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Pakistan schools teach Hindu hatred

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From our conjoined history. For e.g. My folks fled mysore because the retard tipu was bent on converting all the non muslims into muslim by force.
so your entire argument about 180 million muslims in PK and about 200 mil in India is based upon the stories of your "folks" from some 200 yrs ago???
 
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Where did you learn that our ancestors were forcefully converted as you implied in one of your posts???

You do know how many Buddhist and Hindu temples and sites were destroyed and how many people who refused to cower were slain in sindh and punjab...don't you?...no?. Sikhism evolved as a defense force from hindus against muslim killers - you know that..right?.
 
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You do know how many Buddhist and Hindu temples and sites were destroyed and how many people who refused to cower were slain in sindh and punjab...don't you?...no?. Sikhism evolved as a defense force from hindus against muslim killers - you know that..right?.
how many people who refused to cower were slain in sindh and punjab?
 
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so your entire argument about 180 million muslims in PK and about 200 mil in India is based upon the stories of your "folks" from some 200 yrs ago???

The long muslim rule did leave the progenies thinking that they are the inheritors of the desert religion..solely because the muslim reproduced and kept to the faith because of the muslim rule and the benefits of being muslim under it. it was a different sort of the Stockholm syndrome spread over numerous generations. Some gave it a softer finish according to the cultural setting.

how many people who refused to cower were slain in sindh and punjab?

I would estimate in the millions.
 
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Hindus are repeatedly described as extremists and eternal enemies of Islam
There is no such thing in our books.
whose culture and society is based on injustice and cruelty, while Islam delivers a message of peace and brotherhood, concepts portrayed as alien to the Hindu.''
You're taking it out of context. yes your culture was based on injustice and cruelty towards dalits and women. that much is true. you must understand that the books are referring to the 18th century Indian society and fortunately much has changed for the better.
 
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You're taking it out of context. yes your culture was based on injustice and cruelty towards dalits and women. that much is true. you must understand that the books are referring to the 18th century Indian society and fortunately much has changed for the better.
"your culture" :woot:
mine is still the same. You must be talking about yourself and i have already accepted that hindus are evil and i don't have any problem what pakistan teaches to it's children. It's some pakistanis who are whining about minority conditions in pakistan and the report i quoted is from pakistan so explain these things to them.
 
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Blasphemy - dawn the only remotely credible pakistani newspaper spreads falsehood.
Credible because certain idiots and/or sold-out yellow journalists/columnists write what enemies of Pakistan like to read. Dawn's credibility my foot.
 
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India should show how muscular it's foreign policy is. Why is Modi-ji (leader of a new regional power) not doing anything?
quite a steep dive in logic, if your national policy marginalizes it's own minorities, how is it our foreign policy issue....

Teaching our new generation about the cunning and dangerous neighbour is not hatred, its unfortunate bitter reality of life.
Do you have any pakistani hindus?

can you point me out neutral source of your information??? maybe i can read it than get back to you!
Textbook biases: ‘Our schools are extremism factories’ – The Express Tribune

Extremism, Biased Syllabi, and Disassociation Derailing peace, Experts Say | Emerging Leaders of Pakistan. A program of the Atlantic Council’s South Asia Center

Education and extremism - Newspaper - DAWN.COM

In Pakistan's Public Schools, Jihad Still Part of Lesson Plan - Los Angeles Times

School syllabus blamed for religious extremism


In a 1995 paper published in the International Journal of Middle East Studies, historian Ayesha Jalal stated that "Pakistan's history textbooks amongst the best available sources for assessing the nexus between power and bigotry in creative imaginings of a national past." She points out authors whose "expansive pan-Islamic imaginings" detect the beginnings of Pakistan in the birth of Islam on the Arabian peninsula.

A Text Book of Pakistan Studies claims that Pakistan "came to be established for the first time when the Arabs underMohammad bin Qasim occupied Sindh and Multan'; by the thirteenth century 'Pakistan had spread to include the whole of Northern India and Bengal' and then under the Khiljis, Pakistan moved further south-ward to include a greater part of Central India and the Deccan'. [...] The spirit of Pakistan asserted itself', and under Aurangzeb the 'Pakistan spirit gathered in strength'; his death 'weakened the Pakistan spirit'." Jalal points out that even an acclaimed scholar like Jameel Jalibi questions the validity of a national history that seeks to "claim Pakistan's pre-Islamic past" in an attempt to compete with India's historic antiquity.

K. Ali's two volume history designed for BA students traces the pre-history of the 'Indo-Pakistan' subcontinent to the Paleolithic Age and consistently refers to the post-1947 frontiers of Pakistan while discussing the Dravidians and the Aryans.

Anti-Indian sentiments, coupled with anti-Hindu prejudices have existed in Pakistan since its formation, alternated with military dictatorship, and India being a secular state with a civilian government.

According to Tufts University professor Seyyed Vali Reza Nasr, Indophobia in Pakistan increased with the ascendancy of the militant Islamist Jamaat-e-Islami under Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi.

Indophobia, together with Anti-Hinduism and racist ideologies, such as Martial Race theory, were the driving factors behind the re-writing of school textbooks in Pakistan (in both "secular" schools and Islamic madrassahs) in order to promote a biased and revisionist historiography of the Indian subcontinent that promulgated Indophobic and anti-Hindu prejudices. These narratives are combined with Islamist propaganda in the extensive revising of Pakistan's history. By propagating concepts such as jihad, the inferiority of non-Muslims, India’s perceived ingrained enmity with Pakistan, etc., the textbook board publications used by all government schools promote an obscurantist mindset.
 
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Faisal,so according to u,the US Commission on International Religious Freedom. is spreading false information about Pakistan. Many liberal Pakistanis have commented about the negative things written about Hindus,sikhs & christians which r taught to Pakistani school children in yr History text book
I said it before and saying it again, if anyone want proof then he can come to Pakistan and read syllabus books himself.
 
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