Das the area around the temple had over 150 Hindu families and due to the demolition the families including the children spent the nights in the open 232 If you don t want us we will go to India screamed one of the women 232 Maharaj Badri who lived inside the temple said that Our ancestors have been living here since independence We are not encroachers 232 The rise of Taliban insurgency in Pakistan has been an influential and increasing factor in the persecution of and discrimination against religious minorities in Pakistan such as Hindus Christians Sikhs and other minorities Hindu minorities living under the influence of the Taliban in Swat Pakistan were forced to wear red headgear such as turbans as a symbol of dhimmi 228 In January 2014 in an attack on a temple the guard was gunned down 214 Some Hindus in Pakistan feel that they are treated as second class citizens and many have continued to migrate to India 226 233 According to the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan data just around 1 000 Hindu families fled to India in 2013 234 In May 2014 a member of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz PML N Dr Ramesh Kumar Vankwani revealed in the National Assembly of Pakistan that around 5 000 Hindus are migrating from Pakistan to India every year 235 Many Hindu girls living in Pakistan are kidnapped forcibly converted and married to Muslims 236 According to the Pakistan Hindu Council religious persecution especially forced conversions to remain the foremost reason for the migration of Hindus from Pakistan Religious institutions like Bharchundi Sharif and Sarhandi Pir support forced conversions and are known to have support and protection of ruling political parties of Sindh 237 According to the National Commission of Justice and Peace and the Pakistan Hindu Council PHC around 1000 Christian and Hindu minority women are converted to Islam and then forcibly married off to their abductors or rapists This practice is being reported increasingly in the districts of Tharparkar Umerkot and Mirpur Khas in Sindh 237 According to the Amarnath Motumal the vice chairperson of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan every month an estimated 20 or more Hindu girls are abducted and converted although exact figures are impossible to gather 236 In 2014 alone 265 legal cases of forced conversion were reported mostly involving Hindu girls 238 In September 2019 Hindu teacher was attacked and three Hindu temples were vandalised in Ghotki riots over blasphemy accusations 239 240 The protestors attacked properties including the school and vandalised three Hindu temples 239 The Hindu principal of Sindh public school in Ghotki was accused of fake blasphemy and the school was vandalised by the religious extremists in the presence of police states the reports 239 240 In 2020 the Mata Rani Bhatiyani Hindu temple in Tharparkar Sindh was vandalised by miscreants The miscreants desecrated the idols and set fire to holy scriptures 241 242 Four teenagers ages 12 and 15 years have been arrested for theft charges of the cash collection box of the temple 242 According to the report every year around 1 000 young Hindu girls between the ages of 12 and 28 are abducted forcibly married and converted to Islam 241 243 In 2020 an Islamist mob desecrated the construction site of the first Hindu temple in Islamabad Shri Krishna Temple Islamabad 244 Subsequently the Pakistan government halted the construction of the temple and referred the issue to the Council of Islamic Ideology a constitutional body set up to ensure compliance of state policy with Islamic Ideology Punjab Assembly speaker Chaudhry Pervaiz Elahi a member of Pakistan Muslim League Quaid stated that construction of the temple was against the spirit of Islam Jamia Ashrafia a Lahore based Islamic institution issued a fatwa against the temple 245 246 In October 2020 Goddess Durga s idols have been vandalised stripped down and damaged in Nagarparkar the Sindh Province of Pakistan 247 248 According to the reports the incident happened after the Hindu community had performed prayers of the Hindu festival Navaratri 247 The incident has occurred on one of the most auspicious days in the Hindu religion when communities come together to pray to and celebrate the Goddess Durga 247 248 In December 2020 a mob of hundred people led by the local Muslim clerics destroyed and set on fire a Hindu temple in Karak