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Selasa, 20 April 2010

Hindu (Dalits) demand their rights in Sindh , Pakistan

Source http://www.centralasiaonline.com
Tuesday,April 20,2010
Pakistan has nearly 4m Hindus, 75% of whom are Dalits. About 70 Dalit families have moved from Aakli to the plains near Mithi, where they are protesting the abduction of their women and demanding security.

THARPARKAR, Pakistan Long accustomed to discrimination, Pakistan's Hindu Dalits are fighting a new form of harassment that is driving them from their ancestral villages in the Tharparkar District of Sindh.

About 70 Dalit families have left to protest the growing incidence of kidnapping of their young women. The kidnapping typically leads to rape or forced conversion to Islam and marriage.

That fate befell a 15-year-old Dalit girl, Daya, recently, the Dalits say. Kidnappers snatched and forcibly converted her, after which a local Muslim landlord, Mumtaz Hangorio, married her, said Arjan Meghawar, a Dalit.

"Daya ... was kidnapped when the entire family was asleep", he told Central Asia Online. "They were told that she converted to Islam in a local madrassa".

Her family have been unable to see her, he said, calling that situation typical for the families of such kidnapping victims.

"The kidnappers have ordered the Dalit community to stay quiet; otherwise, they will abduct more girls", Meghawar said.

He rejected the claim that the girl converted voluntarily.

"First, Daya is only 15", he said, "which means she is not legally eligible to marry; second, she was not produced in any court to record her statement in this regard". The minimum age for marriage in Pakistan is 16.

Daya was the second Dalit girl victimised by men from the majority community, according to the Dalits. Local men kidnapped and gang-raped Kasturi, 17, on January 24, said Veerjee, head of the Kohli Association.

The abductors are "local bigwigs belonging to the ruling Pakistan People's Party, who are now issuing threats to keep the Dalit community silent", he said.

Kasturi's parents have paid a price for disregarding such threats and complaining to the police, he said; even the police are now harassing them.

"Even though (rape) is a nonbailable offence", Veerjee said, "the local court granted bail to the accused". Kasturi and her family had to flee their village because the suspects threatened them, he added.

Section 365-B of the penal code allows only higher courts, not local ones, to grant bail to those suspected of "kidnapping ... any woman" with forced marriage or sexual intercourse in mind, Arshad Malah, a legal scholar, told Central Asia Online.

Fed up with injustice and fearful for their safety, the fleeing Dalit families (about 400 individuals) have abandoned the village of Aakli and relocated to the plains near Mithi, said Hot Chand Toghani, a social activist with the Thardeep Rural Development Programme.

The government could do more to help them, he said. It has only "distributed 100 application forms for the Benazir Income Support Programme (BISP)", he told Central Asia Online.

The government is doing its best to protect the Dalits, replied Shaarjeel Memon, a member of parliament representing Tharparkar from the ruling party.

"The district government has been directed to establish houses for them and provide food and water", he told Central Asia Online. "They'll be receiving aid money from the BISP very soon. We are trying to convince them to end their protest and return to their villages".

That idea doesn't sit well with some aggrieved Dalits.

"No one can imagine how difficult it is to leave one's ancestral village", said 70-year-old Mehendero Meghawar. "But we've decided not to go back".

Kidnapping brides from the Dalits and forcibly converting them are common abuses, said Sono Khangharani, a Dalit social worker who pins the blame for such acts on local landlords and other influential residents.

"The Dalits are the poorest of the poor and are discriminated against daily, even though the Pakistani constitution promises equal rights to all", he said.

Khangharani is the first Dalit to receive a governmental award. President Asif Ali Zardari named him a recipient of the Thamgha-e-Imtiaz civilian honour in August 2009.

Pakistan has nearly 4m Hindus, 75% of whom are Dalits.

Dalits encounter discrimination from both Muslims and higher-caste Hindus, Khangharani told Central Asia Online. The Dalits' "untouchability" bars them from accessing public places.

