Implications of Bangladesh Joining the China-Russia Axis

Dr. Richard Benkin

Originally published in the Daily Asian Age of Dhaka

https://dailyasianage.com/news/288147/implications-of-bangladesh-joining-the-china-russia-axis

As a westerner, I need someone to explain something to me. Bangladesh is a country that study after authoritative study finds to be among the most faithful to Islam of all countries worldwide; that Bangladeshi Muslims are among the most religiously conservative in the world, and that fundamentalism has an ever strong hold on a significant portion of the population. [Please take note: fundamentalism is NOT the same thing as radicalism; it denotes a form of religious practice that does not have to include non-religious elements.] It takes strong positions on issues it ties to Islam from Israel to Ayodhya and Rohingyas; but remains silent about anti-Muslim genocide. So someone has to tell me how that country-whose constitution begins with the word Bismillah-can keep getting close to another country, China, that is committing genocide against its Uighur Muslim population, and does so without a word of objection to these heinous actions. And it's not just the government: the people themselves have not spoken up about it either. I asked that question in Dhaka three years ago. I got no answer to it then, and still get none. What are people scared of saying when their actions already say the things they fear to be tagged with the most?

Even if Bangladeshi leaders were not mortgaging their people's future to such a hateful country, what they're doing is still a bad idea. In 2018 and 2019, several international think tanks, including that of the Asian Age ("Debt Trap Diplomacy and Regional Threat") all predicted dire consequences for small nations involved with China's Belt & Road Initiative (BRI). They also cautioned Bangladesh about moving forward with the embrace of China that some in the government were urging. Chinese debt trap can move things in the wrong direction in a hurry, and the predictions of a few years ago already are coming true despite the turmoil caused by COVID and the consequent disruptions of the global economy,

We already are seeing the wreckage of nations victimized by China through Belt & Road. Sri Lanka ceded effective control of its strategic Hambantota port. But that is just the most notorious example. Djibouti's experience is no better. Like Sri Lanka, it sits on a very strategic location; and that is what explains China's special interest in the small nation on the Horn of Africa. It, too, has had to cede assets, and the Chinese now control its Doraleh Container Terminal. In the Balkans, China has informed the country of Montenegro that it will have to give up territory and assets since it cannot meet its debt trap payment. When the Chinese loans started rolling into the country, several self-interested persons lined their pockets with it, and then hired a Chinese company to build a still unfinished highway that Montenegrins still a "road to nowhere." Laos, as a result of its borrowing, is turning into one giant Chinese military base. Tajikistan was forced to "settle" a land dispute with China and cede 1,158 square kilometers of its territory in exchange for debt relief. And the list goes on and on. Like Laos, Tajikistan now hosts Chinese military bases, like the one in Badakhshan Autonomous Province it began building secretly in 2017, and which United States operatives discovered just before the pandemic. Unlike Laos, Tajikistan has another role to play. Its bases border China's Xinjiang Province where Uighur Muslims are being forced into high tech concentration camps.

But we do not have to travel around the world to see Chinese debt trap victims. There are plenty of examples in South Asia. Pakistan was the first country in the region to sacrifice its sovereignty for loans billed as being for infrastructure. Even as Pakistan became less able to repay those loans, the Chinese-Pakistan Economic Corridor remained BRI's centerpiece. Chinese military vessels started showing up at Gwadar Port, at first episodically and then regularly. Moreover, the Pakistani government needed an increasingly heavy hand to force these projects onto the people. In doing so, however, land use and resources that should have gone to benefit the people of different regions only exacerbated insurgencies by Pashtun, Baloch, and Sindhi minorities. It also appears that Chinese strategy requires more from Sri Lanka than only Hambantota. Sri Lanka is again looking at loan default and is waiting for the next Chinese demand in lieu of payment-another tactic of its debt trap diplomacy: only giving partial relief in exchange for assets, knowing that nothing is changing to generate income and repay the loan. So China gets to grab another strategic asset. Even the tiny nation of Maldives has failed to escape China's clutches, as former President Mohammad Nasheed lamented, "Without firing a single shot, China has grabbed more land than the East India Company at the height of the 19th century… This land grab exercise hollows out our sovereignty."

Almost every credible analyst criticizes Chinese BRI and other lending as suspicious because it is not transparent. That's pretty important. In the United States and other developed countries, we have laws requiring lenders to show borrowers every aspect of their loans, including consequences and remedies for late or non-payment. Lack of transparency allows lenders to take advantage of borrowers by hiding draconian consequences like accelerated interest rates or venues outside the courts, or in the case of BRI debt trap lending, of asset seizure by the Chinese. Loans that lack transparency are predatory, and these Chinese loans have proven to be just that. Most lending nations share these loan provisions through the Paris Club. Significantly, the Paris Club is committed to collective action to help debtor nations repay their loans without being forced by bigger powers to do the very things China has forced small countries to do in furtherance of their geopolitical aspirations. It is not surprising then that China has rejected membership in the Paris Club, at least in part so it can demand the things it does to small country borrowers. Its secretive loans also open the door for massive corruption of the sort we have seen in Montenegro and other BRI borrowers in trouble. Do Bangladeshis consider their country free of corruption? According to the BBC, Chinese lending targets lower and middle-income countries, the ones least able to repay, located in strategic locations. "It is often kept off government balance sheets, directed to state-owned companies and banks, joint ventures or private institutions, rather than directly from government to government."

Interest rates tend to be higher and repayment periods shorter than those from western countries, and because so much of it is "off the books," actual debt can be difficult for borrowers to discern until it's too late. AidData, a research lab focused on development and lending and often positive toward China, estimates that this has led to these small nations owing China more than ten percent of its GDP; for Djibouti, Laos, Zambia and Kyrgyzstan, it's over 20 percent. Sometimes unseen until it's too late, this dependence gives China leverage over those nations and kicks in provisions that allow it to seize assets when countries cannot make loan payments, something rarely seen in loans by western lenders. That tips us off to China's real intentions and why non-payment is preferable to re-payment. Every bank, large and small, has software and a process to try and assure that borrowers will be able to repay money lent, but China never used these available technologies. Rather, they embraced poorer countries that came to them hoping to modernize and gave them the predatory loans that forced borrowers to cede strategic assets; part of an ongoing effort by China to supplant United States influence with their own; an authoritarian one for a democratic one.

Even before Russian President Vladimir Putin's brutal invasion of his Ukrainian neighbor, American officials began seeing the geopolitical implications of BRI. When Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping advertised their partnership at China's Olympic Games, it only heightened the concern of many western policy makers who drew a straight line between Russia's ambitions in Ukraine and China's in Taiwan. Fortunately, the China-Russia axis got almost everything wrong. It expected Ukrainian defense to fall away tattered-but it remained strong and pushed back the Russians. It expected western resolve to be lacking-but the West united and its willingness to fight stiffened. Even normally neutral European countries like Sweden and Finland, have asked to join NATO, ignoring Putin's threats if they did. If Putin ever did hope to reconstitute the Soviet Union (his piece of this strategic fantasy), his Ukrainian gambit killed it and embarrassed him before his Chinese masters. Attempts to create a financial system to replace the US dominated SWIFT system similarly has fallen flat, and it was supposed to be a key part of their geopolitical strategy; even if a few countries like Bangladesh helped Putin evade some sanctions with a currency swap; which brings us back to what this means for Bangladesh.

Increasing numbers of US lawmakers recognize this attempt by China to replace the US for what it is. Bangladesh's currency swap with Russia, BRI loans with China, deepening ties with China, and continued trade with Russia have come to the attention of many in Washington. This includes several influential United States Senators who have told me that they expect to review our relationship with Bangladesh in light of who it seems to be choosing as its long term allies. Until now, any action has been held in abeyance because of more pressing concerns: a pandemic, a war, global economic disruption. But expect that to change especially if the November midterm elections show through Americans' votes that Americans want a more self-interested foreign policy.

Why should Bangladeshi leaders care? After all, Bangladesh is a sovereign nation whose leaders do what they perceive to be in the best interests of their country and their people. Bangladesh's involvement in China's Belt & Road Initiative, however, does not serve the people's interests and is actually detrimental to them. Although development has begun to slow and inflation has started to tick up, according to World Bank figures, Bangladesh experienced something of an economic miracle in the years before COVID. GDP growth rates were 7.1, 7.3, 7.9, and 8.2 percent in 2016 to 2019, respectively. It even grew by 3.5 percent in 2020, while the GDP of most large economies declined, including the US (-3.4) and India (-7.3). Recent analyses, however, have gone beyond the pre-pandemic growth to issue a start warning: Despite Bangladesh's impressive economic growth, the economy remains inordinately dependent on one sector: garment exports, which accounts for 84 percent of its exports. These concerns get even more alarming.

That means that all that has to happen is for a major importer of Bangladeshi garments to stop or slow these purchases, and it will turn that economic miracle into a nightmare. And Bangladesh's tilt toward China has not gone unnoticed in the capitals of those countries whose citizens support Bangladesh's economic growth with their purchases; especially the United States. Whereas a few western democracies account for more than half of that market, China and Russia together don't even crack one twentieth of it. Simply put, the United States is Bangladesh's best customer for its garments; China is its biggest competitor. Ask any business owner who they would be concerned about keeping happy.

Thus far, that has not happened, but interest in looking at it grows regularly. Sometimes, they ask me about Bangladesh's persecution of Hindus; sometimes, about its increased radicalization. Most recently, it has been about Bangladesh's use of blasphemy laws for repression and social control. Underlying all of it, however, is the perception that Bangladesh is leaving US orbit and becoming more a part of China's.

Bangladesh has been more circumspect than other countries in approving or refusing Chinese loans. Can it remain so, or will it succumb to the seduction of Chinese money? In addition to the possible loss of critical markets, that path is strewn with other consequences. The Chinese have shown themselves to be expansive and imperialistic. BRI seizures are only their latest device supporting that. It still occupies parts of India (Arunachal Pradesh with its vast hydroelectric resources), Kashmir (Aksai Chin), Tibet, Hong Kong, Macao, and now Taiwan. What strategic asset Bangladesh might it try to snatch? And if all of that was not enough to dissuade prudent leaders from joining with China, we read this from another western think tank: "if China is to protect its strategic interests in Eurasia, it may be compelled to increase its military presence as well."

Dr Richard L Benkin is an American scholar and geopolitical expert.

USCIRF as an instrument of the US State Department

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EYx7o2Y_MXc

Note: I was unable to finish my prepared presentation, which was very embarrassing because I pride myself on sticking to schedules like these (mea culpa). I thank the International Commission on Human Rights and Religious Freedom for their understanding. Here is the written presentation I prepared.

US COMMISSION ON INTERNATIONAL RELIGIOUS FREEDOM HAS BECOME FATALLY FLAWED WITH ANTI-HINDU BIAS 

Dr. Richard L. Benkin

 

Good evening and namashkar.

 

I’m Dr. Richard Benkin, a human rights activist who has worked on several issues. But no matter what else I’ve done, I’m most closely associated with my fight to stop the ethnic cleansing of Hindus in Bangladesh. In fact, I tell people that winning that struggle is my dharma.

 

Over the years, this has led me to work in many different ways with the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom, or USCIRF, and I have developed some pretty clear conclusions about that body.

 

·        The first is that its creation made a lot of sense. If we really are the bastion of freedom, a beacon of hope for all people; we should dedicate ourselves to helping those denied freedom; and having an agency devoted to that is an important expression of that commitment.

 

·        The second is that USCIRF is hopelessly biased, in particular, against non-Abrahamic faiths. Or to be more accurate, against non-Abrahamic faiths plus the first Abrahamic faith, that being Judaism. As you will see, USCIRF has never recommended sanctions against a state for religious persecution, unless victims included Christians or Muslims. That bias taints all that USCIRF does and calls its conclusions into question—even accurate ones. I don’t like projecting people’s intentions without some solid basis (and we can talk about that later). Even taking the most generous interpretation, however, I find it disconcerting that a high level body can have such a parochial understanding of religion and religious freedom.

 

·        But here’s the good news. In the end, it really doesn’t matter that much. USCIRF hasn’t any teeth. It periodically shakes its fist, and makes recommendations that the State Department frequently ignores. And it also looks away when facts do not fit its narrative. I warrant that most Americans are not even familiar with it, and its conclusions rarely make their way to our media. For the most part, it talks to like-minded others and gets slammed in foreign media for its recommendations. And I want to emphasize again, that USCIRF’s authority extends only to making recommendations, never policy.

 

And I hope that all changes someday because I do believe that religious freedom is a core value for us all.

 

My first contact with USCIRF came early this century when I was fighting for the release of a Bangladeshi journalist. He was imprisoned and later tortured for urging Bangladeshi relations with Israel and for exposing the rise of radicalism in Bangladesh, especially through its madrassas or Muslim religious schools; that is, for doing his job. And I want to be clear that this brave man was a Muslim, just in case any of us need reminders that courage and moral strength come in many forms and out of many faiths.

 

I was new to human rights activism and so grasped at whatever straws I could, doing what I knew; in this case, it only made sense that I look for help from an agency created specifically to promote religious freedom. The people at USCIRF gave me a lot of verbal support, and they made themselves available for quite a few meetings. I appreciated that, but in the end, it didn’t do much. We won that fight and forced the Bangladeshi government to free him only because I figured out what they needed to fear, and none of it was anything USCIRF could do. I worked with the right people in Washington to let them know credibly that what they feared was coming. It also didn’t hurt that I had a member of the US House Appropriations Committee by my side.

 

The experience taught me a lot. I also learned what it takes for the US or other nations to conclude that international intervention is needed to protect religious freedom. And I want everyone to remember what I’m about to say. According to USCIRF staff—and I heard this more than once from them and elsewhere. Minorities, unfortunately, face attacks pretty much everywhere. What makes it something other than an “internal problem” is what happens next; what the government does about it. If protections are put into place, laws enforced, and so forth; outside parties need to let that country handle things themselves. But if the government either participates in these atrocities, does nothing to the perpetrators, or in no other legal way stops them; then we, the international community have an obligation not to stand by idly. That has been an important distinction I have used throughout my human rights career, and I think it’s a good one.

 

          USCIRF’s Beginnings and Rationale

 

The US Commission on International Religious Freedom was created by the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998 to monitor the right to freedom of religion or belief outside the United States and to make policy recommendations to the President, Secretary of State, and Congress. The Act “declares it to be U.S. policy to: (1) condemn violations of religious freedom, and to promote, and to assist other governments in the promotion of, the fundamental right to freedom of religion; and (2) seek to channel U.S. security and development assistance to governments that are found not to be engaged in gross violations of the right to freedom of religion.”

 

That’s a pretty clear statement of what it is. It passed overwhelmingly and with bi-partisan support in both the House and the Senate; and I like what it stands for. We shouldn’t be cozy with regimes that deny their people basic freedoms; and we shouldn’t be silent or sit by idly while people are brutalized or worse just because of who they are. There’s been too much of that, and people still stand by while others are killed. Just get me started talking about the Bangladesh’s ethnic cleansing of Hindus and how the world seems okay with it!

 

They also did something else to reduce bias. Commissioners would be appointed by leaders of both parties. Three USCIRF commissioners are appointed by the President; two by the Senate leader of the party different from the President’s; one by the Senate leader of the same party as the President; two by the House leader of a different party from the President; one by the House leader of the same party as the President. According to the legislation, these Commissioners “shall be selected among distinguished individuals noted for their knowledge and experience in fields relevant to the issue of international religious freedom, including foreign affairs, direct experience abroad, human rights, and international law.”

 

Throughout the year, USCIRF staff would visit countries worldwide to gather information; and each year, USCIRF would issue a report recommending that the US State Department declare certain nations countries of particular concern: “those countries that commit systematic, ongoing, and egregious violations of religious freedom.” There also are a range of sanctions available to the State Department, although I would not concern myself with that. In almost all cases, when USCIRF’s recommendation is accepted, such countries already are sanctioned or State decides to waive sanctions in the interests of national security. The waiver, by the way, allows the US government to recognize the abuses without taking the sort of action that would hurt its relationship with that country. Saudi Arabia is a good example; Nigeria is another.

 

What could be bad? It seemed to an overwhelming number of people that this was not just a good idea; it also was the sort of thing that helped the United States reach the level of moral imperative that we claim as our heritage. Someone needs to stand up for people when no one else does; and someone needs to stand up for people when their own government stands up for their brutalization, murder, and even genocide.  It’s still a good idea, and a needed one.

 

USCIRF may have started out as good idea, and as an idea it remains so; but in practice it has failed to live up to its promise, largely because of implicit bias that has nothing to do with partisanship or which party appoints a commissioner. And I want to digress a moment to illustrate exactly what drives it.

 

I belong to a synagogue of good people who believe in these principles and live that way. One day quite a few years ago, my rabbi came to me beaming about something because he knew it was something that would resonate with me. Each year, the temple dedicates itself to a specific principle and that year it would be interfaith understanding. He was right, it did make me smile, but when I read the plans for it, I said, “Rabbi, I love the idea and am proud to be part of a synagogue that lives these principles; but to be honest, you really need to change the title to Abrahamic interfaith understanding, because all I see are Christianity and Islam, which leaves out a large number of people in the world and even in the Chicago area.” And to his credit, the Rabbi did change the program so that a wide array of religions were included. But the point was made. Even among good people, we Americans often tend to have this underlying assumption that credits only faiths who worship God with a capital G.

 

In almost a quarter century of existence, USCIRF has never cited a country for persecuting non-Abrahamic faiths. They might gain a mention here and there as an afterthought, but only if USCIRF’s major focus is the persecution of Christians or Muslims. For instance, USCIRF has recommended that Pakistan be declared a country of particular concern 16 times (out of a possible 22 times). If you look hard, you’ll see it mention the persecution of Hindus, but the majority of its focus is on Pakistani Christians. You won’t see anything about how Pakistani Hindus have been reduced to one percent of the population. It has never even mentioned the refugee camps in Nepal for the more than 10 lakh Lhotshampas, Hindus who were forced out of Bhutan by its government. USCIRF really needs to change its name to the “US Commission on International Abrahamic Religious Freedom (except for Jews unless we have to).”

 

          USCIRF’s Sad Record

 

Let’s look at the record. USCIRF has been making recommendations to the State Department since 2001. Every year, it issues its religious freedom report and recommends the countries that it believes should be designated as countries of particular concern or CPCs. State reviews the recommendations, along with other information, and makes its final decisions some time later. Since 2001, USCIRF has made 281 such recommendations involving 21 countries. Some, like Afghanistan, the Central African Republic, and Laos have been recommended as CPCs only a few times. China, Iran, Myanmar, North Korea, and Saudi Arabia have been recommended all 22 times. Year after year, the Hindu American Foundation documents the sort of “systematic, ongoing, and egregious violations of religious freedom” that define a CPC in Bangladesh, Bhutan, Fiji, Malaysia, and Sri Lanka.

 

·        Bangladesh, where Hindus face constant attacks, allowed by or initiated by the government and where 12 million more Hindus are not expected to survive their by mid-century;

 

·        Bhutan, which has expelled most of its Hindu population and still refuses to repatriate them, return their property to them, or allow them to re-enter the country

 

·        Fiji, where ethnic tensions and attacks on the Indo-Fijian community flared up after a coup removed the democratically elected government;\

 

·        Malaysia, where ISIS and its ilk have found a new home, with anti-minority policies that have restricted religious freedom and forcibly re-located Hindu temples; and where government officials encourage anti-Hindu sentiment with the government’s tacit approval;

 

·        Sri Lanka, where government authorities continued to discriminate against Tamils and religious minorities and refuse to respond to or prevent religious violence or harassment by non-state actors.

 

Yet, USCIRF has never recommended any of they be designated a CPC. Not even once. Perhaps it’s because their only victims are Hindus. It’s certainly not for want of evidence.

 

In its “defense,” such as it is, USCIRF has a second tier of countries that they assess as not as bad as CPCs. Nor are there any consequences or recommended action. It has a “special watch list,” for countries whose religious violations are not “systematic, ongoing, and egregious,” but only two of the three, and it has put Malaysia on that list, though I’m not sure how it figured one of the three wasn’t there. Certainly, the victims couldn’t tell you. Neither could the Hindu victims in Bangladesh, Bhutan, Fiji, and Sri Lanka, who evidently should be grateful for their governments according to USCIRF.

 

I want to spend the rest of this section focusing on USCIRF’s behavior in regard to two countries: India and Bangladesh, who together capture the extreme bias that is at the core of USCIRF actions. Although they come out of the same bias, each calls for a different response. So, let’s start with India.

 

In November 2021, USCIRF took the unusual step of issuing a “Fact Sheet,” trying to justify its designation of India and other countries as CPCs; designations that were rejected by the US State Department. And, to be clear, the State Department has rejected almost 40 percent of USCIRF’s CPC recommendations; in some years, almost half. It’s not that long, and I’m going to read the entire statement about India because USCIRF’s words are very revealing.

 

“In 2020 and early 2021, the Indian government continued to implement policies that impact religious freedom for members of India’s Muslim, Christian, Sikh, Dalit, and Adivasi communities.  These policies include the

religiously discriminatory Citizenship (Amendment) Act (CAA), which provides fast-track citizenship to nonMuslims from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, and Pakistan, and in conjunction with the government’s proposed National Register of Citizens (NRC) requiring residents to provide

proof of citizenship, could subject Muslims and others to statelessness, deportation, and prolonged detention. In 2020, nationwide protests against the CAA resulted in deaths and destruction of property, including houses of

worship, largely of Muslims.

