Posted on May 12th, 2015

<p><em>Bahujans, Christians, and Sikhs pose with Congressman McClintock after meeting.</em><br></p>
"What impacts one minority group in India impacts them all," explains Anglican priest
Roseville,
CA: May. 12, 2015 – Community leaders from Sikh,
Christian, and Bahujan communities in Northern California met privately with
Congressman Tom McClintock (R-Roseville) last week to discuss ongoing issues of
state-sponsored persecution of their comrades in India.
“I explained to
Congressman McClintock that persecution doesn’t just impact Sikhs, but all
minority communities in India, including the Christian communities,” says Father
Joshua Lickter, the church-planting vicar for Incarnation Anglican Church in
Roseville, a member of the Anglican Church in North America. He was joined by
Manjit Singh Uppal, former president of Stockton Gurdwara (the oldest
Sikh-American institution), as well as Balbir Singh Dhillon, president of West
Sacramento Gurdwara, and Mandeep Kaur Dhillon, whose father, Surat Singh Khalsa,
is presently on hunger-strike in India for release of political prisoners held
past their sentences.
During
the meeting at Roseville Sikh Gurdwara, Lickter says he also told McClintock:
“While more and more people are becoming aware of the threat that ISIS and other
radical Islamic groups pose in the Middle East, few people realize the level of
persecution that the supposedly ‘democratic’ government of India is both
allowing and encouraging within its borders. I told him that I’ve heard
firsthand reports from colleagues in India whose churches have been burned and
vandalized and whose lives are regularly threatened because of their Christian
faith. I want to help advocate for the Sikh community because what impacts one
minority group in India impacts them all.”
Members of Shri Guru Ravi Dass
Temple of Sacramento also joined the meeting to warn the congressman about
threats facing Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) who visit India. Amar Daroch, Makhan
Lohar, and others highlighted the recent case of Ravinderjit Singh Gogi, a
Californian and the son of Khalsa, who was arrested, imprisoned, and tortured
for two months in Punjab, India. Gogi was released without charges — or
compensation for his ordeal — on April 26, two weeks after McClintock initiated
a letter to the U.S. State Department requesting it assist Gogi and his father,
who is a permanent resident of the United States.
“We thanked the
honorable McClintock for standing up against the harassment of NRIs,” says
Daroch. “His efforts to end Gogiji’s persecution and senseless detention were
granted success by the swift and decisive action of the BSP in Punjab. I got BSP
leadership involved in this case knowing this would be the only way to get him
out.”
In late April, Indian MP Avtar Singh Karimpuri, President of Punjab
state’s Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) and a member of Rajya Sabha (India’s upper
house of parliament), condemned the whole affair, stating: “The government
claims that it was working for the betterment of the NRIs whereas the ground
reality was that the NRIs were subject to harassment back home.” Saying the
groundless imprisonment of an American citizen, who was arrested while visiting
his hospitalized father, showed the double standard of Punjab’s SAD-BJP
coalition government, he pledged that his party will always stand for the rights
of NRIs.
Congressman McClintock, who listened intently to the report,
commented: “In my experience, there are typically two types of political parties
worldwide — those that are authoritarian and those that fight
authoritarianism.”
The congressman, who led six other California
representatives in sending an April 15 letter to U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry to “bring to your attention… Surat Singh Khalsa,” also lent his ears to an
appeal from Khalsa’s daughter, Mandeep Kaur Dhillon. “My father’s struggle of
over 100 days of refusing food in protest of the unjust treatment of political
prisoners in India was of great interest to the congressman,” remarks Dhillon.
“I urged him to speak out for Bapuji Surat Singh Khalsa. He promised to continue
learning about the issue.”
Threats to religious minorities in India, as
well as those considered low-caste, have spiked sharply in recent years. In
April, the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF),
an independent body of the State Department, designated India a “Country of
Particular Concern” in its annual report, meaning it is a country that
“commit[s] systematic, ongoing, and egregious violations of religious freedom.”
The report warned:
“Christian communities, across many denominations,
report an increase of harassment and violence in the last year, including
physical violence, arson, desecration of churches and Bibles, and disruption of
religious services…. Reportedly, local police seldom provide protection, refuse
to accept complaints, rarely investigate, and in a few cases encourage
Christians to move or hide their religion.”
The report also highlighted
how activists from Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), a paramilitary
organization to which Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi belongs, are involved
in the attacks, noting that such “nationalist groups also allegedly target
Dalits if they are believed to be considering conversion away from Hinduism.”
The USCIRF warned that victims of state-sponsored incidents of mass violence,
including the Gujarat Genocide against Muslims conducted in 2002 under the
auspices of Modi (who was then Gujarat’s Chief Minster), have not received
justice. It also rebuked the Indian State’s refusal to resolve the Sikh
community’s opposition to Article 25 of the country’s constitution, which
defines Sikhs as Hindus and qualifies, reported the commission, as a “lack of
recognition of Sikhism as a distinct religion.”
Others at the meeting
with McClintock included Bhajan Singh, Founding Director of Organization for
Minorities of India, who says: “We are deeply grateful to the congressman for
his unflagging commitment to human rights and for keeping an open door to
minority communities in his constituency and region.”

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