Table of Contents
Is India a secular country or not?
With the Forty-second Amendment of the Constitution of India enacted in 1976, the Preamble to the Constitution asserted that India is a secular nation. The Constitution does not recognize, it does not permit, mixing religion and State power.
Is India a communal country?
Communalism is a significant social issue in India, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. Communal conflicts between religious communities in India, especially Hindus and Muslims, have occurred since the period of British colonial rule, occasionally leading to serious inter-communal violence.
Is Pakistan a fundamentalist country?
Pakistan is also fundamentalist because of its draconian sharia laws and its weak leadership that kowtows to the religious lobby when it comes to blasphemy laws and the treatment of religious minorities. Its political culture reinforces fundamentalism and discourages any dissent of orthodox ideas.
Why there is no official religion in India?
there was no official religion in India because there was many kind of religion in India. If there was a official religion than other religion think inequality.
What is fundamental of Islam?
The religious obligations of all Muslims are summed up in the Five Pillars of Islam, which include belief in God and his Prophet and obligations of prayer, charity, pilgrimage, and fasting. The fundamental concept of Islam is the Sharīʿāh—its law, which embraces the total way of life commanded by God.
What fundamentalist means?
noun. an adherent of fundamentalism, a religious movement characterized by a strict belief in the literal interpretation of religious texts: radical fundamentalists.
How did the Hindu fundamentalists take over India?
It was the result of a well-planned strategy by Hindu fundamentalists, who have been trying to gain a foothold in Indian society since the 1920s. Hindu fundamentalists had support from the state machinery, which they have systematically infiltrated in the last decade.
Are there any right-wing Hindu organisations in India?
The right-wing Hindu organisations function under various names in India and throughout the diaspora.
Who does not belong to hindustan5?
All those who do not subscribe to the Hindu religion and hence culture (sic) are not Hindu, and so cannot belong to Hindustan5 – they are ‘otherised’. The final act of assertion by the Hindu right is through a systematic takeover of state power.