AgNoStiC MuSliM
ADVISORS
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2007
- Messages
- 25,259
- Reaction score
- 87
- Country
- Location
Leaving aside the manipulation of the numbers of those killed, comparisons are completely valid, since they illustrate the ability of people from the Hindu faith to embark on a killing spree of those of other faiths, on multiple occasions, indicating therefore that violence is not something inherent to Islam alone.These were communal riots due to specific circumstances and with a long history behind them. The Babri one is specifically related to the bigotry of atrocities by Muslim invaders that has yet not been corrected. Just one of the more than 10000 temples destroyed by those bigots.
The official count of Gujarat riots is 784 Muslims and 280 odd Hindus.
There are no Hindus going around planting bombs in marketplaces or worship places, surely not on the same scale.
Christian community is living most peacefully in India. There are chief ministers on this community in states where there are less than 3% Christians. They are at the front lines of education in India. Those events were isolated and due to specific local conditions.
Any comparisons are superfluous at this stage.
To justify massacres by Hindus of another community in the modern age by pointing to the disputed existence of some temple back in history, or the actions of 'invaders' hundreds of years ago, is morally reprehensible, and coming from a Hindu proves my point about violence and twisted justification for violence not being a solely Muslim phenomenon.
I am not responsible for the 'worlds Muslims'. People can treat me on the basis of MY beliefs and MY actions, not those of people living in a cave half a world away. And if people are not xenophobic and bigots, I have to do nothing more than the average non-Muslim American to illustrate what my ideological beliefs are, nor should I have too.Yes. So accept that there is widespread manipulation going on in the Islamic world at the moment and take steps to correct it. If the world's perception is wrong, it will be automatically corrected if the ground situation changes by the efforts of moderate Muslims like you and millions of others.
Till then, no amount of debate on forums or media will "correct" that perception.
The problem arises when people judge an entire group of people, and individuals from that group, not from what the majority of individuals of that community (in this case Muslim Americans) are doing as a whole, or by what the individual Muslim they come in contact with is doing, but by what a handful of individuals who claim to share the same faith do.