district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Pakistan 249 The violent mob arranged by the local clerics is seen setting on fire the walls and roof of the temple on the footage report According to the report the rally was organised by Jamiat Ulema e Islam F a Sunni Deobandi political party in Pakistan after the speakers delivered their fiery speeches the crowd vandalized the temple and set it ablaze and razed it to the ground 250 249 The human rights activists based in Pakistan and other parts of the world condemned the violent act against the Hindu minority community 249 In August 2021 a Muslim mob stormed and vandalized a Hindu temple in Rahim Yar Khan Punjab damaging and burning down the Hindu idols at the Siddhi vinayak temple 251 252 253 254 According to Ramesh Kumar Vankwani the member of Hindu National Assembly the situation in the city was tense following the desecration of the Hindu temple 254 The negligence of the issue by the local police states Vankwani was very shameful 254 An appeal was made to the chief justice of Pakistan to intervene and to take immediate action states Vankwani 254 The attackers were carrying sticks stones and bricks They smashed the deities while raising religious slogans said Vankwani 255 252 MalaysiaSee also Persecution of Hindus in Malaysia and 2009 cow head protests Approximately nine percent of the population of Malaysia are Tamil Indians of whom nearly 90 percent are practising Hindus Indian settlers came to Malaysia from Tamil Nadu in the late 19th and early 20th centuries Between April and May 2006 several Hindu temples were demolished by city hall authorities in the country accompanied by violence against Hindus 256 On 21 April 2006 the Malaimel Sri Selva Kaliamman Temple in Kuala Lumpur was reduced to rubble after the city hall sent in bulldozers 257 The president of the Consumers Association of Subang and Shah Alam in Selangor State has been helping to organise efforts to stop the local authorities in the Muslim dominated city of Shah Alam from demolishing a 107 year old Hindu temple The growing Islamization in Malaysia is a cause for concern to many Malaysians who follow minority religions such as Hinduism 258 On 11 May 2006 armed city hall officers from Kuala Lumpur forcefully demolished part of a 60 year old suburban temple that serves more than 1 000 Hindus The Hindu Rights Action Force a coalition of several NGO s have protested these demolitions by lodging complaints with the Malaysian Prime Minister 259 Many Hindu advocacy groups have protested what they allege is a systematic plan of temple cleansing in Malaysia The official reason given by the Malaysian government has been that the temples were built illegally However several of the temples are centuries old 259 According to a lawyer for the Hindu Rights Action Task Force a Hindu temple is demolished in Malaysia once every three weeks 260 Malaysian Muslims have also grown more anti Hindu over the years In response to the proposed construction of a temple in Selangor Muslims chopped off the head of a cow to protest with leaders saying there would be blood if a temple was constructed in Shah Alam 261 Laws in the country especially those concerning religious identity are generally slanted towards compulsion into converting to Islam 262 Myanmar Hindu villagers gather to identify the corpses of family members who were killed in the Kha Maung Seik massacre On 25 August 2017 the villages in a cluster known as Kha Maung Seik in northern Maungdaw District of Rakhine State in Myanmar were attacked by Rohingya Muslims of Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army ARSA This was called Kha Maung Seik massacre Amnesty International said that about 99 Hindus were killed in that day 263 264 Due to these many Rohingya Hindus have started identifying themselves as Chittagonian Hindus rather than Rohingyas 265 In Myanmar and in Bangladeshi refugee camps according to some media accounts Hindu Rohingyas particularly women faced kidnapping religious abuse and forced conversions at the hands of Muslim Rohingyas 266 AfghanistanMain article Persecution of Hindus in Afghanistan According to Ashish Bose a Population Research scholar after the 1980s Hindus and Sikhs became a subject of intense hate with the rise of religious fundamentalism in Afghanistan 267 Their targeted persecution triggered an exodus and forced them to seek asylum 268 267 Many of the persecuted Hindus started arriving in and after 1992 