Washington Post and Hinduphobia

Apr 20 2004  | Views 24286 |  Comments  (153)
In our world of constant change, many entrenched paradigms and worldviews are being challenged by marginalized voices. As a patriotic American, I consider these healthy debates as another stage in the series of progressive movements, like civil rights, feminism, gay rights and other movements that started as underdogs and outsiders to the established power structure and had to battle at great expense for... Expand

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  AGMK posted 1 year ago

question who people believe in hinduphobia
 
During the last 60 years, Pakistan sought of the Hindus minorities problem in that country by resorting to forcible conversion their exodus from Pakistan. In 1947, Hindu population in Pakistan was 23%(2.5 crore). Now Hindu population in Pakistan is not even 1%. ?
 
 



  Arun Gupta posted 4 yrs ago


Further food for thought, about institutional problems in the American media:
http://www.cjr.org/issues/2004/3/brits-yanks.asp



  Arun Gupta posted 4 yrs ago

There is an increasing problem with the US media, as evidenced by Sinclair Media Company's decision not to carry Nightline today (April 30) on their ABC affiliates. Why? Because Ted Koppel is going to read out the names of the American dead in Iraq, all 600+ of them. "This is subversive of the public interest" (http://www.sbgi.net/). The point being that the media is much more open to certain points of view than to others. It perhaps never was, but is now much less so than ever, a bazaar for competing ideas.

The Washington Post's "ideological" commitment to upholding the sanctity of Emory Univ. or Univ. of Chicago professors against anyone who criticizes them is only going to get worse, not better, with the current trends.

-Arun



  Sujeev posted 4 yrs ago

Emory Student, Sanjay Garg, sorry you were let down by Sulekha. I hope Sulekha does not do this too often (promising something, then backtracking), as that will erode its credibility.

Emory Student, nobody noticed what Sanjay wrote because this article is off the main page.



  Emory Student posted 4 yrs ago

The recent comment by Sanjay Garg informs us that Sulekha has just succumbed to pressure from SAJA/RISA. Here is what Sanjay posted below but nobody bothered to pay attention:

“Some of you may recall from last week that the Hindu American Foundation was about to post a petition against Washington Post's Hindu Phobia on Sulekha. This petition was then announced on RBC radio in the TriState area over the past weekend...Sulekha has had second thoughts and have declined to post the petition at Sulekha. The reason for the refusal is:

“because there have been numerous instances where people think Sulekha is pushing and advocating the petition. We are particularly wary of being seen as taking sides on such sensitive matters related to religion. Publishing articles, particularly from both points of view, is seen as being neutral, running a petition will be deemed as advocating a particular point.

Excuse me, Sulekha.

EVERY petition under the sun takes a side and the same could be said of any petition whatsoever. The whole idea of a petition service is that each petition is from whosoever signs it, and not by Sulekha which merely provides the hosting platform.

By Sulekha’s logic, petitions on Sulekha must be considered to be Sulekha’s own political stances, right?

Why is SAJA able to bulldoze Sulekha into withdrawing a petition project AFTER it had given its OK to the folks at H.A.F.?

Is Sulekha getting Vedantamized?

Stop all this other crap and deal with THIS!



  sanjay garg posted 4 yrs ago

Some of you may recall from last week that the Hindu American Foundation was about to post a petition against Washington Post's Hindu Phobia on Sulekha. This petition was then announced on RBC radio in the TriState area over the past weekend. Given that numerous people may be looking for the petition & wondering why it has still not appeared on Sulekha, it is important to clarify the reason for the delay. Sulekha has had second thoughts and have declined to post the petition at Sulekha. The reason for the refusal is

"because there have been numerous instances where people think Sulekha is pushing and advocating the petition. We are particularly wary of being seen as taking sides on such sensitive matters related to religion. Publishing articles, particularly from both points of view, is seen as being neutral, running a petition will be deemed as advocating a particular point."

To be fair, Sulekha has agreed to provide a link from Sulekha to the site where the petition will be soon be appearing. Please do keep coming back to Sulekha to find the link to the petition.



  cindy hopkins posted 4 yrs ago

I became involved with this debate when I came to know Malhotra about a week before he published his Washington Post article on Sulekha. He asked me to review it before publication, which I did. Yesterday I went back to see what had become of it. I sent him the following email and he suggested it might be beneficial to post my thoughts. So, following is the email to him. Please note, I do not know Doniger, thus I am speculating about her motives based on her statements in the Washington Post article.

Dear Rajiv,

Today I found the first opportunity to view the comments solicited by your Washington Post article. Today is also the first time I read the Vedantam article that engendered your article in response. The Washington Post article was worse than I thought. It saddens me to see this debate portrayed as a battle of bullies out to protect their turf.

