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By Dr. Richard Benkin Monday, March 28, 2011
The
plight of the Bangladeshi Hindus originally drew me to West Bengal, and
their deteriorating situation keeps me coming back to areas where I can
meet with the victims in their semi-licit and semi-safe havens.
Unfortunately, throughout much of India’s fourth most populous state,
even Hindus native to the country cannot expect basic legal protections
from police and other authorities. While some have offered various
explanations for this injustice, we shall let them argue over that and
not let political wrangling divert us from the heart of the
matter: real people whose victimization and lack of protection
trump any political justifications, theoretical arguments, and
disingenuous defenses raised in an attempt to deny the reality.
Last
September, there was an anti-Hindu riot not far from the West Bengal
capital of Kolkata. Marauding Muslims destroyed Hindu shops and
homes in Deganga and contrary to initial reports, molested several
women. Their immediate aim was to force a longstanding Hindu
temple off land they determined to seize for their mosque; but as West
Bengal political leader Tathagata Roy noted, their real objective was
“to cleanse the area of Hindus [and] totally Islamize the area.” I
visited Deganga five months after the violence and observed that the
rioters were achieving that goal. The remaining Hindu residents
told us that many of their co-religionists had already fled, and most of
them were contemplating the same course of action. Unchecked
violence from Muslims was bad enough, local and state authorities’
refusal to stop it left them alienated and defenseless. At the
riots’ outbreak, government forces deployed along the main road, but
when the criminals reacted by attacking errant homes and villages in the
interior, the troops did not follow. That allowed the Muslim
rioters to savage Hindu communities with impunity. By the time of
my fact-finding mission, Hindus had rebuilt most the demolished brick
structures but not the sense of security they once had. They fear
going to market or school, and women in particular are subjected to
incessant harassment. Numerous requests to the authorities for
protection have gone unanswered.
Not far from Deganga lies the less accessible village of Norit, close
enough to the Kolkata for local and State authorities to protect its
Hindu residents—if they want to do so. Certainly, if I could get
there, they can; and I did, making my way to Norit in the late afternoon
on February 17, 2011 accompanied by Tapan Ghosh and Animitra
Chakraborty of Hindu Samhati, a Hindu advocacy group, and by my fellow
Forcefield board members, Miriam Guttman-Jones and Amitabh
Tripathi. For what seemed like hours, we heard testimony after
testimony of anti-Hindu attacks and the government’s passive
complicity. “It seems as if everyone has a story to tell,” I
remarked. These anti-Hindu attacks have become more frequent over
the last two years along with a “tremendous rise in Islamic
fundamentalism” and aggressive block voting by Muslims.
Up until two years ago, villagers told us, Hindu children had been
able to play soccer, cricket, and other games unmolested in a field on
the village outskirts. Now, however, when they attempt to play,
neighboring Muslim men converge on them and attack. This normally
happens when most adult Hindu men are away working and the mothers are
left to defend their children. Making no distinction for age or
gender, however, the men beat, bite, and attack them with bamboo sticks
or lathis. Many women who described this also showed us the
consequent wounds and permanent disabilities, many of which were treated
in area hospitals. Police intervened in one case but charged both
communities with violence and told them to “live in peace”; drawing a
false moral equivalency between attackers and defenders. Nice
sentiment, but difficult to realize when one party gets to attack the
others’ children with impunity.
Two elderly women in the village described being beaten while only
observing the fray from well outside it. One showed us how the
attackers broke her spine, kicking her repeatedly while she was on the
ground. The other testified to being thrown into a pond and then
beaten some more. Another woman claimed to have been dragged by
her hair and beaten severely about the head. She spent over a week
in the hospital and still suffers constant pain. The testimony
went on for some time painting a very clear picture of a village where
the residents live in fear of attack and official inaction.
Several spoke about home invasions and attempted abduction of women and
children. The most poignant testimony came from the mother and
uncle of 21-year-old Matamata Dutta, who was abducted more than five
weeks prior to our visit. It would be difficult for anyone with
even a modicum of empathy to remain unmoved as her mother described the
girl’s abduction. The real story, however, is how others
apparently can.
Matamat’s
family filed a formal complaint with the police who have refused to
start a case or help the mother recover her daughter. They turned
to Hindu Samhati. Tapan Ghosh personally delivered a formal report
of the incident to the district administration in Howrah and also
reported it to the West Bengal Human Rights Commission. Neither
one responded. In fact, the family reports being threatened with
serious consequences whenever in desperation they go to the local police
station to plead their case. Local Muslims are now threatening to
abduct “more Hindu girls,” knowing they can do so with impunity.
Unfortunately, Matamata’s case is not a unique one. The abduction
of Hindu girls and women of childbearing age has been common in
Bangladesh for decades. That we are seeing them in West Bengal now
substantiates claims that jihad has crossed the border into
India. These abductions deliberately reduce the Hindu gene pool
and contribute to a demographic cleansing of non-Muslim
populations. At the very least, we should wonder why the
authorities refuse even to investigate thus very serious matter
seriously and demand that they do so, even though the miscreants now
have a six week head start.
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