 

“The passage and ongoing enforcement of anti-conversion laws, intermarriage restrictions, and anti-cow slaughter laws in various states throughout India undermine freedom of religion or belief; they also contribute to a climate of hate, intolerance and fear.   Government officials and nonstate actors also use social media and other forms of communication to intimidate and spread hatred and disinformation about religious communities.

 

“Additional policies implemented by the Indian government to curtail religious freedom include the use of the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act and the Financial Contribution (Regulation) Act, to silence or restrict

individuals and NGOs from reporting on and combating religious persecution, and to restrict support for religious organizations and activities.  Religious communities and places of worship are being targeted and surveilled, and those who have advocated for justice and the dignity of

religious communities are being silenced and detained.”

 

a.     “In 2020 and early 2021…” In all my interactions with USCIRF to convince them about the dire situation for Hindus in Bangladesh, they always (literally 100 percent of the time) told me that they would consider only information from that one, specific year. Other data, they told me, could not be considered. Yet, when it comes to India and to supporting a specific narrative, those limits go out the window.

 

b.     “the religiously discriminatory Citizenship (Amendment) Act (CAA)…” This is perhaps the most telling sign of USCIRF bias; specifically, that it is not the fair minded entity it claims to be. We can spend an entire session on the CAA and only scratch the surface, so I want to highlight only a few points that address USCIRF anti-India bias.

 

a.     While there are a lot of people who have concluded that the NRC/CAA is discriminatory, that is far from settled law and opinion on it remains divided. The Indian Supreme Court refused to stop its implementation or concur with claims that it violated India’s secular constitution. Yet, USCIRF writes blithely as if there is but one “correct” opinion on this.

 

b.     Had USCIRF staff taken the time to read the Act—and they have legal experts on staff—they would have read that the CAA applies to illegal migrants only. This social ill and the complexity of grappling with its solution is something that we Americans should certainly recognize. Those affected by the law do not have the same set of protections enjoyed by citizens and legal migrants. Nor does it matter how long they have been residing in India illegally. In fact, for quite some time, the only issue raised here regarding deportation of illegals was the difficulty of identifying and deporting so many people, not issues of whether or not they belong here.

 

c.      As a longtime human rights activist for Hindus facing violent ethnic cleansing in Bangladesh and to a lesser extent Pakistan, I understand the CAA to be a method by which refugees from that brutality can find safe haven. I’ve spent a lot of time in Bangladesh and elsewhere and cannot for the life of me figure out why anti-CAA protestors think Muslims need special protection from the governments of Bangladesh or Pakistan. Moreover, the law does nothing to change their status but only keeps them where they are as opposed to oppressed refugees.

 

d.     In February 2020, I wrote a friend of the court brief for one of the petitions filed in favor of the CAA and in it, talked about what it means for people whose oppression has been ignored for decades. In fact, the CAA is the first time any Indian government has formally acknowledged that Hindus face bigotry in Bangladesh.

 

e.      But again, USCIRF has ignored all that, pretended that only one opinion on it exists, and built its argument on that fallacy.

 

c.      As I said, we could take up a whole session on that issue alone, so let’s move on with “in conjunction with the government’s proposed National Register of Citizens (NRC) requiring residents to provide

proof of citizenship, could subject Muslims and others to statelessness, deportation, and prolonged detention.” I can’t speak for anyone from USCIRF, but I was in Assam when there was an attempt to implement the NRC (and I didn’t see any of them there), so they might want me to educate them.

 

a.     First, someone needs to tell me why requiring people to provide proof of citizenship, especially when a country is trying to get a handle on the massive numbers of illegal migrants is a horrendous religious freedom violation. We’re having the same debate here with ID cards when voting—and people make arguments on both sides; but again, USCIRF merely takes as whole cloth the arguments of one set of people and then uses that unsupported opinion to build its own case. I also was in Assam before and saw the social unrest and concern over the ongoing flood of illegal migrants from Bangladesh, who were having terrible impacts on the people, culture, and environment. This often led to violence (as when I was with Bodo tribesmen), and the NRC was designed in part to stop that.

 

b.     And so when they sought to implement the NRC in Assam, they found that—and this should not have been a surprise to anyone here or there—there were real problems with the records. People who were definitely citizens—and this was the same regardless of religion—that the process excluded, as well as some known illegals who were included. At that point, the Assam government stopped the process and started trying to fix it with the help of the population there. But I can tell you that it did not result in “statelessness, deportation, and prolonged detention” as USCIRF fear mongered. In fact, I’d like to look back and see where the hell else has USCIRF recommended sanctions on a country for what they fear “could” happen—and not even a comment on whether it’s even likely.

 

c.      The Factsheet also takes India to task for “anti-conversion” and “anti-cow slaughter” laws. Regarding the first, coercive conversions are a real problem in India, and if USCIRF gave a damn about how things looked from inside India, they’d know that. If the different faith communities would sit down and agree on what is acceptable and what is coercive, they might be able to arrive at something that works. And the Christian and Muslim communities are at least as much at fault for that as the Indian government. Again, USCIRF ignores history. Prior to the current regime, the government offered no protection to victims of coercive conversion; and there was a great deal of anger about that. All the Modi government was doing was to try to re-set things and look for that inter-communal dialogue. But that has become less and less likely with the continual demonization of Modi and the BJP.

 

d.     I’m not sure why they think anti-cow slaughter laws are an offense against religious freedom. If they bothered to take a ride around cities like Kolkata and elsewhere, they would have seen that there is no problem buying beef, either from a butcher or from a street vendor selling “beef biryani.” I also have seen the way older cows are smuggled into Bangladesh and even recorded one such incident before chasing the smugglers myself. And if this is so “terrible,” I want to know why USCIRF hasn’t condemned those European countries that have outlawed Jewish ritual slaughter, which is an offense against religious freedom. Oh that’s right, neither Jewish nor Hindu lives matter to them.

e.      Finally, what they did not include in this broadside is equally instructive. In their report recommending India as being among the worst countries in the world for religious freedom, it said that “In February [2020], the worst Hindu-Muslim mob violence in more than three decades erupted in Delhi. More than 50 people died and 200 others were injured, mostly Muslims.” They neglected to mention the 30-year old mob violence they were referring to in their statement. Was it the 1992 Mumbai riots that killed 275 Hindus? Maybe it was the murder of around 300 Kashmiri Pandits in 1989-1900; or the subsequent mass exodus of Kashmiri Pandits that has been called the worst case of ethnic cleansing in India since Partition. Even the 2002 mob arson of the Godhra train killed more people than USCIRF’s best example. If it can’t get basic data correct, how can we give any credence to the conclusions it draws?

 

USCIRF has recommended that the State Department declare India a country of particular concern five times, including the last three years, using the most extreme and unequivocal language possible. Why, then, has the US State Department never once accepted their recommendation about India? Let me repeat: the US State Department has never once declared India a country of particular concern despite USCIRF strongly recommending they do five times.

 

There’s at least a couple reasons for that, starting with the fact that USCIRF’s arguments are weak and unconvincing, especially if you have access to a wider range of information than USCIRF uses. State also uses USCIRF as only one of its sources for the decisions it makes. More important are the summaries and specifics it receives from its embassies around the world and from other operatives. And that makes sense, because these people are there on the ground, not meeting with interested parties in an office in Washington.

 

I wish USCIRF’s India problem was simply a matter of bad information. More than that, it has a real thing about India. In 2014, I thought we might have a chance to start repairing the relationship. So, I reached out to the new Modi government and to USCIRF chair Katrina Lantos Swet and arranged a meeting in Maryland. To Dr. Swet’s credit, she flew down for this meeting alone, and on her wedding anniversary; so I was hoping for a successful meeting. But those hopes soon faded as Dr. Swet kept hammering home the point (quite angrily) that India doesn’t let USCIRF come there and assess the situation; and kept saying that the only other country that does that is Cuba. Yet, I wondered why USCIRF has never recommended Cuba as a CPC, though its official policy is atheism and there is restricted religious freedom. Neither could I imagine North Korea, China, or Saudi Arabia giving USCIRF the unfettered access they demand from India.

 

I tried to explain that concern to the Indian government, and tried to explain to Swet that Indian resistance to this sort of foreign intervention smacked very much of the British Raj and its attitude toward India, I made several proposals by which USCIRF staff could come to India in ways that would not do that. But USCIRF was adamant that it had to be official and unrestricted, and that they would see who they wanted to see rather than try to get a more comprehensive view.

 

One final reason why USCIRF is clueless about India. It accepts without evidence the anti-India claims about Indian persecution of Muslims and Christians. If it had any sense, it might instead pay attention to a recent study by the highly prestigious Pew Research Center. This authoritative body talked to Christians and Muslims in India, and for each group, fully 89 percent said that they were totally free to practice their faith without any problem. If I was still teaching, and a student brought me work that accepted unsubstantiated stuff uncritically but ignored authoritative studies, I’d suggest they take another look or likely fail.

 

Now I want to talk about Bangladesh.

 

For years, I have been supplying USCIRF with evidence of the ethnic cleansing of Hindus in Bangladesh. And over the years, more and more organizations and people on Capitol Hill have come to see it. And yet, USCIRF has never once recommended Bangladesh to be a country of particular concern. Even one of Bangladesh’s most noted scholars, Dr. Abul Barkat of Dhaka University has said that Hindus will not survive in Bangladesh past mid-century. The Bangladeshi government has claimed that the reduction of Hindus from a fifth of the country to a fifteenth is the result of “voluntary” migration and high Muslim birth rates.

 

I agree with the voluntary migration only if we agree that a person running from a hungry tiger is doing so voluntary.

 

Demographers and others have demonstrated multiple times that the drop in population could not come from these or other demographic factors. And in my book, A Quiet Case of Ethnic Cleansing: the Murder of Bangladesh’s Hindus, I devote the better part of a chapter to the work of demographer and veteran of Bangladesh’s War of Independence, Bimal Pramanik. We spent time together in his Kolkata office while he ran from one pile of papers to another showing me how it’s impossible to attribute the 49 million missing Hindus to anything but targeted ethnic cleansing; and I have spent the last two decades almost documenting those attacks and the Bangladeshi government’s culpability. I would send the evidence to USCIRF year after year. Then, year after year, they would give me their excuse for why they did not call out Bangladesh.

 

Then came 2020, and I had good reason to expect this year would be different. First, at the end of 2019, the US House and Senate both passed resolutions condemning blasphemy laws, and both called out Bangladesh and Pakistan as the two nations who were the most egregious in their use of these laws for social control and minority persecution. Around the same time, USCIRF came out with its own study that also condemned the same two nations for using blasphemy laws to curtail religious freedom.

 

Even the pandemic, it seemed, was not going to slow the wheels of justice this time. I got back from Bangladesh the last day of February 2020 as COVID cases were sprouting here in Chicago. Shortly after that, we went into lockdown and so did Bangladesh. But it wasn’t long before my associates there started telling me about increased attacks on them and their communities. I started gathering information and by later than year put together a damning spreadsheet of how Bangladesh was using the cover of the pandemic to intensify attacks on Hindus.

 

I looked at targeted anti-Hindu attacks during Bangladesh’s first COVID lockdown, and found that during the 66 day period (March 25 to May 30), there were 85 multi-crime, serious and targeted attacks on Hindus that the government refused to prosecute—even while it enforced social distancing rules otherwise. If anyone was arrested, it was the Hindu victim, not the perpetrator. And I want to be clear that there were about 50 more than that, and I’m sure some or all of them happened, but I report incidents only when I can confirm them with at least two independent witnesses or have seen them myself. Many of these also involved Bangladesh’s Digital Security Act that allows the government to seize people on the complaint of a single individual that they were offended by something online. That, too, was something USCIRF previously noted as contrary to religious freedom. My spreadsheet was ironclad—and I warrant a hundred times more so than what they used to condemn India. Even after all the evidence, I had two columns specifically for USCIRF. One was titled, “AS PER IRFA STANDARD: ACTS ARE ENGAGED IN BY MEMBERS OF THE GOVERNMENT OR TOLERATED BY IT; INCLUDES GOVERNMENT AND POLICE ENGAGING IN ADDITIONAL CRIMES OF COVER UP, BRIBERY, COMPLICITY IN RETALIATION AGAINST VICTIMS, ETC. WITHOUT ANY ACTION TAKEN FOR THEIR OFFENSES.” The other was titled, “SYSTEMATIC, ONGOING, EGGREGIOUS.” All of this was done so USCIRF could see how they fit its criteria for a CPC.

 

Of course, they ignored the truth again. Buried at the back of their report was this weak statement: “” For example, USCIRF received reports of numerous anti-Hindu incidents in Bangladesh that occurred with impunity, particularly during COVID-19 lockdowns.” But the only other times Bangladesh was mentioned was to praise it for taking Rohingya refugees or as a victim of the CAA.

 

That was it! I was surprised at how many times they needed to hit me over the head with a two by four before I realized they would never recognize that “Hindu lives matter.” A few days later, I published our “divorce papers” on my web site asking people to tell USCIRF how they felt:

 

“There was reason for optimism this year as USCIRF started reviewing material to determine Countries of Particular Concern (CPC); those with the worst record on religious freedom. At their request, we and others sent iron-clad evidence of Bangladeshi guilt. USCIRF had overwhelming evidence in hand but chose to ignore it. They listened to corporate lobbyists from Wal-Mart and elsewhere rather than to the cries of the victimized. For shame, USCIRF! Of course, it had no trouble categorizing India as a CPC, even though the worst unsubstantiated allegations against India are not nearly as severe as the real actions by Bangladesh against real people. Coming Monday:  our renewed focus with the US State Department’s current evaluation of Bangladesh and other countries for its report. Also see my blog. Also feel free to let USCIRF know that it has failed to live up to its purpose and that people have taken notice. You can do so by phone (best method) at 202-523-3240. If not, click the button below to email your concern.”

 

Which leads to my final point: what to do now. Basically, I’ve stopped wasting my time with USCIRF. Their bias overcomes evidence every time. The key for me now will be the US State Department because what they decide is what matters. In recent session, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee approved the nomination of Peter D. Haas as the new ambassador to Bangladesh. The State Department gives more credence to what their embassies tell them, and that is an area of focus. I have been working with Capitol Hill and State so that individuals and human rights activists I know are able to come to the embassy safely and document the atrocities against them. The continuing pandemic has made this year too soon, but we expect to start working on that in 2023.

 

Additionally, I am currently getting information to pertinent Senate and House committees and other legislators who have shown they recognize fact over ideology. One House member and I are working on a resolution, and with this year being an election year, I expect that will take off in 2023, too,

 

So I will close with the points I started with combined with what we have learned.

 

·         I do not think USCIRF will anytime soon shed its bias against India.

·         I do not think USCIRF will ignore corporate interests and recommend Bangladesh as a country of particular concern, even if it slaughters its entire Hindu citizenry.

·         I do not think USCIRF is worth our time and effort. There are much more productive channels through the State Department and our embassies, and through our allies in the House and Senate.

 

Thank you, and I’m happy to take questions.

Bangladesh Hindu Ethnic Cleansing and Exodus

Richard Benkin Interviewed by Pratha — Indic Renaissance

https://fb.watch/b0YDkSyrJj/

The link above is to an interview of me by a group in India committed to Hindu renaissance and ending anti-Hindu persecution; and we focused on the ethnic cleansing of Hindus in Bangladesh. I asked each participant, as I do when I speak publicly about this, what they were going to do about this once the seminar ends. I ask everyone seeing this also to think about the same and feel free to contact me if you want to act but are looking for direction.

Is Bangladesh at a geopolitical crossroads?

Dr. Richard Benkin

Originally published in Daily Asian Age, Dhaka

https://dailyasianage.com/news/280982/is-bangladesh-at--a-geopolitical-crossroads

Between the end of World War II in May 1945 and the fall of the Soviet Union on 26 December 1991, the world was seen through the prism of the Cold War-and not just by the two combatants, the USA and the USSR. Of course, there were other important events, most notably the fall of European colonialism and learning to live with the threat of nuclear annihilation. But geopolitics were defined by the Cold War.

I recall, as an American during that period, how we often saw countries as either good or bad, based on where they stood in that conflict. Americans never bought Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru's concept of non-aligned countries. His non-aligned movement failed to establish a viable alternative to the two super powers and their political philosophies. I also remember many of those same countries playing the US and USSR off one another, currying favor with one side then the other and creating a "bidding war" between them.

Is that what Bangladesh is trying to do today, playing off the United States and Communist China? If so, it won't work. Americans found that game frustrating and have learned not to fall into that trap again. It's difficult not to conclude that intention, however. How else can you explain Pakistan and Bangladesh ignoring China's genocidal program against its Muslim population? Bangladesh's constitution begins with the word, Bismillah. Is that how your government lives by that word?

Moreover, the trail of nations shattered by China's predatory lending is large and getting larger; while nations who gained more than they lost are missing in action. Sri Lanka, Djibouti, Montenegro, Pakistan all had to cede control of important assets to China, and there are several more close to defaulting. Will Bangladesh be next? Sri Lanka had to cede control of Hambantota Port, Pakistan gave up Gwadar. It would be interesting to see what assets Sheikh Hasina plans to cede when China's debt trap slams closed on Bangladesh. Chittagong? Matarbari? China does not accept small sacrifices.

Bangladesh's moves toward China under this government have not gone unnoticed in Washington. If, however, anyone thinks that's a good thing for Bangladesh, they better think again. The soundings from Washington have not been encouraging for those who want to use the US-China competition the same way they used the US-Soviet one.


In December 2020, after a great deal of effort and previous tries, both the US House and Senate passed separate resolutions condemning blasphemy laws with overwhelming bi-partisan support-this at a time when partisan divisions were at their greatest. Not only that, both resolutions specifically named Bangladesh and Pakistan as the most egregious human rights violators in this regard. This past December and January only got worse.


In December, the United States, Australia, India, and Japan invited 111 mostly Asian democracies to the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, or Quad. Bangladesh was not among them. In addition to security, the Quad helps countries with things like trade and infrastructure, which are critical to Bangladesh's future. It was an unexpected snub, and experts in the US and Asia see it as deliberate. In January, the United States condemned the anti-Hindu violence in Bangladesh. But that violence occurs regularly and all the time around Hindu festival of Durga Puja.

Generally, nations and media are muted, some not even commenting about it. This year was different. Condemnations poured in from all over. Moreover, for years, America had accepted Bangladesh protestation that they were the work of radicals and not reflective of anything else. This year, however, the US and all its agencies instead made a point about the Awami League government's responsibility for the violence and for stopping it.


Then there were the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations hearing on the nomination of Peter D, Hass to become the next US ambassador to Bangladesh. Much behind-the-scenes discussion revolved around the brutalization of Bangladesh's Hindus and the government's responsibility for enabling it and its obligation to stop it.

During the public portion, the leading Republican made a point of calling out the increased power of radicals in Bangladesh. Both are serious issues that will not go away. We really like your country and especially the Bangladeshi people, and would not send messages like this lightly. The big question is whether your government will read them for what they or incorrectly believe that they can thumb their noses at the United States without the US doing anything in return.


Wait, wait, wait. No one's sending in the marines or breaking off relations. But there will be consequences--and if someone tells me that we better not act or they'd move even closer to China, I would ask them how many Bangladeshi garments the Chinese will buy; because while the US is Bangladesh's biggest customer, China is its biggest competitor.

The garment industry will get even tighter as we come out of the pandemic, with exporting countries less likely to absorb major financial hits. If the Bangladeshi government chooses China over the US, that's certainly its prerogative. But it is similarly the US's prerogative to make trade agreements with nations that share our vision and do not assist China at our expense. (And believe me, I have spoken with a plethora of countries that would love that garment market-and they're rebuffing China and its predatory Belt & Road loans.)


Bangladesh is at a geopolitical crossroads. It can continue its flirtation with China, ignoring China's genocide of its Muslim Uighurs, or it can reject the forces of tyranny inside and outside of the country. It can defeat the retrograde forces and protect all Bangladeshis regardless of faith. It can be seen as progressive rather than retrograde-with all the benefits that come to the people of nations that choose democracy and freedom. I renew the offer I have made on numerous occasions to assist in Bangladesh doing just that. As one who cares very much about the nation and people of Bangladesh, I would love nothing better.

The writer is an American scholar and a geopolitical analyst.

Bangladesh Faces New Challenges in 2022

Dr. Richard Benkin

Originally published in Daily Asian Age, Dhaka

https://dailyasianage.com/news/279796/bangladesh-faces-new-challenges-in-2022

Five and a half years ago, former Congressman Robert Dold and I sat in the antechamber of the House Committee on Ways and Means with Bangladesh's Ambassador to the United States at that time, Mohammad Ziauddin. We were to discuss the persecution of Hindus in Bangladesh; and Congressman Dold, a member of that powerful Congressional committee, set the meeting place specifically to emphasize that there could be consequences for continued inaction on Bangladesh's part. Among other things, Ways and Means controls matter related to international trade, including tariffs and trade agreements.

As the discussion became more open and frank, it became clear that the matter was serious and our concerns were not going away. After some time, Dold finally asked Ambassador Ziauddin, "So you admit that you have a problem [with the persecution of Hindus]?" Ziauddin agreed, and Dold said that "we want to help you solve your problem," which should have opened the door to joint US-Bangladeshi action to help Bangladesh achieve the values of religious freedom and equality enshrined in its Constitution. But that never happened.