as refugees in India 267 268 While these refugees were mostly Sikhs and Hindus some were Muslims 267 However India has historically lacked any refugee law or uniform policy for persecuted refugees state Ashish Bose and Hafizullah Emadi 267 269 Under the Taliban regime Sumptuary laws were passed in 2001 which forced Hindus to wear yellow badges in public in order to identify themselves as such This was similar to Adolf Hitler s treatment of Jews in Nazi Germany during World War II 270 Hindu women were forced to dress according to Islamic hijab ostensibly a measure to protect them from harassment This was part of the Taliban s plan to segregate un Islamic and idolatrous communities from Islamic ones 271 In addition Hindus were forced to wear yellow distinguishing marks however after some protests Taliban abandoned this policy 272 The decree was condemned by the Indian and United States governments as a violation of religious freedom 273 Widespread protests against the Taliban regime broke out in Bhopal India In the United States the chairman of the Anti Defamation League Abraham Foxman compared the decree to the practices of Nazi Germany where Jews were required to wear labels which identified them as such 274 The comparison was also drawn by California Democrat and holocaust survivor Tom Lantos and New York Democrat and author of the bipartisan Sense of the Congress non binding resolution against the anti Hindu decree Eliot L Engel 270 Since the 1990s many Afghan Hindus have fled the country seeking asylum in countries such as Germany 275 Saudi ArabiaOn 24 March 2005 Saudi authorities destroyed religious items found in a raid on a makeshift Hindu shrine found in an apartment in Riyadh 276 United StatesSee also Dotbusters Rajan Zed prayer protest Venkatachalapathi Samuldrala prayer controversy California textbook controversy over Hindu history and Hinduism in the United States Discrimination Hindus constitute 0 7 of the total population of the United States 277 They are also the most affluent religious group 278 279 Hindus in the US enjoy both de jure and de facto legal equality However a series of threats and attacks were committed against people of Indian origin by a street gang called the Dotbusters in New Jersey in 1987 The name originated from the bindi traditionally worn on the forehead by Indian women 280 In October 1987 a group of youths attacked Navroze Mody an Indian man of Parsi origin who was mistaken for a Hindu after he had left the Gold Coast Cafe with his friend who fell into a coma Mody died four days later The four convicted of the attack were Luis Acevedo Ralph Gonzalez and Luis Padilla who were convicted of aggravated assault and William Acevedo who was convicted of simple assault The attack was with fists and feet and with an unknown object that was described as either a baseball bat or a brick and occurred after members of the group which was estimated as being between ten and twelve youths had surrounded Mody and taunted him for his baldness as either Kojak or baldie Mody s father Jamshid Mody later brought charges against the city and police force of Hoboken New Jersey claiming that the Hoboken police s indifference to acts of violence perpetrated against Asian Indians violated Navroze Mody s equal protection rights under the Fourteenth Amendment 281 Mody lost the case the court ruled that the attack had not been proven a hate crime nor had there been proven any malfeasance by the police or prosecutors of the city 281 A few days after the attack on Mody another Indian was beaten into a coma this time on a busy street corner in Jersey City Heights The victim Kaushal Saran was found unconscious at Central and Ferry Avenues near a city park and firehouse according to police reports Saran a licensed physician in India who was awaiting licensing in the United States was discharged later from University Hospital in Newark 282 The unprovoked attack left Saran in a partial coma for over a week with severe damage to his skull and brain In September 1992 Thomas Kozak Martin Ricciardi and Mark Evangelista were brought to trial on federal civil rights charges in connection with the attack on Saran However the three were acquitted of the charges in two separate trials in 1993 Saran testified at both trials that he could not remember the incident 283 The Dotbusters were primarily based in New York and New Jersey and committed most of their crimes in Jersey City Although tougher