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GOVERNMENT
HAS FAILED BRITISH HINDUS
(3 February 2008)
Hindu
leaders from scores of organisations have collectively told Prime
Minister Gordon Brown that the "Government has failed the British
Hindu community". The strong message was unanimously adopted
as a resolution by outraged Hindu leaders on Sunday 3 February at
the ground-breaking ceremony of Europes largest cow protection
farm, built in memory of Gangotri, the temple cow "put down"
by the RSPCA.
"This
Government has no regard for the needs of communities that do not
shout," commented Sudarshan Bhatia, President of the National
Council of Hindu Temples. "Hindu leaders wrote to the Prime
Minister 45 days ago, and there is not even an acknowledgement.
If this had been some other community, the Government would have
rushed to find a solution. Just because Hindus are quiet, we are
ignored, isolated and sidelined."
"The
impression we get is that those who shout the loudest or cause problems
get immediate attention from this Government, while those who work
actively to make community cohesion a reality get ignored,"
explained Ishwer Tailor, President of the Hindu Forum of Britain.
"There has been a catalogue of issues that we have raised with
the Government and they have ignored our concerns. Of course, there
is a lot of lip-service, tokenistic meetings and assurances, but
very little practical action follows. Having spoken to several stakeholders,
I know that our community is becoming increasingly restless with
this Government and wondering whether it is even worth continuing
to engage with them."
"The
lethargy from this Government is unacceptable," said Gauri
Dasa, President of Bhaktivedanta Manor. "A DEFRA minister wrote
a letter to us taking the RSPCA stand and telling us that we were
wrong. Who in their right mind will believe that the Government
is actually serious about talking to faith communities when they
do not even pick up the phone to talk to us before writing judgemental
letters like these?"
"Representatives
from scores of Hindu organisations passed a resolution declaring
the failure of the Government to engage purposefully with Hindus
and asking for immediate dialogue," reported Kapil Dudakia,
Trustee of the Milton Keynes Hindu Association and a member of the
Justice for Gangotri Taskforce. "We hope this Government will
sit up, take note, and stop ignoring our genuine concerns."
Organisations
that have already registered their support for the resolution are
Balaji Mandir Birmingham, Federation of Brahmin Associations of
UK, Gujarat Hindu Association Leicester, Gujarat Hindu Society Preston,
Hindu Council of Birmingham, Hindu Council of Brent, Hindu Council
of Harrow, Hindu Council of the North, Hindu Council UK, Hindu Forum
of Britain, Hindu Forum Walsall, ISKCON Bhaktivedanta Manor, Leicester
Hindu Festival Council, Lohana Community UK, Milton Keynes Hindu
Association, National Congress of Gujarati Organisations, National
Council of Hindu Temples, National Hindu Students Forum, Punjabi
Society for British Isles, Sanatan Mandir Leicester, Shree Hindu
Community Centre Birmingham, Shree Kutch Leva Patel Community, Shree
Prajapati Association UK, Southall Ram Mandir, Vishwa Hindu Mandir
Southall, Vishwa Hindu Parishad UK and Vishwakarma Association.
Hindu
leaders had travelled from all over the country to take part in
the ground-breaking ceremony that included chanting of 10,000 year
old Sanskrit prayers, ancient costumes, traditional dances, and
devotional singing to the accompaniment of Indian drums and cymbals.
It culminated in four simultaneous yajnas, with priests pouring
sanctified offerings of clarified butter into a large sacred fire.
Plans
for building Europes largest Cow Protection Centre, called
'New Gokul' were approved by Hertsmere Borough Council after numerous
planning applications and a pubic enquiry. Many councilors had indicated
that they were impressed with the design and the sustainable character
of the proposed farm buildings.
"In
Britain, 3.38 million cows and bulls are killed every year. Nearly
all young bulls die before they reach their third birthday,"
concluded Gauri Dasa, President of Bhaktivedanta Manor and Spiritual
Commissioner of the Hindu Forum of Britain. "But at New Gokul,
the new cow protection farm, we will demonstrate new ways of ethical,
compassionate and sustainable farming."
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