Not long after that, one of Dold's staff and I met with Ambassador Ziauddin to start that cooperative effort. Instead, Ziauddin told us that "after further study, I find that I was mistaken [when we met previously]" and that Hindus live freely and unmolested in Bangladesh. Please know, we're not naïve.

We knew that "further study" equaled a directive from Dhaka to deny what he said. We also had decades of verified evidence of violent anti-Hindu persecution, some of it deadly.

A lot has happened since then: Dold left Congress for the private sector; Ambassador Ziauddin and others in the embassy here have been replaced; Bangladesh has gotten closer with China; and the world found itself in the midst of a pandemic; in addition to so much more. Something else changed. The rest of the world no longer believes the Bangladeshi government when it tries to blame a few radicals for increasing attacks on Hindus.

The recent anti-Hindu violence surrounding the Hindu festival of Durga Puja was severe enough that governments worldwide condemned it and, in many cases, the failure of Bangladesh's government to stop it, despite the government's almost autocratic control. And that's the key. Regardless of who the actual perpetrators and organizers were, most governments and individuals agree that responsibility to protect its minority citizens lays with the government of Bangladesh. That's no different from the standard we demand of ourselves. For example, when police officers in several cities abused their power and killed some African-Americans, our government had to act-and not only to prosecute and punish the perpetrators. We also had to deal with the conditions that gave rise to these crimes and do something about that; which we did. There have been numerous initiatives at virtually all levels of government designed to do just that no matter how difficult or contentious.

Senator Richard Durbin is one of the most powerful persons in Washington, and someone who has been kind and supportive to me and my work over the years. He recently wrote me that he "applaud[s] the government's response in sending forces to contain the violence," but adds that "more action must be taken against extremists organizations that foment these attacks. As the influence of these organizations grows, it emboldens terrorist attacks on the Hindu community, secular organizations, and other minority religious groups. The government must take action to counter their influence and the horrific actions they have taken against civil society." An argument I've been making for years. Durbin's remarks are both indicative of general sentiment, and a warning to those who wish to read it.

A piece in Al Jazeera openly speculated that recent US actions could be signaling a change in US policy toward Bangladesh. Last month, the United States, Australia, India, and Japan invited 111 mostly Asian democracies to the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, or Quad. Bangladesh was not among them. In addition to security, the Quad helps countries with things like trade and infrastructure, which are critical to Bangladesh's future. It was an unexpected snub, and experts in the US and Asia see it as deliberate. It reflected concerns over Bangladesh's moves toward anti-democratic China; the deteriorating quality of democracy in Bangladesh, and the government's tolerance for anti-Hindu violence. Let's also remember that the US and other democracies were unequivocal in calling Bangladesh's last election neither free nor fair.

I do not expect anyone to be quaking with fear simply because we are the United States. Westerners do not take this position because they believe we are somehow better. Commenting on some of the places I go, people often ask me if I'm concerned for my safety there. I respond that "Everywhere I go, there are people living there 24/7. I get to leave; they don't, and each of those lives is as precious as mine."

I do expect, however, that responsible leaders take note of things that can have a serious impact on their people and do not ignore them. The United States is Bangladesh's biggest customer for readymade garments; China is its biggest competitor. I was in business for many years and always knew that it's a bad idea to anger your customers; and as attitudes change, people from all over regularly ask me to use my influence to get them a piece of that market. I also learned never to take current prosperity for granted.

US-Bangladesh relations are at a crossroads, and the current Bangladeshi government is responsible for which road they take. Their decisions are even more critical today because those readymade garment economies that continue to prosper post-pandemic will do so only because their leaders strengthen relationships with customers, not weaken them. What they do also will go far in determining whether or not Bangladesh has remained true to those ideals that gave it birth. Growing closer to China, becoming less democratic, and continuing to claim impotence against those who persecute their minority citizens will not get it done.

As Senator Durbin, who tends to have his fingers on the pulse of US foreign policy, told me, "I urge the Bangladeshi government to safeguard the rights and security of Hindus and all religious communities in the country." If the government simply can't do it, I can help.

The writer is an American scholar and a geopolitical analyst.

New US Ambassador's Senate Hearing Promises New Era in US-Bangladesh Ties

Concerns in Washington about Bangladesh have been building-from the South Asian nation's retreat from democracy to its increasing radicalization and the ongoing ethnic cleansing of Hindus and other minorities. On top of that, the current and widespread anti-Hindu pogroms have drawn a great deal of criticism from the United Nations and governments worldwide. Amnesty International said that these ongoing attacks "show that the state has failed in its duty to protect minorities," which reflects a general sense of where blame-and responsibility for fixing the situation-lay. Lawmakers on Capitol Hill, the State Department, and elsewhere in Washington have come to see just that point; and that trying to blame Bangladesh's communal violence on rogues and radicals no longer is acceptable. That can have serious consequences for the Bangladesh economy in particular-which brings us to the soon-to-be United States Ambassador to Bangladesh, Peter D. Haas.

When control of the United States (US) Presidency passes from one party to another, the new regime appoints a bunch of new ambassadors; even though most ambassadors are non-partisan career diplomats. Once nominated, prospective ambassadors have private conversations and public hearings with members of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations; and if they pass muster, the Committee recommends that the entire Senate approve the appointment. This year was no exception, and it included a newly nominated US ambassador to the People's Republic of Bangladesh.

Peter D. Haas had his public hearing on 20 October in an atmosphere dominated by concern over Bangladesh's anti-Hindu violence. Mr. Haas has represented the United States in Morocco, London, and Mumbai; and currently is the Assistant Secretary of State for Economic and Business Affairs. Throughout his tenure, he has shown an ability to negotiate trade deals between the US and other countries, understanding both the international financial and geopolitical implications. That's important because it reflects President Joe Biden's and Secretary of State Anthony Blinken's recognition that a trade agreement could be in the interests of both countries-though Bangladesh has more to gain from such an agreement, since its economy is heavily dependent on exports to the United States. In 2019, for instance, Bangladeshi exports to the US totaled almost three times as many dollars as US exports to Bangladesh. And while Americans are the world's biggest customers for Bangladeshi garments, Bangladesh hardly registers as a customer for US goods, accounting for only 0.14 percent of US exports. To put that in perspective, Canada, with but a fifth of Bangladesh's population is the largest importer of US goods, and spent almost a third of a trillion dollars on them in 2019; Bangladesh spent $2.3 billion. For those who might dismiss that because the US and Canada are neighbors, that same year, Japan, America's fourth largest trading partner with about three fourths the population of Bangladesh, spent more than three times as much on US imports than did Bangladesh.

Even if an agreement would be good business, however, there are formidable non-business obstacles to signing one, which were very prominent in those closed door sessions and other behind-the-scenes discussions. I worked extensively for weeks with both Majority (Democratic) and Minority (Republican) Senators and staff, as did the Hindu American Foundation. We did so as news of anti-Hindu pogroms in Cumilla, Rangpur, and elsewhere in Bangladesh shocked Americans. Many Senators and staff on the Committee have worked with me for years and recognized that these events were not exceptions, but more the rule for Hindus in Bangladesh. Even news that an unnamed number of people were arrested failed to gain traction in Washington, since decades-worth of evidence shows that, at best, Bangladesh arrests and later releases individual lawbreakers while providing immunity for those who incite and fund the anti-Hindu pogroms. This should not be taken to mean that these US power brokers do not want a trade agreement with Bangladesh; quite the contrary. It does mean, however, that it won't happen without those other issues being part of the negotiations.

In fact, the overall tenor of the public hearing expressed the importance of US-Bangladesh relations. In his statement to the Committee, Mr. Haas emphasized the strong ties between our two nations and our cooperation on a range of issues including "economic development, peacekeeping, tackling the climate crisis," and more. He also reiterated the US commitment to help Bangladesh recover from the COVID pandemic, which already has included the donation of "eleven and half million vaccine doses," and he pledged to get more to the Bangladeshi people. Haas trumpeted our two nations' shared democratic values and said he would work tirelessly to "broaden our partnership with Bangladesh." As someone who was involved in the hearing process, I can confirm that he will do precisely that to the benefit of both our countries.

After listing many of the practical elements of the US-Bangladesh relationship, Haas pivoted, "But for the people of Bangladesh to realize their full potential, they must also be free to express themselves." The United States is committed to "the free operation of media, civil society organizations, workers, and members of the opposition political parties in Bangladesh without fear of retribution or harm." Bangladesh's recent history tells us that this could become an issue, and Haas said he will "urge the government to protect human rights" and "respect for the rule of law." Where the rule of law exists, all persons regardless of position, relationships, or wealth receive the same treatment under the law; which unfortunately does not happen in Bangladesh. In fact, Bangladesh consistently ranks near the bottom in all accepted measures of the rule of law.

The big issue, however, was the persecution of Hindus in Bangladesh, and the government's role in it. Key Committee members and staff recognized the current violence as part of a larger pattern that, according to Dhaka University's Professor Abul Barkat, will find Bangladesh absent any Hindus before mid-century. The goodwill that Americans have toward Bangladesh has led many to look the other way as the unrelenting attack on Hindus proceeded, hoping that the Bangladeshi government will act to protect its Hindu citizens. That has not happened, as governments have rather encouraged the lawbreakers by rarely arresting the culprits and almost never prosecuting them. The current anti-Hindu pogroms, however, seem to be the straw that broke the camel's back. At a time when partisanship and lack of agreement often characterizes US politics, I was struck by the two parties' agreement as I worked with them. In those all-important closed door sessions, Senators and staff from both parties let Mr. Haas know that the stopping the persecution of Bangladesh's Hindus is a priority for them and for the American people.

So, what will this new era in US-Bangladesh relationships look like under Ambassador Haas? For one thing, Americans (not just our government) want to see more joint efforts with Bangladesh; and Haas's history is one that should encourage all of us. At the same time, this new era will be one in which Americans expect something better from Bangladesh in the way its Hindu citizens are treated. Blaming bad treatment on radicals is no longer persuasive. Rather, expect more focus on the Bangladeshi government's duty to protect all its citizens, including a commitment to democracy, equality, and religious freedom in deeds, not only in words.

In July 2016, I met with the then-Bangladeshi ambassador to the United States, along with Congressman Bob Dold in the anteroom of the House Committee on Ways and Means. Dold chose that location to emphasize its authority over trade and other financial matters pertinent to the US-Bangladesh relationship. In the course of our meeting, the Ambassador told us that his country's poverty prevented it from resolving this problem. Congressman Dold responded by saying, "we want to help you solve your problem." While no one took him up on his offer, there is no doubt that if the government and people of Bangladesh wants our assistance to stop the ethnic cleansing of Hindus; America will be anxious to provide it.

Dr Richard Benkin is an American scholar and a geopolitical analyst

Pogroms a fact of life for Bangladeshi Hindus, but now Dhaka can’t escape scrutiny by blaming radicals

The massive anti-Hindu pogroms in Bangladesh are as disturbing as they are unsurprising, however, they could be the spark needed to awaken nations heretofore willing to look the other way at the South Asian nation’s effort to eliminate Hindus from its borders. The fact that they were associated with the Hindu celebration of Durga Puja, a major Hindu observance with even greater meaning for Bengali Hindus, raises religious freedom issues that make it even more difficult to explain away. Hence, condemnations have poured in from countries and NGOs previously inert at the slaughter of Hindus.

Amnesty International had been largely silent as Hindus faced decades of attacks designed to ethnically cleanse them from their ancestral home in East Bengal. In the past two years, it called on Bangladesh to do more for Rohingya Muslims multiple times, complained about restrictions on press freedom, but seemed okay with ongoing attacks on Hindus.

A 2019 press release noted, “Twenty-five years ago, the international community stood by and watched as genocide unfolded in Rwanda, devastating a country and leaving lasting scars.” Yet, it “stood by and watched” as Hindus went from a third to a fifteenth of Bangladesh’s population. It “stood by and watched” while Hindus faced human rights atrocities — murder, gang rape, forced conversion, and more — that were aided and abetted by Bangladeshi governments that refused to punish the criminals. It accepted those governments’ excuses that the problem was “radicals”; but no more.

On 18 October, Amnesty International issued a statement on the current anti-Hindu violence that held the Bangladeshi government responsible because it “failed in its duty to protect minorities”.

Moreover, that assignment of blame — and responsibility for fixing the situation — is spreading. For it was in that atmosphere, only two days after Amnesty International’s press release, that the US Senate Committee on Foreign Relations held its nomination hearing for President Joe Biden’s nominee to be the new US ambassador to Bangladesh, Peter D Haas. I was involved in that process, as was the Hindu American Foundation, and can confirm that at a time when partisan politics often stands in the way of agreement, neither party had any appetite to excuse the Bangladeshi government’s guilt for the anti-Hindu pogroms.

Public hearings on ambassadorial nominations for smaller countries like Bangladesh tend to be perfunctory affairs. Americans recognise the President’s prerogative to make appointments and tend to approve them quickly. If there are discordant issues that the Senators want the prospective ambassador to address, they raise them in the all-important closed-door meetings that precede the public hearing. In this case, it was holding the Bangladeshi government responsible for the communal violence against Hindus.

Both Majority (Democratic) and Minority (Republican) Senators and staff worked with me as news of anti-Hindu pogroms in Cumilla, Rangpur, and elsewhere in Bangladesh shocked Americans. Many have worked with me for years and recognised that these events were not exceptions, but more the rule for Hindus in Bangladesh. Even news that an unnamed number of people were arrested failed to gain traction in Washington, since decades-worth of evidence shows that, at best, Bangladesh arrests and later releases individual lawbreakers while providing immunity for those who incite and fund the anti-Hindu pogroms. More often than not, the criminals know that nothing will happen to them — which of course incentivises them to commit more crimes against Hindus.

This should not be taken to mean that these US power brokers see Bangladesh as an enemy or do not want a trade agreement with Bangladesh; quite the contrary. It does mean, however, that it won’t happen without the Bangladeshi acting — not just promising — to protect all its citizens and apply the rule of law equally to all of them, something that it has failed to do on every international measure. This is neither more nor less than we should expect from any country; and I was happy when Committee staff said they wanted my ongoing involvement. This is important not because Americans want to be the new British Raj (we don’t) or because we consider ourselves “better” than other people (again we don’t).

Bangladesh experienced an economic miracle before the pandemic that raised it out of the category of less developed nations. Both the people and the government can be rightly proud of their great accomplishments. But that vital economy remains dependent on the largesse of others, especially the United States.

Americans are the world’s biggest customers for Bangladeshi garment exports, accounting for almost a fifth of them, which are the backbone of Bangladesh’s economy. Many other countries export readymade garments and would love a larger share of the American market. This gives Americans a number of alternatives if Bangladesh continues to allow the human rights of Hindus to be violated with impunity.

Bangladesh also provides more United Nations (UN) peacekeeping personnel than any other country, taking in millions of dollars every month, and paid for largely by US taxpayers. The UN, too, has condemned the violence against Hindus, saying that the attacks “need to stop”.

I was in Dhaka during the 2007 military coup and spoke with several military leaders after the coup. There was violence in the street, and Opposition leader Sheikh Hasina told her followers to “close down the country”. But the military told me that, in fact, they finally acted because they worried that the UN would bar them from peacekeeping operations. The stakes for Bangladesh could hardly be higher. Protecting Bangladesh’s peacekeeping role and its export economy is in Sheikh Hasina’s hands. Will she choose to do so or give greater priority to brutalising Hindus?

And what of India? The Citizenship Amendment Act of 2019 marked the first time that the Government of India formally recognised that Hindus are persecuted and at-risk in Bangladesh. In the same tradition in which India has provided safe haven for Tibetan Buddhists and Iraqi and other Jews, it now offers succour to persecuted Hindus in Bangladesh. What it does with that formal recognition remains to be seen. In addition to buying a growing amount of Bangladeshi exports, India also cooperates with Bangladesh on water rights, counterterrorism, and other economic and strategic elements — any of which could be in play if Bangladesh continues to abet the persecution of Hindus.

If my discussions in Washington and Peter D Haas’s confirmation hearings are any indication, Bangladesh can no longer mollify the rest of the world by blaming the ethnic cleansing of Hindus on radicals. If Sheikh Hasina decides to protect all her citizens equally, there is much to be gained. If she instead chooses to continue allowing the ethnic cleansing of Hindus, she will have to explain to her people why she put radical interests over theirs.

The writer is an American human rights activist and the author of ‘A Quiet Case of Ethnic Cleansing: The Murder of Bangladesh’s Hindus’. Views expressed are personal.​

Subaltern Hindus in Bangladesh are not invisible

Subaltern Hindus in Bangladesh are not invisible

Dr. Richard Benkin

2nd Barak Valley Annual Conference 2021 - Session VI

Northeast India Company

Silchar, Assam, India

Via Zoom 1 September 2021

Talk requested by Conference and by the Northeast India Company (NEIC), located in Silchar, Assam. NEIC and its head Dr. Arjun Choudhuri. sponsored my residency in Silchar, December 2019 to January 2020.

Good morning from the United States.

 Whether applied to South Asian Hindus, which is our focus today, or to colonized populations anywhere, as it was originally formulated, the essence of the subaltern concept is:

 1. Others determine who can speak for a people authoritatively.

2. It so demoralizes the subaltern population that many among them, knowingly or unknowingly, buy into it.

 Classic sociological theory took note of a related phenomenon over a century ago: definition of the situation. It’s a great concept, referring to the fact that we all interact on the basis of rules, key understandings, and cultural definitions, apparent or not. We’re not born with these ideas but learn them, which makes it crucial to ask where we learn them and from whom. Because whoever gets to define which ones we use, controls the situation. Here’s an example of how it works. I’m one among many people trying to stop Bangladesh from moving closer to China, which it is doing, first through the Belt & Road Initiative and then expanding on that. Those who disagree with us define the situation one way:

‘China is an Asian brother who provides needed funds that less developed countries use for things like infrastructure, so we don’t have to wait for “permission” from western powers.’

Those who agree with me define it another way:

‘China is a predatory lender that uses these loans as a pretext to seize strategic assets (for example, ports in Sri Lanka and Pakistan). Its goal is not to help these countries but to dominate them.’

The same situation; two very different ways to understand it; and two very different sets of action based on those differential definitions.

Who controls the definitions of your situations? (I’ll just leave that out there for people to contemplate.)

It goes deeper than that. As many of you know, I’ve devoted much of my life to fighting the ethnic cleansing of Bangladeshi Hindus, and saving lives must be our top priority; but if all I’m doing is re-defining the situation for them, ultimately, I’m no different than the British Raj or the Awami League. My goal is and must be for them to evaluate the evidence and define the situation as a dangerous one that they can change. I learned this years ago in makeshift camp in northern Bengal when I asked these Hindu refugees what they would like me to do. “We want you to give us our rights,” they said, but after thinking about that, I said, “I can’t do that. I can’t give you your rights because they are not mine to give. I want to help you claim what is yours. Besides, if I can give them to you, I can take them away, which is something neither of us want.”

They defined their situation as a powerless one, in which only others with power can do good things for them and defeat different others with power who were doing bad things. I was a bit naïve back then and brought my own cultural context and ideas about “inalienable rights.” I figured all I had to do was make the case and provide support. But I had not counted on how being subaltern beat these people down to where they did not even realize that they accepted their oppressors’ definition of the situation.

That is the essence of being subaltern: allowing others to define us, and accepting our invisibility and rightlessness as somehow being warranted. But if we understand this, we can overcome it; we’ll know what to fight and how to fight it. So, let’s get started.

          From Colonial to Post-Colonial

The concept of subaltern populations grew out of a Marxist perspective; and while I do not usually find Marxist ideas useful, this one is—but not because of its “workers of the world unite” roots. Besides exposing a brutal process, it helps us see whose idea of truth begins and ends with a restricted number of elites; versus those who go to a variety of sources; who go to the people for their information; who understand the importance of life for the people from the perspective of the people instead of from some unelected other given the divine right to tell their story. What often passes for authoritative analysis suffers from this limited and limiting perspective; and we owe it to those populations to refrain from that error and expose its bias when others don’t. Nowhere has this been more destructive than in South Asia.

Cracking that has been one of the most important achievements of the Modi phenomenon. Previous Indian governments often bought into a sense of western superiority, overly concerned with what this or that western power or individual might think. The UPA coalition’s referent was Europe and its soft socialism. Modi said, ‘No, we are as good as anyone else and will be telling our own story, thank you very much.’

It was very common for me to be speaking in India, and my Indian colleague, speaking first, would say something and receive a mild or non-existent response from our South Asian audience. I then would say the same thing and get ooh’s and ah’s from the same people. The subaltern definition of the situation says that as a white westerner, I’m someone whose words have value; but as an Indian, my friend’s do not. This always was so embarrassing, partly because Americans have an ingrained dislike of that sort of prejudice. Moreover, my friend had insights that I did not—insights that have become very important for my work. Our South Asian audience missed that because of this legacy of colonialism. It didn’t matter if those South Asians liked what this particular white westerner said. The damage was done by their acceptance of this authority hierarchy. It happens less now. Whether you like Modi or not—and I really like him and what he’s done—you cannot deny this shift in perspective and power.

Recognize that most information we get is driven by ideology, political or religious alliances, self-interest, or even conspiracy theories. It’s not objective, often not even accurate; we must apply the same exacting standards to verify it as we would in any academic venture. If we listen only to the same elites and uncritically let them define the situation for us, we’re going to sign on to a lot of bad stuff, regardless of our intentions.

