

The latest incident of vandalism at a BAPS temple — this time in Indiana and one of four nearly identical incidents at BAPS temples in the past year across the country, in which spray-painted slogans urge death to Hindus, India, and/or leading members of the current Government of India — should be a wake up call for the Hindu American community.
Here in the United States we may be half a world away geographically from India, but political disputes and communal conflict from the spiritual homeland of all Hindus are sadly knocking on our temple doors here in America.
Increasingly vocal and brazen supporters of the creation of Khalistan — some of which have links to international organized crime and terrorism, an allegation that recent FBI arrests support — are targeting temples in the apparent conflated belief that they are official symbols of the nation they wish to split apart. At the same time they are putting all Hindus, regardless of their country of origin or current connection to India, into the crosshairs. If you are Hindu you must support the Government of India and therefore are their enemy, the broken logic of these vandalizing Khalistan supporters says. All mandirs are valid targets in their quest to avenge past wrongs, both real and imaginary, against Sikhs — most of whom both in America and India rightly want nothing to do with such vandalism, separatism, or terrorism and have good relations with Hindus.
Regardless of the genuine fact that our Hindu mandirs are places of spiritual solace for all templegoers and many are places of non-political community service and interfaith outreach, a hate-filled fight under the facade of political grievance is being brought to our doors. We did not seek this hatred and violence but we must not back down now that it has been brought to us.
For too long these incidents and who are responsible for them — by HAF’s count there’ve been 20 since 2022, including ones in Canada and Australia, and including ones where statues of Mahatma Gandhi outside temples have been attacked with similar motives — have been downplayed by mandirs in the interests of peace and community harmony. If we just quietly clean up and move on “we won’t be targeted again” and “all will be well”, seems to be the attitude.
This is a profound miscalculation.
If we Hindu Americans, both as individuals or institutions, do not take these incidents seriously and plainly state who the apparent perpetrators are, educating law enforcement and our elected officials about the dynamics and nuances of the threats we are facing, how can we ever expect these incidents to stop and those people responsible brought to justice? How can we ever expect these criminal bullies masquerading as freedom fighters to stop if we all, Hindu and Sikh alike, do not stand up to them?
We cannot and should not continue to brush these aside and mistakenly accept that occasional death threats in spray paint are just a fact of being a Hindu mandir in the United States. No other community would accept such threats and Hindus should not either.