India has flagged to Ottawa the Indo-Canadian community’s concerns over a bill before Canada’s Parliament to ban the sale and display of hateful symbols, including the swastika for its association with Nazism.
A private members bill, tabled by National Democratic Party MP Peter Julian last week, which has the support of party leader Jagmeet Singh, has infuriated the Indo-Canadian over “demonization” of a sacred symbol of the community.
The bill seeks to “prevent the display or sale of symbols or emblems such as the Nazi swastika and the Ku Klux Klan’s insignia, flags such as the standards of Germany between the years 1933 to 1945 and those of the Confederate States of America between the years 1861 to 1865 and uniforms, including the German and Confederate States of America military dress of those periods, as well as the hoods and robes of the Ku Klux Klan”.
It was brought after such symbols were seen at the first weekend of the truckers protest against cross-border vaccine mandates, during which protesters laid siege to the Canadian capital of Ottawa.
“Swastikas and confederate flags have no place in Canada. We have a responsibility to make our communities safe for everyone — it’s time to ban hate symbols in Canada,” Singh said earlier this month, promoting a petition in this regard.
India’s Consul General Apoorva Srivastava said India has “formally flagged this issue to Government of Canada and shared with them the petitions received from Canadian groups in this regard”. He was responding to Toronto-based rights advocate Ragini Sharma, according to whom, those who revere the swastika — including Hindus, Buddhists and Jains — found “deeply hurtful” the remarks by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau alluding to “the inherent violence of the swastika”.
Canadian MP Chandra Arya, from Trudeau’s Liberal Party, is likely to raise the matter in the House of Commons. His office said that he was “very concerned on the plans to ban Hindu sacred symbol Swastika. He is taking the lead to stop this from happening”.
Sharma also said there was a campaign to oppose the bill as it would “criminalise the swastika”.
While empathising with the trauma suffered by Jews during the Holocaust, the campaign is against “the incorrect linking of The Nazi HakenKreuz or hooked cross to the Swastika. We need Canadians to be educated about the differences and to understand that the Swastika has nothing to do with Nazi hate symbol”.
She pointed out that if it became law, it could cause problems for individuals and even for organisations like the Canadian Buddhist Association, which prominently features rows of the symbol at the entrance to its temple in Toronto.
A rally against the bill Indo-Canadians was also held in the town of Surrey in British Columbia. Organisations, including the Hindu temple in Burnaby and the Gurukul Cultural Society of Canada, participated in the protest last Sunday.
One of the participants, Neema Manral said they are demanding that the swastika word be removed from the bill and replaced with Nazi symbols. “How can we not have a swastika displayed at home or in a temple?” she asked.
In a letter to all MPs and Senators, copied to Trudeau and other federal party leaders, National Association of Indo-Canadians president Azad Kaushik said the umbrella body “strongly opposes” the bill as “it would infringe upon the rights of Hindus, Jains and Buddhists to freely and publicly practice their religion”.
Source : Hindustan Times
Don’t conflate Swastika with Hakenkreuz: US-based Hindu group to Canadian PM Trudeau and Jagmeet Singh
Washington : A prominent US-based Hindu organisation has urged Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Indian-origin leader Jagmeet Singh not to conflate the ‘Swastika’, an ancient and auspicious symbol for Hindus with the ‘Hakenkreuz’, a 20th century Nazi symbol of hate.
Amidst massive protests by hundreds of truck drivers against Canada’s Covid restrictions, New Democratic Party (NDP) leader Jagmeet Singh tweeted, “Swastikas and Confederate flags have no place in Canada.
“We have a responsibility to make our communities safe for everyone — it’s time to ban hate symbols in Canada. Together, we can make sure hate is given no space to take hold and no air to breathe,” Singh wrote on February 2.
Both Trudeau and Singh have made statements in the recent past, accusing protesters of “waving Swastikas”.
Reacting to this, the HinduPACT (Hindu Policy Research and Advocacy Collective) has urged Trudeau and Singh not to conflate the “Swastika”, an ancient and auspicious symbol for Hindus, Buddhists, Sikhs and many indigenous communities around the world, with the “Hakenkreuz”, a 20th century Nazi symbol of hate.
“We believe this misrepresentation will lead to hate crimes against Hindus and Sikhs. In the past month alone, six Hindu temples were vandalised and looted in Canada,” said Utsav Chakrabarti, executive director of HinduPACT.
The federal NDP is advocating for the government to ban the display of three different hate symbols, which leader Singh says are being used to mobilise movements.
Bill C-229 would prohibit the “display or sale” of symbols or emblems such as the Nazi swastika, the Ku Klux Klan’s insignia, and the Confederate flag.
HinduPACT also urged Trudeau, heading the ruling Liberal Party of Canada, to respect the right of the Canadian people to peacefully protest.
The right to peaceful protest is fundamental in any democracy and the promulgation of an emergency order to quell voices of dissent sets, for the first time, a tragic precedent for Canada, it said.
Source : The Tribune