 Recently, I was part of a seminar on forced conversion. The convener told me that there would be segments on Hindus in Bangladesh (mine), Coptic Christians in Egypt (another very serious matter), and “Muslims in India.” I asked him who was forcibly converting Muslims in India, and he replied that “some people from the International Religious Freedom Summit” said it was a bad situation that needed to be addressed. Things were supposed to end there with the seminar proceeding as planned—that is, “some people” had an a priori right to assert this without facts. Instead I asked—and this is the key—what data they sent to support their assertions, as we other two gave him mountains of data. He sent me three internet articles, the sum total that they sent him. After securing his consent, I analyzed those articles and showed their bias, poor data, misinformation, and so forth. To Mr. Yi’s credit, he dropped them and proceeded with Bangladeshi Hindus and Coptic Christians. More than that, his organization was working on a Congressional Resolution and dropped Indian Muslims from that, too.

 There is powerful coterie of academics, diplomats, and others with a visceral hatred for India. They always have been bolstered by the left, who since Modi have been joined by an unlikely ally: right wing, Evangelical Christians. Their visceral hatred comes from the Modi Administration’s actions against coercive conversions that Christian missionaries never had to bother about before. It’s not easy fighting both left and right at the same time, but winning this two-front war is not impossible. You do it by challenging their data and by being as tough on yourself and others when you have data supporting your position. That’s what we did. It was not about Christians, Muslims, or any other social group. We focused on data and the scientific method.

 And we refused to let others define the situation, which was important when that same group of India haters circulated an anti-India resolution. They got support because of who they are, not because of facts. But they thought facts didn’t matter; that political and ideological alliances were all they needed. And it looked like they might be right. The resolution passed easily in six other US cities and so was expected to sail through in Chicago, but something happened there.

 Chicago’s NRI Hindu community decided to fight it and insisted that they should be telling that story. They fought the haters with facts, and asked Councilmembers why, with all the serious problems Chicago has, they were focused on India. (I don’t know how much it’s circulated globally, but at least within the United States, Chicago has become shorthand for a city with out of control crime and on the brink of financial ruin.) They also got the Jewish community involved. We supported them, worked with them; and raised our voices against those who co-opted the right to tell their story. Organizations, including the Hindu American Foundation, StandWithUs, and the Middle East Forum got involved, too. But—and this is also critical—our Jewish community and organizations only got involved because the Hindu community asked for our help. This is their story and fight; we will do everything we can; but as supporters, friends. The measure was defeated because Chicago’s Hindus made it happen! More than that, it has not been introduced it anywhere else, as it was expected to be. Our opponents were so used to winning with ideology alone, that when we fought them with facts, they had no effective response.

 This is what happens when others tell our story, the essence of a subaltern mentality; and what happens when we prevent that and tell our own.

Italian Marxist Antonio Gramschi developed the subaltern concept to push back against Europe’s accepted “truth” that understood non-European peoples from the perspective of their European colonizers (e.g. India from the British, Indo-China from the French, Congo from the Belgians). Those stories were driven by the colonizers’ own self-interests, cultural assumptions of their superiority, and cultural and religious imperialism. Though the British Raj died close to 75 years ago, this legacy of colonialism remains strong and explains our ongoing struggle against the fact-free demonization of India and Hinduism, replete in things from school textbooks to anti-Hindu slurs in the media. Too many, both East and West, never let go of a view that looked to the West, primarily Europe, for information about non-Europeans. The Subaltern Hindus under Bangladesh rule might live in a post-colonial world, but they still look outside their community at hostile others telling their story. They are no less invisible than when the British defined their fathers.

 Let’s look at another example of how this works. You’ll notice how I go back and forth between theory and action. That’s because you need both. Theory is sterile without connection to real life, and experience is chaotic without an overarching context. It also will take both of them to stop the ethnic cleansing of Bangladesh’s Hindus: we change assumptions about who is authorized to tell a people’s story; and use facts and fight for that change.

 Several years ago, I was part of a government briefing about Bangladesh. Throughout the proceedings, people casually referred to Bangladesh as a Muslim nation—which is objectively correct. It’s over 90 percent Muslim, Islam is its official state religion; even the first word of its constitution is Bismillah. When the audience had a chance to speak, one Bangladeshi Hindu told us that every time people call Bangladesh a Muslim nation, he feels like a foreigner in his own country. Others there voiced their agreement. That young man will never know the impact he had, because it drove home to me that the only way I’d be of value is by going to South Asia, cities and the villages, and listen to what the people said. It would not get done with a Google search, with the second and third hand internet articles that our opponents try to pass off as fact, or by going to so-called experts. That young man told me that Bangladesh’s Subaltern Hindus are never allowed to tell their own story—the many centuries of Hinduism in Bengal; how Bengal’s division is a British contrivance that hurts their sense of who they are and threatens their physical survival. They are not even recognized as authorities about the atrocities they face.

 Experts who rarely leave their offices in London or Washington are considered more credible. Bangladeshi governments and their hired guns put out the consecrated word about Hindus, refusing to move off the fiction of Bangladesh as—and I’m using their words—“a land of communal harmony.” We know better, but it’s tough to get others to see it, because when we challenge that, we’re not just fighting misinformation, we are blaspheming against their very world view, which helps explain their anger towards us. One Bangladeshi general recently told me that he and his colleagues see opposing us as a “patriotic duty,” even if the facts are on our side. That’s why people charged with blasphemy in Bangladesh often are charged with treason for the same actions.

 When others—whether European colonizers or oppressive native regimes—have the monopoly on telling our story, truth becomes the victim, sublimated in favor of the self-interests of those others. Their racial and cultural domination lets them use unsubstantiated information, and reject vetted information from others who do not share the listeners’ subaltern understandings.

We must never suspend our critical faculties and blithely accept what they tell us. Even as a child, my daughter would say: “Question the man who tells you the sky is blue so you’ll be sure to challenge the man who tells you the sky is red.” In other words, we can’t go wrong by questioning what others tell us; but we can go wrong if we don’t. If anyone—and I mean anyone, me, your professors, politicians, or someone claiming to carry the mantle of human rights—makes accusations all backed up the same sources and categories of elites, with little or nothing from the people being victimized; question it. If they are not transparent about their methods for verifying allegations or their analytical methodologies; doubt it. Either they’re being devious or they don’t care about facts. Challenge them; make them care; reject their assumption of being entitled to speak for others.

That’s the first step in breaking the subaltern grip.

          The Subaltern Hindus of Bangladesh

When we refer to Bangladeshi Hindus today as subaltern, what exactly do we mean? We mean first and foremost, that the end of European colonialism did not mean the end of colonialist mentalities, whereby Bangladesh’s subaltern Hindus accept their own subjugation to a government that denies them legal and social equality and equal access to the rule of law. In 2013, after Bangladeshi governments barred from the country for six years, I was allowed into Bangladesh where I got a crash course in that mentality. Several Hindu Members of the Jatiya Sangsad, Bangladesh’s parliament, had asked to meet with me, which we did on 18 February. I’ll read you my journal for part of that evening.

“Okay, tell me what you—as Hindu MPs—are doing about the ethnic cleansing of your people here.”

          “We have done many things—“

          “Many things?  You know that’s bullshit.  They’re being raped and killed, land being snatched, Mandirs destroyed; and no prosecutions.  So, don’t tell me that you’re doing ‘many things.’  How many Hindu Members of Parliament are there?”

          “70.”

          “70, that’s a lot of people; and you mean to tell me that with that many in parliament, you still haven’t done anything.”

          “Well, the party—“

          “That’s your other mistake, and I tried to tell this to Hindus before the last election.  Minorities need to form their own political party.  Right now, the Awami League doesn’t have to do anything.  They know you’ll vote for them anyway.  And the BNP doesn’t have to do anything because they know you won’t vote for them….”

And I went on for some time, peppering them, demanding, egging on, etc.  I told them that they should be ashamed that I come half way around the world while they do nothing here for their own people.  I gave them at least a half dozen suggestions of things they can do.  Pointing to Rabindra Ghosh, I said that “he has extensive evidence that there are Members of Parliament involved big time in grabbing Hindu land, even rapes and other atrocities.  What do you think your enemies think of you as you can sit next to them smiling?  ‘We can steal their land, rape their daughters and sisters, and just give them a few Taka.’”

Someone started to say something about there being problems.  “Problems?  Problems?  I don’t want to hear about problems.  You think I don’t have problems?  Or that he [R Ghosh] has none.  Do you think I give a shit about problems?  Problems are just an excuse for not doing what’s right.”

I was on a roll, and did not let up.  I kept telling them they should be ashamed….But I think my favorite part was when I stopped my rant, looked at them, and said:  “So, are you happy you came here tonight?”

They were so embedded in the subaltern assumption of their inferiority to others that they ended up believing the excuses and even seemed puzzled at why I wasn’t thrilled merely to take pictures with them. Worse still, they did not use the power they had to stop the carnage, and could not understand why that was something they should consider. That’s how insidious this is.

What do we do with all that? How do we stop the atrocities?

For the time being, I want to lay aside that aspect of subaltern Hindus by which they accept others’ superiority. It is a real phenomenon, and it will be difficult to stop the carnage unless it changes; but too much focus on it smacks of blaming the victim. Neither can we blame Bangladeshi Hindus, especially those in the villages, from concluding that they are objectively powerless and are dependent on the largesse of others who are powerful. They are, and we need to change that, too.

As things stand right now, western elites give credence to others for what is said about Bangladeshi Hindus, and those others include the Bangladeshi government and its acolytes. There is nothing evil about that or specifically anti-Hindu. In fact, that’s how it should be. Regardless of our different faiths, origins, and other tribal characteristics, we cede that authority to the larger society in exchange for protection, equal access to the law, and other benefits that come from living together as one. This goes back to Rousseau and Hobbes, and despite disagreeing on so much, they agreed on this. That’s theory, and as theory it usually works. Bangladesh’s Hindu population, however, does not get protection, and the government blocks their access to the law. By so doing, it has forfeited its right to claim to speak for them, but Western authorities do not recognize that abrogation of the social contract.

 To explain, I keep referring to “western” entities because the west controls Bangladesh’s pressure points, not because they have any inherent qualities that should make them our focus. The West either can join our struggle for justice or ignore reality and reinforce injustice by clinging to status quo. Indeed, would those same westerners recognize China’s authority to tell the Uighurs’ story or Myanmar’s version of the Rohingyas’? Of course, not. Getting them to see that the Bangladeshi government has ceded it rights no less is our job.

           Saving Bangladesh’s Subaltern Hindus

 It’s a lousy situation, but we have to do something. We cannot stand by idly while innocent people are systematically destroyed. As a Jew, I got into this fight precisely because that’s what most Europeans did when my people were being murdered, or in a message specifically for India, we cannot shutter our shades and hide while our neighbors are being dragged away to their deaths.

 Many in the West who can do something about it refuse to re-consider their position. Most subaltern Hindus are not convinced that they have the right to take action against their own government. That’s changing, but not fast enough, according to the many Bangladeshi human rights activists who tell me that one of their greatest challenges is convincing young Hindus not to leave Bangladesh, but to stay and fight for it. Let’s also recall Dhaka University’s Professor Abul Barkat’s dire warning that if things don’t change, Hinduism will be dead in Bangladesh by mid-century.

 To be effective, we must first understand that the Bangladeshi government will never do the right thing on this simply because it is the right thing to do. It will try to pacify you with mere words and no action, which you know they are trying to do. Demand action, because the government will do the right thing if we make it contrary to their interests to continue the carnage.

 First, congratulations to India. Its 2019 NRC/CAA marked the first time that an Indian government formally recognized that Hindus face persecution in Bangladesh, and that it’s bad enough for India to provide the victims with a safe haven. Build on that with facts that oppose and defeat those who are trying to define it otherwise and use it for their own purposes. We do not yet know all that will come of this, but it provides a legal basis for India finally doing something about its oppressed neighbors. And when it does, India has several measures it can take from controlling water, to making its embassy in Dhaka a center for resisting anti-Hindu human rights abuses, to undercutting Bangladesh on the international readymade garment market and taking parts of this market that is central to the Bangladeshi economy. Get them to act by showing them what will happen if they don’t.

 Second, US President Joe Biden has sent the Senate Foreign Relations Committee his nominee to be the new US ambassador to Bangladesh. Peter D, Hass is a qualified professional who should do well in that role. My only concern is his history of trade deals. Achieving a trade deal with the United States has been the Bangladeshi government’s Holy Grail for decades, which makes sense. The US is their largest customer for readymade garments—which are the key to the Bangladeshi economy. Any benefits they get in our trade relations tend to mean billions of dollars. While there is nothing wrong with that, we cannot make the deal a priority and conclude it without demanding specific actions that give Bangladeshi Hindus equal access to the law in reality, protection from the police and government in reality; and for the government to sack those government officials who participate in anti-Hindu violence, its non-prosecution, or its cover-up. Though not always consistent about it, my country frequently considers human rights in determining its relations with other countries. So we have a path to justice, but we cannot close it with a trade deal alone.

 If we get this issue raised as part of Mr. Haas’s hearing, it will tell him that this is on the American peoples’ agenda. It also will put Bangladesh on notice that we’re no longer ignoring its atrocities against Hindus there. I’m currently working in three different channels to get this issue raised in Mr. Haas’s hearings, and any help I get could mean the difference between success and failure. Members of the Committee represent 40 percent of our 50 states and about the same percentage of the total US population. That means there are a lot of opportunities for people to make their concerns known to their senator on the Committee. If you have friends, relatives, or associates who are US citizens, you need to have them contact their senator on the Committee. I can help. I’ve put my email address, along with a link to the site with Committee members, in the Chat. Please join me in this. You could help end a horrible and horribly ignored human rights disaster.

 Dhanyavaad.

Richard Benkin: Jews and Hindus Face the "Same" Islamist Adversaries

Originally published in Middle East Forum, August 10, 2021.

https://www.meforum.org/62557/benkin-jews-hindus-face-same-islamist-adversaries?fbclid=IwAR1GO-GLR-iqgF5I4U_7uasXFTCUisPX6kD6BomVNDE-UZ13Pa4uPX3VhUA

Article by Marilyn Stern; link includes article and attached video of the Benkin interview

Richard Benkin, human rights advocate and author of A Quiet Case of Ethnic Cleansing: The Murder of Bangladesh's Hindus, was interviewed by Benjamin Baird, deputy director of Islamist Watch, in a July 23 Middle East Forum webinar (video) about growing Jewish and Hindu solidarity in the face of Islamist threats.

According to Benkin, who works with the Hindu American Foundation to foster ties with the Jewish community in Chicago, Jews and Hindus are natural allies because the two ethno-religious groups "have similar values and face the same adversaries," namely Islamists.

Abroad, Jewish-Hindu solidarity manifests itself in strong relations between Israel and India. Security and intelligence cooperation between the two has been growing for many years, particularly in the aftermath of the November 2008 Islamist terror attacks in Mumbai. Following Narendra Modi's election as India's prime minister in 2013, "relations between India and Israel really flourished." Benkin cited a 2018 pro-Israel rally held in Calcutta, India that drew 70,000 Hindus.

Jews and Hindus "have similar values and face the same adversaries."

In the United States, Jews and Hindus face a common threat from lawful Islamist groups such as the Council for American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), the Indian-American Muslim Council, Stand With Kashmir, and Friends of Kashmir. Partnering with progressive organizations that also include leftist Jews and Hindus, these groups vilify Israel and India and seek to further their agenda by gaining influence in government.

After having "failed at the federal level" to pass resolutions condemning India, American Islamists have recently focused on pressuring local governments, particularly city councils dominated by the progressive left, to endorse resolutions "vilifying India and accusing it of human rights abuses ... [and] accusing the BJP [Bharatiya Janata Party] majority government of being a Hindutva group [an ideology representing Hindu cultural nationalism] which basically persecutes the Muslim minority in that country."

In March 2020, Chicago's city council rejected a resolution condemning India for religious persecution.

The Islamists made considerable headway in six states, but suffered a major loss last year in Chicago when Jewish and Hindu grassroots activists mobilized to defeat an anti-India city council resolution. A Chicago oncologist and Hindu community leader, Dr. Bharat Barai, contacted Benkin to enlist the aid of the Jewish community. Partnering with the Middle East Forum's Counter-Islamist Grid project, they organized a letter-writing campaign that resulted in 12,000 constituent letters to protest the Islamist resolution.

Jewish-Hindu solidarity is a two-way street. Benkin said that after the resolution's defeat, Dr. Barai was notified by a council member that the same Islamist coalition was also "planning to introduce an anti-Israel resolution." Dr. Barai informed Benkin of this initiative and told him, "Just as you stood with us, the Hindu community will stand with you." The sentiment was further illustrated by Hindu participation in pro-Israel rallies during the recent conflict between Israel and Hamas. "We didn't have stronger advocates for Israel than the American Hindu community," said Benkin.

Islamists and their allies see Hindu-Jewish solidarity as a threat to their agenda.

Not surprisingly, Islamists and their allies see Hindu-Jewish solidarity as a threat to their agenda and are pulling out all the stops to disrupt it. The Islamophobia Studies Center of Berkeley, California, has criticized Jewish and Hindu solidarity as "steeped in fascism and religious supremacy," an accusation Benkin dismisses as "an old slander" by Islamists who want to sow division and appeal to their progressive fellow travelers.

Anti-Hindu activists have also spread "false propaganda that India is inhospitable to Christians." However, while acknowledging that Hindus have developed a mistrust of proselytizing in India stemming from the country's occupation by the British and before that the Muslim Mughal empire, Benkin emphasized that Christians, Muslims, and other religious minorities are able to practice their faith freely in India.

Asked about whether the level of cooperation between India's Modi government and the Trump administration would be similarly found in the Biden administration, Benkin expressed concern that Biden "has to negotiate with a growing ... progressive faction in his party" and questioned whether he can find a way to "mollify them without empowering them." He noted that many top-level administration appointments who are of Pakistani and South Asian heritage have "problematic" views, but said it "remains to be seen" what influence they will have in administration decisions.

Benkin believes the recent activism seen in the American-born Hindu community will continue to grow stronger. Defeating the Islamist resolution in Chicago was only one example of the Hindu community saying, "We need to take a stand." Seeing that the Jewish community faces a similar boycott campaign by Islamists and progressives, "they were smart enough to say [to the Jewish community], 'Let's ally on this and on future issues.'"

Marilyn Stern is communications coordinator at the Middle East Forum.

Is Passport Change a Step toward Bangladesh Recognizing Israel?

Originally published in Daily Asian Age June 14, 2021.

https://dailyasianage.com/news/264184/is-passport-change-a-step-toward-bangladesh-recognizing-israel

A little time has passed since Bangladesh's new passports came out, omitting "except Israel" from "THIS PASSPORT IS VALID FOR ALL COUNTRIES OF THE WORLD EXCEPT ISRAEL." The government had to know it would cause a great deal of speculation:

* Especially since Israel was one of the first countries to recognize Bangladeshi independence, a move that Bangladesh never reciprocated.

* Especially since Bangladesh is one of a shrinking number UN members that do not recognize Israel, and an even smaller number without some level of relations with it.

* Especially since all but the most autocratic and repressive of that group are moving toward recognizing Israel.

* Especially since the nations that have shed blood for the cause Bangladesh claims is the stumbling block now have full relations with Israel, are close to that, or are war-torn and as a result do not have the ability to make that move.

* Especially since Bangladesh already supports the Israeli economy with its purchase of Israeli goods.

Perhaps even more provocative is the fact that while the change became known around the time of another Mideast shooting war, the decision was made at the height of a period when more and more Muslim-majority nations were establishing relations with Israel through the Abraham Accords and otherwise. So, is Bangladesh on a path to finally recognizing Israel? As one Bangladeshi military officer told me, "That's the million dollar question."

The Bangladeshis, of course, deny it. They hold to their consistent position that they will not recognize Israel until there is an independent Palestinian Arab state. But while that seems clear enough, it's not so simple. By holding rigidly to that position, Bangladesh’s government is subverting the interests of its people to those of another. Moreover, the position actually takes us further from peace. It has given Palestinian leaders the leeway to refuse even honest negotiations; that is, those without a pre-determined result and in which both parties cede some positions in order to reach an agreement, in this case peace. The Palestinians have never agreed to budge from their demands of an independent Palestine on the entire West Bank and Gaza Strip, with Jerusalem as its capital, and a wholesale "right of return" for all Palestinians and their descendants. Nor will they recognize Israel as a Jewish homeland. Their positions are structured to eliminate Israel incrementally, and we should not expect Israel or anyone else to agree to commit suicide in order to assuage erstwhile enemies. That is why it was not surprising when the Saudis and others chastised the Palestinians for rejecting honest negotiations. Bangladesh's position was once rock solid among almost all Muslim-majority countries, but no longer is.

Bangladeshi denials also recall what happened with Sudan in 2020. On February 3 last year, Sudanese General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Uganda and discussed issues that included normalizing ties between their nations. But when the meeting became public, the Sudanese government scrambled to deny that anything happened. It said the General was acting on his own, and the foreign policy head of the ruling Supreme Council resigned in protest. Even when Sudan opened its skies to Israeli aircraft soon thereafter, the angry denials continued and did not stop almost until the day when Israel and Sudan normalized relations. Is that what's happening with Bangladesh?

