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          We Appeal Rights for Afghan Hindus & Sikhs in Afghanistan

The Afghan Govt. is just playing with poor Afghan Hindus/Sikhs, telling them, promissing them  since last 2 years to

 aloting them a Crimation Ground & Schools for Children  But still nothing is happened.  why?

NO HUMAN RIGHTS in AFGHANISTAN, SPECIALLY NO RIGHTS for AFGHAN HINDUS/SIKHS

The remaining Minority Community of Afghan Hindus/ Sikhs in Afghanistan are facing big Problems:

    They donot have a Cremation Ground.

    The Children can not visit a proper School.

    The Community is being discriminated & persecuted from Local Muslims.

The Hindus in Kabul and Kandahar suffer from not having a proper area for cremation and are forced to move the bodies to other provinces and even across the border at some instances. According to their religious rituals, the bodies of children above two years of age are to be burnt whereas younger than that is to be buried.

For centuries, the Hindu and Sikh communities have been living in the capital as well as the other provinces of Afghanistan and possess Afghan nationality. They are facing this problem since four years. For 120 years they performed cremation in the Qalacha area of Kabul but now the residents of that area do not allow it and they have to move the bodies to Ghazni, Khost and Nangarhar provinces and even to Peshawar city in Pakistan.

This issue was addressed to the government, the Municipality of Kabul, police, Ministry of Hajj and Pilgrimage and the Parliament but till now, no proper area has been given to them. In 2005, they took two bodies from Kabul to Khost province, two other bodies to Jalalabad city in 2006 and another two bodies in 2007 to Ghazni province for cremation. Some times  back they took a body to Qilacha area for cremation but the people didn’t allow them and they were forced to take it to one of the deserts in the Char Asyab district of Kabul. This problem was also faced by the Hindus and Sikhs of Kandahar who are even insulted by people

a delegation met Hamid Karzai in 2003 and he ordered the Kabul Municipality to give a land to them for cremation but it is pending till today. They were given a land in the Pul-e-Charkhi area of Kabul but later it was found out that it belonged to the Kochi tribe. In 2003 they were promised 10 hectares of land from the Ministry of Hajj and Pilgrimage but they have not fulfilled their promise till now.

Father in law of Mr.Jugandir Singh of De Afghanan area of Kabul with a grocery shop died last year but the residents of Qalacha area didn’t allow his cremation. It was only after a demonstration and with police enforcement that they finally managed to do it there

A number of residents of Qalacha area confirmed that there was a land for cremation but now due to the influx of population, people don’t want bodies to be burned near their homes.

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The Kids in Kabul / Khandahar have no rights to visit the Schools, Hindu and Sikh communities said their children were being forced to drop out of state schools because of bullying.

When the children go to the government schools, they face problems. The children of Muslim brothers don’t know who we are. They hate our children. For instance, some of them cut off our children’s hair, while others make fun of them. They regard them as strangers, not as Afghans.

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Our Community living in Afghanistan is not recognized from Local Residense as Afghans, They are being discriminating through Local Muslims.

We condempt these Non Human acts in Afghanistan & demand an end of such Non Human activities.

Please help our Minority Community in Afghanistan., We apeal Human Rights for Hindus & Sikhs in Afghanistan.

 

Please Sign an Online Petition, click here:              List of people who already signed the petition

10_6_2002_sikh afghanisikhs
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Afghan Sikhs Under Threat : A Brief History

By Jagmit Singh

Kabul, Afghanistan (CHAKRA) – The recent beheading of Sikhs by the Taliban in Peshawar, bordering Afghanistan, has reminded the community of the hardships they face on both side of the Pakistan, Afghanistan border today. Two Sikhs men were reportedly beheaded by the Taliban in the FATA region of Pakistan, with their heads later being dropped at a gurdwara in Peshawar. Still, reports suggest that other Sikhs are under hostage.

Last year the Pakistani Taliban militants had taken over shops and homes of Sikh families in the Orakzai Agency, while making demand for ransom. This year’s incidents are repeated attacks from last year, with threats to the Sikh community to convert, if they want to continuing living in Peshawar or even living at all.

 

Afghan Sikhs sit around the coffin of community elder Lachman Singh during a protest in Kabul September 17, 2007. Around 100 angry Afghan Sikhs carried a coffin to the United Nations headquarters in Kabul on Monday, accusing Muslims of stopping them cremating the dead man.

The Sikhs have been living in this region of Peshawar for a long time, historically. India is acclaimed as Sikh’s homeland while they were settling in Afghanistan over phases of its history, especially in the early nineteenth century when the Afghans lost Peshawar to the Sikhs.

Over the last few centuries, descendents of Sikhs traders have settled in Afghanistan starting in Sindh and Punjab through Kandahar, Jalalabad, as well as Kabul. The trade routes created through these settlements, went across the Hindu Kush to Samarkand, Merv and into Europe.

Afghan-Sikhs-constantly-face-threats

During the partition of India, a late migration occurred when many Sikhs living in Pakistan, near the Afghan border found it easier to find refuge in Afghanistan rather than taking a risk to travel across the country to go to India.

This new group of Sikh refugees made Afghanistan their home and they are known as the Afghan Sikhs who formed a more ethnically diverse Afghanistan. Just as they came in during different times in history, the Sikhs also left in different phases—out of the country.

Some left during the Soviet War, dying on their way because of the bombings of the war. The displacement caused by the war made many travel to India to find a temporary place to live but it turned out to not be temporary after all.

When they returned home shortly, their homes were taken over by warlords and their businesses were all destroyed. Years of the Sikhs hard work had shattered.

The Afghan Hindus and Sikhs were over 50, 000 in total before 1992 in areas like Ghazni, Jalalabad, Khandahar, Khost, Kabul and Laghman. Today there are only about 1500 Sikhs living, mostly in Kabul. The only ones that remained in Afghanistan are the ones who had no relative abroad or not enough resources to migrate somewhere else.

After 2001, many Sikhs have had serious problems and been denied freedom to practice their culture and rituals within the Afghanistan borders. An attempt to cremate a Sikh body in Kabul led to tensions between the local communities as the cremation was seen as going against beliefs of Islam—the majority religion practiced now in Afghanistan.

 

The Text in FARSI......... More in pdf

You can download the Original version of this Poster, just click on Poster

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KABULNATH

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Zentralrat der afghanischen Hindus und Sikhs in Deutschland e.V.

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