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South Asian @Wellesley Alumnae and Students #RejectCAA_NRC
Image by Nabi H. Ali (@ab_varaham) for @EqualityLabs, posted with permission from both.
We the alumnae and students of Wellesley College and members of the South Asian diaspora stand in solidarity with the citizens and residents of India who are protesting the recently-passed Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA). CAA amends the Citizenship Act of 1955 and allows for resettlement and path to citizenship for Hindus, Parsis, Buddhists, Jains, and Sikhs but specifically and intentionally excludes Muslims.
CAA is being posited by the right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leaders, Prime Minister Narender Modi and Minister of Home Affairs Amit Shah, as an effort to help persecuted religious minorities in majority Muslim neighboring countries of Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Afghanistan. During the civil war between East and West Pakistan, which led to the formation of Bangladesh, thousands of Muslim refugees came to India to escape violence and persecution. This community has now lived in India for over four decades and the Indian government now seeks to expel this vulnerable population. The bill also explicitly excludes Myanmar in attempt to expel and deter Rohingya Muslim refugees.
BJP leaders maintain that CAA will not impact Indian Muslim citizens but this is a farce as low income Indian Muslim citizens without access to identification documents such as birth certificates could be arrested, housed in camps, and deported. Further, if this bill was truly about assisting religious minorities persecuted in neighboring South Asian states, then the bill would explicitly include Christians, Ahmadis, Sufis, Tamil Muslims, and Shia Muslims. This bill isn’t about religious liberty, but rather about Hindu hegemony.
In addition to CAA, Home Minister Amit Shah has also been pushing for a National Registry of Citizens (NRC). The NRC already exists and was recently updated in the state of Assam. Shah is now pushing for all states to update NRC such that undocumented residents of India can be identified, detained, and deported.
CAA and NRC are the antithesis of what the dream of India stands for and perpetuate the divide and conquer techniques of British colonization -- grouping people by religion and caste rather than celebrating the religious, ethnic, regional, and linguistic diversity that comprises the subcontinent and the nation-state of India, a country that touts itself as the world’s largest democracy.
We stand in solidarity with students across India from every religion , region, caste and language who are in the streets protesting CAA and NRC and facing police brutality as a result.
#StopHinduFascism #StopCAA #SouthAsiansAgainstCAA #SouthAsianWellesleyAlumsAgainstCAA #KeepIndiaSecular #RejectCAA_NRC
Follow @EqualityLabs on IG and Twitter and sign up for their alerts! Here are some resources their alerts have provides
Resource List: Learn about CAB and NRCUN Commission on Human Rights: Concern over CAB
Scroll.in: #BoycottNRC
Minority Rights Group: Condemns CAB
The Wire: Members of Minority Community Groups Raise Concern over CAB
The Wire: The Citizenship Amendment Bill and NRC Will Together Destroy Our Country
Counter Currents: Why Must CAB be rejected?
India Today: Is the CAB Constitutional?
CNN: India Passes Controversial Citizenship Bill that Excludes Muslims
Also check out this Whats App Cheat Sheet.
In love and solidarity,
Shelly Anand ‘08
Tarini Mohan ‘08
Shloka Ananthanarayanan ‘08
Swini Garimella '09
Neha Lund ‘22
Amish Rasheed ‘23
Nandita Dinesh ‘06
Tarini Sinha '22
Sitara Sriram ‘19
Isha Gupta ‘21
Safia J. Lakhani, ‘06
Amita Rao ‘05
Neeraja Deshpande ‘23
Sidikha Ashraf ‘19
Eashaa Jampala ‘21
Divya Alukal ‘17
Dharani Persaud ‘17
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Festival, Diu, Gujarat, India. Everyone was excited, especially the little boy. This was his first festival, his first Ganpati. His family loved the festival of Ganpati because it meant prosperity, acceptance and celebration. For generations, the boy's family had been artists creating and selling the beautiful statues of Lord Ganesha. Their statues were the best about town. Everyone in the village saved up every year so that the boy's father could make the most glorious statue of the most auspicious God. The father toiled day and night to get the right image of Lord Ganesha. His trick was to curve the trunk twice to make it look flawless. Thereafter for the days before visarjan, the entire town would bring gifts and foods to the idol. They'd sew new clothes, buy fresh garlands and play the best songs for God. On the day of the visarjan, the boy wore his best kurta and the mother wore her most beautiful sari and they prepared for their favorite day of the year. The father walked in with his head bleeding and sat down next to them. He mumbled, "this year we stay at home." The boy cried, the mother worried. The father sat with a bloodied piece of cloth on his head. The boy ran to the window and saw the entire village dance alongside the idol. He turned and asked, "why can't we go?" The father replied, "they don't want us there, Usman." #read #readersnetwork #readersofinstagram #writersnetwork #write #writersofinstagram #wander_lost_stories #wanderloststories #tales #shortstory #stories #diu #gujarat #india #aroundtheworld #rejecthate #rejectcaa_nrc #oneindia #humdekhenge #tinytales #storiesfromindia (at Diu, India) https://www.instagram.com/p/B7m5nEuFpuD/?igshid=l2nj1a543m75
#read#readersnetwork#readersofinstagram#writersnetwork#write#writersofinstagram#wander_lost_stories#wanderloststories#tales#shortstory#stories#diu#gujarat#india#aroundtheworld#rejecthate#rejectcaa_nrc#oneindia#humdekhenge#tinytales#storiesfromindia
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