Particularly distressing is Doniger’s statement: “The argument is being fueled by a fanatical nationalism and Hindutva, which says no one has the right to make a mistake, and no one who is not a Hindu has the right to speak about Hinduism at all.”

My experience is exactly opposite. I am not Indian. I was born and bred in America to a father whose ancestry was Lebanese and a mother whose ancestors were Irish. I could not and would not make any exclusive claim to being Hindu. Yet, I have spoken about Hinduism, and I know not of what Doniger speaks when she claims that because she is not a Hindu her remarks are rejected. People I have met from the Hindu tradition have respectfully considered my thoughts, observations, and questions, even when, perhaps my comments easily could have been found to be disrespectful or ignorant.

So, from personal experience, Doniger is wrong. Moreover, if she is a scholar of India, she would know that people who come from, who epitomize, the Hindu tradition have accorded other westerners great respect, almost reverence, for their promulgation of the tradition. Think of Sir John Woodroffe, Alain Danielou, Agehananda Bharati, just to name a few.

To be blessed with understanding a tradition one must have the patience and humility to learn the tradition from those who know it. This is Doniger’s greatest mistake. It is why she makes such an appalling statement as holding you (indirectly) responsible for stirring up passionate emotions. She is “stirring up emotions” by not learning, not understanding. Rather than listening to the outcries she has unleashed, she retreats to the cover of claiming she is being discriminated against because she is not from India. But discrimination is her fault: both for characterizing criticism against her as nationalistic and for lacking true discrimination to take what is being said and gain from it.

I congratulate you on the responses, particularly the one from Vedantam. I took him at his words: “While further controversy can always be manufactured to increase website traffic, readers should judge for themselves whether to trust such claims.” I am not sure what he meant by the first phrase in the above sentence. However, I admit to being guilty of increasing the website’s traffic by reading his response. I also judged for myself the claims in his article and in yours. Vedantam’s article seemed intent on pitting people against one another on the basis of a superficial difference—their heritage. It discounted the Hindu tradition as a worthwhile, venerable endeavor in its own right. Your article did not.



  Sujeev posted 4 yrs ago

Rajiv,

I too am doing what I can. I am not an armchair critic, neither am I an armchair activist.

If I run into you somewhere, you can be sure that I will hand over a substantial contribution (for my income level) to the Infinity Foundation, not bug you for funding. I am surprised, though, to hear that the Infinity Foundation is facing a funding crunch inspite of your high profile activism over the past few years.

Bhadraiah, I am sorry but I have to beg off from having a full fledged discussion over my comments.



  Karna posted 4 yrs ago

Ramesh, while I agree with you, Vedantam's case was pretty much torn to fine shreds by Rajiv's original article and his subsequent rejoinder to Vedantam's pathetic response. Any left over threads were atomized in the first couple of dozen or so comments in Rajiv's and Vedantam's columns. Without Vedantam's participation, there is little left in these threads than calls for action and some light-hearted (or otherwise) silliness.

It is clear that Vedantam was arrogantly dancing naked in a minefield and has had his cojones blown off. Now he appears to be hiding behind his masters and cronies, nursing his wounds formulating his next assault -- which is unlikely, in my opinion, to happen on Sulekha. I predict that Vedantam will either lie low for a while, waiting for the storm to pass and then resume his lying, stupid and dishonest (LSD) journalism, or, more likely, enlist the support of his sponsors (SAJA, FOIL, and RISA) to wax eloquent on all forums controlled by his sponsors on how he is "the victim of a Hindutva witch-hunt aimed at supressing free expression that might reveal the nefarious and sinister plans of the fascist Hindu Fundamentalists."

I further predict that he will cherry pick the least logical and most emotional of posts in these two threads and make the representative of ALL the discussion here, posting them just about everywhere.

SAJA, FOIL and RISA are using their power to disseminate disinformation. Among the ways to combat this Evil Axis is to establish an alternative to SAJA for willing journalists of Indian (not South Asian) origin.

Unlike some previous posters, I don't agree at all that all those who pursue the humanities or journalism represent the bottom of the intellectual barrel. I grew up reading some fine English journalism in India -- unfortunately, those very newspapers, such as TOI, Indian Express and Hindu, have turned into cesspools.



  vaidix posted 4 yrs ago

Ramesh Rao,

I agree completely. We should not overstate the role of individuals.

Gandhiji took up the issue at judicial level, because in his times there were no institutions other than East India company and the Raj, so legal option was the only resort.

Currently this is a fight at organizational level, unless people want to take it personal. Now we have the corporations, for-profit, non-profit, charitable etc, and each organization has its own proclaimed objectives and mission. Let us work with this framework until it refuses to cooperate. The first line of attack should only be against organizations, not individuals, except those who chose to get in as individuals.

Bhadraiah