anti hate crime laws were passed by the New Jersey legislature in 1990 the attacks continued with 58 cases of hate crimes against Indians in New Jersey reported in 1991 284 On 2 January 2012 a Hindu worship center in New York City was firebombed 285 In late January 2019 an attack on the Swaminarayan Temple in Louisville Kentucky resulted in damage and Hinduphobic graffiti on the temple A cleanup effort was later organised by the mayor to spread awareness of Hinduism and other hate crimes An arrest of a 17 year old was made for the hate crime days later 286 287 288 Trinidad and TobagoDuring the initial decades of Indian indenture Indian cultural forms were met with either contempt or indifference by the Christian majority 289 Hindus have made many contributions to Trinidad s history and culture even though the state historically regarded Hindus as second class citizens Hindus in Trinidad struggled over the granting of adult franchise the Hindu marriage bill the divorce bill the cremation ordinance and other discriminatory laws 289 After Trinidad s independence from colonial rule Hindus were marginalised by the African based People s National Movement The opposing party the People s Democratic party was portrayed as a Hindu group and Hindus were castigated as a recalcitrant and hostile minority 289 The displacement of PNM from power in 1985 would improve the situation Intensified protests over the course of the 1980s led to an improvement in the state s attitudes towards Hindus 289 The divergence of some of the fundamental aspects of local Hindu culture the segregation of the Hindu community from Trinidad and the disinclination to risk erasing the more fundamental aspects of what had been constructed as Trinidad Hinduism in which the identity of the group had been rooted would often generate dissension when certain dimensions of Hindu culture came into contact with the State While the incongruences continue to generate debate and often conflict it is now tempered with growing awareness and consideration on the part of the state to the Hindu minority 289 Hindus have been also been subjected to persistent proselytisation by Christian missionaries 290 Specifically the evangelical and Pentecostal Christians Such activities reflect racial tensions that at times arise between the Christianized Afro Trinidadian and Hindu Indo Trinidadian communities 290 FijiSee also Hinduism in Fiji and Church involvement in Fiji coups The burnt out remains of Govinda s Restaurant in Suva over 100 shops and businesses were ransacked in Suva s central business district on 19 May Hindus in Fiji constitute approximately 38 of the country s population During the late 1990s there were several riots against Hindus by radical elements in Fiji In the Spring of 2000 the democratically elected Fijian government led by Prime Minister Mahendra Chaudhry was held hostage by a guerilla group headed by George Speight They were demanding a segregated state exclusively for the native Fijians thereby legally abolishing any rights the Hindu inhabitants have now The majority of Fijian land is reserved for the ethnically Fijian community 291 Since the practitioners of Hindu faith are predominantly Indians racist attacks by the extremist Fijian Nationalists too often culminated into violence against the institutions of Hinduism According to official reports attacks on Hindu institutions increased by 14 compared to 2004 Hindus and Hinduism being labelled the outside others especially in the aftermath of the May 2000 coup have been victimised by Fijian fundamentalist and nationalists who wish to create a theocratic Christian state in Fiji This intolerance towards Hindus has found expression in anti Hindu speeches and destruction of temples the two most common forms of immediate and direct violence against Hindus Between 2001 and April 2005 one hundred cases of temple attacks have been registered with the police The alarming increase of temple destruction has spread fear and intimidation among the Hindu minorities and has hastened immigration to neighbouring Australia and New Zealand Organised religious institutions such as the Methodist Church of Fiji have repeatedly called for the creation of a theocratic Christian State and have propagated anti Hindu sentiment 292 See also Genocide portal Hinduism portal Crime portalExpulsion of Indians from Burma in 1962 Hindu Temples What Happened to Them The History of India as Told by Its Own