AS RECD from another source THINK

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I was invited to a conference of Western Conservatives: As a Hindu, here is
why I decided not to go

In all honesty, my only interest is the preservation and protection of
Hindus, and any global non-Left alliance is pointless if that objective
isn’t furthered. I have little regard for validation – from the Left or
from the Christian conservatives. I do believe a Global Alliance against
the Left and possibly Islamism would be beneficial to my community;
however, any such alliance must be founded on equal footing. I never was,
nor will I ever be, a votary of chipping away at my own religious and
cultural identity for the purpose of forging such an alliance, nor would I
ever capitulate to those who deem themselves superior.

31 October, 2025

Nupur J Sharma

I was invited to the 2026 ARC Conference which aims to 'unite conservative
voices': As a Hindu, here is why I decided not to go

ARC Conference (Image credit: The Daily Declaration)

Note: I was invited invited to the ARC Conference (Alliance for Responsible
Citizenship Conference). The conference, set to be held in June 2026, aims
to unite conservative voices, with Jordan Peterson, Douglas Murray, Vivek
Ramaswamy and several others on the advisory board. As one of the first
Hindus to be invited to such a conference, I was looking forward to
attending it. However, I decided to decline the invitation. Following is a
reproduction of my response to the organisers.

Dear organisers,

At the very outset, I wish to express my gratitude for the invitation. I am
acutely aware that at this esteemed gathering, it is rare for Hindu
conservatives to be welcomed. Therefore, it would ordinarily be considered
a privilege to be among the first Hindus to engage in a broader discussion
about the threats faced by my community, common enemies, and a loose
coalition to combat civilisational adversaries. I would also like to thank
my Jewish friend who recommended my name. He believed (perhaps, still does)
that a conservative alliance would be just as incomplete without Hindus as
it would be without Jews, since both communities face persecution and
religiously motivated hostility.

When my Jewish friend and I had a conversation about ARC (The Alliance for
Responsible Citizenship) and him recommending my name for an invite, I was
somewhat sceptical. A conservative conference in the US, without a doubt,
revolves around Christian revival. I, of course, will not criticise that.
Every community has the absolute right to work towards its own cultural,
religious and civilizational revival. As a Hindu, I was unsure what my role
would be at such a conference.

My friend reminded me that I have long maintained that Hindus are alone in
their civilizational battle. I have long advocated that a community victory
of the Hindus is for us alone to cherish, and a loss, a defeat, is for us
to bear the burden of. I had also brought up Jordan Peterson’s shameful
denigration of the Hindu mother Goddess (Maa Kali) and Douglas Murray’s
inaccurate defence of the colonisation of India – what could I possibly
have in common with these folks, I had asked. My friend, the eternal
optimist, said that the world is no longer a place where persecuted
communities can survive without allies and possibly, the ARC Conference
could be a great opportunity to find allies against common threats and
enemies.

I have, in fact, also believed that the best way forward would be reaching
a common minimum program of sorts, where, despite our theological
differences, Hindus, Christians, and Jews work towards tackling common
civilizational threats. What that alliance would look like, however, always
eluded me, because the theological differences between Hindus and
Christians are insurmountable.

When Mr. Ram Madhav spoke at the National Conservatism Conference in July
2024, he went in solidarity. In the Christian conservative fight against
the Global Left, Madhav said a billion Indians would be their brothers in
arms. “We can be at the forefront”, he had said. Despite the olive branch,
he was derided, mocked, humiliated and abused for his Hindu faith by
Christian conservatives on X.

I knew that if I had attended the ARC Conference, I would have been met
with similar derision. But that hardly bothers me. Online hate is something
every non-Left commentator is used to – regardless of where they come from.
Despite these realities, I thought the ARC Conference could add value for
my community because mostly, the racist attacks against Ram Madhav came
from what one could dismiss as fringe quarters – random social media
accounts who, I thought, had no power to impact policy or serious
engagement.

That the racist social media chatter did not affect policy or rules of
engagement got slightly reinforced when those like Elon Musk, David Sachs
and others defended Sriram Krishnan after MAGA enthusiasts unleashed a
barrage of racist abuse against him after Donald Trump picked him as the
Senior White House Policy Advisor on Artificial Intelligence (AI).