Probably not. Prime Miniter Sheikh Hasina is a shrewd political animal who has survived and thrived despite assassination attempts, international condemnation of unfair elections and minority persecution, and the growing power of home grown radicals. Even after successive elections secured her super majorities in the Jatiya Sangsad and she gained control of most other power centers, Hasina continued to use a political calculus before making decisions that might alienate Bangladesh's growing radical base. Don't expect her to put herself in those crosshairs. Yet, she has overseen a steady increase in Israel-Bangladesh trade, which has been growing year after year since 2014. That means jobs and income, two things needed to maintain the people's support. And she got that without taking politically perilous actions. Israeli goods also have been strengthening Bangladesh's security sector, with quality and effectiveness unavailable through its other trading partners. So, why should she take the political risk of making all that public and unequivocal?

Israel and Israel-supporting Jews played critical roles in the early days of Bangladeshi independence. Israel was one of the first nations to recognize Bangladesh, and were it not for one Jew who loved Israel, that independence might never have happened. Indians, Pakistanis, and Bangladeshis all acknowledge Indian General Jack Farj Rafael Jacob's pivotal role in the 1971 War of Independence. Through brilliant maneuvers, his troops captured Dhaka and forced Pakistan's 1971 surrender. His strategy in that war has become mandatory study in several military academies. Bangladeshis gratefully acknowledge that but probably don't know that Jacob was a Zionist, He visited Israel many times and was close with Israeli leaders, especially Mordechai Gur, the Israeli commander who led the liberation of Jerusalem in 1967. Gur's words at the moment of redemption are sealed in the hearts of most Jews and Israelis: "Har ha-bayit be-yedeinu," or "The Temple Mount is in our hands," after 2000 years of Romans, Byzantines, Turks, British, and Jordanians denying Jews access to our holiest site-something Israel never denied Muslims.

When Bangladeshis see their National Assembly building, they should know that they are gazing at the work of another Israel-loving Jew, Louis Kahn. Commissioned by Pakistan in 1962, work was halted when Bangladesh declared independence in 1971. Kahn was so inspired by Bangladesh's independence that he determined to design building to honor it and serve as a symbol of democracy and pride for the Bengali people; which it has been since its completion in 1982.

Its refusal to recognize Israel puts Bangladesh in a small group of nations that is getting smaller and more radical and hurts Bangladesh's international brand as a moderate nation.

Since winning independence in 1971, Bangladesh's brand has been that of a moderate, democratic nation. Like most countries, Bangladesh has found the reality tougher to maintain than simple declarations in its Constitution. Diplomats and others have a strong desire to hold on to that 1971 image, even if doing so can be challenging. Bangladesh's economic miracle and continued success depends on western capital from its garment exports, foreign aid, and its continued participation in UN peacekeeping. If Bangladesh rejects that brand, western capital likely will go elsewhere; and Bangladeshis should not expect the Chinese to pick up the slack and purchase all those garment exports. This puts Bangladesh in a difficult spot as its government contends with internal forces that might push Bangladesh closer to the radical and undemocratic camp.

Of the other countries that do not recognize Israel, seven are fighting civil wars and do not have functioning governments effectively empowered to take that step; five others are among the most radical and tyrannical in the world. It certainly will not help Bangladesh's brand to be in the same category as Iran and North Korea. That leaves 15 other nations; and they provide the clue for where Bangladesh might be moving.

Many of them loudly proclaim the same stance on the Middle East as does Bangladesh. Yet, all have had clandestine (or open) talks with Israel, have military alliances with it, or have long term trade relations with Israel. Several are thought to be on the road toward full diplomatic relations. Would the people of Bangladesh prefer being part of the first group (chaotic); the second (radical, and terror supporting); or the third, much larger group (western oriented and moderate)? No doubt the third, especially if Bangladesh hopes to keep its citizens employed and happy as we navigate the uncertain future of post-pandemic economics.

It also makes the most sense. Bangladesh, like the others but to a lesser degree, trades and conducts talks with Israel. Like some of the others, it can repeat its rejection of diplomatic relations while still getting the benefits of trade with Israel and, at the same time, building people to people relationships. The latter element, built quietly over years in the UAE and elsewhere, is why Israel's latest peace deals are embraced at the popular level in the countries that signed them.

Times have changed, and the conflict is no longer defined by religion.

For most of its history, going back even before Israel was reborn as a modern nation, the conflict was defined by religion. Israel was seen as dar al-harb, and many Muslims were told destroying it was a religious duty. Multi-national Muslim organizations (e.g., the Arab League and the Organization of Islamic Cooperation) and their constituent nations took a solidly anti-Israel stance. That is no longer the case. Gulf States, like Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), have come to recognize that Israel is not their enemy, but the Islamic Republic of Iran is.

Neither was that religious wall evident during Israel's recent clash with Hamas, though the Gaza terror group tried to make it a matter of religion. It claimed that Al Aqsa was in danger--which makes no sense. Since coming under Israeli control, the Muslim Waqf has dug out large parts of the Temple Mount for auxiliary mosques to accommodate many more worshippers—mosque attendance that never led to that under Muslim Turkish and Muslim Jordanian control. Consider, too, that the Israeli government protects Muslim prayer on the Mount, but forbids Jews from praying there.

Regardless, Hamas's attempt did not work. No Muslim nation joined the attacks, and many criticized Hamas for firing indiscriminately at civilians, while Israel went to great lengths to avoid civilian casualties. Even the head of the Gaza-based and anti-Israel United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNWRA), said as much for which Hamas expelled him.

Building ties with Israel benefits the people of Bangladesh.

Besides the technological advantages trade with Israel offers, Israel also provides aid and training in many countries worldwide. It can be long term and structural, in fields like agriculture and security, or emergency aid following natural disasters. The overall opinion I encountered is that, yes, Israel would like relations with Bangladesh, but that Bangladesh's refusal does not hurt Israel or motivate it to exert even greater efforts to resolve its conflict with Palestinians. It does, however, victimize Bangladeshi citizens, depriving them of work opportunities in Israel where approximately one in every 30 people is a foreign worker. So those lost opportunities are ample. The travel ban also prevented Bangladeshis from traveling there for educational opportunities, including seminars and conferences; and, as many observant Bangladeshi Muslims told me, it prevents them from praying at Al Aqsa mosque and elsewhere in Israel. Removing the passport restriction, then, is a positive move regardless of what it does or does not signify.

There's another factor: the United States. When Morocco recognized Israel, the US recognized that country's claim to the disputed Western Sahara. When Sudan recognized Israel, it was removed from the list of terror sponsoring nations. When Egypt made peace with Israel, it became the second largest recipient of US foreign aid. I have no doubt that Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina is well aware of that and what Bangladesh could gain.

Do not expect Bangladeshi recognition of Israel soon. Both active and retired members of the government and military made that clear; and I take them at their word. I do expect, however, that Bangladesh will put itself in the larger category of nations—and apart from the most radical regimes—and increase trade with Israel, perhaps even allow Bangladeshis to visit Israel and see things for themselves.

The writer is an American scholar and a geopolitical expert. The opinions expressed in the article totally belong to the author and have nothing to do with the editorial policy of The Asian Age.

Bangladesh’s 1971 genocide still echoes today

https://www.hinduamerican.org/blog/1971-bangladesh-genocide-still-echoes-today

March 25 marked the 50th anniversary of one of the worst slaughters in a 20th century filled with slaughters — up to 3 million killed, hundreds of thousands raped in the Bengali Hindu genocide. On that day in 1971, Pakistan launched Operation Searchlight to quell Bengali unrest, which had been growing from years of oppression and second class status for ethnic Bengalis at the hands of the dominant West Pakistanis. Back then, Pakistan had two non-contiguous two parts: West Pakistan, which is today’s Pakistan; East Pakistan, today’s Bangladesh.

Operation Searchlight affected all Bengalis, especially intellectuals and other prominent persons. The Pakistanis and their collaborators killed an estimated 991 teachers, 13 journalists, 49 physicians, 42 lawyers, and 16 writers, artists and engineers to cut off the head of Bengali resistance. But their top target was the Hindu community. They were marked for eradication in the same manner as the Jews of Nazi Europe, Tutsis of Rwanda, and Armenians of the Ottoman Empire.

Pakistan’s 1970 election produced a Bengali victor for the first time in its history; but Pakistani leadership refused to let Sheikh Mujibur Rahman take office. That was the final straw, and on March 26, 1971, he declared an independent Bangladesh. The Pakistanis and their allies swooped in to kill the rebellion with another agenda as well. Military leaders at Eastern Command Headquarters in Dhaka (now Bangladesh’s capital) spoke openly about using the revolt for “the elimination or exile of Hindus,” Pakistani journalist Anthony Mascarenhas wrote for London’s Sunday Times that he “saw Hindus, hunted from village to village and door to door” and shot after soldiers stripped them and confirmed that they were uncircumcised. More importantly, he wrote, “the killings are not the isolated acts of military commanders in the field.” One military leader told admitted, “Now under the cover of fighting we have an excellent opportunity of finishing them off.” Outrage reached the US Senate, but nothing was done to save the victims.

Today, the Bangladeshi government is helping others finish the job Operation Searchlight started.

Bangladesh was founded with a promise. It worked with India to gain its freedom, and was to be democratic and secular. Unfortunately, this turned out to be an unmet promise. Minorities face a callous government and brutal mob justice. Others are simply terrified as Bangladesh teeters on the brink of being a one-party dictatorship. It’s not safe to speak freely about the ethnic cleansing of Bangladesh’s Hindus. I’ve sat with highly placed officials who were close to trembling as they told me how they and their families would face violence or worse if their concerns became public. A credible fear that friends learned the hard way. Others have threatened me, barred me from the country for years, and now threaten to take away my visa unless I close my eyes to this anti-Hindu genocide. Several of my human rights associates in Bangladesh have been attacked or arrested. Another can’t return home safely. Senate and House anti-blasphemy law resolutions passed in December with overwhelming bi-partisan support called out Bangladesh as a major rights violator.

Many Bangladeshis are now using the cover of a pandemic to eliminate Bangladesh’s Hindus. Bangladesh imposed a COVID lockdown from March 26 through May 30. While social distancing and mask wearing were otherwise enforced; police and government looked the other way as mobs attacked Hindus: 85 multi-crime incidents in that 66-day lockdown period—murder, gang rape, religious desecration, and some that can be described only as anti-Hindu pogroms. None of them were prosecuted by Bangladesh’s government. No victims were saved, not even abducted children.

Americans have a special duty to help. We are the largest customers for Bangladesh’s exports, upon which their economy depends. US taxpayers fund their UN peacekeeping efforts that bring in millions of dollars monthly. The Biden Administration has put human rights back on our foreign policy agenda. If we can be strong against powers like Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and China; we can be equally moral with Bangladesh. The mere prospect of stopping the money flow will force a change and save lives, as it did when I was there during its 2007 coup. Urge your Senators and Representatives to support the anti-blasphemy resolutions when they are introduced again this year. Let them know that this is important to you and to how you vote. If you stop buying goods “Made in Bangladesh,” tell retailers why you’ve made that decision.

I know Bangladesh’s leaders well: They will not do the right thing because it is the right thing, but they will do the right thing if it is in their interests to do so. Until we act, people will continue being killed, raped, and their children abducted with no one seeming to care.

Dr. Richard L. Benkin is author of A Quiet Case of Ethnic Cleansing: the Murder of Bangladesh’s Hindus and editor of What is Moderate Islam?

How antisemitic is South Asian antisemitism?

Talk by Dr. Richard Benkin

Institute for the Study of Global Antisemitism and Policy (ISGAP)

Under the auspices of Dr. Navras Jaat Aafreedi

18 February 2021

https://isgap.org/seminar-series/antisemitism-in-south-asia-in-comparative-perspective/

Thank you, Dr. Aafreedi, my dear friend and colleague of many years. If anyone knows how important this topic is, you do. And understanding it is even more important today given the geopolitical significance of South Asia. With the shifting sands of self and national interests, we simply can’t afford to make assumptions about the essence of antisemitism in South Asia or what that means for action. Doing so misses the point and leads people to consider potential allies as enemies, as we will see later. Some assumptions and insights as we delve into this.

 ·        First, it would be a mistake to try and understand antisemitism in South Asia within the context of traditional Western antisemitism. To take a mild illustration, the few people who continue calling Chicago’s Maxwell Street “Jewtown,” do so despite decades of information that it offends Jews. And as a result of these decades of education (not to mention urban renewal), the expression has passed from popular speech; and take-out signs advertising a “Jewtown Polish” also are gone. But there’s no offense meant or taken at the many signs, store names, and such that identify Jew Town near the Paradasi Synagogue in Kochi, India. That’s not to deny their existence but rather to avoid potential pitfalls in our analysis, and to determine what should and should not be addressed and find the most effective way to address it.

 ·        Second, while our analysis doesn’t focus on South Asia’s religions per se, it recognizes the distinct nature of antisemitism among post-Judaic Abrahamic faiths (i.e., Christianity and Islam) vs. non-Abrahamic faiths like Hinduism.

 ·        Third, for context; we use the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s (IHRA) “working definition” of antisemitism: “Antisemitism is a certain perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jews. Rhetorical and physical manifestations of antisemitism are directed toward Jewish or non-Jewish individuals and/or their property, toward Jewish community institutions and religious facilities.” IHRA’s accompanying guide provides examples that include traditional anti-Semitic canards (e.g., Jews are more loyal to Israel or an alleged worldwide Jewish network than to their country). It also includes targeting the State of Israel with “double standards by requiring of it a behavior not expected or demanded of any other democratic nation.” That is, it doesn’t label all criticism of Israel as anti-Semitic, but it acknowledges that much of what masquerades as policy or politics is nothing more than a smokescreen for Jew-hatred.

 ·        And fourth, in drawing conclusions, I paint with a broad brush and base much on almost two decades of participant observation as a Jew in South Asia.

 So let’s begin. In the West, antisemitism’s origins—and continued existence—are based on theology and nationalism; both of which makes antisemitism the hatred that will not die.  In South Asia, antisemitism is essentially political, even if it sometimes has theological overtones; and that makes it something that either can be marginalized or eradicated among most. Two very different phenomena with very different staying power.

Western antisemitism developed organically from the strong hybrid soil of violent Roman imperialism and Christian religiosity; that makes it the hatred that will not die. Antisemitism in South Asia, on the other hand, was a foreign phenomenon grafted onto the cultures of the region.

 The Roman Empire was anti-Jewish long before it made Christianity its official religion; even waging anti-Jewish genocidal wars in the first and second centuries of the Common Era. And I use the word genocidal deliberately. The first war ended with the wholesale expulsion or murder of most Jews, especially their intelligentsia and other elites; Roman hordes burning and looting the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem; and the destruction of the Jewish/Israelite state. Sixty years later, the Emperor Hadrian visited the region and determined to eradicate all remaining things Jewish. He set up a new colony on the ruins of Jerusalem, Aelia Capitolina, and erected a Temple to Jupiter where the Jewish Temple had stood. That serious desecration helped spark the doomed Bar Kokhba revolt, which brought on the second military campaign; and ended with Rome killing, expelling, and enslaving more Jews and renaming Judea Syria Palestina.

 The Jews’ refused to do what other occupied peoples were compelled to do, that is, alter their faith and include Roman deities alongside Ha-Shem. That same fidelity to their faith also formed the basis of Christin antisemitism. In Why the Jews, (a great little book that I keep constantly at my desk), Dennis Prager and Rabbi Joseph Telushkin argue that Jews represented an existential threat to the early Church. Supersessionism, a key tenet of the faith then and for many now as well, held that Jesus as the son of God replaced or superseded Jewish law; that with Jesus, belief alone was sufficient, and there was no imperative to follow Judaic laws. But the Jews rejected that and as Prager and Telushkin wrote, “Jews, merely by continuing to be Jews, threatened the very legitimacy of the Church. If Judaism remained valid, then Christianity was invalid.” ‘Belief in Jesus alone was not sufficient,’ the Jews proclaimed simply by remaining Jews. For this new religion, now wedded to violent Roman imperialism that could not stand. Thus, the violent Jew-hatred in the writings of many revered fathers of the early Church.

 ·        St. John Chrysostom, whose appellation means “golden mouth,” used his ‘golden mouth’ to call “the synagogue… worse than a brothel [and] the refuge of devils.” He justified anti-Jewish violence in a way that Catholic historian Malcolm Hay said “would have been useful to the defense at Nuremburg.”

 ·        St. Ambrose of Milan established the principle that all damage done by anti-Jewish rioters had to be rectified and paid for by the Jews themselves; a tenet Joseph Goebbels imposed on Germany’s Jews after Kristallnacht.

 ·        The Gospel of John, the last gospel written, had Jesus rant to the Jews “You are of your father, the Devil, and your will is to do your father’s desire.”

 ·        St. Louis was an implacable antisemite who ordered Jews expelled from France after previously being only the second monarch to order that Jews wear a yellow badge, and ordered 12,000 copies of the Talmud burned.

 ·        Even “good” Pope John Paul II began beautifying rabid anti-Semite August Cardinal Hlond who in 1936 told the Polish people “So long as Jews remain Jews, a Jewish problem exists and will continue to exist… Jews are waging war against the Catholic church, [they] constitute the vanguard of atheism, the Bolshevik movement, and revolutionary activity. It is a fact that Jews have a corruptive influence on morals and that their publishing houses are spreading pornography.”

Even today’s New Catholic Dictionary has an entry on “Little” St. Hugh of Lincoln. In the 13th century, his nine-year-old body was found in a well, and England’s Jews were accused of killing him in a ritual murder. There were widespread anti-Jewish riots, and King Henry III himself took an active role, ordering 90 Jews arrested and held in the Tower of London. They were convicted of “ritual murder,” and 18 were hanged; the rest saved from execution some time later when embarrassed clerics intervened. And though ritual murder has been debunked as libelous and the cause of unjust suffering and death; this “NEW” Catholic Dictionary notes that, “Whether there was any truth in the accusation against the Jews, there is now no means of ascertaining.” Really! You mean it might be true? That crap keeps Christian Jew-hatred and the blood libel alive, and there’s even a boys’ school in Lincolnshire, England, named after Little St. Hugh. You know what they say: ”Teach your children well.”

South Asia is a different matter. Just outside the main worship hall of Kochi’s Paradesi synagogue is a room whose walls are covered with paintings that depict the arrival of South Asia’s first Jews after that first Roman genocide, 72 CE. Evidence supports the depiction, and there are anecdotal accounts of Jewish-Hindu interaction even earlier: Judean traders visiting India during King Solomon’s time and emigres arriving after the First Temple was destroyed in 587 BCE. As such, Judaism was the first foreign religion in India and so arrived there without the baggage of Roman and Christian antisemitism. In fact, Indians pride themselves on the fact that Jews never faced the bigotry and official hatred in India that they did in the West, other than the foreign/colonial imposition of the Portuguese Inquisition in Goa, which targeted Hindus and Muslims, as well as Jews.

 Yet, it would be wrong to say that there’s no antisemitism in South Asia today, but we’ll never understand its dynamics unless we throw away the prism of western antisemitism. Here are two illustrations of this disconnect.

 While preparing this piece, I found myself leafing through the pages of Mein Kampf, Adolf Hitler’s notorious autobiography and Jew-hating manifesto. I bought it in an open air market one night in Kolkata and recall how the vendor had no idea of the book’s place in the panoply of hate. He knew that Hitler led Germany to a string of “amazing” successes, as he put it, in World War II before going down to defeat, and that Indians fought alongside the British and against Hitler in that war. For many Indians, the “enemy of my enemy is my friend” mantra has them curious about this fierce opponent of their colonial oppressors. The Kolkata vendor also knew that Hitler “hated Jews and killed some” but couldn’t provide any context for what happened, any history that could have caused that phenomena, other than the fact that Hitler was a “bad man.” But that assessment, too, was a foreign import with little emotional content. The publisher, Jainco, also publishes Anne Frank’s Diary of a Young Girl. And while that makes little sense from a western point of view, there is no contradiction if we understand that South Asian antisemitism simply does not work the same way.

 I’ve also helped with recent discussions between the American Jewish and Hindu communities over a New York State Senate bill that recognizes the swastika as a symbol of hate; in effect, as something odious. It reads in part:

 As many of our youth are not aware of the hateful connotations behind swastikas and nooses, it is necessary for the legislature to mandate compulsory education in all schools across our great state in regard to the meanings of these two symbols of hate.

But the swastika is a Hindu religious symbol that predates the Nazis’ hateful appropriation by millennia; and it remains a treasured symbol in the Hindu religion. It’s said to bring good luck and well-being. So on roads throughout India—from New Delhi and Mumbai to remote villages—you see swastikas on car windows, none of them having anything to do with Nazism or antisemitism. Hindus are incensed about this attempt to declare their religious symbol hateful, and to teach that to their children no less. Consider: I am involved in protests to the Sri Lankan government over religious freedom violations, viz. forced cremations of Muslims; who like Jews, proscribe cremation. How different is that from forcing Hindu children to learn that their religious symbol is hateful. At the same time, like so many other Jews, I lost a lot of family in the Shoah, and have come to find it and the Nazis the most detestable of human scum; and as the crisis has heated up, I’ve been receiving emails from Jewish groups that show pictures of Indians wearing clothing or jewelry adorned with swastikas. These messages suggest that the images prove Indians view Hitler and Nazis with favor. It doesn’t do that, but it does show that we cannot understand the existence or lack of antisemitism in South Asia using the historical baggage that we in the West bring.