Historians Anti Hindu sentimentNotes Will Durant called the Muslim conquest of India probably the bloodiest story in history 7 Devout Hindus cherish the manifestation of the divine everywhere such as in icons people and sacred places 14 Hinduism is embedded in its sacred iconography sacred prosopography and its sacred geography states Wink considered an aid in contemplating the divine 14 These form the fundamental structure behind Hindu pilgrimage mythology festivals and community just like the other major Indian religions 14 The Muslim court historians describe the desecrated sacred cities of Hindus in demeaning terms For example they describe Mathura a sacred city of Krishna tradition in Hinduism as the work of demons jinn and refer to the sacred idols as well as their worshippers Hindus as devils shayatin 16 The architecture of Hindu temples underwent change under the Muslim rulers and incorporated Islamic influences The Vrindavan temples built under Akbar lack ornamentation as imagery was generally prohibited 17 Some of the evidence of desecration and destruction of Hindu sacred monuments is independent of the Muslim texts of the period It is found in Islamic monuments built during this period As examples the Qutb mosque in Delhi shows its reliance on disassembled temple materials as do the Caurasi Kambha mosque near Bharatpur the Jami Masjid at Sultankot also called Ukha mandir mosque the idgah in Bayana 45 Number of temples destroyed Avari 2013 p 115 citing a 2000 study writes Aurangzeb was perhaps no more culpable than most of the Sultans before him they desecrated the temples associated with Hindu power not all temples It is worth noting that in contrast to the traditional claim of hundreds of Hindu temples having been destroyed by Aurangzeb a recent study suggests a modest figure of just fifteen destructions Audrey Truschke 2017 Aurangzeb The Life and Legacy of India s Most Controversial King Stanford University Press ISBN 9781503602595 p 85 Nobody knows the exact number of temples demolished or pillaged on Aurangzeb s orders and we never will Richard Eaton the leading authority on the subject puts the number of confirmed temple destructions during Aurangzeb s rule at just over a dozen with fewer tied to the emperor s direct commands Other scholars have pointed out additional temple demolitions not counted by Eaton such as two orders to destroy the Somanatha Temple in 1659 and 1706 the existence of a second order suggests that the first was never carried out Aurangzeb also oversaw temple desecrations For example in 1645 he ordered mihrabs prayer niches typically located in mosques erected in Ahmedabad s Chintamani Parshvanath Temple built by the Jain merchant Shantidas Even adding in such events however to quote Eaton the evidence is almost always fragmentary incomplete or even contradictory Given this there were probably more temples destroyed under Aurangzeb than we can confirm perhaps a few dozen in total but here we run into a dark curtain drawn across an unknown past In contrast the historian Abraham Eraly estimates Aurangzeb era destruction to be significantly higher in 1670 all temples around Ujjain were destroyed and later 300 temples were destroyed in and around Chitor Udaipur and Jaipur among other Hindu temples destroyed elsewhere in campaigns through 1705 77 Avari writes Aurangzeb s religious policy caused friction between him and the ninth Sikh guru Tegh Bahadur In both Punjab and Kashmir the Sikh leader was roused to action by Aurangzeb s excessively zealous Islamic policies Seized and taken to Delhi he was called upon by Aurangzeb to embrace Islam and on refusal was tortured for five days and then beheaded in November 1675 Two of the ten Sikh gurus thus died as martyrs at the hands of the Mughals 81 References Divya Sharma 2020 Glossary Ethics Ethnocentrism and Social Science Research Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 00 028273 3 Eileen Barker James T Richardson 2020 Reactions to the Law by Minority Religions Taylor amp Francis pp 190 192 ISBN 978 1 00 033324 4 Brian J Grim Roger Finke 2010 The Price of Freedom Denied Religious Persecution and Conflict in the Twenty First Century Cambridge University Press pp 46 51 58 59 ISBN 978 1 139 49241 6 Eltayeb 2013 p 90 91 Eltayeb 2013 p 91 a b Eltayeb 2013 p 92 Durant Will 2014 first published 1935 The Complete Story of Civilization Our Oriental Heritage Simon and Schuster pp 458 ISBN 978 1 4767 7971 3 The