Indian Americans Protest in Texas & California against Arrests and Demolition of Muslim Homes in India
Washington, DC: Indian Americans in two of America’s largest states, Texas and California, protested last weekend against the increasing persecution of Muslims in India.
Globally renowned US-based Islamic scholar Shaikh Omar Suleiman led the protest in Dallas, which was jointly organized by The Indian American Muslim Council (IAMC), and North Texas Peace Advocates (NTPA). Shaykh Alaeddin El-Bakri of the Islamic Society of North America led the Bay Area protest organized by IAMC, which drew over 500 protesters.
“We will continue to tell Modi, who is a wannabe Hitler, that you are a coward and that you are not welcome in Texas,” Suleiman told a cheering crowd. “We will hold elected officials accountable. We will hold corporations accountable when they deal with [India’s] fascist regime. We will not stand for the genocide of our brothers and sisters.”
At the Bay Area protests, Shaykh Alaeddin El-Bakri condemned India’s persecution of Muslims, “I was talking to someone from Al-Aqsa Mosque in Palestine, and he told me to extend my support to the Indian Muslim brothers and sisters and tell them we are with them they are uniting us they are pushing us back,” he said.
Protestors in Dallas’ Dealey Plaza withstood hours of sweltering heat to raise their voices marching together and chanting slogans of support for Indian Muslims. The slogans included, “We Stand With Afreen Fatima,” and “Stop Indian Muslim Genocide.” Fatima, a 22-year-old activist saw her house razed to the ground by bulldozers deployed by the Uttar Pradesh government, after her father was falsely arrested and accused of being the mastermind behind communal riots.
Protesters at both Dallas and the Bay Area called for a unified response from the American Muslim community to mobilize US Congress and the Biden Administration to pressure India to pull back from its severe persecution of its 200 million Muslims.
Many protesters waved the Indian flag, the tricolor that is made of saffron, the color of Hinduism, green, the color of Islam, and white, the color of peace, with a wheel in it.
Speaking at the Dallas protest, Sabiha Shariff, an Indian American, urged the community to speak up before it is too late. “Don’t wait for the day when the Indian national flag is changed to saffron and the chakra [wheel] is changed to bulldozers.”
IAMC President Syed Afzal Ali urged the protesters to use social media to reach out to elected representatives and the Biden Administration asking them to act quickly.
“Now is the time for the Biden administration to step in. No country, ally or otherwise, should be given a pass for genocidal policies against its minorities,” Ali said.
“We call upon President Biden to immediately and publicly denounce the Indian government’s use of bulldozers and police violence against Muslims and to recognize India as a Country of Particular Concern for its ongoing and egregious violations of religious freedoms and human rights.”
IAMC Bay Area President Jaweed Khan said, "the world may not know yet what is going on in India, but if we continue to put together protests like these for people to see how many are truly impacted, we will be able to make a change.” - IAMC