 I have not faced serious antisemitism myself in India, aside from some anti-Israel partisans; but I have encountered ignorance and stereotype. In 2009, for instance, Dr. Aafreedi arranged for me to give two days of talks at Lucknow University. On our way to the car after the second day, a young man in religious Muslim garb ran out of the Islamic Studies Center and invited us to come inside for tea, which we did. One person there was a journalist who writes in Urdu, the lingua franca of Indian Muslims. He and I had a rather animated debate over what he called “the occupation,” and as we were leaving, he said rather nonchalantly that “every Muslim child knows that the world’s media is controlled by eight Jews.”

 “Really.” I said. “Who?”

 “Rupert Murdoch,” he replied.

 “Not Jewish,” I said. “Next.”

 “Ted Turner.”

 “Ted Turner! I replied. “I don’t know if he even likes Jews!”

 Here was a journalist, an opinion maker and giver of information. Even he was ignorant about Jews, yet repeated bigotry as if it was accepted, common knowledge. And that ignorance, with a political overlay that people try to associate with religion, is at the heart of South Asian antisemitism.

 Back to the Goa Inquisition. Catholic Portugal imposed it on India about 15 years after Columbus arrived in America. Its focus was to root out “New Christians” who continued to practice their original faiths or elements of them. Though former Hindus and Muslims way outnumbered Jews, the Portuguese Inquisition in India, like its big brothers in Europe, held a particular animus for them. Portugal’s King Manuel I expelled the Jews in 1497, and many fled Portugal on trading ships. A lot ended up in India in large part because:

 ·       There was no native antisemitism in India, as there was in Europe and most of the lands they ruled.

·        India presented trading opportunities barred to Jews in Europe and elsewhere.

·        There was an old and well-established Jewish community not far from Portuguese-ruled Goa, in Kochi, that welcomed Jews and were ready to accept those forcibly converted to Catholicism back into the Jewish faith.

 Significantly, after the Inquisition was abolished in 1812, hostility toward so-called crypto-Hindus and crypto-Muslims remained in the Christian community there, but antisemitism largely evaporated. Again we see that antisemitism was a foreign import with no traction among Indians.

We do find a general ignorance about Jews in India, especially conflating being Jewish with being Israeli. In 2009, I was in Delhi to be the featured presenter at a seminar for lawyers who practice before the Indian Supreme Court. The event was held just across from that chamber, and I arrived to see a big sign reading:

“Jihad: The Jews response, Lessons for India. A talk by Dr. Richard Benkin, Noted Jew Thinker and Human Rights Activist.”

The conveners were well-educated people with a large imprint on Indian public life. Yet, even their level of knowledge is limited. They didn’t want the Jewish response to terrorism. Most Jews would find the notion of getting a single Jewish approach to anything, let alone this, hilarious and absurd. They wanted Israel’s response to terrorism; that is, why tiny Israel can do what giant India cannot. And here I am, an American citizen who has never been anything but an American citizen; but for most of the South Asians I’ve encountered, that also means Israeli. Antisemitism or what we might think is antisemitic in South Asia has two basic sources, ignorance and politics, but nothing as emotionally impactful as religion.

I also disagree with those who have been trying to identify Hindu nationalists as antisemitic or suggest that it’s inherent to their philosophy. That, too, is politics and reflects the writers’ distaste for Hindutua, the BJP (Bharatiya Janata Party), PM Narendra Modi, or conservatives in general. But there is an antisemitic strain there. Our group of Hindu and Jewish Americans puts on events like our “Hindu/Jewish Festival of Lights” celebrating Diwali and Chanukah, Recently, we were working on other events when one of our Hindu members, many of whom are Hindu nationalists, remarked on some push back by saying that “there are some in our community who are against working with Jews.” So that dislike is there, but third parties who have called out groups like the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) as endemically antisemitic are hoping to convince people of something that simply isn’t so. The RSS and other Hindutua groups have had me address their members regularly—and I am very openly and proudly Jewish and Zionist. Antisemitic individuals among Hindu nationalists? Yes, but no one has been able to provide anything but anecdotal evidence. It’s something to be watched and opposed, to be sure, but nothing organic to them.

Religious overtones do exist in South Asia’s Muslim-majority countries, but they’re secondary to politics and thrive on ignorance. Somewhere in the Bangladeshi legal system are government papers identifying me as an agent of Israel’s Mossad intelligence agency. There is no truth to it, and if real agents ever thought about the accusation, they’d probably find the idea rather humorous. But no one was laughing when they made the charge; and the Mossad accusation adds a sinister and dangerous dimension to my status in a region where conspiracy theories abound. In fact, one long time Bangladeshi colleague explained that “you can be sure to have a lot of supporters in Bangladesh, no matter what it is for, if you condemn Israel.” He also said that calling something “a Zionist plot” is a credible way to deflect criticism or cover failures.

Dr. Shadman Zaman, a 25-year-old Bangladeshi who moved to Israel, said he grew up surrounded by classic antisemitism, and with school books that taught ‘Jews are the mirror of Satan’ and ‘Zionists control the world.’” No doubt, but I never encountered antisemitism, unless it came from Islamists or foreigners (like the Iranians who picketed my presence with antisemitic tropes.) The one exception came from H.T. Imam, a close confidant of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina with a cabinet-level post. On March 10, 2015, human rights activist Rabindra Ghosh met with him about the persecution of Hindus. Imam dismissed the notion out of hand, so Ghosh noted my long standing activism and detailed documentation of anti-Hindu atrocities, Imam replied, “Dr. Benkin is working for the interests of the Jews,” and warned him not to meet with me in Kolkata as he planned. Mr. Ghosh, however, a longtime colleague, met with me, and handed over a thick dossier with evidence of government-tolerated persecution.

According to the B’nai Brit Anti-Defamation League (ADL), Imam is an outlier. Its 2014 poll of global antisemitism sampled 102 countries. Bangladesh was tied for 50th in overall antisemitism, squarely in the middle of the pack, besting both France and Greece. This distinction is not merely academic. Antisemitism is not embedded in the Bengali cultural narrative, though arguments used to demonize Israel contain antisemitic canards, and there is a significant Islamist element that actively promotes Jew hatred. Yet, the government while not taking action to combat or actively condemn it; doesn’t adopt or express those anti-Jewish attitudes even when criticizing Israel.

Pakistan did not appear on the ADL study; too difficult and dangerous to sample. And of the three South Asian countries, I admittedly know Pakistan the least. I do, however, work closely with its Pashtun, Sindhi, and Baloch minorities. Pashtuns claim descent from Ancient Israel’s Ten Lost Tribes, and other Pakistanis derisively call them “Yahud” or Jew. Doing so, one Pashtun colleague told me, is intended to make them less legitimate as Muslims. But again, while given a religious veneer, the phenomenon is essentially political. My colleague said he was raised with it being emphasized again and again (often with beatings) that a Muslim’s first and overarching loyalty was to the Muslim Ummah, and any attempt to strengthen other identities was contrary to being a good Muslim; and that “during childhood, I considered the Jews and all other non-Muslims as the worst enemy of Islam and Muslims and that Jihad should be fought against them.” That’s a pretty telling statement. Is there a lot of anti-Jewish prejudice? Yes, but only to the extent that it serves other, less particularistic, goals.

Yes, South Asia’s radical Imams give anti-Jewish sermons and polemics, and use the Quran and Hadiths to try to tie Jew-hatred to religious duty; but that simple reality is replicated globally. As long as these expressions of antisemitism remain largely the province of the extremes, they are no more reflective of the general population than were the Charlottesville, VA, marchers reflective of Americans when they chanted “The Jews will not replace us.”

So, what do we do?

1.     We leave our assumptions at the door and stop acting like expressions in South Asia mean the same things they do in the West.

2.     Education. As Dr. Aafreedi has noted, the abundance of ignorance about Jews breeds an abundance of antisemitic stereotypes. And no one has done the hard work for so long and effectively on this as Navras has. I wouldn’t even try to suggest anything more than referring to his substantial body of work.

3.     De-politicize things. Conflating Jews and Israel means identifying Jews as the villains of the conflict and for many, ties that to Muslim religious duty. And there is real reason for hope on this front.

Besides being the year of COVID, 2020 was a year of unprecedented change in the Israel-Arab cum Jew-Muslim conflict. There are so many reasons to celebrate the Abraham Accords by which several Muslim-majority countries embraced the Jewish state. But I believe their greatest achievement was de-coupling the religious conflict from the political one. In one early human rights battle, I freed a Bangladeshi Muslim journalist accused of blasphemy for urging relations with Israel. Charge him with treason or something else, if you want, but if you call it blasphemy, then more and more Muslim leaders are likewise guilty for having relations with Israel. And even the heart of Islam, the land where The Prophet trod, where Islam was born, we now know has some level of relations with Israel. If we stay that de-political course, will there still be antisemitism in South Asia and radical Imams spewing hatred toward the Jews? Probably; but fewer and fewer Muslims will see their stance on Israel as anything more than political.

Thank you.

US Senate, House, and US Commission Call Out Bangladesh as Major Rights Violator

This was to have been published in Bangladesh over a month ago but had to be moved to Assam and the US because journalists in Bangladesh face violent retaliation for criticizing the government. Facts mean less to the current government there than their own power does. Much thanks to my friends and colleagues at SindhuNews, their multi-religious Assam students; and especially Arjun Chowdhury and Shonu Nangia.

https://sindhunews.net/cultures-and-societies-sindhu-news-stories-and-information/call-out-bangladesh-as-major-rights-violator/

With Americans seemingly distracted from global events by the pandemic, the election, and the transfer of power in December; it is not surprising that many people likely missed recent events in Washington that will have profound consequences for US-Bangladesh relations and for the people of Bangladesh. The first blow came on December 9, 2020, when the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) released its study on blasphemy laws, Violating Rights: Enforcing the World’s Blasphemy Lawsin which Bangladesh was featured prominently. USCIRF was created by the 1998 International Religious Freedom Act to provide a source of verified information for the United States to use in formulating foreign policy. Its data and conclusions are authoritative and will impact pertinent US actions, including funding and trade, which are critical for the Bangladeshi economy. As if to confirm that, only days later, both the United States Senate and the House of Representative passed resolutions condemning blasphemy laws as “inconsistent with international human rights standards,” and calling for their repeal globally. Only six countries were singled out by name: Russia, China, North Korea, Indonesia, Pakistan, and Bangladesh. Pakistan and Bangladesh were the only countries mentioned in the resolution more than once.

The report and the resolutions represent a new approach for US policy-makers, as they explicitly reject the two major excuses by which Bangladeshi officials have tried to cover up their nation’s atrocious human rights record. For while USCIRF found that 84 countries still have blasphemy laws, it also noted that 81 percent of all cases where states enforced them came from Bangladesh, along with Pakistan, Iran, Russia, and six others. Is that the company where we should find a country that calls itself democratic? According to USCIRF, the answer is no, as its report notes. “Governments’ enforcement of blasphemy laws undermines human rights, including freedom of religion or belief and freedom of expression.” That, and the palpable fear of government-supported violence against minorities, dissenters, and their families, is a far cry from Bangladesh described in its constitution.

To help US policymakers and others make use of its findings, USCIRF noted that blasphemy laws often are hidden in other languages, but the words do not blunt their attack on free speech.  So, for instance, as I noted in my statement to the Commission, Bangladesh’s blasphemy laws exist in Section 295A of the Bangladesh Criminal Code, which according to the US State Department, criminalizes “statements or acts made with a ‘deliberate and malicious’ intent to insult religious sentiments.”The fact that the same government responsible for the ethnic cleansing of Hindus gets to decide on the accused’s intent signifies that the law is part of the authoritarian social control exercised Sheikh Hasina and her cronies. It gets even more ominous for democracy, as Section 99of the code empowers “the government [to] confiscate all copies of a newspaper if it publishes anything subversive of the state or provoking an uprising or anything that creates enmity and hatred among the citizens or denigrates religious beliefs,” violating press freedom as well. Nor has there been an attempt to clarify their provisions. Keeping them vague makes arrest and prosecution possible merely on the feelings of one particular individual who claims to be aggrieved. More from the State Department: “While there is no specific blasphemy law, authorities use the penal code aswell as a section of the Information and Communication Technology Act to charge individuals.” In other words, the United States has stopped falling for Bangladeshi claims of innocence.

Bangladesh was also among a handful of nations that USCIRF cited in the report for depriving the accused of due process, something I’ve witnessed all too often. There is overwhelming evidence of government-sponsored action preventing attorneys for minority victims from getting due process for their clients, and this includes a capital case in the constituency Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has represented for almost a quarter-century. Moreover, the USCIRF report cited Bangladesh as one of the worst rights violators in its use of mob violence against alleged blasphemers. Only Pakistan was tagged as worse, and the two countries together accounted for 57.35 percent of all such cases worldwide; a pretty astounding statistic. Tellingly, USCIRF cited a report by the international legal group, Open Trial, entitled, “Bangladesh’s criminal justice system incapable of providing justice.” It finds that “witness tampering, victim intimidation and missing evidence” are typical and make fair trials impossible with the primary victims being minorities, women and children, the poor and disabled. Along with many others, it notes that such abuses of the criminal justice system exist despite the high-minded words of Bangladesh’s constitution. This is critical because one of Bangladesh’s go-to responses when we identify its anti-minority violence is to cite the words of its constitution, but no one’s buying that anymore. Few people give that much weight against verified evidence of government-tolerated attacks on Hindus and others.

In my formal statement to USCIRF, I referenced my own study of anti-Hindu violence during Bangladesh’s first COVID lockdown period. It found that from April 8 to May 15, 2020, a mere 38-day period, at least twelve different cases were brought by the Bangladeshi government against Hindus who were accused of violating the Digital Security Act by insulting religious sentiments on Facebook. It turns out, the alleged insults were made by hackers, but the government took the accused minority victims into custody “based only on rumor, a single allegation with no attempt at verification, and other unsubstantiated evidence. Before their arrest, these minorities were attacked and otherwise brutalized, but police never arrested known culprits who were witnessed committing assault, arson, robbery, and other criminal actions. Instead, they arrested and held the minority victims under the Digital Security Act for offending the criminals’ religious sentiments! The incidents also involved indiscriminate attacks on the entire Hindu community with, again, the minority victims being the only people arrested.” By accepting the principle of censoring free speech, the Bangladeshi government opened the door to those abuses and is being seen more and more as the author of these violent acts.

I noted further that the same period saw, “15 incidents of Hindu temples desecrated or destroyed, along with other acts of anti-Hindu religious desecration; and even when victims complained and the perpetrators were known, the government refused to prosecute.” So, while blasphemy laws are inherently contrary to the principles of free societies, the current Bangladesh government does not even pretend to implement them in accordance with its own constitution that claims to guaranty freedom to all citizens. Moreover, it further demonstrates the dishonesty inherent in the government’s insistence that its official state religion is compatible with secularism. Nonsense!

Over the years, Bangladesh has gotten away with excusing its anti-minority actions by talking about the ideals that gave birth to it, claiming that the real culprits were non-state actors, or offering ridiculous excuses—and believe me, I have heard them all. I’m not sure which one is my favorite. Was it when a Bangladeshi ambassador claimed that all the missing Hindus had fled to India “to find better matches for their children” or when a former Home Minister claimed that the entire matter is no worse than the decline in union membership in the United States?

Both the Senate and House resolutions enjoyed wide bi-partisan appeal, passing unanimously in the Senate and 386-3 in the House. More than perfunctory resolutions, they call “on the President and the Secretary of State to make the repeal of blasphemy, heresy, and apostasy laws a priority in the bilateral relationships of the United States with all countries that have such laws.” If Bangladesh wants to protect its export markets and its participation in UN peacekeeping (which is funded to a large extent by US taxpayers), it needs to take those resolutions seriously and protect all its citizens from violent and anti-democratic forces. Words are no longer enough. There are efforts underway to pass similar resolutions in the new Congress and Senate, and others are working to take stop US funding of these atrocities through trade and support for Bangladesh as a UN peacekeeper with bi-partisan support.

No one is claiming to be the new “British Raj,” but if Bangladesh wants to protect its critical markets in the US and its role in UN peacekeeping, it would do well to take note of the extensive and well-documented USCIRF report and hearing, as well as the strong support for it among US lawmakers. As we just saw in the Middle East, bad actors who believe Americans are distracted from international events during this power transition, have made a fatal error. This year marks a half-century since Bangladesh’s War of Independence. What better time than that for the Bangladeshi government to usher in a new era that begins to realize the promises of that revolution!

Europe to Bengal: Jewish and Bengali Experiences with Genocidal Terror

Europe to Bengal: Jewish and Bengali Experiences with Genocidal Terror

Talk by Dr. Richard Benkin

Human Rights Congress for Bangladesh Minorities (HRCBM)

26 January 2021

 

There’s a debate going on in Israel right now following Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s nomination of former IDF general and cabinet minister Effi Eitam to head Yad VaShem. I’m not sure how many of you are familiar with Yad VaShem. It’s Israel’s memorial to victims of the Shoah, Shoah being the Hebrew and more accurate name for the Holocaust. Yad VaShem is also central to Israeli and Jewish identity and the best expression of grief and honor for the Shoah’s victims, alive and dead. Over the years, two understandings of the Shoah have emerged. The first, traditional use is that the Shoah was an historically unique event and though others suffered and died, it was essentially an anti-Jewish genocide. The second recognizes the Shoah’s historical uniqueness—and it really was unique in that there never was before or since a horror so planned and carried out on an industrial scale with the realistic aim of totally erasing an entire people. That goal was driven in part by the Nazis’ experience with non-Jewish Europeans, who did not fight their destruction of Jewry, who were complicit through inaction. When they euthanized mentally and physically disabled Germans, the public outcry forced them to stop. Not so when they started killing Jews so they kept up the killing. That lesson was not lost on the Nazis, and it should not be lost on us today.

The more current understanding also recognizes that the Shoah was primarily anti-Jewish—hardwired into Nazi ideology and practice. We acknowledge all its victims and, most importantly, apply the insights we gleaned from it to judging our own behavior. And I’m going to take a somewhat contrary view of things today—because if we overuse concepts like genocide, they lose their power and we lose the ability to understand what is happening and what we can do. So, for instance, although we talk about the Bengali “genocide” by Pakistan and its goons in 1971, there was no realistic expectation of wiping out all Bengalis. That’s a critical difference between the two. Yet, it would dishonor the victims of both atrocities to ignore their similar nature and human toll.

In recent years, the latter interpretation of the Shoah has been the ascendant one. We Jews know that we can’t stand by while others die, as all those “good Europeans” did while their Jewish neighbors were dragged away to their horrific fate. That understanding recognizes our obligation to make sure “Never Again,” the clarion cry that came out of the holocaust, means never again for anyone.

And that’s a great segue because, as a Jewish child growing up in the decades just after the Shoah, I always understood Never Again to mean that we would never again allow that to happen to us and also that we would not stand by silently while it happened to others. In both cases, it is how we apply it to ourselves as moral individuals who—unlike those who helped drive Nazi expectations—do care enough to take action. It is out of that moral imperative that I came to devote my life and attention to stopping the ethnic cleansing of Bangladesh’s Hindus—where, according to noted Bangladeshi Professor Abul Bakat and others, if unchecked, it will mean the total elimination of Hindus in Bangladesh before mid-century. Yes, the Shoah was uniquely evil, but if we fail to recognize and fight its echoes today, we risk becoming more unwitting accessories to genocide. Things can happen quickly, too, if we’re not paying attention to the antecedents of genocide, ethnic cleansing, and violent bigotry. Former US President Bill Clinton, for instance, has said on many occasions since leaving office that if he and other world leaders acted just a little more quickly, they probably could have saved an additional 300,000 lives in Rwanda. A brief moment of inaction can mean the difference between life and death!

I want to compare what is happening to Hindus in Bangladesh today to what happened in the Shoah—to be clear, not to equate them, but to compare them. As I noted before, killing off the Jews was an essential component of Nazi ideology and practice. A glance at the Bangladeshi constitution shows that—regardless of its lack of reality in practice—making Bangladesh free of Hindus does not track with the values of that nation. A huge difference that means we might one day see all Bengalis living peacefully together. On the other hand, we noted that if we don’t act forcefully and quickly, Hindus will be eliminated there. Significantly, the Nazis’ original goal was to eliminate Jews in Europe and grew globally only with their military and genocidal successes. They partially succeeded, too. On the eve of the Shoah, most Jews lived in Europe; today only nine percent do, and the number is not going back up again. That’s because even without Hitler and his gang, Europe’s not a very hospitable place for us, and that is such an important insight. While some people seemed to think that the holocaust also killed European Jew-hatred, the reality is that it never went away. People were just too embarrassed to be public about it after the Shoah. Not anymore. Violent antisemitism is the order of the day in much of Europe, whether disguised as opposition to Israel or out in the murderous open. For many in Europe, killing a Jew does not rise to the level of murdering anyone else, as in the Sarah Halimi case in France and many others. I wonder how long it will take before the remaining 1.3 million Jews either emigrate or die out, fulfilling the Nazis’ initial goal.

In other words, I believe that both Europe and the by-standing world missed one of the most important lessons of the Shoah; namely, that while the Nazis were awful people, they were not the main reason for the Shoah. The reason the Shoah could proceed is the many millions more who were complicit in it because they sat and did nothing; or rationalized their participation in it: from rabid Jew-haters in every occupied country’s militia, to people who drove the trains that took Jews to Auschwitz, people who were just fine taking over now emptied Jewish homes, and others who were part of the death machine in many ways. The Shoah is also a history of missed opportunity; of not taking advantage of ways to save lives: refusing to bomb the rail lines that carried boxcars of Jews to death camps, refusing to dock a shipload of Jews fleeing Europe and sending them back to their deaths, the allies’ decision at the infamous Bermuda Conference in 1943 to do nothing, and more deadly inaction.

