Hinduism commands the adherence of
approximately 850 million people in the world. Thus every 7th
human being is a Hindu. This makes Hinduism the third largest
religion in the world, after Christianity (approx. 2 billion) and
Islam (1.3 billion). These figures certainly give the impression
that Hinduism is a world religion. However, a look at the
geographical spread of Hindus (Table 1) shows that the impression
is deceptive:
It is clear that more than 95% of all Hindus
reside in India and approx. 98% in South Asia. Besides, Hindus in
most countries outside South Asia are emigrants from India and
other countries of the region. Only the Hindus of South Asia,
Vietnam and Indonesia are indigenous. In contrast, Christians
dominate countries of the entire Western hemisphere, Europe,
Oceania and southern half of the African Continent while Islam
dominates in scores of countries in North Africa, West Asia
besides Albania in Europe, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Maldives and
Bangladesh in South Asia and Malaysia, Brunei and Indonesia in the
Far East. The two predominant reasons for the geographical
confinement of Hinduism are:
1. Traditionally, Hinduism is a
non-proselytizing religion i.e., Hindus do not normally
convert people of other faiths to their own. Forcible
conversions have never been carried (except in a solitary
instance around the Independence of India) and even peaceful
methods have not been employed on any significant scale. This
contrasts totally with the record of Semitic faiths like
Christianity and Islam.
2. In the last few centuries, Hindus in
many countries have suffered severe reverses due to absorption
by or conversion to other religions or massacres and
persecution leading to migrations to India or conversion to
other faiths.
It is pertinent to point out, however, that
several fundamental tenets of Hinduism have been accepted whole
heartedly by Non-Hindus all over the world. For instance, one in
four residents of the United States believes in the doctrine of
rebirth. The Hindu-Buddhist spiritual discipline of Yoga has been
gaining popularity in the West for quite some time and has even
been granted recognition by certain churches.
1.2 Historical Decline of Indigenous Hindu
Communities
As stated earlier, Hinduism has suffered
serious reverses in the last few centuries and this has lead to
the displacement or extinction of several indigenous Hindu
communities. Following is a brief account of the same in different
regions of the world (the adversities faced by emigrant Hindu
communities like in Surinam and Fiji are beyond the scope of this
section):
1. Sinkiang (China): This region,
referred to as ‘Uttara-Kuru’ in Hindu scriptures, was
inhabited by an Indo- Aryan people called Tocharians in remote
antiquity. The Tocharians adhered to Abhidhamma Buddhism and
Saivite forms of Hinduism before the onslaught of Mongol tribes
from the East and the Arabs later. As a result, the Tocharians
simply disappeared or were absorbed by the invading peoples.
According to Indian traditions, the Shakadvipee and Kamboj
Brahmins residing in Bikaner, Ghaziabad and several other parts or
North India are descendants of the Tocharians who fled to India1.
2. The Middle East: Ancient Indian texts
refer to Caspian Sea as Kashyapa Sagar and the Black Stone
at Kaaba, Mecca (revered by Muslims) is referred to as a ‘Sivalinga’
( a Hindu icon representing Lord Siva) by a Hindu text ‘Bhavisyat
Purana’. This could demonstrate that Indian merchants
traveled often to these regions for carrying on trade. Ruins of
Hindu temples are encountered in Coastal Iran, Baku (Azerbaijan)
and Iraq. Historical records mention that fanatical mobs led by
St. Gregory massacred the tiny emigrant Hindu merchant community
in what is now Iraq, and smashed the temples and the idols therein2.
3. Afghanistan: Referred to as Gandhara
and Vahlika in ancient Hindu-Buddhist scriptures, Hinduism
(Saivite) and Buddhism (Mahayana) were the dominant faiths of the
ancestors of present day Pathans inhabiting the Eastern and
Southern parts of Afghanistan, before the advent of Islam. Around
654 C.E., Arab forces started attacking the Hindu Kingdoms of
Kabul and Zabul ruled by the Shahiya kings. The Pathans resisted
for 2 centuries before they were overwhelmed and forcibly
converted to Islam3. So great was the massacre of
Hindus that the local mountain range was renamed as ‘Hindu Kush’
meaning ‘Hindu slaughter’4. With the fall of the
communist regime in 1980’s and after demolition of the Babri
Masjid in India on December 6, 1992, the 75000 Hindu minority,
mainly resident in Kabul, Jalalabad and Kandhar, was targeted
selectively and their religious sites were descecrated15.
