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Kites over the Mango Tree: Restoring Harmony between Hindus and Muslims in Gujarat: Praeger Security International

Autor Janet M. Powers
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 noi 2008 – vârsta până la 17 ani
Hindu nationalists in the west Indian state of Gujarat repudiate the pluralist vision of Gandhi and Nehru and foment state-sponsored violence and ethnic cleansing against Muslims and Christians. In 2002, the burning to death of 59 rightwing Hindu militants in a train in Gujarat set off waves of state-condoned communal riots in which as many as 2,000 predominantly Muslim Gujaratis were murdered and 200,000 made homeless. In the wake of these atrocities, secular peace-building organizations have redoubled their efforts to heal the rift between Hindus and Muslims in Gujarat. A certified mediator, Janet Powers bases her book on interviews with workers in twenty of these peace-building NGOs and grassroots peace organizations, which are locked in struggle with politicized Hindu religious organizations largely funded by money raised in the United States. This is the first book to examine Hindu-Muslim relations in Gujarat in the frame of ongoing peace and conflict resolution efforts.Gujarat is the state of origin of most of the entrepreneurial Indians who own motels, convenience stores, and gas stations in the United States and United Kingdom. Much of the funding for the rightwing Hindu parties that foment extremist violence, ethnic cleansing, and re-conversion campaigns against the Muslim and Christian minorities in Gujarat comes from Gujarati expatriates in the U.S. and UK. Gujarat is the home of Mahatma Gandhi, who was assassinated in 1948 by an agent of the RSS, a violently anti-Muslim Hindu nationalist organization that flourishes today in Gujarat in virulent association with the ruling BJP and VHP parties. Equally dangerous to the peace of Gujarat are violent Wahhabist organizations based in Pakistan but operating in India. Powers assesses the prospects for long-term healing in Gujarat based on historical precedents, and she applies the lessons of Gujarati grassroots peace-building organizations in Gujarat to zones of state-sponsored religious conflict in other parts of the world.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780313351570
ISBN-10: 0313351570
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Praeger
Seria Praeger Security International

Locul publicării:New York, United States

Notă biografică

Janet M. Powers is Professor Emerita of Interdisciplinary and Women's Studies at Gettysburg College, specializing in Indian religion and literature. A certified conflict resolution mediator, she has worked with women's peace-building organizations in India, Palestine, Israel, Haiti, South Africa, and Estonia. She is the author of Blossoms on the Olive Tree: Israeli and Palestinian Women Working for Peace (Praeger, 2006) and a contributor to South Asian Novelists in English (Greenwood, 2003).

Cuprins

IllustrationsForewordPrefaceAcknowledgmentsPrologue1. 1992 and 20022. Kingdoms and Conquest3. European Dominance4. Mahatma Gandhi: Khalifat, Partition and Beyond5. The Sangh Parivar Organizations6. Muslim Reformers and Islamic Nationalists7. Motels and Convenience Stores8. SEWA: Work as Antidote to Violence9. The Gujarat Harmony Project10. Recovering the FutureAppendixBibliography

Recenzii

In this honest, well-intentioned book, Powers (interdisciplinary and women's studies, Gettysburg College) examines theproblematic relationship between Hindus and Muslims in the troubled province of Gujarat in India. . . . Recommended. General readers and all undergraduates.
. If people will open their minds and hearts, prospects for peace can flicker and bloom much like it did before. You'll have to read the book to uncover the symbolism of the kites and mango trees!