It was then that I thought maybe I was being too much of a pessimist.
Perhaps a common, limited understanding could be reached, and my community
could benefit from such an alliance. Even in the face of increasing racist
attacks and comments, I believed that this conference could allow me to
address the bias.

That pushback or even some sign of disapproval during the Sriram Krishnan
saga was completely absent during the recent flurry of anti-India and
anti-Hindu comments after Donald Trump’s policies sparked a debate on H1B
visas.

In fact, the intellectual leadership of the MAGA movement or the anti-woke
movement seemed either in agreement through their silence or too scared to
voice their dissent.

As someone who has spent the better part of her life advocating for Hindu
rights and documenting religiously motivated hate crimes against Hindus, I
could not, however, overlook the Hinduphobic comments made not by fringe
white supremacists but by the Vice President of the United States of
America himself.

When JD Vance told USA that he hopes his wife, Usha Vance, would find
Christianity, he essentially declared to the one billion-plus Hindus that
their faith was not good enough. He sanctified the Hinduphobic comments
made by his supporters, calling Hinduism a “false religion” and our Gods
and Goddesses, Demons.

Now, I cannot authoritatively speak for what JD Vance truly believes, but
if it was not a statement of conviction, it was evident that, at the very
least, he was too scared to offend fringe sentiments. While being married
to an ethnic Indian and a practising Hindu, Vance not only refrained from
wishing Hindus on Diwali (clearly a conscious decision) but also hoped,
publicly so, that his wife would convert to Christianity. If nothing else,
the statement of JD Vance proves that in the USA, the racist fringe is the
mainstream now, dictating how leaders behave and what they espouse.

One must contrast this with India and the Indian leadership, viewed as
Hindu nationalists. In India, a large section of the Hindu population
believes that India should be a Hindu nation. That, however, does not stop
the leadership from reaching out to the Christian community or the Muslim
community, because the current leadership and its ideological foundation –
the RSS – believes that anyone born on this land needs to be viewed as a
brother, regardless of theological differences. In fact, the USCIRF often
screeches, relying on inauthentic data, to claim that Christians are being
persecuted in India. The truth is quite the contrary. There are hundreds of
cases and thousands of Hindus who Christians persecuted in their own land.
These cases are meticulously documented on Hinduphobia Tracker – a database
of Hindu persecution. Despite this, the government, viewed as Hindu
nationalist and tarnished by elements in the USA, makes an earnest attempt
to assuage the fears of minorities.

I am, in fact, one of those Hindus who believe India is the civilizational,
cultural and religious land of the Hindus. And since I say this, I must
also place on record that as someone who believes India is a Hindu land, I
am the last person to take umbrage at Christians thinking of the USA as a
Christian country. However, for Hindus, India being a Hindu land does not
mean the expulsion of Christians but the preservation of Hindu rights,
religious and cultural. India is the only land to have accepted persecuted
communities from across the world – from the Jews to Parsis, Christians and
even Muslims, not once expecting them to abandon their faith. The pushback
against Christians is limited to infringement on Hindu religious rights. In
other words, Hindus oppose Christians only when they attempt to, by force,
alienate Hindus from their faith and impose their religious beliefs on
them. The pushback is not inherently due to theological differences;
fundamentally, Hindus are perhaps the only people who accept differences,
theological or otherwise, as part of coexistence.

While Hindus have their fundamentals clear, it is the Christians who now
need to define what their Christian nation would look like. That is not for
me to weigh in on. But for now, it is apparent that the fringe racists
dictate the leadership in the USA, and they will even throw their own
family under the bus if it means that the fundamentalists would be
assuaged.

The sceptical hope of a broader coalition between the global non-Left,
which was hanging on by a thread after Elon Musk and others had condemned
racist attacks against Sriram Krishnan, his ethnic and religious identity,
is now all but gone.

When the leadership itself appears in sync or scared, attending such an
event would reap no benefit.

The obvious defence to what has recently transpired would be that it is
natural for JD Vance, a Catholic, to hope that his wife embraces
Christianity because Christians believe it to be the only path to
salvation. And I hold no brief for Usha Vance. I, frankly, don’t
particularly care what Usha Vance decides to do. But what the Vice
President of the United States says about the faith of a billion people
matters because it shapes how the Western World, or at least a large part
of it, interacts with the followers of that faith.