They fled en-masse to cities like Delhi in India, where they are
settled now. Several modern day Indian Hindu communities like the
Sehgals are descendent of Afghan Hindus who fled Islamic
persecution in Afghanistan several centuries ago. The Afghan
Hindus have set up a website13, to highlight their
situation.
4. Kashmir (India and Pakistan): This
region is referred to as Kashmir and Kashyapasara in Hindu
texts like the Nilamata Purana and was the seat of Mahayana
Buddhism, Vedic Hinduism and Pratyabijna school of Hindu
philosophy. Kashmir was regarded as a cradle of Hindu scholarship
till as late as the 13th Century C.E. For instance, the Moorish
traveler Al-Beruni, who sojourned in India, states in his memoirs5-
"The Hindus have inveterate hatred for Muslims for the forces
of Islam have utterly ruined the prosperity of Hindustan. The
Hindus have been scattered like atoms of dust and their sciences
have retreated to far off places like Kashmir, Benares and the
South." The large scale massacres and forcible conversions of
Hindus, burning of Hindu scriptures, destruction of temples by the
subsequent Muslim rulers of the region have been documented
vividly6,7 and are being left out. In modern times, the
possession of Kashmir has been a major bone of contention between
India and Pakistan ever since the two countries were partitioned
from erstwhile British India in 1947 C.E. At that time, encouraged
by Pakistan, the fanatically Muslim Pathan, Afridi and Chitrali
tribesmen invaded the Hunza, Balistan, Gilgit, Ladakh, Poonch,
Rajouri, Mirpur and Muzaffarabad regions of Jammu and Kashmir and
let loose a reign of terror9. The genocide of the 20%
minority of Hindus in these regions was total. For instance, the
100,000 strong proud Hindu Vaish community of Mirpur and Poonch
areas was massacred, and their women-folk were sold as slaves in
cities of Pakistan. More recently, in the last 15 years, terrorism
in the Kashmir valley, partly fueled by Islamic fundamentalism,
has lead to massacres of the Hindus in the valley. Almost the
entire Kashmiri Hindu community (300,000) has fled to Jammu, Delhi
and other parts North India to escape the wrath of Islamic
terrorists. Members of this erudite and cultured community have
set up websites to highlight their plight 14. In this
year alone, the Kashmiri militants have killed approximately 150
members of this minority in parts of Kashmir- 29 were killed in
the village of Barankot on April 18, 1998, for their refusal to
convert to Islam8.
5. Pakistan: Pakistan was a Hindu
country till the invasion of Sindh by Arabs in 712 C.E. and of
Punjab later on by Turks and Afghan Muslims. Thereafter, barring
brief periods, Hindus of the region suffered violent bouts of
persecution and discrimination at the hands of their Muslim
rulers. Hoards of Muslims Sufis also descended from Iran and
Central Asia to preach and propagate Islam while the practice of
Hindu customs and study of Hindu texts was abolished.
Consequently, millions of Hindus were either killed for refusal to
convert to Islam, or converted (either under duress, or due to
their own will to escape the disabilities of the Hindu caste
system, or to escape crippling Jaziyah tax imposed by Muslim
rulers on Hindus or to acquire material advantages in the Muslim
state), or fled to other parts of India (for instance, the Arora
community of N. India is from Aror- the ancient capital of Upper
Sindh)26. It is well known that the Muslim majority
areas of India were carved out from British India to form
Pakistan. The country was comprised of two wings- West Pakistan
(modern Pakistan) and East Pakistan (Bangladesh). The word
Pakistan means "Land of the Pure"- implying that the
founders of Pakistan established an Islamic state for pure Muslims
from India dominated by ‘impure’ non-Muslims. Hindus
constituted 11% of the population of Pakistan (28% in Sindh, 11%
in West Punjab, 7% in N.W.F.P. and 8% in Baluchistan) in 1946 C.E.
when large scale massacres of Hindus started10,11. The
Hindu community fled en-masse from Punjab and N.W.F.P. and later
from Sindh as a result of which, they are now a tiny minority of
1.3% there. Most Pakistani Hindus now live in the remote and
barren parts of the province of Sindh, where they form a 6%
minority. They are not even the largest minority in Pakistan- the
Christians form the largest minority (1.5%). daily persecution of
the hapless Hindu minority continues 12,13 as a result
of which migration to India and conversion to Islam in Pakistan
under duress is still in progress. The Pakistani Hindus have set
up a web-site15 that is worth visiting.