So let’s move from yesterday to today, from what happened to what must be done. I’ve been fighting the ethnic cleansing of Bangladesh’s Hindus for more than a decade and a half. Since the partition of India in 1947, Hindus have gone from almost a third of the East Bengal population, to just under a fifth when East Bengal became Bangladesh in 1971, to about one in 15 today. Throughout that time, we have seen an unbroken torrent of anti-Hindu atrocities including murder, rape and gang rape, child abduction, forced conversion, religious desecration, land grabbing, and more. The Bangladeshi government would be right in objecting to my intervention—and they have in many ways and at many different times—by saying that minorities are attacked almost everywhere, including in my own, beloved United States. But I also learned a long time ago that in the human rights field, you have to take another step and ask what is being done about it. Is the government taking real action to stop it or allowing it to happen with a wink and a nod. Hey, we Americans don’t always get it right or get it done the first time, but we ACT! What is Bangladesh doing about its assault on Hindus?

Nothing! For decades those atrocities I referred to have be allowed to proceed without any action against the perpetrators, no matter which party is in power. That is, the killing or brutalization of a Hindu does not rise to the level of murdering anyone else. Sound familiar? In addition, to years of reviewing and vetting the data, I have experienced that myself in the cities and villages of Bangladesh. In 2013, for example, I visited a remote Hindu village in far northern Bangladesh soon after it was attacked by a mob whose Imam told them to rid the land of Hindus and build a mosque on the remnants of their homes.  I witnessed the aftermath you might expect: all the livestock were taken, all crops destroyed, homes and other things in ashes, and traumatized women and girls. That day and many other times, the attackers said they were coming back to “finish the job.” Yet, while I was there, a truck drove up with four Muslim police, who told me they get to the village as often as they can, something the villagers confirmed. Those police told the attackers they’d have to get through them first if they attack the village again. They also told me that they do this on their own time “because the government will do nothing.” I’ve spoken with police on the ground in villages and large cities, who told me that they could do something to stop the carnage but the government prevents them. Many are very discouraged by this, I can tell you. They see crimes being committed, and as law enforcers they want to do something about them but the government won’t let them.

Yet, when I raise this, the government denies its culpability, offering ridiculous excuses (like “Hindus have left Bangladesh to go to India to find better matches for their children”); angry denials that the evidence of our senses are wrong (“we’re a land of communal harmony and you’re causing the problems”); accusing the accuser (one former Home Minister responded that the United States is bad and what Bangladesh is doing to Hindus is no worse “lower union membership in the US”).

We are entering a new phase in what we can do, and it would be shameful if every one of us did not do what we can. There’s a new attitude about Bangladesh in Washington. Resolutions in the House and Senate last month called out Bangladesh along with Pakistan more than any other country for their use of blasphemy laws to undermine democratic values. The State Department is publishing unflattering information about Bangladesh now, and recent actions by the US Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) reflects that new attitude as well. Expect new initiatives this year that could prevail upon Bangladesh to change its ways or face serious handicaps to its economic well-being—but only if we continue the struggle unrelentlingly. It’s up to everyone to stay up on things and to actively support initiatives when they arise. And even if it’s not genocide, it does not have to be for us to be obligated to take action.

Let me add one more thing along those lines. I’m moving the picture so you can see my shirt. It shows support for the LGBTQ community and is germane here because it affirms that everyone must be able to live as who they are. And if we say that being lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or queer does not merit equal rights, or worse merits atrocity, we are repeating the history that we just condemned.

Thank you.

Bangladesh: “A rose by any other name is still blasphemy.”

Written statement to US Commission on Religious Freedom Virtual Hearing on Blasphemy Laws and the Violation of International Religious Freedom Wednesday, December 9, 2020

https://www.uscirf.gov/sites/default/files/Statement%20by%20Dr.%20Richard%20Benkin.pdf

Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights states: “Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.”

While few people champion an unrestricted right to free of expression, fewer still stand behind the use of state power to protect a citizen’s right from being offended by another’s words. In the United States, for instance, a country regarded by many correctly or not as a “Christian” nation, people freely produce products insulting to many Christians, all protected, not criminalized by the government. A notorious example was a painting of the Virgin Mary with elephant dung in a 1999 Brooklyn Museum exhibit. Attempts to ban it or sanction the museum failed, and a man who later defaced the work to redress what he considered an anti-Christian slur was convicted of criminal mischief for it. Laws that criminalize free expression as blasphemy are incompatible with free societies, and nations that only pose as such often continue persecution for blasphemy in disguise. In Bangladesh, the government hides behind high sounding words in a toothless constitution while sanctioning blasphemy in other guises. The use of blasphemy charges has become a major element of an oppressive social control in a country that hardly resembles the nation described in its constitution or by the nation’s father, Sheikh Mujibar Rahman.

I have been involved in two blasphemy cases there. The first was brought against a journalist for reporting on the rise of radical Islamism in Bangladesh and for suggesting that the nation recognize Israel. Actions since by many Muslim majority nations have shown that neither is contrary to Islam or blasphemous. The second was brought against an author for a book he wrote in a foreign country and which the Bangladeshi government had banned as blasphemous eight years before the charges were brought. The author, Salam Azad, claimed that the charges were retaliation for his exposing the illicit seizure of Hindu land by a senior official of the ruling Awami League. In both cases, the government was forced to quietly resolve the charges when they became known outside of the country. And that’s the key point: blasphemy laws are recognized as antidemocratic. The ruse enables Bangladesh to claim say it has no formal blasphemy law while still criminalizing free speech as blasphemy nonetheless.

Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina in 2013 very publicly refused radical calls for a new blasphemy law with draconian penalties, which would have become Section 295B of the Bangladeshi penal code. She did not, however, do anything about Section 295A, which according to a 2018 US State Department (State) report, criminalizes “statements or acts made with a ‘deliberate and malicious’ intent to insult religious sentiments.”

Moreover, the provision remains vague, and according to State, “the code does not further define this prohibited intent [and] the courts have interpreted it to include insulting the Prophet Muhammad….The law applies similar restrictions to online publications. While there is no specific blasphemy law, authorities use the penal code as well as a section of the Information and Communication Technology Act to charge individuals. [Emphasis mine.] The Digital Security Act, passed by parliament in September, criminalizes publication or broadcast of ‘any information that hurts religious values or sentiments.’” Do not be deceived: this amounts to blasphemy laws dressed up in new clothing. And it gets worse. All it takes is just one individual claiming to be offended in order to bring a case, which is what happened in the above noted prosecution of author Salam Azad. In that case, a self-described “Muslim activist” claimed Azad’s book, Bhanga Math (Broken Temple) “contained slanderous remarks against the Prophet Mohammed (PBUH) and Islam.” Azad faced prosecution for it and multiple disabilities even though his book was banned in Bangladesh and never appeared there. So, not only is the law flawed in its conception; its implementation is flawed as well. Blasphemous actions are never defined but remain vague enough to include just about anything that one person might decide to find offensive, as it takes only one aggrieved individual to bring the entire state apparatus down on the accused.

Blasphemy laws in Bangladesh also exist in Section 99(a-f) of the Code of Criminal Procedure that allows "the government [to] confiscate all copies of a newspaper if it publishes anything subversive of the state or provoking an uprising or anything that creates enmity and hatred among the citizens or denigrates religious beliefs. [Emphasis mine.]" Section 144 also lets the government prevent a journalist from going to his or her work place for the same alleged offenses.

Blasphemy laws are bad enough in theory, but their real impact is much worse. State and others frequently referenced the use of Bangladesh’s 2018 Digital Security Act as a de facto blasphemy law. Between April 8 and May 15, 2020, a mere 38-day period, at least twelve different cases were brought by the Bangladeshi government against Hindus who were accused of violating that Act by insulting religious sentiments. Prosecution and incarceration were allowed based only on rumor, a single allegation with no attempt at verification, and other unsubstantiated evidence. Before their arrest, these minorities were attacked and otherwise brutalized, but police never arrested known culprits who were witnessed committing assault, arson, robbery, and other criminal actions. Instead, they arrested and held the minority victims under the Digital Security Act for offending the criminals’ religious sentiments! The incidents also involved indiscriminate attacks on the entire Hindu community with, again, the minority victims being the only people arrested.

Blasphemy laws are retrograde enough, however, when they are coupled with a favored and official state religion as they are in Bangladesh, the laws are applied in a discriminatory manner as well. For instance, while the government is quick to prosecute those accused of offending followers of the official state religion; they refrain from doing so when other religions are defamed. For instance, during the same 38-day period referenced above when the government aggressively prosecuted Hindus for blasphemy, there were 15 incidents of Hindu temples being desecrated or destroyed, along with other acts of anti-Hindu religious desecration; and even when victims complained and the perpetrators were known, the government refused to prosecute.

Further, in Bangladesh, any discussion of blasphemy laws is subordinated to political considerations. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina reaffirmed this warped sense of priorities during open discussions with radical Islamists in exchange for the latter’s political support; something that many Bangladeshis call her “strategic compromise” with the terrorist groups. Since then, as she promised, there has been no consideration of repealing these ersatz blasphemy laws or challenging their bigoted implementation under her party’s rule.

People who care about human rights, freedom of religion and belief, and even basic standards of decency, must recognize the surreptitious transformation of blasphemy laws. As more and more countries find such laws anti-democratic and retrograde; blasphemy’s proponents will attempt to hide them in other language that, as we see in Bangladesh, continue to give blasphemy charges the force of law and the approval and connivance of the government. Don’t be fooled by words without action.

From 33% to 8% – The Vanishing Hindus of Bangladesh: An Interview with Richard Benkin

Originally published in SindhuNews December 10, 2020.

https://sindhunews.net/opinion-and-histories-sindhu-news-stories-and-information/bangladesh-india-hindus/

This interview of Richard Benkin about Bangladesh and its Hindu population has been conducted and transcribed by Prof. Shonu Nangia. Both Prof. Nangia and Dr Benkin have been nominated as visiting residents at Silchar’s The Northeast India Company in 2019-2020. Details about their residency and participation can be found at www.theneic.com

1.. How did you become interested in Bangladesh?

The simple answer is because someone asked. Quite a few years ago, a journalist there contacted me to ask for help in bringing Bangladeshis unbiased news about Israel. As a result of that contact, we worked together and made real progress—until he was arrested and charged with capital crimes of blasphemy and treason for urging Bangladesh-Israel relations and exposing the rise of radical Islam in Bangladesh. After successfully freeing him, I was able to get into Bangladesh where I heard about the persecution of Hindus. When I returned home, a Hindu whose family had fled to India faxed me and asked me to “please save us.” That’s when I started devoting my life to the Hindus of Bangladesh.

Until 2013, I was barred from entering the country, except the time mentioned above, which had me in Dhaka during the 2007 military coup. Since then, I’m in Bangladesh two or three times a year, thanks in part to the consistent support of Dr. Daniel Pipes and the Middle East Forum who recognize the link between our efforts. Thanks also goes to the Bangladeshi embassy in Washington whose principals always welcome me cordially, and who recently granted me a ten-year, multi-entry visa. They comprise a very professional group who give me hope for eventual resolution of this human rights atrocity.

2. What kind of hostilities, discrimination and violence have Hindus been facing in recent times in Bangladesh?

I scrutinized about 135 anti-Hindu incidents that took place during Bangladesh’s initial COVID lockdown, March 26 through May 30, figuring that if the government enforces social distancing and other restrictions but refuses to enforce them for attacks on Hindus, it would be clear just how committed that government is to eliminating Hindus and Hinduism. I have very strict standards for accepting an allegation, and even using them, I was able to confirm 85 multi-crime incidents specifically targeting Hindus in a 66 day period. In normal times, I might witness incidents myself, which qualifies an incident for inclusion. If I have not, however, which obviously is the case since COVID, I have to confirm the incident with two independent witnesses; additional sources help, too. I also analyze allegations based on my own knowledge of Bangladesh on the ground and general principles of reasonableness, consistency, etc.

The incidents in this study all were serious crimes, including murder, gang rape, Mandir destruction, child abduction, forced conversion, land grabbing, and more. And in all of these cases, the government refused to take any action against the criminals, sending everyone the message that you can commit anti-Hindu atrocities in Bangladesh with impunity.

3. Cities like Lahore, Karachi, and Dhaka were actually Hindu majority in 1947. In East Bengal (today’s Bangladesh) Hindus made up around 33 percent of the population even years after 1947. To quote your own words, “Hindus have gone from a third of the population in 1951, to a fifth in 1971, to between seven and eight percent today.” Why hasn’t the world taken note? Why has there been no outrage, not even in India?

The wall of indifference about this atrocity is formidable in blocking real change. There are several reasons for it. The first is that Bangladesh gained its independence as a “moderate” and “secular” nation, which was in contrast to the nation from which it broke, Pakistan. Even India helped the revolt, people tell me when they assert that Bangladesh is “good” to Hindus. This was so avidly accepted as an article of faith by the international media, human rights industry, diplomatic corps, and others that most of those same groups refuse to challenge it. Doing so would expose the fact that these “experts” were wrong and their mistake has cost millions of lives. For the most part, even overwhelming verified evidence cannot get them to question their cherished assumptions.

Another problem is that unlike China, Iran, Pakistan, and other bad state actors, the Bangladeshi government does not commit the atrocities directly. Rather it enables others to do the dirty work for them by refusing to prosecute or punish these criminals, and being far more likely to arrest the victims, as we saw again recently in Comilla. When we identify atrocities, the Bangladeshis then claim that these things happened outside of their control; and to the shame of the rest of the world, it accepts those lies. That also means that the atrocities in Bangladesh are given less attention than other real atrocities against minorities elsewhere.

The third dimension is ideological. Those who claim the mantel of human rights tend to focus their displeasure on democratic countries like Israel, the United States, and India. Their criticism tends to be uncompromising with an assumption that persecution of minorities in these three countries is endemic—a ridiculous assumption given how minorities have grown and flourished in those countries in clear contrast with the countries that surround them.

Finally, the lack of activism by the Hindu community also suppresses recognition of the problem. This includes most groups that have the temerity to remain silent and yet call themselves “pro-Hindu” or Hindu nationalist. As one US Congressman asked me: “We believe you, Richard, but if the situation is as dire as you say, why don’t we hear from our Hindu constituents about it?” Those four factors getting people and governments to stop anti-Hindu atrocities in Bangladesh an uphill battle that we must keep fighting regardless, until justice is secured.

4. You recently took up the issue of the ethnic cleansing of Bangladesh’s Hindu community with that country’s ambassador to the US. How did that go?

The current ambassador to the United States, Mohammad Ziauddin, assumed his duties in September 2014. His appointment represented a positive break from previous Bangladeshi ambassadors under this government. Ambassador Ziauddin is a professional diplomat with a broad perspective. I had my first meeting with him in July 2016, along with former US Congressman Bob Dold in an antechamber of the House Committee on Ways & Means. Ways & Means initiates all tax and other financial legislation and has jurisdiction over trade; so the significance of our having it there and the fact that Congressman Dold was a member of that powerful committee was not lost on the Ambassador.

During our meeting a fascinating and rare thing took place. During our talk, Ambassador Ziauddin admitted to Congressman Dold and me that, yes, Hindus are facing persecution in Bangladesh, but he added that the country is incapable of fixing the problem. Dold then said that we can help them fix it and offered that help. I have spent a lot of time meeting with high Bangladesh officials, and it is rare to hear the sort of honesty on this issue that came from Ambassador Ziauddin. To no one’s surprise, however, after this became known in Dhaka, the ambassador was “convinced” to change his tune, as he put it, “after further research.” So that meeting went very well, the ambassador’s retraction didn’t fool anyone on Capitol Hill. Since that time, the group at that Washington embassy has been cooperative, cordial, and professional with me; although officials in Dhaka generally respond to me with angry denials and blanket claims of Bangladesh being “a land of communal harmony.” Fortunately, privately and out of public view, several have told me a very different tale but fear reprisals if their admissions are ever discovered.

5. What effective measures can the Bangladesh government take to protect the Hindu population in Bangladesh from Islamist attacks and violence? Where has it failed?

The most effective measure is a simple one: apply the rule of law consistently and equally to all citizens; and the fact that no Bangladeshi government has done that is their greatest failure. Several international legal groups have emphasized that the rule of law is dead in Bangladesh; that is, you cannot look at anything on the books or in the constitution if you want to know what is happening to Bangladesh’s Hindus. Remember, the Bangladeshi government for the most part does not itself carry out the atrocities. Rather it enables them by refusing to prosecute and punish criminals who commit crimes against Hindus and other minorities. In other words, when it comes to Hindus, the rule of law is non-existent. While simple, however, this solution requires real commitment from the Bangladeshi government because the injustices it allows occur all over the country and every day. Any Bangladeshi official who knowingly allows anti-Hindu atrocities to occur without rigorous prosecution and punishment of all involved, must be prosecuted as an accessory to the crimes. And prosecution must include the influential and powerful people who fund and organize the attacks, not just the small fry who engage in them for personal gain. For it to work, that process must start with Sheikh Hasina or whoever is Prime Minister and cannot be overlooked no matter who the guilty parties are.

The government also must stop the atrocities it does carry out itself. One is in the maintenance and application of blasphemy laws, for which Sheikh Hasina and the Awami League have given full-throated support. Blasphemy laws must be repealed entirely and immediately. Punishing people for their words is contrary to the basic principles of a free country and of the Bangladeshi constitution as well. The other is arresting Hindus who are accused—almost always without evidence—of making anti-Muslim statements on social media. This is another way to use the law as an agent of oppression. All of these things together would send a signal to human rights abusers and the rest of the world that Bangladesh is serious about being a democracy; to do less sends the opposite message to the same people.

6. India and Bangladesh currently have very good relations. Under Sheikh Hasina, Bangladesh has been a friendly neighbor and a reliable economic and geopolitical partner for India. What can India do to help Bangladesh protect the Hindu minority there without triggering an Islamist backlash against Sheikh Hasina’s elected government which is often accused by the opposition BNP and Islamist groups of being pro-Hindu and too friendly towards India?

First of all, I think the question is premised incorrectly, with the false assumption that somehow the Awami League is better for Hindus than the BNP. Look at the use of the Vested Property Act to seize Hindu land; look at the number of severe attacks on Hindus; and you will see that, if anything, it’s worse now under Sheikh Hasina and the Awami League. If we fear a backlash and remain timid, with the false belief that the Awami League will lift a finger to save Hindus; then we are part of the problem, and Bangladesh’s Hindus will suffer for it.             

Now let’s ask this question: Which country benefits more from good India-Bangladesh relations? We know it’s not India. India is enabling Bangladesh’s water supply, which it can change if its cooperation also enables anti-Hindu persecution. India, if it had the will, wanted to could undercut Bangladesh in garment exports, which would severely cripple Bangladesh’s economy. Sheikh Hasina should send Narendra Modi a bouquet of flowers every day to thank him for not doing these things that it can. So, it is cowardly to talk about the good relations, and use that as an excuse for not acting to prevent the ethnic cleansing of Bangladesh’s Hindus.

7. What is the moral responsibility of India and the Modi Government towards Bangladesh’s Hindus? How can Indians be educated about this issue?

Let me start this way. What do you think Israel does when there is antisemitism? It does a lot of things in the background to use its power, but something it does very publicly is that it screams bloody murder. How much has India publicly accused Bangladesh of its attack on Hindus? In fact, I can tell you that Bangladeshi leaders will respond to a strong statement and action by India. Why hasn’t it happened? There was no stomach even to whisper an objection under the previous regime, however, I continue to wait for the current regime to take real action.

Having said that there is one significant action by the Modi government that could signal the beginning of a new Indian policy toward Bangladesh. That’s NRC/CAA. By including Bangladesh, it is the first time an Indian government has publicly acknowledged that Hindus face massive persecution in Bangladesh, and that’s a great thing. Beyond that, it needs to use its geopolitical heft and make a big thing about this everywhere: at the UN, with the United States, at every international forum, etc. If Bangladesh ignores that, India should take specific and severe action, such as seizing garment markets where Bangladesh holds sway, charging for allowing water to flow to Bangladesh from Indian rivers, etc. Whatever the specific action, India needs to take it as a core element of its national policy and international relations. PM Modi needs to tell PM Sheikh Hasina that he is holding her government responsible for what happens and will take the appropriate action if it does not stop.

As to your second question, we have to ask: Educate about what? Because I doubt that there are too many people in India who do not know that Hindus are persecuted in Bangladesh. In 2009, during the election, I met with BJP candidate L K Advani Ji and talked about this. His response was that the people of India must be informed about it; but neither he nor his supporters ever did; nor did anyone else, including groups that call themselves Hindutua, Hindu nationalist, or pro-Hindu. Shame!

8. What about forced religious conversions? Is that still an issue?

It remains a very serious issue. We encounter it regularly in cities and villages. Bangladesh is a country where forcible conversion to Islam is not a crime and will not be prosecuted. Yet, you can kill someone who has converted from Islam without being prosecuted. People will praise you for it and the government won’t even say that such murders are wrong, let alone take action about it.

There is at least one thing that the Hindu community can do. Many of the female victims, once raped and forcibly converted, believe with good cause that they will not be accepted back into their communities; that they will be looked at as if there is something wrong with them now. That’s terrible, and so many victims end up staying with their captors, remaining Muslims, because they have no other options.

