http://washingtontimes.com/op-ed/20040113-085244-4546r.htm
 
Make the tough decisions
By Paul Marshall
The Washington Times
January 14, 2004 
 
    Since September 11, world attention has focused on
the dangers of Islamic extremism. Unfortunately,
threats to human rights are tied to only one religion.
The disturbing political trends in India — fueled by
Hindu extremists and their allies in the Bharatiya
Janata Party (BJP)-led Indian government — have
largely been ignored. A country once personified by
Mahatma Gandhi is fast becoming known for religious
hatred and violence. 
    India has developed friendlier relations with the
United States and Israel: Ariel Sharon made a state
visit in September. It is a strong ally in the war on
terrorism, and strategically close to Pakistan and
Afghanistan. 
    The government has also loosened the previously
heavily regulated economy to produce one of the
highest growth rates in the world. The Bombay stock
market rose 50 percent in 2003. 
    And despite terrorism — especially in Kashmir
India remains the world's largest democracy. 
    But the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party is linked to
Hindu extremist groups like the Rashtriya Swayamsevak
Sangh (RSS), the Bajrang Dal and the Vishwa Hindu
Parishad (VHP), which mount hate campaigns and
sometimes-violent attacks against religious minorities
and demand that Hinduism dominate society and
politics. The RSS was founded by admirers of fascism
and Nazism, produced Gandhi's murderers and is now
perhaps the world's largest paramilitary organization,
with millions of members. 
    The BJP functions as Hindu nationalism's political
wing. Prime Minister Vajpayee publicly praises the RSS
and, in August, shared a podium and sang songs with
RSS chief K.S. Sudarshan. Other top officials,
including Home Affairs Minister Advani, are RSS
associates. 
    The main target of the "Hindutva" or
"Hinduization" campaign are the Muslim and Christian
communities. Some 2,000 Muslims were massacred in the
state of Gujarat in 2002, after Muslim mobs were
reported to have set fire to a train carrying Hindu
nationalists, killing 58 persons. 
    Attacks against Christians have also escalated.
They gained international attention in 1999, when
Australian Graham Staines, who had worked with lepers
for more than 30 years, was, along with his two young
sons, burned alive by a Hindu extremist mob. Priests
are murdered, nuns raped, churches ransacked and
cemeteries desecrated, with more than 100 such
incidents reported annually, provoking Pope John Paul
II this summer to make a rare public denunciation of
this religious oppression. In Orissa last month, Hindu
militants burned down one church, broke into another,
raped a nun, demonstrated near the district governor's
house and burned Bibles. 
    While condemning violence, BJP officials often
excuse or provoke it, arguing that incidents are
isolated, the work of foreigners, or have no relation
to radical Hindu organizations, while, after the
Gujarat massacres, the state's chief minister, and BJP
member, Narendra Modi, asked supporters to "teach a
lesson" to the Muslim community. 
    The BJP's extremist allies are even more
threatening. The VHP international president described
the Gujarat carnage as a "successful experiment" that
could be repeated all over India, and its
general-secretary declared that the "VHP will take the
Gujarat experiment to every nook and corner of the
country." 
    The BJP has also been weak in convicting the
perpetrators of violence. Gujarat authorities largely
stood aside during the massacres, and some took part
in the riots. Charges against 21 defendants for
torching a Muslim bakery along with its inhabitants
were dismissed after the main witness, a 19-year-old
girl, said she couldn't identify the attackers; she
later told the press that she changed her story
because "local Hindu politicians repeatedly threatened
her family ? and ? prosecutors ? made no effort to
meet with her before the trial, and were not serious
about gaining convictions." In September, India's
Supreme Court chief justice declared publicly that he
had "no faith left in the prosecution and the [BJP]
Gujarat government." Meanwhile, the state BJP used the
massacre's aftermath as a springboard to election
victory later in the year. 
    To expand its support and hold its political
coalition together, the national BJP moderates its
stance, but then it courts extremists to appeal to its
base. Meanwhile, it is Hinduizing the school
curriculum, undercutting minority rights and
supporting laws forbidding lower castes to change
their religion to escape their low status under
Hinduism. 
    India continues to have proud democratic
institutions, but the growth of often-violent Hindu
nationalism threatens its tolerant traditions and
pluralistic democracy. If religious extremism
continues to grow, it will, as we have learned
elsewhere, drag India's democracy, economy and foreign
policy down with it. We cannot afford to be silent
against that threat, even when the country is an
important partner and ally of the United States in the
war against terrorism. 
     
    Paul Marshall is senior fellow at Freedom House's
Center for Religious Freedom and edited its recent
book The Rise of Hindu Extremism. 
 
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