6. Bangladesh: Islam spread mainly
through peaceful conversion of the natives by active Muslim Sufis
and Pirs like Suhrawardy of Sylhet but persecution of Hindus
leading to their massacres, destruction of temples etc. were not
uncommon. To start with, Hinduism was not firmly established in
most parts of Bangladesh when Islam arrived. Most inhabitants
followed a mixture of animist, tantric Buddhism and primeval Hindu
beliefs. In 1947 C.E., when East Pakistan was formed, Hindus
constituted 34% of the population there but relentless persecution
and Govt. triggered communal rioting and massacres of Hindus
started soon and millions of Hindus migrated to India or converted
to Islam under duress16,17. In 1971 C.E., the Bengalis
started a war of Independence from West Pakistan. The West
Pakistani dominated army of Pakistan retaliated brutally. Hindus
were targeted in particular18. About 3.0 million
Bengalis (including 2.4 million Hindus) were massacred. About 10
million Bengalis (of which 8 million were Hindus) fled to India.
After the establishment of Bangladesh, the Hindus there (already
down from 34% to 16%) heaved a sigh of relief but their hopes were
dashed soon after when Bangladesh was declared as an Islamic
nation. A series of discriminatory acts have been passed19
by the Bangladeshi Govt. to the disadvantage of Hindus and daily
suppression of Hindus by their Muslim neighbors continues. The
plight of Bengali Hindus is poignantly narrated in a
semi-fictitious book "Shame20" by Taslima
Nasreen- a Bangladeshi Muslim. As a result, she drew a fatwah
ordering her death from the Muslim clergy of Bangladesh. The
author now lives in Sweden under asylum. After the demolition of
the Babri Mosque in India in Dec. 1992, fanatical Muslim mobs went
on a rampage in Bangladesh, destroying 200 temples, killing 2000
Hindus and raping several 1000 Hindu women 21. In
September-October 1997, the Durga Puja celebrations of Hindus were
attacked by Muslim youth all over the country in about 100 places.
Hindus were demanded to pay the Jaziyah tax for ‘practicing
pagan customs in a Muslim country.’22 Due to
continued persecution, the % of Hindus has dwindled to 11% and
some estimate it to be as low as 8% now.
7. Indonesia: This country was once the
seat of powerful Hindu empires like the Majhapit in the island of
Java and Sri Vijaya in the island of Sumatra. Indonesians believe
that Hindu culture was brought to Indonesia by Sage Agastya- who
is a legendary Sage in the Hindu tradition and is credited with
spreading Vedic Hindu culture south of the Vindhya mountain range
in Central India. The belief of Indonesians might be apocryphal,
but evidence of practice of Hinduism as early as 4th Century C.E.
in parts of Indonesia is known from inscriptions. In the early
15th Century C.E., Muslim traders from India and elsewhere and
Muslim Holy men called Sufis carried the message of Islam to
Sumatra and thence to other islands of the archipelago. Large
numbers of Indonesians peacefully converted to Islam and several
petty rulers of islands in the region too accepted Islam for
commercial reasons. However, the rulers and the population of the
Majhapit kingdom on Java resisted, leading to protracted warfare
between Muslim Indonesians and the Majhapit kingdom. Occasionally,
Hindus in the Muslim ruled areas suffered persecution but such
instances were rare23. The boundaries of the kingdom
shrunk towards east and eventually the royal family fled to the
adjoining island of Bali, where Hinduism is still the religion of
masses. Hindus are also found in large numbers in the adjacent
island of Lombok and also in the eastern shores of Java and I have
personally witnessed their festivities and customs during my visit
to Indonesia in March-April 1996. Soon after the advent of Islam
in Indonesia, European powers like the Dutch and the Portuguese
became rulers of Indonesia and checked the cultural Islamization
of Indonesia as a result of which, despite being overwhelmingly
Muslim (86%), Indonesians still adhere to their pre-Islamic Hindu
culture. The Javanese, especially are called the ‘Abangan’
(easy going) Muslims. Thus, the Javanese still have Hindu names,
enact Hindu epics like the Ramayana. A lot of their greetings and
customs are distinctly Hindu, as known from my personal experience
with my Javanese friends. The emblem of the National Airlines of
Indonesia is the bird Garuda- the mount of the Hindu deity Lord
Vishnu. Hinduism is one of the five officially recognized
religions in Indonesia (the other being Confucianism,
Christianity, Islam and Buddhism). The Hindu New Year is a
national holiday in Indonesia. In recent decades, Indonesian
Muslims have targeted members of the predominantly Christian
Chinese minority and Christian24 Indonesians with
violent attacks but the Hindus have not been molested.