If the Hindus communities, especially in villages where this problem is more severe, would make it clear that these women are victims and deserve nothing but support—and that they will be accepted as full and whole members of their Hindu communities; more women will flee from their captors and return to Hinduism and freedom.

9. What can concerned people in India do to help safeguard the human rights of the Hindus in Bangladesh and prevent thecycles of violence against them? Can everything be left to the government there?

Indians have to stop pretending. If Bangladesh’s persecution of Hindus is obvious to so many people half way around the world, does anyone really think it’s a mystery to people next door in India? I can’t believe that anyone is that stupid. There are several things Indians can do. First, since India is a democracy, citizens need to tell people running for office that the only way to get their vote is to take serious action in this matter and never to ignore it. Then, those same citizens have to make good on that and vote only for people who take the matter with the seriousness needed. And as citizens of a free country, they have no less right and obligation to demonstrate than did those Indians who protested the NRC/CAA in Shaheen Bagh.

Second, Indians need to do the same with media; that is, tell them you will not patronize those media who do not highlight this issue, who pretend nothing bad is happening, or who throw out a token article once in a while so they can say they’re doing something. And tell everyone you know to do the same, especially big media advertisers and the decision makers among them.

Third, Indians have to stop cooperating with Bangladesh so long as it is a human rights abuser. Don’t buy their products. Never, no matter what the excuse. Don’t engage in trade or commerce with Bangladesh until this stops. Lobby your governments (states and the center) to be very vocal about this, take specific actions, and make clear why. We should hope that Indian citizens, regardless of their religion or politics, would be equally involved in this effort, just as Hindus protested with Muslims in Shaheen Bagh. Don’t let any other Indians claim that they defend human rights as long as they turn their backs on the Hindus in Bangladesh. Challenge them; don’t let them get away with it!

10. Is the Islamization of Bangladesh a fait accompli, a done deal? Or is the process still unfolding? Can it be rolled back?

The word, Islamization, is problematic. Yes, Bangladesh is a Muslim-majority country with Islam as the official state religion that begins its constitution with the word Bismillah. While we cannot pretend that is not the case, we also must understand that the problem facing Bangladeshis is not Islam per se. That is a matter of faith; by itself, something personal. The problem is radical Islam or Islamists, who have gained a serious foothold in almost every major social institution in Bangladesh.That radicalization can be rolled back only if people care enough to do something and not just gripe about it.

Radical Islamists are being defeated all over the world and are squeezed into a few small pockets. World leaders have to tell Bangladesh that it has three choices: (1) It stops Islamists; (2) It asks other nations to help it stop Islamists, then together they stop Islamists; (3) The international community will take its own actions to stop Islamists. That is, it can be rolled back, but the rest of the world has to stop letting the Bangladeshi government treat Islamists as just another vote bank.

*Bio: Richard Benkin is an American author, human rights activist and a sought-after writer and speaker.  His book, “A Quiet Case of Ethnic Cleansing: The Murder of Bangladesh’s Hindus,” provides verified evidence of anti-Hindu atrocities in Bangladesh, the government’s complicity in them, and the rest of the world’s deliberate silence about it. He has been called a “one-man army” for his human rights work which include efforts such as helping free a Muslim journalist who was imprisoned and tortured for writing favorably about Israel, helping people escape terrorist violence, arranging armed protection for a Hindu temple under attack, and more. He is one of the foremost fighters upholding the cause of Bangladesh’s Hindus, helping to get a reluctant world to recognize the tragedy. In 2016, he confronted the Bangladeshi government with evidence of the crimes, got it to admit culpability, and is working with both Washington and Dhaka to resolve the matter. He travels to affected hotspots to comfort victims, confront miscreants–including government officials, and gather evidence of human rights abuses. He has given briefings to the US State Department and influential members of government on Capitol Hill and has had extended discussions with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. He recently gave addresses in both India and Bangladesh on human rights, geopolitical dynamics, and the actions of major powers.

He also works closely with Pashtun, Baloch, and Sindhi activists to verify and make known the human rights atrocities by the Pakistan government against them and shares findings with the US State Department. In 2019, he and a group of Pashtun activists visited Buchenwald concentration camp to stand together for justice.  In “What is Moderate Islam,” he brings together Jewish, Hindu, and Muslim voices to help end non-productive and inaccurate polar thinking that either calls all Muslims jihadis or refuses to critiquepolitical Islam.  Dr. Benkin holds a doctorate from the University of Pennsylvania, has held a number of faculty and business positions, is on a number of boards, and regularly serves as an expert witness in U.S. asylum cases involving South Asian refugees.

Richard Benkin's Speech to IRF Side Event

By Dr. Richard L. Benkin

Delivered November 20, 2020.

INTERNATIONAL RELIGIOUS FREEDOM ROUNDTABLE SIDE EVENT ON BANGLADESH

For decades, Bangladesh has gotten away with atrocities against Hindus and other minorities in an effort to rid the land of non-Muslims first, and ultimately those Muslims who do not practice their faith in a way acceptable to the government and its radical allies. If we do not stop enabling this, it will mean the end of Hindus in Bangladesh, and signal radicals everywhere that we will not oppose their ethnic cleansing anywhere.

 Bangladesh’s ability to engage in ethnic cleansing without facing sanction or even approbation for it represents a dismal failure of those nations and organizations that consider themselves to be the defenders of human rights. That must stop of we will be like those “good Europeans” who closed their shutters so they wouldn’t have to see their Jewish neighbors being taken to Nazi concentration camps.

 Five major factors keep up this cowardice:

 1.      Governments, international media and pundits, the human rights industry, and others saw Bangladesh as a new kind of Muslim nation when it rebelled from Pakistan in 1971: democratic and moderate, with leaders who guaranteed minority rights. Of course, those elements were true on paper only, and those experts are committed to maintaining the narrative or be forced to admit how “un-expert” they are.

2.      Unlike Pakistan, China, and others, Bangladesh does not do it themselves, but rather empower even reward others and refuse to prosecute these crimes against Hindus. Those experts seem incapable of making this conceptual leap (did I say leap, make that conceptual baby steps), and allow the Bangladeshis to believe they can fool us.

3.      The third is ideological: an obsessive focus on India and other democracies where minorities flourish despite challenges, where the law is actually implemented; to the exclusion of real atrocities in Bangladesh and other South Asian countries.

4.      People who continue to act against the fact by pretending that the Awami League is any better in this regard than the BNP. It is not, and Professor Abul Barkat, mentioned earlier demonstrated that both are equally guilty of stealing Hindu land based on the Vested Property Act. If anything, it is worse under Sheikh Hasina and the Awami League.

5.      The lack of activism by most Hindus. As one US Congressman asked me: “If the situation is so dire, why don’t we hear from our Hindu constituents about it?”

And one more obstacle to justice: people who believe that words are an adequate substitute for action.

So, how do we change this?

First, understand that the Bangladeshi government will never do the right thing simply because it is the right thing; to assume otherwise is naïve. But it will do the right thing if we make it in its interest to do so, or more to the point, we make it contrary to its interests not to do the right thing.

While Bangladeshis are rightly proud of their economic success, graduating from the category of least developed countries, their economy remains inordinately dependent on one thing—garment exports—and we hold the key because Americans are their best customers. No retailer wants to be seen by the public as supporting ethnic cleansing, and while purchase decisions are non-governmental, the US government has the moral duty to publicize Bangladesh’s complicity in the murder of millions, especially since they already have the data. They just need to place justice ahead of politics and prestige. I appreciate the presence of State Department and USCIRF today. Unfortunately, both USCIRF and the State Department are supposed to highlight these things but both have been incomprehensibly timid in forcing Bangladesh to face the consequences of its action. 

Additionally, I refer to the interfaith letter just sent to our ambassador in Dhaka, with Senate and House copies, to defend human rights attorney, Rabindra Ghosh, who has been beaten again for representing his minority client; trying to get simple due process. I want my government—the government and country I love, the country and government with which I am associated—to take the appropriate action and not ignore this crime as it has too frequently in the past. Let the Bangladeshis know their best customers are having doubts about their integrity so they act to protect their interests. That would be a good start—securing justice in one case and initiating a new era in stopping the greater injustice.

After that, it’s up to the rest of us to let retailers like Walmart know that it is supporting murder and that we won’t. Not a boycott, but moral decisions made by informed consumers. How many people here, concerned though you might be, are wearing garments with the label, “Made in Bangladesh.” By not doing that, you can make a difference that will save lives!

It’s no coincidence that today is the 75th anniversary of the Nuremburg Trials of Nazi war criminals. Let’s see if our government can be true to its lessons by doing at least this much.

 Thank you.

Less than three weeks away US elections still unclear

By Dr. Richard L. Benkin

Originally published in the Daily Asian Age (Dhaka), October 18, 2020.

https://dailyasianage.com/news/244737/less-than-three-weeks-away-us-elections-still-unclear

My 17 September Daily Asian Age article on the state of the US elections emphasized the still uncertain outcome. A little less than a month later, they're still not clear, but some definite trends appear to be emerging. Although, as I noted in my last article, polls have been notoriously inaccurate in measuring President Donald Trump's support;

many commentators see the race so clearly tilted in favor of former Vice President Joe Biden that they believe the gap is too large for the President to close it in the time remaining. Since 2016 pre-election measures and predictions almost uniformly predicted a Hillary Clinton win, many wonder if we are seeing the same "Trump effect" in 2020. The Presidential contest, however, is not the only one this year, and this article looks at races for the United States Senate.

The United States Constitution provides for three co-equal branches of government that are to act as "checks and balances" on one another provide layers of protection against autocracy. The Executive Branch is comprised of the President, Cabinet Members, and agencies under their direction; its function is to enforce the law. The Legislative Branch, is a bi-cameral or two chamber body, the Senate and the House of Representatives; its function is to pass legislation or make the law.

The Judicial Branch contains the court system, sitting on top of which is the nine-member Supreme Court; its function is to interpret the law and at times rule that actions of either of the other two branches are null and void because they are contrary to the US Constitution. The Senate is the "senior body" of the Legislative Branch.

Here's why the Senate races are even more important this year. Getting a law passed in Washington almost always requires that both the House and the Senate pass it and that the President signs it.  Usually, the House and the Senate will pass their own versions of the bill, after which it goes to a "conference committee" that negotiates a final bill, which is then passed by the Senate and House separately before going to the President for his signature. If the President does not agree, he can veto or reject the bill, which then goes back to the legislature where by two-thirds of both the Senate and the House have to pass it to override the President's veto.

I like divided government where by each major party controls at least one of those three bodies. Divided government helps keep one party from imposing its agenda and philosophy on the nation. Divided government also forces the parties to "sell" their programs in the marketplace of ideas to the American people who only periodically give either party control of all three of those bodies.

The last US President whose party controlled both houses of Congress during his entire term was Democrat Jimmie Carter from 1977-1981.It's instructive given that power monopoly, many Americans consider Carter's presidency among the most ineffective. Moreover, he was resoundingly rejected in his re-election bid; and the next two Presidents, Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush both Republicans, ruled without their party's control of either the House or Senate during their entire tenures. Republican George W. Bush had a Republican controlled Congress twice, due in part to national unity after the 9/11 attacks.

Bill Clinton, Barack Obama, and Donald Trump had it only once each. Right now, Democrats control the House, Republicans the Senate; and President Trump is a Republican. No credible model suggests that Republicans will win control of the House this election; and with the possibility of Republicans losing the White House, Republican control of the Senate could be our only chance for divided government.

Senators can serve for an unlimited number of six year terms, compared to House members whose terms are only two years. On a rotating basis, one third of the Senate is up for re-election every two years. This year, 34 states are voting for a new Senator or to return the current one to office, most of which are not competitive. For instance, in Massachusetts, pollsters predict that Democratic Senator Ed Markey will defeat his Republican challenger, Kevin O'Connor by 34.1 percentage points.

Similarly, in Idaho, Republican Senator Jim Risch is expected to defeat Democrat Paulette Jordan by 21.3 points. After reviewing most major polls, especially those with a track record of accuracy and a lack of political bias, as well as other sources; I feel confident in saying that the outcome eleven of those 34 races appear to be in doubt to small or larger extents.

Senate seats in Arizona. Georgia, Iowa, and North Carolina, all currently held by Republicans, are rated as even or leaning toward the Democrat. (When a pollster says a race is leaning toward one party, it signals a tight race with no clear leader). In general, Arizona has become difficult to peg for either party, and the Senate race is trending toward the Democratic challenger.

I see former astronaut, Mark Kelly, picking up that seat for the Democrats. If President Trump has a strong showing in Arizona, Republican Senator Martha McSally still might eke out a win; but I do not consider that likely. Georgia remains more closely tied to Republicans, and I believe Iowa Republican Senator Joni Ernst retains strong support in this farm state, next door to my own.  Similarly, Michigan is getting tight, but I believe its Democratic history will keep that seat from falling to Republicans. North Carolina is tough to call.

Sexual scandals involving the Democratic challenger have not moved the polls toward Republican Senator Tom Tillis as much as initially expected, and I believe this race will hinge on who carries it in the Presidential contest. If I had to pick a winner, I'd provisionally go with Tillis. Republican held seats in Alaska and Montana, rated as leaning Republican, should remain as they are. Many people are beginning to suggest that South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham-one of the most powerful people in Washington-might be ousted.

I don't think so, but if he is, take it as a sign that Democrats will have a big night. Former Colorado Democratic Governor John Hickenlooper is slightly ahead of incumbent Republican Senator Cory Gardner, and I believe Hickenlooper will grab the seat. Longtime Maine Republican Senator Susan Collins also seems headed for defeat, however she has survived serious challenges before. And, finally, former football coach Tom Tuberville is well on his way to taking back Alabama's Senate seat for Republicans.

Headed into the elections, Republicans held a 53-47 advantage in the Senate but had to defend 22 of the 34 seats decided next month. My current projections would have Democrats picking up Republican seats in Arizona, Colorado, and Maine, and Republicans taking Alabama from the Democrats. That means a net pick up of two seats for Democrats, which would leave the Senate under Republican control, even if former Vice President Joe Biden wins the White House and gives his party the tie-breaker in a 50-50 vote. As I did two years ago, I will re-visit these predictions after the election to see how well I did.
 
The writer is an American scholar and a geopolitical expert.

Only seven weeks away US elections still unclear

By Dr. Richard L. Benkin

Originally published in the Daily Asian Age (Dhaka), September 17, 2020.

https://dailyasianage.com/news/241547/only-seven-weeks-away-us--elections-still-unclear

If you want to understand what's happening with the US Presidential election, you need to know three things before setting out on that journey. The first is that anyone who says they're certain who will win, President Donald Trump or former Vice President Joe Biden, is either delusional or dishonest. The second thing is that almost every statement coming out of the US about who might win and why is colored by a prism of partisanship; so take care before accepting what you are told as fact.

You will notice I said "almost every statement," and this article is designed to fall in that small "almost all" group. The third insight is that even pundits and pollsters, whose job it is to predict elections, have acknowledged that traditional methods for predicting election outcomes have limited value in 2020. As one of those experts put it, "All models are wrong, some are useful, many will be misinterpreted."

Mr. Shoeb Chowdhury's recent Asian Age article did a good job of giving readers specifics about how US elections work; for instance, that the overall popular vote does not determine the winner but electoral votes, based on the popular vote in each state, do; and that determines each candidate's strategy. Of the five states with the most electoral votes, three of them (California, New York, Illinois) are reliably Democrat. So much so, for instance, that in the last election, voting in Illinois ended at 7pm, and the state was called for Hillary Clinton before 7:01; and because of US demographics, Democrats tend to carry them by large numbers.

In 2016, Hillary Clinton became the fourth person to win the popular vote but lose the election because her opponent, Donald Trump, won the majority of electoral votes. But if you remove California from the equation, the largest state in the US, Trump wins the popular vote as well. In other words, it doesn't matter if you win a state by one vote or ten million; the winning candidate's electoral vote total is the same.

The Electoral College (EC) was a compromise reached after the American Revolution (1775-1783) between those who wanted to maintain something akin to England's Parliamentary System, whereby Congress would select the President, and those who wanted a more comprehensive break from the English system and called for direct, popular election. The EC was an acknowledgement that citizens' interests and values are affected by where they live and that the people in different parts of the country have different values and priorities.

That was when the United States was comprised of only 13 states, all running along the eastern seaboard from New Hampshire in the north to Georgia in the south. If the founders recognized that much variation then, imagine the diversity in today's United States of 1/3 billion people in a land mass larger than all but two nations (Russia and Canada). I like the Electoral College because it is a check against the tyranny of the majority. As one US Senator from a rural Midwestern state told me, "We don't want a bunch of people in New York and Los Angeles telling us what to do." His sentiment reflected a streak of independence and self-reliance that is a core American value, and their fear of more intrusive government favored by many citizens in large coastal cities.

Given that, the reality is that most states have little chance of being competitive. Before the election even starts, we can be almost 100 percent certain that 21 states with 163 electoral votes will go to the Republicans, and 14 states plus Washington, DC, will give their 187 electoral votes to the Democrats. That means that 15 states with 188 electoral votes are where the election will be decided: Arizona (11); Colorado (9); Florida (29); Georgia (16); Iowa (6); Michigan (16); Minnesota (10); Nevada (6); New Hampshire (4); New Mexico (5); North Carolina (15); Ohio (18); Pennsylvania (20); Virginia (13); Wisconsin (10). A President needs 270 to be elected, which means Biden needs to 83 votes from that group, Trump 107.

Some of those states, such as Georgia and New Mexico, are less competitive than the others. We should recall, however, that Donald Trump won in 2016 in part because he was able to surprise Democrats in Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin and capture their 46 electoral votes. Prior to 2016, the last time Pennsylvania or Michigan went Republican was in 1988, carried by President George H. W. Bush; and Wisconsin had not gone Republican since President Ronald Reagan carried it in 1984. But 2020 is a different year, and Democrats will not be surprised in those three states again.

They are putting a huge effort into capturing votes there, which they did not do in 2016. Biden has maintained small to moderate polling leads in those states, however, momentum has been moving clearly in Trump's direction.Pollsters also are admitting that Trump voters are difficult to poll. As a top Republican finance chairs told me, when asked, Democratic voters tell pollsters for whom they plan to vote, but Trump voters refuse. So pollsters move on to someone else, which skews the numbers.

My original home state is Pennsylvania where I got my political "baptism of fire." Joe Biden was born and raised in the Pennsylvania town of Scranton, and he always has had strong support in the Keystone State. If that support helps return Pennsylvania to the Democrats, Biden will need only 63 of the remaining 168 electoral votes in those so-called swing states. With about seven weeks until the election, it's still a tough call, but I would advise readers to watch Florida and Ohio (47 votes).

If Trump starts pulling ahead in both of those states, he will have a clear path to re-election. With Georgia and Iowa (22) shaping up to be less competitive than originally thought, he'll need to find only 38 more electoral votes out of 119 remaining, and could lose one of the three states that put him over the top in 2016. But that's if he pulls ahead in Ohio and Florida. No Republican has ever been elected President without carrying Ohio and Trump will need both states to win again. Biden could lose both; and with New Hampshire, New Mexico, and Virginia (22) looking more likely to go for him, he'll need 61 of 119 remaining electoral votes. But again, this race is really undecided at this point.

COVID-19 threw the election into disarray. Before the pandemic, Trump appeared headed to an easy win with the economy hitting all-time highs and the country virtually free of unemployment. But the pandemic changed all that, and many people have criticized the way that the Trump Administration handled it. Then came the police murder of George Floyd and general agreement that we had to fix the way our justice system treated people of color.

At that point, things started looking better for the challenger. The US, however, has experienced many periods when citizens identify problems with our democracy, the most notable in recent times being the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s and 1970s. With the exception of our Civil War (1861-1865), we have addressed the problems and made our country better with the tools in our Constitution and democratic traditions.

Thus, when many protests turned violent, and Democratic run cities did not crack down on the lawlessness; there was a reaction. Trump emphasized his commitment to law and order, and opinion started moving in his direction again. More recently, people have become aware of the Trump Administration's major foreign policy victories-from peace in the Middle East to putting the brakes on Chinese expansion. While foreign policy generally has less impact on US elections, it remains to be seen if it makes a difference to enough voters in critical EC states.

Make no mistake.This election is about Donald Trump, with Joe Biden being a secondary character in the drama. A recent poll asked voters whether they were voting for their candidate or against his opponent. Eighty-three percent of Trump voters said they were voting for their candidate, as opposed to only 59 percent who said they were voting for Biden. And that's the best way to understand this election. As one Democratic strategist said, dismissing the importance of those numbers, "Democrats hate Trump more than cancer." I expect that was hyperbole, but it made the point that Democrats' anti-Trump vote is as strong as Republicans' pro-Trump vote.

SOMETHING TO CONSIDER, 2004. Going into the 2004 election, President George W. Bush was unpopular with a lot of Americans, in large part, because of the Iraq War. But it seemed to most people that the only message of the campaign against him by Democratic nominee John Kerry was, 'I'm not Bush.' It wasn't enough and Bush was re-elected to a second term. Are we seeing something similar in 2020?

So while the election remains too close to call, we can go into its final weeks with more than how we feel about Donald Trump. Will the momentum in the next several weeks work for him or his opponent?  Let's look again in October.


The writer is an American scholar and a geopolitical analyst.