Shaking your Fists and Do Something!
By Dr. Richard L. Benkin
Address to Telugu Association of
July 4, 2009
I was asked to come here today to talk about the ethnic
cleansing of Bangladeshi Hindus: by Islamists—who
drive it—“average” Bangladeshi Muslims—who carry it out—and the
To those who never tire of complimenting themselves for their
years of work on the victims’ behalf; to Bangladeshi politicians who cynically
claim to be the Hindus’ great hope; and to those international organizations
that pretend to carry the mantle of human rights; I ask:
With all of your “heroic” action, have
things gotten any better for the Bangladeshi Hindus? Are they any safer today than they were when
you started your activity? Has
With
all of your “heroic” action, why have Hindus fallen from 30 percent of the
population at the time of Partition (1947) to nine percent today?
My God! Have we
learned nothing from the Nazi Holocaust?
Do we really have to wonder what the end of these sterile actions will
be; not for us, but for the Bangladeshi Hindus?
Look at
The comparison with the Nazis is not strained; for Islamists
want the same thing for Hindus that Nazis wanted for the Jews. And Islamists today, like Nazis in the 1930s,
find no shortage of world leaders and diplomats who recommend we overlook their
sins as some sort of cultural expression or justified anger; who urge us to cooperate
with those murdering innocents. You’ve
heard the expression, “If you lay down with dogs, you get up with fleas.” Well, if we do as they suggest, we will have
the smell of the charnel house upon us; which is the stench emanating from
Albert Einstein famously defined insanity as “doing the same
thing over and over again and expecting different results.” We—no, the Bangladeshi Hindus—cannot afford
for us to do the same thing we have been doing for years expecting that somehow
things will change. We must understand that making polite
protests, putting our trust in Sheikh Hasina’s Awami League, and waiting for
the UN, Amnesty International, or the rest of the misnomered human rights industry
to act will achieve nothing except
more of the same. And what is that? Try this.
On March 23 this year, I was in North Bengal, near
Sometimes, they describe what happened then say it occurred a
safe number of years ago; I have to figure out which ones really did happen
recently. Occasionally, though some brave Hindus speak up regardless of
potential consequences, convinced as they are that there is nothing about their
current state that makes them happy or promises anything better for their
children and grandchildren; and this is what I encountered that day in
March. A local teacher and a political
activist said they knew of a Hindu family that had crossed into
Getting back to March 23, the family’s young daughter
affected me the most. At first, she was silent
then her mother stopped her from speaking; but she kept trying to talk. Eventually, she did and told me that “the
Muslims… chased” her; her exact words. Her
mother clearly did not want her daughter to talk about her experience and tried
to take over the conversation. I
realized later she just was trying to protect her. But the girl kept talking, looking down and
away as she did. There was a lot more to
this, so I decided to give her a break turning to some of the others before
asking her, “Did the Muslims say anything when they were chasing you?” That question really made her uncomfortable,
especially with my camera going, even though, by agreement, I did not show
faces or give away our location; so I turned it off. It was only then that, still looking down, she
said that they “caught [her and] did bad things.”
Perhaps it was her tragedy; perhaps her courage. It could have been her parents, still trying
to spare her, because most of these young rape victims are shunned by their
families and consigned to live with their attackers only to be victimized again
and again. But I think about that girl
and her family a great deal. I thought
about them last month when President Obama addressed the Muslim world; and with
all due respect, I had to disagree with him about something essential in his
speech. The problem we face is not those
he termed the “violent extremists.” It
was not just extremists who brutalized that family and the many more like them. In fact, most of the attackers in these cases
are average Muslim citizens who do it because they know they can. Nor was it a Taliban Afghani, Wahabi Saudi,
or holocaust-denying Iranian government that let them get away with it. It was a “moderate” Bangladeshi government—the
Awami League government that the West has said would move
She told me she wanted to be a schoolteacher. Why?
Because she was proud of being a Bengali Hindu and thought the most
important thing she could do was to instill the same in other, young Bengali
Hindus. Given the world in which she
lives, her statement shows an incredible inner strength that any of us would be
proud to have. But I wonder if she will
get the chance, because the Indian and West Bengali governments are not making
it easy for her people to survive, let alone spend time on education. The surrounding villages are becoming more
and more hostile to Hindus. As we rode through them, my companions noted that
they once had mixed Hindu-Muslim populations but are now all Muslim—and you
could verify that by the absence of the small temples common wherever Hindus
live in India. From time to time, too,
Islamists from across the border will team up with these locals and attack the
refugee camps. So, I wonder how much
Hindu spirit—like that girl’s—is being snuffed out every day.
Several times every week, I receive reports of anti-Hindu
violence in
On 1 January, 14-year-old Subarna Karmakar was on her way
home from school in the
On 15 January, nine Muslim males kicked in the door of a
family home in the
On 24 January in
On 26 January in Faridpur, a group of local, heavily armed
Muslim Fundamentalists attacked a Hindu funeral site and a nearby Kali temple,
which they destroyed completely. They
have seized the temple land, and police have taken no action.
On 28 January, a madrassa
was built on the land of a
On 30 January in the
Also on 30 January, in the
In February, there were at least five more, including a
murder; and March incidents included rape and a possible anti-Hindu pogrom that
police allowed in
For us there can be only one question: What are WE going to do about it.
We need specific goals and a plan to achieve them. I have found that good people are unable to
turn their backs when faced with real tragedy and real human rights horrors
such as I saw in March. I defy anybody to look in the face of that
brave girl and feel nothing. But I am
just as firmly convinced that government, press, and even human right activists
will do everything they can to avoid getting to that point. For some, it is because they do not want yet
one more issue in their very busy lives.
For others, an ideological or political agenda drives it. Only we
can overcome that. If we wait for it to happen magically, we will witness an
end to Hindus in
First, Indiana Congressman Mike Pence once said that any
member of Congress who gets at least ten phone calls (not emails!) from
constituents on a particular issue will take notice, convene staff meetings,
and likely vote their constituents’ passion.
To be ready we need someone or some group to collect names and phone
numbers of people in every Congressional District willing to call their
Representatives. We must put them into a
data base that can be activated as soon as the moment comes; for if we wait to
do it until that moment, we will fail. For
instance,
Our success in any of these things will not just help the
particular bill. More importantly
perhaps, it will identify us (and Hindus) as an organized and powerful
political constituency that no longer can be ignored.
So, who will volunteer?
[Identify people.] Meet me after the session, and I will get you
started. Give me your name and contact
information.
Second, many of us receive regular emails about anti-Hindu incidents. Some are accurate, some not; and even many that
are accurate lack specific information needed to make them credible. At the behest of people who can do something
about this, I have been reviewing and vetting incidents but the volume of
information is much greater than I can handle alone. We need another group to help—existing
organizations, students, or a group of individuals making that commitment
today. I have developed the methods and
a spreadsheet for the information.
So, who will volunteer?
[Identify people.] Meet me after the session, and I will get you
started. Give me your name and contact
information.
And third, sometimes it takes a particular incident for
people to recognize a human tragedy.
Finding such an incident could be the spark that lights this fire. Throughout May, reports out of
Thank you.