Approximately 500000 members of the animist Tengger community in
Eastern Java have embraced Hinduism25 in the last three
decades while 2 million have opted for Christianity.
8. South East Asia: Hinduism and
Buddhism reached Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, Kampuchea and Burma
simultaneously and there was a fusion of these two sister
religions there, with the Buddhist element generally dominating.
The largest Hindu temple in the world (Angkor Wat) is found in
Kampuchea. By and large, Hindu practices have been absorbed
peacefully into Buddhism in the region and distinctly Hindu
customs are employed only when there is no Buddhist parallel (like
the coronation ceremonies of Thai kings). These ceremonies are
performed by descendants of Brahmin priests who were invited to
the region by local kings several centuries back. This was learnt
by during personal visits to these countries in the year 1986.
9. India: Indians were referred to as
‘Hindus’ in ancient times and the two terms were fairly
synonymous. However, large parts of the country passed under
Islamic rule and under subsequently under Portuguese, French,
Dutch and British rule. Millions of Hindus were converted to Islam
and Christianity till, by 1947 C.E. approximately 25% and 1.5% of
the population of the Indian Subcontinent had converted to Islam
and Christianity respectively. While Hindus converted to other
religions, they themselves refused to accept any converts. Thus,
most indigenous Muslims26 and Christians are descended
from Hindu and Buddhist Indian ancestors. We may summarize the
following causes for the conversion of Hindus to Islam and
Christianity:
a. Hindu Caste System: The social
structure of the Hindu society put some communities/castes at
a severe disadvantage in all temporal matters. Islam and
Christianity offered these communities social equality and so
several Low Caste Hindus and tribals left their ancestral
beliefs. For instance, the socially inferior Lohana Rajputs of
Bahawalpur (now in Pakistan) converted to Islam when the
Muslim Sufi Farid offered them sops for converting to Islam.
About 80% Christians in India have Low Caste or Tribal
origins.
b. Forcible conversions: This was an
important factor in the spread of Islam in South Asia. Often,
the invading Muslims offered a choice between Islam and death
to the inhabitants of subjugated Hindu areas31. The
stories of cruelty and barbarianism of Islamic rulers are
folklore among the Hindu masses of India. Similarly, in the
Portuguese ruled part of Goa32, Catholicism was
often forced upon the Hindus and Muslims there. It is
estimated that the 8 century long Islamic rule witnessed the
massacre of 80 million Hindus26. This is the root
cause of the on-going Hindu-Muslim fued in South Asia.
c. Anhilation of symbols of Hinduism:
Islamic rule in India saw a widespread destruction of Hindu
places of worship27, burning of libraries (Eg.
Vikramshila in 1200 C.E.), burning of Hindu scriptures (Eg.
Emperor Aurangzeb ordered destruction of Hindu scriptures in
Thatta in Sindh and in Multan in West Punjab), selective
massacres of Hindu priestly class; prohibition of Hindu
customs and rituals; desecration of rivers, ponds etc. held
sacred by Hindus (for instance, Timur threw slaughtered cows
into River Ganga at Hardwar and massacred the entire Hindu
population of Delhi, while sparing the Muslim-Sayyad quater of
the city). All these acts demoralized the leaderless Hindus
further and drove them to accept the faith of the victorious-
Islam.
d. Worldy allures offered to converts:
Often Hindus found it easier to rise in the Muslim run
administration system by converting to Islam since the Muslim
rulers of India by and large favored their co-relgionists for
the top positions. Hindu traders were often charged higher
taxes than their muslim counterparts. Most Muslim rulers
exacted the crippling Jaziya tax from hapless Hindu masses to
keep them in poverty. Hindus often had to pay taxes to
practice various aspects of their religion (Eg. Temple entry
tax, pilgrimage tax). Some Muslim rulers pardoned the crimes
of Hindu criminals if they converted to Islam. All these
measures forced several Hindus to convert to Islam.
