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Is US Corporate Philanthropy Funding Hate Groups In India?

The Campaign to Stop Funding Hate Announces Project Saffron Dollar

              

 

 

Received via South Asia Citizens Wire.

         

 

Are the charity dollars generously provided by American companies?

including some of our leading corporate citizens of the high

technology world, being used to fund violent, sectarian groups in

India? The Campaign to Stop Funding Hate (SFH) announces the launch

of Project Saffron Dollar to bring an end to the electronic

collection and transfer of funds from the US to organizations that

spread sectarian hatred in India.

 

The Campaign to Stop Funding Hate (SFH) is a coalition of

people‹professionals, students, workers, artists and

intellectuals‹who share a common concern that sectarian hatreds in

India are being fueled by money flowing from the United States.  SFH

is committed to an India that is open, tolerant and democratic.  As

the first step, SFH is determined to turn off the money flow from the

United States to Hindutva hate groups responsible for recurring

anti-minority violence in India.

 

IDRF: THE SANGHıS FUNDING BRANCH IN THE USA

 

Project Saffron Dollar aims to put an end to the collection of

hundreds of thousands of dollars by the most Œrespectableı of the US

based funding arms of the violent and sectarian Hindutva movement‹the

India Development and Relief Fund (IDRF). In its communications and

on its website, the IDRF claims to be a non-sectarian, non-political

charity that funds development and relief work in India.  However, a

report ­ A Foreign Exchange of Hate ­ co-published today by the South

Asia Citizens Web (SACW) based in France, and Sabrang Communications,

Bombay, India, documents in rich detail the fundamental connections

between the IDRF and the Sangh Parivar (or simply the Sangh, the name

commonly used for the network of RSS-linked organizations that

collectively define the Hindutva movement).  Amongst other documents,

the SACW/Sabrang report examines a tax document filed by IDRF (at its

inception in 1989) with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) of the US

Federal Government. The report offers the following:

 

[F]orm 1023, duly filled by IDRF executives when it was created in

1989, identifies nine organizations as a representative sample of the

types of organizations IDRF has been set up to support in IndiaŠ All

nine are clearly marked Sangh organizations.

 

The report concludes that the fact of money being sent to

organizations linked to the RSS is not a Œmereı incidental to IDRFıs

larger operations, but rather that raising funds for the Sangh

Parivar is, and continues to be, the primary reason for the existence

of IDRF in the US.

 

It is critical to underscore that IDRFıs claim to being non-sectarian

is entirely misleading. The SACW/Sabrang report indicates that a

whopping 82% of the funds disbursed at the discretion of IDRF go to

Sangh organizations.  Of the remaining, the bulk goes to sectarian

Hindu charities that may or may not have a direct Sangh affiliation.

Less than five percent of their funds go to agencies that do not have

a distinct Hindu-religious identification. Examining the IDRF fund

disbursement from a Œactivity-fundedı viewpoint, the SACW/Sabrang

report documents that nearly 70% of the monies are used for

"hinduization/tribal/education" work, largely with a view of

spreading Hindutva ideology amongst Adivasi (tribal) communities.

Less than 20% of the total sent by IDRF is used in what are commonly

understood as Œdevelopment and reliefı activities.  However, the

report also concludes that "the 15% funds that the IDRF disbursed for

"relief" must also be seen as sectarian funds" because of the

sectarian basis of how relief work is carried out by the

organizations that IDRF funds.

 

DOLLARS OF DECEPTION: IDRF FUND RAISING TECHNIQUES

 

A substantial proportion of IDRFıs fund-raising is done through

electronic means:

… money transfer portals such as PayPal;

… company foundations and their electronic portals such as Cisco Foundation; … other charity portals such as Givingstation.org; and … credit card commissions through a NSC/MBNA Bank issued IDRF Master Card.

 

SFH research indicates that in excess of half a million dollars may

be going every year into the hate-lined coffers of IDRF through such

transfers.  As of 10AM PST (USA), November 19 2002, petitions seeking

an immediate cessation of the transfer of funds to IDRF have been

dispatched along with comprehensive back-up documentation, including

A Foreign Exchange of Hate report, to ten of the leading

corporations, portals and money exchange facilities.  The SFH

petition urges these corporations to immediately disallow IDRF from

using their facilities for direct or indirect fund-raising.

 

Many large US corporations such as CISCO, Sun, Oracle, HP and AOL

Time Warner match employee contributions to US based non profits.

"Annual Giving" programs normally happen once a year in late

Fall‹timed to occur between Thanksgiving and Christmas. Unsuspecting

corporations end up giving large amounts of money as matching funds

to IDRF as employees of these firms direct funds to IDRF.  For

instance, in fiscal 1999, Cisco Foundation gave almost $70,000 to

IDRF ­ placing IDRF among the top 5 of Cisco grantees.  In

comparison, a well-regarded mainstream institution like the Nobel

Peace Prize winning Doctors Without Borders received only $2,560.

Also, other Indian-American development organizations such as Asha

($1,417), CRY‹Child Relief and You ($4,427) or the Maharashtra

Foundation ($2,000) all fared much worse than IDRF.  Clearly, at

least among Cisco employees, the IDRF has come to occupy much of the

giving space.  When you add Ciscoıs matching grants to the original

amounts given by its employees, a total of at least $133,000 went

through Cisco to IDRF in 1999-2000‹this is more than 5% of IDRFıs

total cash collections for the same time period.

