US Corportions fund Right-Wing Indian Hindu Groups
November 25, 2002
US Corportions fund Right-Wing Indian Hindu Groups
Hindutva, the Hindu supremacist ideology that has under
girded much of the communal violence in India over the last several decades,
has seen tremendous growth outside India over the last two decades. This
report focuses on one US based organization--the India Development and
Relief Fund (IDRF), which has systematically funded Hindutva operations
in India. "The Foreign Exchange of Hate" establishes that the IDRF is
not a secular and non-sectarian organization as it claims to be, but is,
on the contrary, a major conduit of funds for Hindutva organizations in
India
The full report can be found here.
Methodology of the Report
This report is a product of a careful study and analysis of more than
150 pieces of documentary evidence, almost three-quarters of which are
those published by the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (henceforth, RSS or
Sangh) and its affiliates, either in printed form or electronically. These
documents are diverse in nature, including forms of incorporation and
tax documents filed by IDRF with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) in
the US, articles in Sangh Sandesh, the newsletter of the Hindu Swayamsevak
Sangh, and occasional reports published by different Sangh organizations
in India and the US. The remaining 25% of the documents are from secondary
sources, largely drawn from: mainstream media reports, including published
interviews with RSS, BJP and VHP leaders; reports of judicial enquiry
commissions; reports from citizen's panels; and reports published by various
Human Rights organizations. The methodological emphasis on primary sources
internal to the Sangh Parivar, is to ensure that the evidentiary basis
of the conclusions drawn is of the highest standards.
Report Summery
The purpose of this report is to document the links between the India
Development and Relief Fund (IDRF), a Maryland, US based charity, and
certain violent and sectarian Hindu supremacist organizations in India.
The IDRF operates in the US under the rules governing tax-exempt charitable
organizations. These rules prohibit such organizations from participating
in political activity of the kind that involves funnelling money overseas
to violent sectarian groups. Further, the report provides evidence to
argue that IDRF's claim of being a non sectarian organization that funds
development and relief operations in India is disingenuous at best, and
that this claim is strategically designed to insert IDRF into the cultural
milieu and goodwill of the Indian diaspora as the 'charity of choice'.
The main points of this study are:
* The Hindutva movement is a violent sectarian movement seeking to create
a Hindu Rashtra (an ethnically 'pure' Hindu Nation) in India, in many
ways similar to the Nazi idea of a pure Aryan Germany. It seeks to exclude
or eliminate religious minorities such as Muslims and Christians and fix
Dalits and Adivasis into an internal hierarchy of caste.
* The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS, or the Sangh, literally, the National
Volunteers Corps) is the core organization of the Hindutva movement, and
it operates through hundreds of front organizations in both India and
the US.
* From documents submitted to the US Federal government in 1989 as part
of its application for tax exempt status, it is clear that from its very
moment of inception, IDRF's goal was clearly to support the Sangh in India.
That IDRF supports Sangh organizations in India is thus not a matter of
accident but is instead the very purpose for its existence.
* Since its inception, IDRF's links with Sangh organizations in India
have grown dramatically. Of the organizations in India that it lists as
"sister organizations", an overwhelming number are clearly part of the
Sangh's family of organizations.
* IDRF's leadership in the US has well-established links with the Hindutva
movement both in India and the US. Officials of IDRF in India are also
openly part of the Sangh.
* Hindutva organizations in the US do extensive publicity and fundraising
for the IDRF. They openly acknowledge IDRF as a part of the Sangh.
* Of the funds that the IDRF transfers to India, almost two-thirds go
to organizations that can be identified as RSS organizations. About half
of the remaining funds go to organizations that can be identified as sectarian
Hindu organizations. In other words, less than 20 percent of the funds
sent to India by IDRF go to organizations that are not openly non-sectarian
and/or affiliated with the Sangh.
* More than 50 percent of the funds disbursed by the IDRF are sent to
Sangh related organizations whose primary work is religious 'conversion'
and 'Hinduization' in poor and remote tribal and rural areas of India.
Another sixth is given to Hindu religious organizations for purely religious
use. Only about a fifth of the funds go for disaster relief and welfare-most
of it because the donors specifically designated it so. However, there
is considerable documentation indicating that even the relief and welfare
organizations that IDRF funds, use the moneys in a sectarian way. In summary,
in excess of 80 percent of IDRF's funding is allocated for work that is
clearly sectarian in nature.
* Adequate documentation also exists to show that the IDRF funds organizations
in at least three states in India that are directly involved in large
scale violence against Muslim and Christian minorities. This reports documents
the case of an the IDRF beneficiary, the Vanvasi Kalyan Ashram in Gujarat
and its extensive involvement in anti-Christian violence between 1998-2000
including the physical destruction of Christian institutions, schools,
churches, colleges, and cemeteries and forcible conversions to Hinduism.
* Secondary documentation also exists to show that the same Hindutva organizations
involved in the anti-Christian violence of 1998-2000 were involved in
the Gujarat carnage of 2002 where, by most reliable accounts, more than
2000 people, mostly Muslims, were massacred.