e. Unfair Laws against Hindus: While
Hindus could convert to Islam and still retain their
inheritance, the reverse was not allowed. Hindus were not
allowed to marry Muslim women unless they converted to Islam
while Muslims could easily marry Hindu women. Emperor Jehangir26
(1605-1628 C.E.) ordered approx. 400 Hindu families of
Northwest Punjab to convert to Islam since their men had
married Muslim women. Some Muslim rulers insulted/decapacitated
Hindus by preventing them from carrying arms or riding
elephants etc.
f. Higher growth rate of Muslim
Population: This was due to the greater fertility rate of
muslim women, prevelance of widow remarraige amongst Muslims,
polygamy and continuous influx of Muslims from Persia, Central
Asia etc. into India.
g. Superstitious beliefs of Hindus:
As a result of nightmarish experiences that Hindus had with
Muslims and the Portuguese, Hindu masses reduced social
intercourse with Muslims and Christians. Those Hindus, who
interacted with Muslims or Christians, were osctracised by the
Hindu society and often excommunicated. For instance, the
court musicians of Moghul Emperor Muhammad Shah ‘Rangila’,
who were Brahmins, faced great ostracism from Hindus and so
were forced to convert to Islam. (Their descendants are the
famous Dhrupad singers- Dagar brothers). Similary, an entire
community of Hindus were declared outcastes by neighbouring
Hindus in Vasai (Thane district of Maharasthra) after they
accidently drank water from wells that had been ‘polluted’
by pieces of bread that had been thrown into them
intentionally by the Portuguese! Hindus also stopped admitting
non-Hindus into Hinduism and even to this day, many Hindus
oppose the idea of converting non-Hindus to Hinduism. Thus,
conversion was a one way traffic from Hinduism to other
faiths.
1.3 Emigrant Hindus- The Hindu Diaspora:
a. Oceania: Till recently,
Australia and New Zealand followed a ‘white only’ policy which
excluded most Asians from the continent. Only recently have the
two countries relaxed immigration rules to allow more Asians
including Indians to emigrate. In case of Indians, it is widely
known that Indian Christians are favored over non -Christians for
immigration. An estimated 100000 Indians are now settled in
Australia and presumably most of them are Hindus. Most Indians
here are recent arrivals and hail from affluent sections of the
Indian society. They still adhere to the same forms of Hinduism as
are practiced in India, without of course the facilities of Hindu
temples and priesthood. It is too early for then to
‘Australianize’ their Hindu beliefs. The only island with any
significant Hindu population is Fiji. Indians are approximately
46% of the total population and accordingly, Hindus could account
for a little less than 40% of all inhabitants. Indians/Hindus here
are essentially descendants of the rebellious ‘Purubiya’
(of Eastern Uttar Pradesh and Bihar regions of India) settlers who
were taken from India in large numbers more than a century ago to
work in sugar plantations there. Due to their cultural origin,
Fijian Hindus study the ‘Ramacharitamanas’ and
devotional texts on Lord Hanuman with great faith, put saffron
flags atop their houses very often and celebrate Hindu festivals
like Holi, Vijayadashmi, Diwali in the North Indian manner. A few
years back, the pro-Christian forces lead by General Rabuka, who
is a native Fijian, captured control of the island and put several
humiliating restrictions on the practice of religious beliefs of
Hindus. However, he has since been succeeded by a Prime Minister
of Indian origin, who has removed these restrictions.
Nevertheless, this episode has shaken the confidence of Hindus
there and has made them realize the need to organize in a better
manner to thwart any such future incidents.
b. Europe: Barring Britain and
Netherlands, no other European country has a sizeable Hindu
community. Hindus in Great Britain number about 400 000 or
approximately 0.7% of the population. They are mainly Gujaratis
and Punjabis who emigrated either directly from India or from
erstwhile British colonies like Kenya, Nigeria, Guyana. About two
decades back, the Ugandan dictator Idi Amin singled out the Indian
ccommunity (mainly Gujarati) for harassment as a result of which
65000 of them fled Uganda, mainly for England. The Hindus of
Britain practice their faith very actively and have established a
chain of beautiful temples all over the country. The Swaminarayan
temple at Neisden (in Greater London) is a beautiful marble
edifice constructed recently and has already been christianed as
the ‘Taj Mahal of England.’ British Hindus are also well
organized as is evident from their collective protest against
actions perceived by the community as insulting to or
discriminating against Hindu sentiments. For instance,
approximately a decade back, about 10000 Hindus marched in protest
in London when permission was refused for construction of a Hindu
temple at the outskirts of London on the grounds that the temple
architecture violated local architectural traditions. In 1989, the
‘Shila Pujan’ ceremony advocated by the Vishwa Hindu Parishad-
a Hindu organization that has been clamouring for the construction
of a Temple at Ramajnmabhoomi at Ayodhya, drew widespread support-
so much so that the English mayor of Kent- a town with a large
Indian population, presided over the ceremony34.
