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YOU ARE INVITED

IS INDIA WITNESSING A RISE IN HATE ?

WEDNESDAY, 9 FEBRUARY 7 PM IST

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Nobel Peace Prize Nominated, Harsh Mander is an Indian author, columnist, researcher, teacher, and social activist who started the Karwan-e-Mohabbat campaign in solidarity with the victims of communal or religiously motivated violence. He is the Director of the Centre for Equity Studies, a research organisation based in New Delhi. He also served as Special Commissioner to the Supreme Court of India in the Right to Food Campaign and was a member of the National Advisory Council of the Government of India, set up under the UPA government.

SYNOPSIS:

During the dark days of the Raj many predicted that the idea of India would eventually fail and the divisions of caste, religion and race would come to define the subcontinent. The 75 years of independent India have proved these doomsayers utterly wrong. Instead of the divisions, the peaceful co-existence of its various ethnic and cultural groups has come to define the Indian nation. Hence it is naturally a matter of grave concern that much of the national and international media in their coverage of India have been featuring alarming headlines about the rise of intolerance. Gruesome stories about communal violence and mob lynchings appear to have become commonplace. Many of India’s prominent artists and academics, along with veteran bureaucrats and opposition politicians have felt compelled to draft public letters, deliver emotional parliamentary speeches and file writ petitions in the Supreme Court, seeking urgent action to check this disturbing trend. Even foreign leaders such as Barack Obama and Kamala Harris have pushed diplomatic boundaries to remind India of its commitment to democracy and the strength it derives from being inclusive. 

Can all of this be simply an overreaction or is it a sinister conspiracy to defame India? Or worse, is it true? Is India seeing a rise in hate?

If indeed true, the alarm bells must be heeded. Hate, if allowed to fester for too long, can tear the social fabric of any society. Moreover, experts point out that "rising intolerance, hate crimes and moral policing can seriously damage the economic growth of the nation." That’s a risk India, which still needs to lift hundreds of millions out of poverty, cannot afford to take. The doctrine of hate cannot be allowed to reverse India's upward trajectory. 

In this session, we meet face-to-face with Mr. Harsh Mander, who has been nominated this year for the Nobel Peace Prize in recognition of his extensive work with victims of mass violence and his campaign 'Karwan-e-Mohabbat'. 'Karwan-e-Mohabbat', meaning “Caravan of Love” was founded by Mr. Mander in 2017, to show solidarity to victims of hate crimes. An award-winning author, researcher, teacher and human rights worker, he has been hailed as "an important voice for religious tolerance and dialogue."

GET A CHANCE TO BE FACE-TO-FACE WITH HARSH MANDER AND ASK HIM QUESTIONS DIRECTLY

Knowledge Sessions are live video conversations that let you interact directly with the people that inspire you.

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