If we go by the State Religion, then Hindus do not have a single Nation they 
call it Hindu, not even Nepal, after the demise before our own eyes of total 
destruction of the Hindu State by chronic communists, who are dead elsewhere 
accept in Nepal & West Bengal and some ramparts of the UPS Government. Even 
China has rejected communism.



In Malaysia, Fiji, Mauritius, Guyana, East Africa, the UK, USA, Burma, Bhutan, 
West Indies and elsewhere Hindu Dharma is not a state religion, so how could 
anyone be wrong when they say there is no Hindu country in the world, like 
there are nearly 60 countries where the State religion is Islam, there are 
nearly 100 countries where the state religion is Christianity. In the UK, 
if one is a Catholic let alon of other faith, he or she cannot become a Prime 
Minister or even the Chancellor, one of the reasons why Tony Blair waited 
to convert to become a Catholic after he resigned as the PM. In all the 
European Countries, accept the Scandinavian ones, one cannot assume the office 
of PM if one is not a Catholic.

So Hindus do not have a Hindu Nation.


-----Original Message-----
From: prabir chatterjee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Fri, 25 Jan 2008 15:03
Subject: [ =>> Jharkhand <<= ] Real Hinduism we all know and respect









Wrong. There is more than one nation state with Hindus.

Nepal was a Hindu country.

Hinduism is a major religion in Mauritius, in India and in the Guyanas. It is 
not unknown in Seychelles, northern Sri Lanka, Malaysia, South Africa- even if 
discriminated against. In UK and in US there are many temples and the 
British Crown Prince is considering recognising this. There is no real 
discrimination in Canada for instance. Have many pictures of Diwali and Durga 
Puja celebrations in Netherlands and Canada- would you be interested in seeing 
them?

Prabir

v <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:




Hindus have only one country wherein even there they are attacked for defending 
their faith. ....

Here is a supreme court definition of Hindutva --

 

The Supreme Court also ruled that "Ordinarily, Hindutva is understood as a way 
of life or a state of mind and is not to be equated with or understood as 
religious Hindu fundamentalism.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hindutva

 









 

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