 

  The dynamics of IDRFıs corporate funding strategy are simple.  As

professional Indian migration to the US has boomed over the last

decade, especially in the software sector, groups of Sangh

operatives, in each of the large high-tech firms with liberal giving

policies, have worked to put IDRF on the corporationsı list of

grantees.  The swayamsevaks (Sangh Œvolunteersı) within these

corporations then push IDRF as the Œbestı and the Œonlyı way to

provide funding for Œdevelopment & reliefı work in India, thus

causing not only other unsuspecting employees, but also the

corporation itself to fund the Sangh in India.  Such activities of

Sangh operatives, within firms such as Cisco, constitute a clear

effort to mislead the corporation into funding organizations that

spread sectarian hate: explicitly in contravention of company policy.

For instance, a criterion for eligibility for donations that Cisco

outlines is that the "organization/project being funded must have a

nonreligious primary purpose"; and, equally explicit, is the

criterion for an ineligible organization: "organizations whose

primary mission is to promote or serve one culture, race, or

religion.Š"  Clearly IDRF falls outside of the purview of eligibility

because of its Sangh connection and is also marked clearly as

ineligible because of its single minded focus on Hindus and the

creation of a Hindu Rashtra (a vision of an exclusivist Hindu

Supremacist nation).

 

The case of Charity portals such as Giving Station or Donation Depot

is similar.  Many US corporations use one or other of these donation

portals to encourage annual giving by their employees. For instance,

Hewlett Packard, the California based computer and peripherals giant,

manages its annual giving plans through Giving Station.

 

IDRF has also adopted an older Hindutva strategy.  Between 1993 and

1995 the VHP of America had signed up with AT&T in its Associations

Rewards Program, wherein a fixed percentage of any subscribers total

telephone bill could be directed to a non profit of his/her choice,

provided the non profit was registered with AT&T in its Association

Rewards Program. Under consistent pressure from people appalled by

this misuse of charitable giving, AT&T withdrew all support to VHP of

America.  IDRF has reproduced exactly the same method for funds

collection, this time through a credit card issued by MBNA bank as

part of a program managed by the National Scrip Center‹an

organization founded primarily to simplify fund-raising by schools.

The operation of this scheme is similar to what the VHP-A had tried

with the AT&T Rewards program‹from one to fifteen percent of all

transactions conducted on an MBNA-IDRF credit card goes to IDRF.

 

What is perhaps morally more reprehensible than individuals directing

money to IDRF knowing that most or all of it will be used for Sangh

activities, is the subterfuge involved in misusing the generosity of

well meaning individuals and organizations for the securing of hate

money.  Such deception does great harm to the Indo-American community

by taking advantage of people (and corporations) who care, people who

give money in the belief that they are helping non sectarian relief

and development work in India.

 

A CALL TO BE VIGILANT

 

The diversity of the funds collection strategies employed by IDRF in

the small sample outlined above indicates that it is very likely that

there are many more such tactics employed by the Sangh that have yet

to be uncovered.  SFH is committed to following the last dollar.

 

Although it is clear that a large amount of money does go from the US

to fund Sangh operations in India‹what the exact amount is, is still

an open question.  The SACW/Sabrang report clearly locates

"development" and "seva" work as the most potent Sangh cover in its

spreading the ideology of hate.  SFH sees its role as not just a

campaign to stop such relatively Œover-groundı funding as done by

IDRF, but also to promote an awareness of how even funds that are

given to temples and cultural organizations may be ending up in the

hands of the Sangh and similar organizations.

 

A decade ago, people who funded development work in India could do so

without being too vigilant on the specific usage of these funds.  But

in the wake of the growing levels of sectarian violence across the

world, we all need to heighten the level of scrutiny regarding the

funds being transferred to organizations overseas‹funds ostensibly

collected for Œdevelopment & reliefı work but being used to foment

hatreds and spread violence.

 

Corporations also have a responsibility in ensuring that their funds

are not misused by agencies like IDRF.  By inadvertently promoting

such groups, corporations end up not only supporting violence in

India but also importing the divisions and hatreds of Indian society

into the Indo-American community and promoting extremism on American

soil.

 

For SFH our guiding light is well expressed by the apostle of peace,

Mahatma Gandhi, who when told that the RSS had done some excellent

relief work in the wake of the 1946 communal riots, answered, "But

donıt forget, even so had Hitlerıs Nazis and the Fascists under

Mussolini."  He saw right through this façade of seva and

characterized the RSS as a communal body with a totalitarian

outlook.ı He paid for this with his life. Our task is to ensure that

his message of peace, love and tolerance does not die in India.

 

A Report by Sabrang Communications Pvt. Ltd. (India) / SACW (France)

 

the online report is available at:

South Asia Citizens Web (France) http://www.mnet.fr/aiindex/2002/FEH

Sabrang Communications (India) http://www.sabrang.com

 

The full report is also being hosted by a growing number of web sites

worldwide.

The current list is:

Isis Creations (Australia): www.isis.aust.com/sacw/

Insaf (Canada): www.insaf.net

Outlook (India):  www.outlookindia.com

India Committee of the the Netherlands: www.indianet.nl

(UK): azadee.users.btopenworld.com/

Z Mag South Asia (USA): www.zmag.org/southasia/southasia1.htm

Alliance for Secular and Democratic South Asia (USA):

www.alliancesouthasia.org

Proxsa (USA)  www.proxsa.org/newsflash/

SikhSpectrum.com Monthly (USA)  www.sikhspectrum.com/112002/Report/hdv.htm

Stop Funding Hate (USA) :   www.stopfundinghate.org/resources/FEH.htm

Dissident Voice (USA):   www.dissidentvoice.org

Coalition Against Communalism (USA):

www.ektaonline.org/cac/resources/reports/sacw/index.html

 
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