Project Saffron Dollar
Project Saffron Dollar
The Campaign to Stop
Funding Hate has ruffled quite a few feathers, and understandably
so. Since IDRF's links with the Sangh Parivar have been laid bare, they don't
bear repetition. Given this, there still arises the question - Why only pick
on Hindu fanaticism? I will try answer this in what follows.
Religious fanaticism has come to be identified with Islam, courtesy bin Laden.
In the aftermath of the WTC attacks, the U.S President issued an
executive order on terrorist financing, "blocking
property and prohibiting transactions with persons who commit, threaten to
commit, or support terrorism", and designated 27 individuals and organizations
- all of them Muslim - as engaged in terrorism. Incidentally, this included
Harkat ul-Mujahideen (HuM), a terrorist organization operating from Pakistan
Occupied Kashmir. In late October, HuM, Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) and
Lakshar-e-Toiba (LeT) were designated as
Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTOs). Shortly after its suicide
attack on the Jammu and Kashmir Legislative assembly, JeM's assets were frozen
by the U.S State Department. LeT met with the same fate after the Indian
Government accused it, along with JeM, of involvement in the suicide attack on
the Indian Parliament. Also caught unawares in the dragnet was Ummah
Tameer-e-Nau (UTN), which, besides being a charity engaged in relief
work in Afghanistan, is also an Al Qaeda collaborator and a suspect in eight
attacks in Kashmir in August which killed about 100 people. Terrorism under the
garb of charity seems to be the norm, and this also applies to JeM and LeT.
As things stand now, the principal (in the Indian context) Islamic terrorist
groups have been outlawed, and their assets frozen, in the U.S, U.K and India.
What about their Hindu brethren who have been indicted by one and all, most
recently by the
Citizens Tribunal? The Indian Government can't,
for obvious reasons, be expected to act against the Saffron Warriors. This
being the case, someone else had to shoulder the responsibility of exposing
their nefarious activities, which is what The Campaign to Stop Funding Hate
did. Their report, Foreign Exchange of Hate
, is an irrefutable expose of IDRF, a charity very much on the lines of UTN.
This is not all, however. While a majority of Hindutva organizations in the U.S
masquerade as charities, they are not all that averse to revealing their
virulent self. One of the most recent such instances was Sadhvi
Rithambara's recent visit to the U.S. Infamous for her role in the demolition
of the Babri Masjid, where a very cunning juxtaposition of encouragement (in
the form of incendiary slogans like 'Ek dhakka aur dho, Babri Masjid thod dho
[Give one more push, break down Babri Masjid]') and castigation (of the less
forthcoming Swayamsevaks for their impotence) did the trick, she was at her
venomous worst in New York. While ostensibly fundraising for shelters for
orphans and widows, she justified the RamJanmaBhoomi movement on the
pretext that "if the youth of India stood up for the cause, even Muslims will
start to say Long Live Lord Ram [Yahan to meeyan log bhi bolenge, Jai Shree
Ram]." The 300 odd people who had made it to the event had coughed out between
$50 to $1,000 each. In her five week tour of the U.S and U.K, the fortune she
amassed is anybody's guess! Rithambara's fundraising activities are apparently
beyond the purview of the executive order on terrorist financing!
Furthermore, in a cruel twist of irony, while she claims, in spite of having
(mis)used a religious platform (Ganesh temple in New York) to spit venom
against other religions, to be the upholder of Hinduism, those protesting her
visit were branded anti-Hindu! Doesn't really paint a rosy picture of Hinduism
to the uninitiated, does it?
If after having been outlawed by both the U.S and Indian governments, Islamic
fanaticism continues to pose as much a threat as it does, doesn't Hindu
fanaticism, operating under the patronage/indifference of these governments,
pose a much bigger threat? Since the Indian Government only seems to be
concerned with the happenings in Kashmir, isn't it even more imperative for
us to do our mite to restore normalcy in Gujarat and ensure there'll be no more
Gujarats? Lets start off by strangling the funding for fanaticism, be it for
Hindutva as in the U.S and UK, or for Jihad as in say, Saudi Arabia. While
continuing to pressurize the Governments to act, lets also
petition the individual donors.
Ra Ravishankar
December 3, 2002