Edison, New Jersey (November 15, 2022) – A coalition of leading New Jersey-based civil rights organizations have held several meetings with federal and state law enforcement agencies and sought action against Hindu supremacist groups indulging in anti-Muslim hate and bigotry.

In light of several incidents of open display of Hindu supremacist (Hindutva) hate in multiple counties across New Jersey over the last two months, the coalition met with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the US Attorney General’s Office, the Department of Homeland Security, the Department of Justice, the NJ Attorney General’s Office, and several other local and national officials to urge an investigation into Hindu supremacist hate groups in the United States and their foreign sources of hate.

The coalition included Indian American Muslim Council (IAMC) New Jersey chapter, Council on American Islamic Relations-New Jersey (CAIR-NJ), Black Lives Matter (BLM), American Muslims for Democracy (AMD), and Hindus for Human Rights (HfHR).

IAMC has specifically requested an investigation into prominent US-based groups with ties to the Hindu supremacist ideology of Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh, a fascist paramilitary group in India. This includes the Indian Business Association (IBA), which was responsible for allowing the use of hate symbols by the Overseas Friends of the Bharatiya Janata Party (OFBJP) during the Indian Independence Day parade in Edison, NJ, in August. OFBJP is the registered foreign agent of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu supremacist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

Most notably, the coalition met with US Department of Justice Community Relations Service representatives Benoy Thomas and Harpreet Singh Mokha, US Attorney General’s Office attorney R. Joseph Gribko, and an FBI Special Agent. IAMC has also corresponded with NJ Senators Bob Menendez and Cory Booker, both of whom have condemned the IBA’s use of a bulldozer as an anti-Muslim hate symbol in their parade.

Representatives from the US Attorney General’s Office and the Department of Justice, who met jointly with the delegation, stated that the Edison incident was a “case of intimidation and bias” and offered to help facilitate mediation within the community, including through school programs to foster inclusivity.

“As displays of Hindu extremism in the US become bolder and less apologetic, it is of utmost importance that national law enforcement becomes aware of the hateful roots and rhetoric of Hindutva, a movement that is completely antithetical to the values of American democracy,” said Syed Ali, President of IAMC.

“We are grateful to these law enforcement agencies for taking these threats seriously and hope that this is the beginning of a thorough investigation into US-based hate groups that are directly connected to violent extremists in India,” Ali added.

This story was originally published in milligazette.com . Read the full story here