Friday May 9, 2025
Blogs
Contact Us
SARIM SARIM
SOUTH ASIA RESEARCH INSTITUTE FOR MINORITIES
Latest News

Bullet-hit body of Rab official found at Ctg’s Chandgaon camp

Teenage girl’s hanging body found weeks after rape complaint in Faridpur

Soomro Bheel was killed by Chandia community due to land dispute

Karnataka: When Dalits asked a barber to cut their hair, the shops in the entire village were locked – Shocking incident of caste discrimination!

Azamgarh: Dalit family attacked due to old enmity, FIR lodged against five including former Pradhan

Death of khyang woman: Husband files rape and murder case

Tamil Nadu: Chaos during temple festival in Pudukottai, hut of Dalit family burnt, government bus attacked! 14 arrests

Man sent to jail over attempted rape in Netrakona

In Moulvibazar’s Kulaura, the Kali idol at Palakandi Tea Garden’s Kalimandir was vandalized

In Bagerhat, Bangladesh, Group reportedly stormed the home of a Hindu man set fire

SARIM SARIM
SARIM SARIM
  • Home
  • About Us
    • ABOUT SAREM
    • OUR TEAM
    • COLLABORATION
  • Activities
    • International Webinars
    • Interviews
    • Panel Discussions
    • International Conferences
    International Webinars Panel Discussions Interviews International Conferences

    Faith in the Margins: The Meaning of Easter for Persecuted Christians

    Who is Ambedkar?

    Counting the Uncounted: Why the Caste Census Matters for Social Justice and Ending Discrimination

    Unfolding Caste The Dynamics of Casteism and Caste Based Discrimination

    The Genius of Justice: Dr. Shailaja Paik’s Battle Against Caste Oppression

    Contours of Identity_ Rethinking Minority Politics in South Asia

    Caste, Gender, and Marginalization: Minorities in Bangladesh

    International Hybrid Conference Breaking the Silence (11 June 2024)

    International conference on ‘Role of minorities in conflict resolution and peace in South Asia,’

  • COUNTRIES
    • Bangladesh
    • India
    • Nepal
    • Pakistan
    • Srilanka
    Srilanka Pakistan Nepal India Bangladesh

    Christians join to help Buddhist pilgrims at sacred exposition

    Asian Christians pay tributes to Pope Francis

    Beyond the Headlines: ‘Ever-Present’ Persecution in Bangladesh and Sri Lanka

    Soomro Bheel was killed by Chandia community due to land dispute

    Religious minorities missing in Pakistan’s Islam-heavy textbooks

    Pakistani citizen, wishing to go to India for religious rituals, mysteriously disappears from Wagah border

    Four, including minor, held on kidnapping charges in Parsa

    Man found dead in Palpa

    72-year-old man found dead under suspicious circumstances in Sankhuwasabha

    Karnataka: When Dalits asked a barber to cut their hair, the shops in the entire village were locked – Shocking incident of caste discrimination!

    Azamgarh: Dalit family attacked due to old enmity, FIR lodged against five including former Pradhan

    Tamil Nadu: Chaos during temple festival in Pudukottai, hut of Dalit family burnt, government bus attacked! 14 arrests

    Bullet-hit body of Rab official found at Ctg’s Chandgaon camp

    Teenage girl’s hanging body found weeks after rape complaint in Faridpur

    Death of khyang woman: Husband files rape and murder case

  • Themes
  • Events
  • SAREM JOURNAL
  • PUBLICATIONS
sarim logo

Hardliners seek to ban Indian minorities at Hindu pilgrimage

Updated: October 14, 2024 12:44 PM GMT

Call for such ban is undemocratic and against the spirit of Indian constitution, say minority leaders

Hard-line Hindu leaders have sought a ban on non-Hindus setting up stalls at the venue of next year’s Kumbh Mela, a Hindu pilgrimage expected to attract millions in India’s most populous Uttar Pradesh state. 

The Akhil Bharatiya Akhara Parishad (ABAP), the state’s top body of Hindu seers and religious leaders, said it would ask Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath to prevent non-Hindus from entering the venue to do business.

The “non-Sanatanis” or non-believers should not be allowed to set up food or market stalls at the Kumbh Mela, Hindu leaders said on Oct. 10, citing a possible deterioration in law-and-order situation.

Sanatani is a collective term used to denote all sections of Hindus who believe in eternal (sanatan) values such as truth, justice, and righteousness. 

An estimated 400 million people are expected to arrive in the Prayagraj (formerly Allahabad) area of Uttar Pradesh during the 45 days of Mahakumbh in January-February 2025.  

Hindus believe a dip in the river Ganges during these auspicious times will wash off their sins. 

Mahant Ravindra Puri recently told the media that he also demanded that only Sanatani (Hindu) police officials be assigned to duty at the Kumbh Mela.

Mahant Harigiri, general secretary of BJP’s student wing, reiterated a similar stance.

“We have also decided to raise objections against anyone apart from Hindus being allowed to set up food or any stalls in the Kumbh Mela premises,” he told The Hindu, a national English newspaper.

“This will also prompt the devotees not to buy things which will be used in Puja (Hindu ritual) or consumed in the Kumbh from a non-Sanatani shopkeeper,” he said.

Minority leaders and rights activists say the call to ban non-Hindus from the festival is irrational.

The call for a ban “is not only undemocratic; rather, it is against the spirit of the Constitution of India,” A.C. Michael, national coordinator of United Christian Forum (UCF), told UCA News on Oct. 14.

Micheal, who is also president of the Federation of Catholic Associations of the Archdiocese of Delhi, said: “We Indians are known for living in peace among various religious practices and co-exist irrespective of caste, creed, and language.”

Muhammad Arif, a Muslim and chairman of the Centre for Harmony and Peace, told UCA News: “We condemn such kind of demands from the religious heads as it may cause communal tension among different religions, especially among Hindus and Muslims”.

The government as well as seers should avoid such demands that divide people in the name of caste, creed and religion, said Arif, whose organization is based in Varanasi, a city in Uttar Pradesh.

“Such a direction will give a bad name for the country in the world. It is undemocratic and a targeted attack on the minorities which the state government considers as second-class citizens,” the Muslim leader said. 

He said that the government, run by the pro-Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), had already faced a protest when it directed shopkeepers to display their names outside their stalls on the path of Kanwar Yatra, a Hindu pilgrimage held from July 22 to Aug. 19 this year.

The action was criticized as an attempt to identify Muslim shopkeepers and boycott them.

Previous post
Next post
Most Recent
Bangladesh

Bullet-hit body of Rab official found at

May 7, 2025
Bangladesh

Teenage girl’s hanging body found weeks after

May 7, 2025
Pakistan

Soomro Bheel was killed by Chandia community

May 7, 2025
India

Karnataka: When Dalits asked a barber to

May 7, 2025
India

Azamgarh: Dalit family attacked due to old

May 7, 2025
Bangladesh

Death of khyang woman: Husband files rape

May 7, 2025
India

Tamil Nadu: Chaos during temple festival in

May 6, 2025
Bangladesh

Man sent to jail over attempted rape

May 6, 2025
SARIM SARIM

About

About Sarim
Work With Us
Advertisement
Privacy Policy
Publications

Useful Links

Webinars
Interviews
Countries
Events
Themes

Iqra University Airport Campus, Main Shahrah e Faisal, Wireless Gate, Karachi

+92 21 34572746

info@sarimwatch.org

contact us
SARIM SARIM

Follow us:

Copyright 2025 © All Right Reserved