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HINDU STUDENTS GET COMMUNAL ON THE NET
June 22, 2001 US city pages

The Rediff US Special/ Arun Venugopal

An Internet message board hosted by a chapter of the Hindu Students Council
at the University of California at Irvine has for some time been a popular
discussion venue for issues relating to Hinduism. But with a preponderance
of racist and profanity-laced messages, many of which are in violation of
university policy, it remains to be seen what action university
administrators will take against the organization. 'I am a Hindu,' reads
one posting, a response to an online essay about Hindu-Muslim unity. 'I
hate Muslims. I'm a youngster & brought up in US. I don't know how the hell
anyone can think of uniting with those animals (Muslims aren't worthy of
being called people).' 'Instead of uniting,' continues the message,
submitted by 'Raj', 'we should have pure Hindu execution squads killing any
fanatic Muslims (just as they do to us behind everyone's backs). If you ask
Hindus anywhere, they feel oppressed by Muslims who are much more
aggressive.' "That's making a threat," says Diane Kim, director of judicial
affairs at the University of California at Irvine, "which is grounds for
discipline. We would probably at least want to talk to club officials and
get a sense of what they are doing about the situation." The university has
posted its rules regarding network usage, including the following: 'Using
computers or electronic mail to act abusively toward others or to provoke a
violent reaction, such as stalking, acts of bigotry, threats of violence,
or other hostile or "intimidating fighting words". Such words include those
terms widely recognized to victimize or stigmatize individuals on the basis
of race, ethnicity, religion, sex, sexual orientation, disability, etc.'
Another posting, a reprint of an essay on South-Asian Americans, seems more
innocuous, until you see the ID of the submitter: 'I Choke Muslim Scum.'
Finally: 'you claim that you don't care about who you associate with?? ha.
you're full of shit. sellout. Personally, I am proud to say that I don't
hang out with Muslim scum.' There are others, of course. The message board
is replete with anonymously posted messages. While some messages are
religiously motivated, others are of a more personal nature, often
involving caustic exchanges between various respondents. Sunita Patel, a
fourth-year student and outgoing president of the UCI chapter, notes that
the messages have become increasingly aggressive of late. "From the very
first year of implementation -- we are entering our fourth year as a
student organisation at UC Irvine -- you can see a trend from discussion to
degeneration of topics," she says. The Hindu Students Council was formed in
1990 by members of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad of America. It has since
become the largest Hindu student and youth group, with over 50 college and
school chapters across the US and Canada. In addition to sponsoring
discussions and retreats related to Hindu culture, the organisation is
actively involved with a number of charitable causes. Several
national-level members of the Hindu Students Council did not respond to
emails or phone messages regarding the message board. Rishi Bhutada, a
student at the University of Pennsylvania, feels the message board is
susceptible to hostile postings. "In cyberspace, since people are replying
to faceless entities, there is sometimes a loss of civility in the reply,
as evidenced by the postings all across the board," says Bhutada, who
recently participated in an HSC summer camp. "I actually think the
statements are more indicative of a problem occurring [among] Hindu youth
today as to if and how they should associate with Muslim youth," he adds.
"That's where the major arguments on the board seem to lie." But the
organisation does not seem to have made inter-faith dialogue a priority.
"The HSC as a whole has not embarked on a goal of achieving Hindu-Muslim
unity," says Bhutada, "but nor has the HSC tried to discourage it. I know
individual chapters have undertaken interfaith activities with Muslims,
with varying degrees of success or failure." Sohail Shakeri, president of
the Muslim Students Union at UCI, expresses remorse over the postings, but
says his organisation will not take up the matter. "It is only acts of hate
and arrogance that we should, as committed Muslims, oppose," he argues.
Imam Sa'dullah Khan of the Islamic Centre of Southern California notes that
the problem is not restricted to Hindu Web sites. "It's nothing new," he
says. "I am sure there are many Muslims doing the same things against Jews
and Buddhists and others. Fortunately, people have the right to say what
they want, but I am surprised how misinformed people are about the rest of
the world." Khan points out that there is no end of activist causes in the
Islamic community, a trend he finds counter-productive. "Everything that
seems to be anti-Islamic becomes cause for action," he remarks. "We should
be more finicky about it." Sunita Patel points out that forum guidelines
have been posted on the message board, but "the freedom accompanying a
nameless forum often has people putting those guidelines aside during
heated [debates]. For the next year, it has been proposed that there will
be forum moderation taking place. I am not sure how this will go, but
hopefully, it will keep my original goal of educating through presentation
of ideas."


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