"Neither Hindu nor Muslim barbers will shave Dalits or give them a haircut", he said. "Hindus and Muslims won't eat food prepared by the Dalits, either. Such practises concerning untouchability are very common in Sindh".

Islam not only forbids forced conversion and forced marriage, it mandates equal treatment of all religious minorities, said Mufti Wali Khan Almuzaffar, a prominent Islamic scholar. Islam has no concept of untouchability and the idea of an untouchable social class comes entirely from tradition and myth, he added.

Rabu, 24 Maret 2010

Ignorance and foolishness leads a Hindu to sacrifices his daughters, self to please goddess , Pakistan

Source http://www.nation.com.pk
Wednesday,March24,2010


MIRPURKHAS - A priest of Kali Mata temple slaughtered his three daughters before killing himself as a sacrifice to appease the goddess inside the temple at Mirwah Gorchani area, District Mirpurkhas, on Tuesday.

The temple where this gruesome incident took place is located on the first floor of Tekamdas Meghwar’s house in Bhemomal Colony at Mirwah Gorchani Town.

Tekamdas Meghwar first slaughtered his three daughters Parwati, 6, Rena, 4 and one-year-old Aarti with a sharp-edged weapon, and then killed himself to give sacrifices to please the Kali Mata goddess.

Moulchand, brother of Tekamdas Meghwar, told the newsmen that his brother was a Hindu priest and he was worshipping whole nights to please the goddess.

He said that the deceased brought different things such as flowers, oil, etc., for worship. He further said that Monday night was the Navaratri night for worship and Tekamdas worshipped throughout the night and early morning. He slaughtered his three daughters and raised slogan Jeay Kali Mata before committing suicide by a sharp-edged weapon.

Panic gripped Mirwah Gorchani Town, when the news spread. Hundreds of residents gathered at the spot.

Heavy contingent of police headed by Rasool Bux Thaheem, SHO taluka police, rushed to the spot and shifted the bodies of the slain girls and their father to Rural Health Centre Mirwah Gorchani for autopsy.

Former provincial minister Hari Ram Kishori Lal and DPO Mirpurkhas Muneer Ahmed Sheikh also reached the spot and met with heirs of the deceased and got information about the incident.

Rasool Bux Thaheem said that after postmortem of the three children and their father, the bodies had been handed over to their heirs while clothes of the deceased and fingerprints were also taken for investigation.

A Hindu Bhagat Ashok told newsmen that act of Tekamdas was foolish and giving sacrifice of even animal in Hindu religion was illegal.

However, no report of this incident was lodged till filing of this report.

Rabu, 10 Maret 2010

Pakistan’s ‘minority women’ seek equality

Source http://www.cathnewsindia.com
Wednesday,March10,2010
Girls staging a performance at the Caritas Lahore-organized event
Lahore : Church workers in Pakistan have demanded equal rights for women from minority communities who are largely ignored for being poor and non-Muslim.

Several Church-run seminars highlighted the plight of women to mark International Women’s Day around the country yesterday. Speakers urged participants, mostly Christian women, to raise their voices against prejudice and discrimination in a male Muslim-dominated society.

“The sufferings of minority women seem unending. Many Christian housemaids are raped and killed and their families get no justice. The situation gives little reason and hope to celebrate,” said Sister Tomasina Rehmat.

She was addressing about 150 participants at a seminar in Karachi, Sindh province. The major Religious superiors’ justice and peace commission organized the event titled Equal Rights for Women to ensure Social Prosperity yesterday.

A group of nuns kicked off the program with a song highlighting the importance of women in family life. The participants sang religious songs in local languages and prayed for strength.

Later, Sister Rehmat told UCA News about the kidnapping of Hindu women and their “conversions” as a major concern in the province.

“In Sindh province, Hindu women work in a feudal society for more than 12 hours every day. Still, their salaries are handed over to their male family members. These landless peasants work as bonded laborers and their women are often molested,” she said.