Mohammedan Conquest of India is probably the bloodiest story in history It is a discouraging tale for its evident moral is that civilization is a precarious thing whose delicate complex 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Magnes Press Jerusalem University pp 31 32 ISBN 978 965 223 521 3 Noel D Johnson Mark Koyama 2019 Persecution amp Toleration The Long Road to Religious Freedom Cambridge University Press pp 279 280 note 3 ISBN 978 1 108 42502 5 FROM MONGOLS TO MUGHALS www webpages uidaho edu Retrieved 2 January 2023 Gabrieli Francesco 1965 Muḥammad ibn Qasim ath Thaqafi and the Arab Conquest of Sind East and West 15 3 4 281 295 ISSN 0012 8376 JSTOR 29754928 Asif Manan Ahmed 2016 A Book of Conquest Harvard University Press pp 8 15 ISBN 978 0 674 97243 8 a b Wink 2002 pp 192 195 Wink on Asif A Book of Conquest The Chachnama and Muslim Origins in South Asia H Asia H Net networks h net org Retrieved 7 March 2021 a b c d Wink 1991 pp 124 126 Peter Jackson 2003 The Delhi Sultanate A Political and Military History Cambridge University Press pp 6 10 with footnotes ISBN 978 0 521 54329 3 a b Wink 1991 pp 319 320 with footnotes Yohanan Friedmann 1975 Medieval Muslim Views of Indian Religions Journal of the American Oriental Society Volume 95 Number 2 pp 214 217 JSTOR 600318 a b c Wink 1991 pp 320 322 with footnotes Eaton Richard M Temple desecration in pre modern India PDF Frontline Dutta Ranjeeta 2009 Review of Demolishing Myths or Mosques and Temples Readings on History and Temple Desecration in Medieval India Social Scientist 37 11 12 89 92 ISSN 0970 0293 JSTOR 27748619 Iyer S Shrivastava A Ticku R 23 January 2017 Holy Wars Temple desecrations in Medieval India Cambridge INET Institute doi 10 17863 cam 7847 Lycett Mark T Morrison Kathleen D 2013 The Fall of Vijayanagara Reconsidered Political Destruction and Historical Construction in South Indian History Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 56 3 433 470 doi 10 1163 15685209 12341314 ISSN 0022 4995 JSTOR 43303558 Wink 1991 pp 142 143 with footnotes Granoff Phyllis 1991 Tales of Broken Limbs and Bleeding Wounds Responses to Muslim Iconoclasm in Medieval India East and West 41 1 4 189 203 ISSN 0012 8376 JSTOR 29756976 Andre Wink 1991 Al Hind the Making of the Indo Islamic World The Slave Kings and the Islamic Conquest 11th 13th Centuries BRILL Academic pp 142 143 with footnotes ISBN 90 04 10236 1 Wink 1991 pp 294 295 with footnotes a b Peter Jackson 2003 The Delhi Sultanate A Political and Military History Cambridge University Press pp 123 125 with footnotes ISBN 978 0 521 54329 3 Peter Jackson 2003 The Delhi Sultanate A Political and Military History Cambridge University Press pp 123 125 139 145 with footnotes ISBN 978 0 521 54329 3 Wink 1991 pp 130 135 with footnotes for specific examples of destruction and plundering in and around what is now Delhi Uttar Pradesh Gujarat eastern Rajasthan and central India a b c Peter Jackson 2003 The Delhi Sultanate A Political and Military History Cambridge University Press pp 278 279 with footnotes ISBN 978 0 521 54329 3 a b c Peter Jackson 2003 The Delhi Sultanate A Political and Military History Cambridge University Press pp 279 281 with footnotes ISBN 978 0 521 54329 3 Peter Jackson 2003 The Delhi Sultanate A Political and Military History Cambridge University Press pp 282 284 with footnotes ISBN 978 0 521 54329 3 a b Peter Jackson 2003 The Delhi Sultanate A Political and Military History Cambridge University Press pp 285 287 with footnotes ISBN 978 0 521 54329 3 Peter Jackson 2003 The Delhi Sultanate A Political and Military History Cambridge University Press pp 208 210 with footnotes ISBN 978 0 521 54329 3 a b Peter Jackson 2003 The Delhi Sultanate A Political and Military History Cambridge University Press pp 287 288 with footnotes ISBN 978 0 521 54329 3 a b c Peter Jackson 2003 The Delhi Sultanate A Political and Military History Cambridge University Press pp 288 289 with footnotes ISBN 978 0 521 54329 3 a b c d Peter Jackson 2003 The Delhi Sultanate A Political and Military History Cambridge University Press pp 290 291 293 295 with footnotes ISBN 978 0 521 54329 3 Raziuddin Aquil 2008 Rajat Datta ed Chapter On Islam and Kufr in the Delhi Sultanate in Rethinking a Millennium Perspectives on Indian History from the Eighth to the Eighteenth Century Aakar Books pp 177 181 ISBN 978 81 89833 36 7 Raziuddin Aquil 2008 Rajat Datta ed Chapter On Islam and Kufr in the Delhi