We are talking about in Myanmar, specifically Arakan. I asked for an example there, since thats where the issue of foreign vs local has arisen.
Are you and I Dharmic brothers too? I see no difference between myself and a Bangladeshi Hindu, hell I hardly see the difference between myself and South Asian.
By my comparison I mean the larger society pertaining to recognition of similarity with another, not particular opinions.
There may be some intersection between Islam and Hinduism, mostly due to Sufism etc....but Islam is fundamentally not from the dharmic realm in its core. Its dogma as written in the Koran (well outside the subcontinent) is outside the dharmic lineage just like Christianity and Judaism. Where there are common end-objectives and societal improvement/philosophy...sure there can be some mutual interaction occuring....but that's akin to a Japanese Shinto and Welsh Wiccan Druid both agreeing about various tenets of nature worship but acknowledging how different they are in other areas fundamentally (after all its only natural given the distance between their geographic origins).
Buddhism, Hinduism, Jainism and to large degree Sikhism have clear related lineage to each other historically. Hinduism itself is an assortment of many varied lineages, but they all have much fundamentally greater intersection than any Abrahamic religion and Buddhism for example.
It's like two great trees growing next to each other. Over time yes the branches of one may nestle among those of the other just by the great size of both.....but they do not become one tree because of it. Dharmic religions (more correct to say systems/philosophies) are very much part of one great tree.
Perhaps if the Rohingya WERE inducted into the peace table, we wouldn't be in this situation?
Much opportunity was afforded to them in the past. They were put in the same boat as Indian Burmese and Chinese burmese when the nationality law took hold in the 80s. But why did the latter two evolve, adapt and now are integrated (and largely citizens or continued status quo) in Burma...but Rohingya never do so?
When you shed the "we are eternal victims" complex and see there is a history of your whole people simply unable to get along with x,y or z that are "different"....its painfully obvious where the common denominator lies.
Bangladesh has taken 500,000 Rohingya people, as the most densely populated country on the planet I don't know how much more we can take. In an ideal situation, perhaps the Rohingya majority districts of Myanmar would have been included in the 1947 partition, but we don't live in that reality.
You can take in a lot more, all of them preferably. Plus take in the millions of illegals you have in India over time too....and the Pakistanis have some as well
@LA se Karachi @django
Bangladesh being such fertile land and not in danger of sinking but actually growing according to some here (and about to beat India economically in just 5 years time in every parameter) should have no problem taking in millions more of its own people. They have outstayed their welcome and its not going to increase the population density a whole lot anyway...given say 5 million people is like 3% of the BD population....which is about what BD grows by in 3 years anyway.
You would also improve relations with your neighbours immensely (if you take them back voluntarily), far more than the economic "burden" you feel you might take on. Anyways you have largely been pretty short-sighted w.r.t your illegals everywhere....so I do not foresee that....thus whats going to happen is going to happen.
There's no intrinsic reason Rohingyas can't be integrated into Myanmar's society (correct me if I'm wrong but aren't there other Muslim ethnicities in Myanmar that don't have the same problems the Rohingyas?). Aside from integration, what other options are there? Ethnic cleansing and/or continued insurgency, neither of which I'd like to see happen.
Its not really a muslim thing entirely....though if the Rohingya were Buddhist, it would probably help them stay sure. The main reason is that the Rohingya simply are a fundamentally different ethinicity to the Burmese AND are different culture/religion to the majority AND have different area of origin (i.e not converts but migrants at some point...how recent or old is another debate) AND have pushed for secession from Burma multiple times AND have started conflict and suppression of the local arakan population (both sides point fingers at other for starting it...but who you expect Burmese to take side of?) AND etc etc....there are lots of things coming together here.