Father Inayat Bernard, executive secretary Caritas Pakistan Lahore, agrees. “Women in interior Sindh are reported to have sold their children for 8,000 rupees (US$ 95.23) due to poverty. Hindu and Christian women are more vulnerable for being women and belonging to a religious minority,” he said.

Father Bernard was speaking to UCA News on the sidelines of a Women’s Day program at the Caritas building in Lahore. The event saw Caritas personnel helping women working in factories and living among villagers, who oppose education for women, to be aware of their rights.

According to the World Economic Forum’s Global Gender Gap Report 2009, Pakistan is at the bottom of the ranking among Asian countries, and placed 132 out of 134 countries. Its ranking was 127 in 2008.

The report says physical and sexual violence, honor killings, forced marriages and structural inequalities make Pakistan one of the worst countries in the world in terms of the gender gap.

Selasa, 02 Maret 2010

Festival of colours dimmed by shadows of hate , Pakistan

Source http://www.dailytimes.com.pk
Tuesday, March 02, 2010
By Amar Guriro

KARACHI: The Hindus of Sindh confined the celebration of their religious festival Holi and Rangoli to limited places amid fears of religious riots, a very rare situation in Sindh, where the teachings of Sufism of love and peace have been the dominating force for centuries.

In the past, Hindu residents of Umerkot, Tharparkar and Sanghar districts, where the majority of Hindus in Pakistan live, always celebrated the colourful festival of Holi at a mass level, but this year, most of them refrained from moving beyond certain places for their celebration.

This step was taken on voluntary basis as a precautionary measure as the Hindus had in mind the religious riots that erupted last year in Umerkot town, where officially 43 percent of the total Hindus of Sindh reside.

On March 11, 2009, the Hindus were celebrating Holi when the Muslim population of the area found writings on the road they considered sacrilegious, written with colours used for Holi celebrations. Several towns of the districts and nearby districts were closed and angry mobs attacked the properties of Hindus.

Although, government authorities took control of the district and stopped the riots, a cold war started between the Muslim and Hindu communities.

“In Umerkot, not only the Hindus, but Muslims celebrate Holi with their Hindu friends as well, but last year’s riots have frightened the Hindus, so we have restricted our celebration areas to avoid any unpleasant event,” said a resident of Kolhi Daro area of the town.

He said this year Muslims celebrated Eid Miladun Nabi just two days before Holi and hoisted their flags and banners carrying the holy names. Therefore, Hindus have selected deserted places so that colours don’t get accidentally splashed on these flags and banners.


Holi, a Hindu festival, falls on the full moon of Phagun (a month of Hindu calendar) and is observed to celebrate the death of a cruel king who had killed several people.

On the night of the festival young men and women perform Dandiya (bamboo stick) and on next day, colours are thrown at each other to express the happiness of the festival.

The Hindus are the highest religious population of Pakistan with 2.7 million people, according to the 1998 census.

However, estimated figures suggest that they may be more than 8 million, with a majority of them living in Sindh.

“The people of Sindh never had a tendency towards extremism, but some miscreants are trying to start war between Muslims and Hindus and, but we are sure that our Muslim brothers would never allow them to succeed in their nefarious designs,” said Pakistan Hindu Foundation (PHF) President DM Maharaj.

Rabu, 10 Februari 2010

Shri Ramdev Shiv Santosh Mandir ,Karachi City, Pakistan









Namaste to Everyone


Shri Ramdev Shiv Santosh Mandir

Shri Ramdev Shiv Santosh Mandli has scheduled
Maha Pooja of “Bhagwan Shiv”
Tomorrow 11th Feb 2010
Kindly come with your friends & family on this prestigious pooja.
Venue: Shri Ramdev Shiv Santosh Mandir,
Al-Haider Society, Massan Ghat Driag Road,
Karachi
for more inofrmation you can contact 0333-2024170
0345-3685277

Regards,
Sanjesh Sunny