Sultanate in Rethinking a Millennium Perspectives on Indian History from the Eighth to the Eighteenth Century Aakar Books pp 168 171 177 179 181 189 ISBN 978 81 89833 36 7 a b c Mehrdad Shokoohy 1991 Architecture of the Sultanate of Ma bar in Madura and Other Muslim Monuments in South India Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society Third Series Cambridge University Press Volume 1 Number 1 pp 33 34 with footnotes JSTOR 25182270 a b Mehrdad Shokoohy 1991 Architecture of the Sultanate of Ma bar in Madura and Other Muslim Monuments in South India Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society Third Series Cambridge University Press Volume 1 Number 1 pp 34 35 with footnotes JSTOR 25182270 a b Mehrdad Shokoohy 1991 Architecture of the Sultanate of Ma bar in Madura and Other Muslim Monuments in South India Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society Third Series Cambridge University Press Volume 1 Number 1 pp 44 45 with footnotes JSTOR 25182270 Mehrdad Shokoohy 1991 Architecture of the Sultanate of Ma bar in Madura and Other Muslim Monuments in South India Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society Third Series Cambridge University Press Volume 1 Number 1 pp 46 47 with footnotes JSTOR 25182270 Crispin Branfoot 2003 The Madurai Nayakas and the Skanda Temple at Tirupparankundram Ars Orientalis volume 33 pp 156 157 JSTOR 4434276 Richard M Eaton 2019 India in the Persianate Age 1000 1765 Penguin Books p 233 ISBN 978 0 520 97423 4 Truschke Audrey 2017 Aurangzeb The Life and Legacy of India s Most Controversial King 978 0141001432 pp 2 9 ISBN 978 1503602571 Ayalon 1986 p 271 Aurangzeb as he was according to Mughal Records FACT Francois Gautier Retrieved 15 May 2017 More links at the bottom of that page For a record of major Hindu temple destruction campaigns 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such as World Bank and additional information available to the subcommittee document the reign of terror which grips East Bengal East Pakistan 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 Mascarenhas Anthony 13 June 1971 Genocide The Times London The Government s policy for East Bengal was spelled out to me in the Eastern Command headquarters at Dacca It has three elements 1 The Bengalis have proved themselves unreliable and must be ruled by West Pakistanis 2 The Bengalis will have to be re educated along proper Islamic lines The Islamization of the masses this is the official jargon is intended to eliminate secessionist tendencies and provide a strong religious bond with West Pakistan 3 When the Hindus have been eliminated by death and flight their property will be used as a golden carrot to win over the under privileged Muslim middle class This will provide the base for erecting administrative and political structures in the future Bangladesh A Bengali Abbasi Lurking Somewhere South Asia Analysis Group 23 April 2001 DEATH BY GOVERNMENT GENOCIDE AND MASS MURDER www hawaii edu Retrieved 2 January 2023 World Pakistan The Ravaging of Golden Bengal Printout TIME 2 August 1971 Archived from the original on 11 March 2007 Retrieved 25 October 2013 Farahnaz Ispahani 2017 Purifying the Land of the Pure A History of Pakistan s Religious Minorities Oxford University Press pp 165 171 ISBN 978 0 19 062165 0 Bert B Lockwood 2006 Women s Rights A Human Rights Quarterly Reader Johns Hopkins University Press pp 227 235 ISBN 978 0 8018 8373 6 Javaid Rehman 2000 The Weaknesses in the International Protection of Minority Rights Martinus Nijhoff Publishers pp 158 159 ISBN 90 411 1350 9 Persecution of Pakistan s religious minorities intensifies says 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Pioneer 19 January 2010 Archived from the original on 22 January 2010 Rohingya militants slaughtered 99 Hindus in a single day Amnesty International Retrieved 21 August 2018 Rohingya militants massacred Hindus BBC News 22 May 2018 Retrieved 21 August 2018 Don t call us Rohingya Myanmarese Hindu refugees in Bangladesh detest the incorrect labelling Firstpost www firstpost com 21 November 2017 Retrieved 21 August 2018 Hindu Rohingya refugees forced to convert to Islam in Bangladesh camps India Today Retrieved 20 January 2019 a b c d e Ashish Bose 2004 Afghan Refugees in India Economic and Political Weekly Vol 39 No 43 pp 4698 4701 a b Emadi Hafizullah 2014 Minorities and marginality pertinacity of Hindus and Sikhs in a repressive environment in