Netherlands too has a large Hindu population, mainly people who
fled from Surinam in the 1960’s to escape the Creole perpetrated
atrocities. It is of interest to note that 14% of population of
East Europe is Gypsy who were originally Hindus of Afghanistan and
Punjab (in India and Pakistan) enslaved by invading Islamic hordes
and carried off to Central Asia and beyond. In course of time, the
Gypsies have become Christians to survive but still retain several
vestiges of their Hindu/Indian past. The Lithuanians are another
interesting community of Europe. They were the last European
nation to adopt Christianity and so still retain several features
of their Pagan cultural past. Lithuanian mythology has a lot in
similarity with Vedic mythology and in addition to the now extinct
Vedic Sanskrit (language of Hindu revelation), Lithuanian is the
only ‘accented’ language. Indian participants Surinder Attri
and Arvind Ghosh recently participated in the International Pagan
Conference at Lithuania and in personal communications to me,
expressed amazement at the similarity between folk Lithuanian
culture and Vedic beliefs. It appears that Lithuanians are also
aware of their link with ancient Indian culture and are proud of
it35. Europe also has distinguished centers of
oriental/Hindu studies like Utrect (Netherlands), Helsinki
(Finland), Berlin (Germany), Vienna (Austria) where oriental
scholars continue to produce excellent works on Hindu culture and
philosophy. As for indeginous Hindus, there are hardly any in
Europe and most of them are Hare Krishnas. Native Italian Hindus
recently petitioned the Italian Govt. for state recognition of
Hinduism- a process that is expected to take approximately 15
years. Portugal too has a tiny Hindu minority emigrated from Goa.
Portuguese Hindus have constructed a beautiful Hindu temple in the
heart of Lisbon on land that has been donated by the Govt. of
Portugal.
c. North America30:
Details of Hindu Diaspora in Canada and the United States will be
covered in the next chapter. This subsection will deal mainly with
the Hindu communities in the Caribbean Islands. Indians,
predominantly Hindus, were introduced as indentured laborers in
1838 in British Guiana and later to Trinidad, Jamiaca, Grenada,
St. Lucia, Martinique, Guadeloupe and Surinam. Right from the
beginning, they had to face sustained attacks on their religions
by aggressive Christian missionaries on one hand and state
sponsored discrimination against Hindu religious practices on the
other. Thus, Hindu marraige and cremation customs were not
recognized and upon the death of a Hindu man, the state treated
his widow as concubines and his children as bastards, especially
in Jamaica and Grenanda. Lack of awareness of their own relgious
beliefs, apathy of Hindu priests, lack of effective leadership in
the Indian community and intermarraige with Christian creole
majority caused enmasse conversion of Indians to Christianity and
their absorption into mainstream communities in Jamaica and
Grenada. In Guadeloupe though, the tiny Hindu minority has
constructed several Hindu temples to keep its faith alive.
d. South America: Three countries
in this continent have a sizeable Hindu population- Surinam,
Guyana and Trinidad and Tobago. In Trinidad and Guyana, the Hindus
suffered considerable erosion in their ranks but their greater
numbers and the Hindu response lead by Arya Samaj has stopped the
conversions and Hinduism is still the relgion of majority of
immigrant Indians. In all countries barring Surinam, Hindus face
some disability or the other in practicing their religion and are
under constant Christian missionary propaganda and enticements.
For instance, several Hindus have had their children converted to
Christianity so that they could have the opportunity of a better
school education. Surinamese Indians form 37% of the population of
their country and 82% of them adhere to Hinduism. In Guyana,
Indians are 53% of the population with Hinduism being the faith of
60% of them. All over the Carribean, immigrant Indians are
descedent from Purubiya Hindus and so follow the Hindu customs of
Gangetic Plains in varying degrees.
e. Africa: Before the United States
took over a decade back, South Africa had the largest immigrant
Indian community in the world. Immigrant Indians form about 3% of
the total population of South Africa and so number approx. 1
million. They are concentrated in the eastern regions of Natal and
Transvaal of the country. About 65% are Hindus, 15% Muslims and
the rest Christians. Indian Christians are mainly Hindu converts
who adopted their new faith in the first half of the century.
