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Hindu Nationalism
Sanjeev Kumar (2012): ‘Sangh Parivar and the Bhutanese Refugees: Constructing a Hindu Diaspora in the US’ in John Zavos, Pralay Kanungo, Deepa S. Reddy, Maya Warrier and Raymond B. Williams (Eds.) Public Hinduism, Sage Publications

Sangh Parivar and the Bhutanese Refugees: Constructing a Hindu Diaspora in the US By

Sanjeev Kumar
I happened to meet Bhutanese refugees of Nepali origin for the first time at a Hindu Swayamsevak Sangh (HSS) camp in Tampa, Florida in December 2008. These refugees travelled to the US via Nepal, having left Bhutan and entered Nepal in the 1990s. The refugee crisis was prompted by Government-sponsored discrimination against Nepali speakers in Bhutan (Banki 2008). In the late 1990s the first batch of refugees (called Lhotshampai) began to move out of Bhutan, and entered Nepal. The Bhutan, however, refused to recognize these Lhotshampas as refugees from Bhutan and Nepal refused to acknowledge them as Nepali citizens. By 2008, some 130,000 Bhutanese people of Nepali origin had been forced to live in exile for more than 17 years (Hutt 2006; Banki 2008). In Nepal, around 105,000 of these refugees lived in refugee camps organised by the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) in the Morang and the Jhapa districts of south-eastern Nepal and the rest lived in different parts of Nepal and India (Hutt 2006; HRW 2007; Banki 2008; and UNHCR 2010). After years of failed negotiations between the governments of Bhutan and Nepal, in 2006, at the request of UNHCR, the United States declared its willingness to accommodate 60,000 of these refugees (UNHCR 2009). Countries like Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Norway, Denmark and the Netherlands promised to accommodate the rest of 45,000 Lhotshampa refugees from the UNHCR refugee camps (UNHCR 2009). The idea of third country settlement initially met with some stiff resistance; amongst its strongest opponents were those organisations that were supporting the cause of Bhutanese refugees in



Bibliography: Andersen, Walter and Shridhar Damle. 1987. The Brotherhood in Saffron: The Rashtriya Sawamsevak Sangh and Hindu Revivalism. New Delhi: Vistaur Publication. Banki, Susan. 2008. Resettlement of Bhutanese from Nepal: The Durable Solution Discourse. In Protracted Displacement in Asia: No Place to Call Home, ed. Howard Adelman, pp. 2955. England: Ashgate Publishing Ltd. Gozdziak, Elzbieta M. 2002. Spritual Emergecy Room: The Role of Sprituality and Religion in Resettlement of Kosovar Albanians. Journal of Refugee Studies 15(2):136-152. HRW. 2003. Trapped by Inequality: Bhutanese Woman in Nepal. New York: Human Rights Watch. _______. 2007. Last Hope: Need for Durable Solutions for Bhutanese Refugees in Nepal and India. New York: Human Rights Watch. Hutt, Michael. 2003. Unbecoming Citizens: Culture, Nationhood, and the Flight of Refugees from Bhutan. New Delhi: Oxford University Press. Jaffrelot, Christophe. 2005. (ed.). The Sangh Parivar: A Reader. Critical Issues in Indian Politics. New Delhi: Oxford University Press. Kurien, Prema. 2006. Multiculturalism and “American” Religion: The Case of Hindu Indian Americans. Social Forces 85(2):723-741. _______. 2007. A Place at the Multicultural Table: The Development of an American Hinduism. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press. Men, Chena Rithy. 2002. The Changing Religious Beliefs and ritual Practices among Cambodians in Diaspora. Journal of Refugee Studies 15(2):222-233. Mortland, C. 1994. Khmer Buddhists in the United States: Ultimate Questions’. In Cambodian Culture Since 1975 eds. M. Ebihara, C.Mortland and J. ledegerwood. Ithaca: Cornell University Press Saul, B. 2000 Cultural Nationalism, Self Determination and Human Rights in Bhutan. International Journal of Refugee Law 12(3); 321-353. Sewa International USA, 2009. Bhutanese Refugee Empowerment Project GA Available online at http://www.sewausa.org/bhutanese-refugee-empowerment-project-ga (downloaded on 31.10.2010) 5 UNHCR. 2009. Number of Refugees Resettled from Nepal passes 25,000 Mark, last accessed on Sept.28, 2010 at http://www.unhcr.org/print/4b22462e6.html _______. 2010. Nepal: 2010 UNHCR Country Operations Profile- Nepal, last accessed on Sept. 28, 2010 at http://www.unhcr.org/pages/49e487856.html Vishwa Hindu Parishad of America (VHPA), 2010. Ashraya: A new beginning Bhutanese resettlement project. Available online at http://www.vhp-america.org/press/Ashraya.html (downloaded on 31.10.2010) 6

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