Washington:There is now a dangerous hybridisation of hate against the Hindu community, a US-based scientific research organisation has said, citing the increasing attacks on them in this country and various parts of the world. We've seen that there's been a growth of over 1,000 per cent and anti-Hindu slurs are stoking fears of replacement mixing with anti-semitic memes, with other forms of narratives, and hatred shared by white supremacists, by Islamists, and others, and creating a toxic atmosphere of hostility, said Joel Finkelstein, chief science officer and co-founder of the Network Contagion Research Institute.
Presenting key points of his latest research at the Building Representation and Education on Hindu American Lived Experiences organised by the Coalition of Hindus of North America (CoHNA) at the US Capitol, Finkelstein said that in recent months vandalisation against Hindu temples had increased in the US, and in Canada, it is going through the roof.
"And now we see what amounts to a low-grade pogrom occurring in England, Finkelstein told members of the Hindu American community. He was referring to the ongoing violence against Hindus in the United Kingdom. Based out of New Jersey, the Network Contagion Research Institute (NCRI), a nonprofit organisation, studies misinformation, deception manipulation, and hate across social media channels.
Observing that Hinduphobia is one of the most complicated hatreds, Finkelstein said there is now a dangerous hybridisation of hate against the community. Responding to a question, he said that there is a likelihood of escalation of hatred against the Hindu community in the world. Congressman Hank Johnson, the only Buddhist lawmaker in the current Congress, also expressed concerns over the recent increase in hate against Hindus in the US.