These large scale conversions jolted the Hindu community of South
Africa and Arya Samaj- an aggressive and reformist Hindu sect
stepped in to stem the tide of defection from Hinduism. Since
then, Hindus have consolidated themselves and conversions to
Christinaity have ceased. Indian Hindus are mainly Gujaratis and
Tamils and continue to follow their regional variations of
Hinduism. Mauritius- an island in the Indian ocean has a 63%
Indian majority of which 80% follow Hinduism. Hindus in Mauritius
have been well organized from the start and wield considerable
clout in political matters, with several successive Prime
Ministers being of Indian Hindu origin. Mauritian Hindus still
frequent the pilgrim centers of India, but have now established
the 13th Saivite Jyotirling on the island, after the 12 in India.
The conscecration ceremony was attended by the Mauritian Prime
Minister Mr. Anirood Jaganaut (Aniruddha Jagannatha) and was
preced by the emptying of pitchers of water from Holy rivers of
India into a lake at the banks of which the temple was to be
constructed. Arya Samaj is an important sect of Hindus on the
island, but most Hindus follow the customs observed by Hindus of
Eastern Uttar Pradesh and Bihar in India since their anscestors
came from these areas. Several 1000 Indians also reside in the
former British colonies of Kenya and Tanzania. Although they form
less than 1% of the population of these countries, they have
considerable economic clout and are a well respected minority.
Again, Hindus there have a very restricted interaction with the
locals and do not seek converts. Diwali is a national holiday in
Kenya. During recent bomb blasts at the US Embassy at
Daar-es-Salaam in Tanzania and Nairobi in Kenya, Hindu Students
Councils of these countries were at the forefront in providing
medical aid to the victims36.
f. Asia: Burma, Malaysia,
Singapore, Sri Lanka, Indonesia and the Middle East have sizebale
immigrant Hindu communities. The Indian/Hindu community of Burma
is a legacy of the British rule when almost a million Indians
(mostly Bengali) emigrated to Burma. However, when Burma obtained
its freedom in 1948 C.E., most of them returned to India. Those
still there often intermarry with local Burmese and there have
been several cases of conversion to Buddhism37. Indians
number approximately 10% of the population of Malaysia and 70% of
them are Hindus. They mainly reside in the rubber plantations of
the Penang province and are predominatly from the Coromandal coast
of Tamil Nadu in India, from where the British took them a few
decades back to work in the rubber plantations. There have been
cases of friction between the Hindu minority and the indigenious
Muslim community. In 1979 C.E., mobs of Malay muslims ran amuck
plundering Hindu temples and smashing idols of Hindu deities38.
In the beginning of this year also, there was a fear of a riot
when 1500 Muslims attacked a newly built Hindu temple next to a
mosque, complaining that the loud speakers of the Hindu temple
were provocative. The Prime Minister of Malaysia (Mahathir
Mohammad) had to step in to defuse the tension and ordered the
relocation of the temple. Muslims are barely over 50% of the
population in Malaysia and have yet declared it an Islamic state,
putting mainly Buddhist Chinese and Hindu Indians at a
disadvantage vis-a-vis ‘Bhumiputra’ Muslim Malays. Singaporean
Hindus too number 7% of the population of the Island and maintain
close cultural and religious links with the parent Tamil Hindu
community of India. There are several beautiful Hindu temples in
Singapore and Hindus of the Island have also set up a beautiful
website. Hindus emigrant from India form a double digit % of the
population of several Arab countries like Kuwait, U.A.E., Oman,
Yemen and so on. However, these countries are strictly Islamic
nations and brook no competition from rival faiths. Cremation is
disallowed in these countries and only the comparatively liberal
states of Sharjah (one of the 7 Emirates of U.A.E) and Oman have
allowed construction of one Hindu temple each. Saudi Arabia does
not allow Hindus to worship icons even in the privacy of their
homes in the country and has barred the entry of all Sikhs and all
Hindus bearing the surname ‘Singh.’
References:
Considerable help has been taken from information
available on the web,
in addition to books. Both are referenced below.