When JD Vance said that his wife is not very religious, contradicting Usha
Vance’s earlier statement that she was a religious Hindu, he essentially
negated the faith in its entirety. He basically said that Usha Vance was
“faithless”, not because she was an atheist (by her own admission, she
comes from a religious family), but because she did not follow Catholicism.
When he admitted that his children were being raised Catholic, only months
after claiming that their kids follow both religions, with Hindu rituals
being a part of their life, he delegitimises the faith itself – presumably
because he wanted to pander to the fundamentalists, his core vote bank.

Here, I would like to reiterate: I don’t care what faith Usha Vance or
their children follow. Their marital arrangement is not a matter of global
concern. What is of international concern, however, is what his statements
mean for Hindus and how they would translate into their dehumanisation and
the delegitimisation of their faith.

Vance’s statement wasn’t just about his wife. It implied the inferiority of
the Hindu faith and furthered cultural erasure and stereotyping.

It is a byproduct of racial and religious hate that Hindus, who neither
proselytise nor impose their religious practices on others, apart from
being productive members of any society, are expected to give up their
religious practices and chip away at their cultural identity to
“assimilate”. The pressure to give up their religious identity is such that
most Hindus in the US hardly call themselves religious. They claim they are
“spiritual” or pull a Vivek Ramaswamy to claim that Christian values and
Hindu values are synonymous. Essentially, to escape discrimination and
humiliation, even Hindus who have political power must capitulate to
Christian supremacists by giving up their exclusively Hindu identity to
claim they are, if not Christian, then Christian adjacent.

Of course, I blame such Hindus just as much as I hold Christian
fundamentalists responsible. The Hindus’ need to assimilate and find crumbs
of acceptance from White supremacists contributes just as much to the
dehumanisation of fellow Hindus. But if the Vice President of the United
States of America cannot stand up and defend the faith of his wife, I have
very little hope from other Christian conservatives, even for a limited
alliance to fight common enemies.

In all honesty, my only interest is the preservation and protection of
Hindus, and any global non-Left alliance is pointless if that objective
isn’t furthered. I have little regard for validation – from the Left or
from the Christian conservatives. I do believe a Global Alliance against
the Left and possibly Islamism would be beneficial to my community;
however, any such alliance must be founded on equal footing. I never was,
nor will I ever be, a votary of chipping away at my own religious and
cultural identity for the purpose of forging such an alliance, nor would I
ever capitulate to those who deem themselves superior.

This letter would undoubtedly raise debate among my followers and readers.
Should I have attended the ARC Conference to say this in person? Is it not
better to be there than be derided in absentia? Would my letter change
anything? And if it would not, why not simply attend and have a shot, even
if it is a slim one, at convincing other conservatives that Hindus are
meant to be allies.

I fear, now more than ever, that a Global Non-Left Alliance may not be
forged. Theologically, Christians would always be inclined to alienate
Hindus from their faith. In India, there are thousands of cases of
Christians persecuting Hindus, forcing them, and threatening them to
convert to Christianity. Politically, the ‘right’ would always be local in
nature, unlike the Left, which finds global consonance. Hindus would want
to focus on the religious, cultural, and traditional preservation of their
people’s faith and the land of their ancestors. In contrast, Christians, in
addition to working towards cultural and religious revival, would also be
theologically invested in eradicating Hindus and their faith.

I am sure the ARC Conference or other Conservative Conferences would find
several other Hindus who would be more than willing to capitulate, to blame
Hindus for their own persecution and humiliation. I refuse to be one of
them.

I believe the need is for Christian conservatives to get their house in
order because, currently, their message to the world is clear – Christian
conservatism is either subservient or indistinguishable from fundamentalism
rooted in pristine theology and xenophobia, which hates Hindu existence
itself.

I do hope there comes a time in the future when Christian conservatives
realise that while they poured their energies into converting the
“heathens”, their land and their identity were being stolen by common
enemies – forces inimical to civilizational survival. I do hope that
someday, forging a common alliance would not necessarily entail Hindus
chipping away at their own cultural and religious identity. Until then, I
would be uncomfortable attending this conference, while being deeply
appreciative of the invitation extended to me.

I am, of course, not placing the blame for JD Vance’s Hinduphobia on the
ARC Conference. But in the absence of any condemnation from the
conservatives and widespread agreement in contrast, I believe a Christian
Conservative gathering is not one I feel the need to attend.

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KR IRS 21125

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