Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
International

Temple Attack In Pakistan Not Because Of Faith: Reema Abbasi

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Jan, 2016 01:20 PM
    Asserting that Hindus were not persecuted in her country, Pakistani journalist-author Reema Abbasi on Saturday attributed land-grabbing rather faith behind attacks on temples in Pakistan.
     
    "No temple has been razed on ground of faith. Yes, when the Babri Masjid demolition happened, there was a backlash in Pakistan, but otherwise the attacks on temples were not because of faith," Abbasi said at the Kolkata Literary Festival.
     
    "So when people see headlines about a temple being attacked, they should look into the fine print where they will find that the reasons are land-grabbing or greed," said the author of "Historic Temples in Pakistan: A Call to Conscience".
     
    She also said some attacks on temples took place to accommodate a large number of people displaced due to the war against terrorism.
     
    Abbasi, who in her book has documented ancient temples chronicling old pilgrimage sites like Hinglaj, Katas Raj, Kalka Cave temple, Panchmukhi Hanuman Mandir, and Shivala Mandir in present day Pakistan, termed as a "myth" media reports about "persecution" of Hindus in Pakistan.
     
    "Hindus are not persecuted in Pakistan, it's all myth. And it's all because of the media hype. People usually go by the headlines which grab the eyeballs but they should instead go through the fine print which will eventually get them to the truth," she said.
     
    "In 2013, there were 265 forced conversions in Pakistan, but in 2015 there have been only 14 such cases. Of course, not a single such case should happen, but it has been a part of the South Asian society and not just Pakistan alone," the author added.
     
    Abbasi informed her next book is on South Asian Islamic scholar and philosopher Moinuddin Chishti also known as Gharib Nawaz.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    What's In A Name? Democratic 2016 Front-Runner Hillary (Rodham) Clinton Knows More Than Most

    What's In A Name? Democratic 2016 Front-Runner Hillary (Rodham) Clinton Knows More Than Most
    WASHINGTON — As a young girl growing up in suburban Chicago, Hillary Rodham decided she'd never change her last name. Three decades later, an entire state debated her childhood choice.

    What's In A Name? Democratic 2016 Front-Runner Hillary (Rodham) Clinton Knows More Than Most

    Paris Climate Meet Reaches Draft Deal, India's Concerns Visible

    The thrust is on a legally-binding deal before the end of this round of negotiations due till December 11.

    Paris Climate Meet Reaches Draft Deal, India's Concerns Visible

    Texas Festival To Showcase South Asian Diaspora Films

    More than a dozen films focusing on issues affecting South Asians and exploring the lives and stories of the South Asian diaspora in the US will be showcased at a film festival in Texas next February.

    Texas Festival To Showcase South Asian Diaspora Films

    Two Followers Of Group Carried Out California Attacks: Islamic State

    The radio of the Islamic State militant group on Saturday claimed that two of its followers carried out Wednesday's San Bernardino mass shooting in California.

    Two Followers Of Group Carried Out California Attacks: Islamic State

    63-Year-Old Indo-Canadian Man From Vancouver Killed In Home Invasion In Nicaragua

    63-Year-Old Indo-Canadian Man From Vancouver Killed In Home Invasion In Nicaragua
    63-year-old Vancouver man was killed this week in an apparent home invasion robbery at his property in Nicaragua

    63-Year-Old Indo-Canadian Man From Vancouver Killed In Home Invasion In Nicaragua

    No Revealing Clothes At Angkor Wat, Please

    No Revealing Clothes At Angkor Wat, Please
    Cambodia on Friday decreed that visitors should not wear revealing clothes or smoke at the famed Angkor Wat temple, which was originally built as a Hindu shrine dedicated to Lord Vishnu.

    No Revealing Clothes At Angkor Wat, Please