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India - A nightmare for minorities? What migration reveals about religion in India

Are you saying minority rights in India shouldn't be discussed by Pakistanis and Bangladeshis?


Anything can happen on pp doesn't mean it can be taken seriously, pakistani and Bangladeshi talking about minority rights is a joke, y don't they try to get some rights to minorities in their own country, then its all about muslim majority nation and Islamic law and Islamic republic,
 
As i have been on PP, longer than you , @uppercut has many times rubbed pork comments onto people - he even threatened to kill me with his cmment , yet in hindusims its still a debate if you can eat beef.

Not until someone abuses or insults me. Then I do nothold back


and he sells his cows to the leatehr industry = contradiction

What ?
 
I dunno if this has been posted earlier: This is what Chaiwala has done to a once progressive India:


Where are all the sanghis? Will they condemn this? They jump around like monkeys when something happens in another country but remain silent about things happening in their country.

@cricketjoshila @Rajdeep @uppercut @Champ_Pal ... come on, guys. Condemn this if you believe in decency. :inti

Fact of the matter is, minorities are oppressed far worse in India than any other country in Asia. Whole of Asia.

Save Indian minorities from the evil of the sanghis.
 
Where are all the sanghis? Will they condemn this? They jump around like monkeys when something happens in another country but remain silent about things happening in their country.

@cricketjoshila @Rajdeep @uppercut @Champ_Pal ... come on, guys. Condemn this if you believe in decency. :inti

Fact of the matter is, minorities are oppressed far worse in India than any other country in Asia. Whole of Asia.

Save Indian minorities from the evil of the sanghis.
Shameful act and every Indian will condemn it.
Just yesterday 18000 Adivasi tribals who converted to Christianity were reconverted back to Hinduism. There are lot of people converting back and forth.
 
You should try Pork and Whiskey . ... cheaper the Whiskey the better .... now what ? Two can play this game
why would that hurt me, and i said im gonna eat some ribeye (organic) - cooked it medium rare, which i did, but you've done the opposite, i never told you to eat it


you dont make sense,


now stick to the topic
 
how come thr converting back and forth
Money. They are all tribals. No education and no skills. They live off of what the forest and land provides. Basically fruits and bushmeat.

These tribals have their own tribal Gods and Goddesses. They share some commonality with Hinduism and celebrate many common festivals. These people are targeting by missionaries and they are very active in Odisha, Madhyapradesh, Andhra and Tamilnadu. Recently Punjab has also seen massive increase in conversions. Mostly Sikhs converting to Christianity.
I don’t know if Sikh Akal Takht is doing anything about it, but many Hindu organizations have become active now in tribal areas of India and bringing them back to their traditional beliefs. You can call them Tribal beliefs or Hindu beliefs. It does not matter.

The friction comes when the converted person or family is reconverted back to their traditional beliefs is again reconverted to Christianity. Tensions rise and sometimes become violent. It also depends on which government is in power that determines which religion the tribal chooses.

I know a Hindu friend in US who worked for an organization that was active in tribal areas. He said it has become a joke now and no one knows which religion or belief a tribal follows.

A lot of uneasiness is also there because the BJP government says no to reservation once the Dalit or tribal changes his/her religion. So the Dalit/tribal person pretends to be a Hindu Or Christian whichever way it suits him/her. They are poor and don’t give a rats behind about religion. All they care about is food and shelter. They get in the bad books of missionaries when they are found still practicing their old faith. Sometimes they get punished for that. It’s a mess.
 
Hate Against Minorities Behind Kerala Lynching Nation




A group of people, some with criminal antecedents, formed a kangaroo court and put him on trial, asking if he was a Bangladeshi.


A group of people, some with criminal antecedents, formed a kangaroo court and put him on trial, asking if he was a Bangladeshi. The lynching of Ram Narayan Baghel, a dalit migrant worker from Chhattisgarh in Palakkad in Kerala last week, is a pointer to the seepage of politics of hate across the Vindhya range, a dangerous trend people of the region have to be cautious against. (Photo: X) The lynching of Ram Narayan Baghel, a dalit migrant worker from Chhattisgarh in Palakkad in Kerala last week, is a pointer to the seepage of politics of hate across the Vindhya range, a dangerous trend people of the region have to be cautious against. Baghel was in Kerala for hardly a week, having come there in search of work. That his brother has been working there for some time was a reason why the 31-year-old with a wife and two children chose to go to Kerala. New to the place and with no knowledge of Malayalam, the local language, he lost his way and wandered around the village Attapallam near the border.

A group of people, some with criminal antecedents, formed a kangaroo court and put him on trial, asking if he was a Bangladeshi. They tortured him for hours on end and left him there brutalised. The residents alerted the police who took him to hospital where he died. The doctor who conducted the post-mortem said there was no part in his body that did not sustain an injury. The state government appears to have taken the gruesome incident with the seriousness it deserved. The crime branch of the state police is investigating the case and has arrested five persons. Chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan condemned the incident unequivocally and said the government will do everything possible to ensure that the stringent punishment is meted out to the culprits. The state cabinet will soon decide on the compensation to the family of the guest worker.

That most of those who were arrested are alleged to have links with the RSS and were accused in past instances of assaults on CPI(M) workers in the region cannot be lost sight of. The right wing forces in the country find protectors and benefactors in the ruling dispensation at the centre and are now rearing their ugly heads in a state which holds an impeccable record of social harmony throughout its history. Kerala has resisted the advances of such forces all these years. Even leaders of the BJP in Kerala have been careful of this past while presenting their politics before the people. But it appears that the spread of hate has transcended them, too.


If the foundational principle of India is its diversity, then Kerala is qualified to best represent it. It has followers of every religion on earth, in varying proportions, thanks to the welcoming policy it has followed for hundreds of years. Kerala has assiduously followed the principle in modern days too: the state with an estimated population of 3.5 crores hosts about 25 lakh migrant workers from across the country. Some of them belong to their second generation, having been born, educated and employed in the state.


It is a paradox that at least a section of the people of the state comprising those who have been to many continents and countries is questioning a migrant worker about his status. The question whether Baghel was a Bangladeshi is not an accidental one; it has its roots in the hate campaign that has been running in the state against the followers of Islam. That the religion arrived in the state some 14 centuries ago and its followers have lived there in perfect harmony with others does not stop the hate-mongers from targeting them. It is time Kerala woke up from being complacent about its history and culture, and recognised the fact that what values the state has held dear are now under attack from right wing forces. Civilisational progress is not on auto-pilot mode anywhere in the world; it must be defended, protected, endured and nurtured with much effort. For now, the state must compensate the family of Baghel adequately and ensure proper investigation in the case.


@sweep_shot - yout think the indians will comment on the above article, i really doubt they would;

@Rajdeep @cricketjoshila @Champ_Pal @JaDed @Devadwal @uppercut @Theanonymousone @straighttalk @Vikram1989 @RexRex @Varun @Romali_rotti @Bhaijaan @Cover Drive Six @rickroll @rpant_gabba, @Romali_rotti
 
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