Pt. Udayavira Sastri; Samkhya Darsana ka Itihasa;
Virjanand Vaidika Shodha Samsthana; Ghaziabad, India
Sita Ram Goel; History of Hindu-Christian Encounters; Voice
of India; Delhi, India; 1986
Sita Ram Goel; Heroic Hindu Resistance to Islamic Invaders
(654 A.D. to 1206 A.D.); Voice of India; Delhi; India
Website http://www.hindunet.org/hindu_history/modern/hindu_kush.html
Tawarikh-e-Hind
Narendra Sehgal; Converted Kashmir: A Bitter Saga of
Religious Conversion; Utpal Publications; Delhi; 1991 (Available
on-line at Reference # 8.b)
K. N. Pandit; Baharistan-I-Shahi: A Chronicle of Medieval
Kashmir (An English Translation); Firma KLM Pvt. Ltd.; Calcutta;
1989 (Available on-line at Ref. # 8.b)
Website URL: www.hindunet.org/kashmir/killingsApr98
Also website: http://www.kashmir-information.com
Bal Raj Madhok; Kashmir- The Storm Centre of the World; A.
Ghosh- Publisher; Houston; 1992
Massacres of Sikhs and Hindus in West Pakistan; Sri Gurdwara
Prabandhak Committee; Amritsar, India;
Details personally heard from members of numerous migrants
from West and East Pakistan now residing in Delhi (including my
maternal grand-parents and my In-laws)
Website: http://rbhatnagar.ececs.uc.edu:8080/human_rights/pakistan/pak_herald_report_1.htr9/6/98
Website:
www.geocities.com/Athens/Olympus/6706/index.html
Website:
www.hindunet.org/kashmir
Website ‘Pakistani Hindu Patrika’: www.geocities.com/Athens/Delphi/7295
Baljit Rai; Muslim Fundamentalism in the Indian Subcontinent;
B. S. Publishers; Chandigarh, India; 1991
S. K. Bhattacharya; Genocide in East Pakistan; A. Ghosh-
Publisher; Houston; 1987
Website: www.hindunet.org/hindu_history/modern/hindu_bangla.html
Website:
http://rbhatnagar.ececs.uc.edu:8080/human_rights/bangladesh/introduction.html
Taslima Nasrin; Shame; Prometheus Books; New York; 1997
Arvind Ghosh; Koran and Kafir; A. Ghosh-Publisher; Houston;
1994
Website: www.hvk.org/hvk/articles/1197/0051.html
Ira Marvin Lapidus; A History of the Islamic Societies;
Cambridge University Press; New York; 1988
Website www.domini.org/openbook/
Robert W. Hefner; Hindu Javanese: Tengger Tradition and
Islam; Princeton University Press; Princeton, New Jersey; 1985
Kishori S. Lal; Indian Muslims- Who Are They? ; Voice of
India; Delhi; 1992
Ram Swarup, Arun Shourie, Jay Dubashi, Ssita Ram Goel, Harsh
Narain; Hindu Temples- What Happened to Them? (Two Volumes);
Voice of India; Delhi; 1997
Kishori Saran Lal; Early Muslims in India; Aditya Prakashan;
Delhi; 1984
Dwarka Nath; A History of Indians in Guyana; Published by the
author- 30 Crowther Road, South Norwood, London; 1970
I. J. Bahadur Singh (Ed.); Indians in the Carribbean;
Sterling Publishers Private Ltd.; New Delhi; 1986
Margaret A. Gibson; Accomodation Without Assimilation;
Cornell University Press; Ithaca, New York; 1988
Titus; Islam in India and Pakistan
A. Prilokar; Goa Inquisition; Voice of India; Delhi
Hindu Vishwa; A VHP publication (annual); 1989 issue
Emails from Sri Surinder Paul Attri- an Indian participant
from the United States at the World Pagan Conference 98’ at
Vilnius, Lithuania
Email received from the Hindu Students Council of Kenya
Personal conversations with Mr. Sibal, an Indian importer of
rice from Burma
Collin Maine; The Dead Hand of Islam; The Australian Humanist
Asscociation; Sydney; 1982
Karen Isaksen Leornard; The South Asian Americans; Greenwood
Press; Westport, CT; 1997
Madhok, Balraj; What is a Hindu Rashtra?
Chatterjee, Abhas Kumar; Concept of a Hindu Nation; Voice of
India; Delhi
Mazumdar, Shampa; " Sacred Spaces: Socio spatial
adaptations of Hindu Migrants"; PhD dissertation;
Northeastern University, Boston; 1995