Afghanistan Nationalities Papers Cambridge University Press 42 2 307 320 doi 10 1080 00905992 2013 858313 S2CID 153662810 Quote The situation of Hindus and Sikhs as a persecuted minority is a little studied topic in literature dealing with ethno sectarian conflict in Afghanistan the breakdown of state structure and the ensuing civil conflicts and targeted persecution in the 1990s that led to their mass exodus out of the country A combination of structural failure and rising Islamic fundamentalist ideology in the post Soviet era led to a war of ethnic cleansing as fundamentalists suffered a crisis of legitimation and resorted to violence as a means to establish their authority Hindus and Sikhs found themselves in an uphill battle to preserve their culture and religious traditions in a hostile political environment in the post Taliban period The international community and Kabul failed in their moral obligation to protect and defend the rights of minorities and oppressed communities Emadi Hafizullah 2014 Minorities and marginality pertinacity of Hindus and Sikhs in a repressive environment in Afghanistan Nationalities Papers Cambridge University Press 42 2 315 317 doi 10 1080 00905992 2013 858313 S2CID 153662810 a b Haniffa Aziz 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13 a b International Religious Freedom Report 2002 Trinidad and Tobago U S Department of State Retrieved 5 May 2015 Fraenkel Jonathan Firth Stewart 2007 From Election to Coup in Fiji The 2006 Campaign and Its Aftermath ANU E Press p 306 ISBN 978 1 921313 36 3 Lt colonel rabuka throws out the allegedly indian bavadra India Today 15 June 1987 SourcesAiyangar Sakkottai Krishnaswami 1921 South India and her Muhammadan invaders Oxford University Press OCLC 5212194 Avari Burjor 2013 Islamic Civilization in South Asia A history of Muslim power and presence in the Indian subcontinent Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 58061 8 Ayalon David 1986 Studies in Islamic History and Civilisation Brill ISBN 978 965 264 014 7 Batabyal Rakesh 2005 Communalism in Bengal From Famine To Noakhali 1943 47 SAGE ISBN 978 0 7619 3335 9 Cariappa M P Cariappa Ponnamma 1981 The Coorgs and their Origins Aakar Books OCLC 641505186 Chakrabarty Bidyut 2004 Partition of Bengal and Assam 1932 1947 Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 33275 5 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12369 3 Haig Wolseley 1928 The Cambridge History of India Vol III Cambridge University Press Keay John 2000 India A History Atlantic Monthly Press ISBN 978 0 87113 800 2 Lal Kishori Saran 1999 Theory and Practice of Muslim State in India Aditya Prakashan ISBN 978 81 86471 72 2 Machado Alan 1999 Sarasvati s Children A History of the Mangalorean Christians Bangalore I J A Publications ISBN 9788187609032 Saikia Yasmin 2011 Women War and the Making of Bangladesh Remembering 1971 Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 5038 5 Sajjad Tazreena 2012 First published 2009 The Post Genocidal Period and its Impact on Women In Samuel Totten ed Plight and Fate of Women During and Following Genocide Transaction Publishers pp 219 248 ISBN 978 1 4128 4759 9 Sen Surendra Nath 1930 Studies in Indian History University of Calcutta OCLC 578119748 Sharlach Lisa 2000 Rape as Genocide Bangladesh the Former Yugoslavia and Rwanda New Political Science 22 1 89 102 doi 10 1080 713687893 S2CID 144966485 Smith Vincent A 1919 The Oxford History of India Oxford University Press OCLC 839048936 Spencer Philip 2012 Genocide Since 1945 Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 60634 9 Wink Andre 1991 Al Hind the Making of the Indo Islamic World Volume 2 The Slave Kings and the Islamic Conquest 11th 13th Centuries BRILL Academic ISBN 90 04 10236 1 Wink Andre 2002 Al Hind the Making of the Indo Islamic World Volume 1 Early Medieval India and the Expansion of Islam 7th 11th Centuries Brill ISBN 978 0 391 04173 8 External links Wikiquote has quotations related to Persecution of Hindus Persecution of Hindus Shri Kailasa Gargan Edward A 11 December 1992 The Hatreds of India Hindu Memory Scarred by Centuries of despotic Islamic Rule The New York Times This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Hunter William Wilson 1893 A Brief History of the Indian Peoples PDF Clarendon Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Persecution of Hindus amp oldid 1154005359, wikipedia, 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