The private member bill violates community freedom to practice their religion by uniting the symbol of ancient religion with HakenKreuz – the derivative of the Nazi Party, said the community
India has marked the Ottawa concern of the Indo-Canadian community over the bill before the Canadian parliament to ban sales and display of hatred symbols, including Swastika for its relationship with Nazism.
A private member bill, was submitted by the National Democratic Party MPs Peter Julian last week, which has the support of the Jagmeet Singh Party leader, has woriled Indo-Canada for the “incidence” of the community sacred symbol.
The bill seeks to “prevent the appearance or sale of symbols or symbols such as the Nazi Swastika and my Badges Klux Klan, flags such as German standards between 1933 and 1945 and people from the United States between these years 1861 to 1865 and uniforms, including America United States Unions and Confederations of Military Dresses from those periods, as well as my hood and robe Klux clans “.
It was taken after such symbols were seen in the first weekend truck drivers against cross-border vaccine mandates, where protesters lay down the siege in the Canadian capital Ottawa.
“The swastikas flag and the Confederation have no place in Canada. We have the responsibility to make our community safe for everyone – it’s time to prohibit hate symbols in Canada,” said Singh earlier this month, promoting a petition in this matter.
The Indian Consul General APOORVA Srivastava said India had been “marked by formal this problem to the Canadian government and shared with their petitions received from Canadian groups in this matter.” He responded to the advocate-based advocacy of Toronto Ragini Sharma, according to whom, those who respect the Swastika – including Hinduism, Buddha and Jain – found “very painful” statement by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau alluded to “violence attached to” Swastika “.
MP Canadian Chandra Arya, from the Liberal Trudeau Party, is likely to increase the problem at the House of Commons. His office said that he was “very concerned about plans to ban the Sacred Symbol of Hindu Swastika. He led to stop this happening”.
Sharma also said there was a campaign against the bill because it would “criminalize Swastika”.
While empathizing with the trauma suffered by Jews during the Holocaust, this campaign opposed “the wrong link from Nazi Hapenkreuz or making love with Swastika. We need Canadians to be educated about differences and to understand that swastika has nothing to do with the Nazi hatred symbol” .
He shows that if it becomes a law, it can cause problems for individuals and even for organizations such as the Canadian Buddhist Association, which stands out has a symbol line at the entrance in Toronto.
A rally against the Indo-Canada Bill was also held in the city of Surrey in British Columbia. Organizations, including Hindu Temple in Burnaby and Canada Gurukul Cultural Culture, participated in protests on Sunday.
One of the participants, the Manal Neema said they demanded that the Swastika word removed from the bill and replaced with the Nazi symbol. “How could we not have a swastika displayed at home or at the temple?” He asked.
In a letter to all parliamentarians and senators, copied to Trudeau and other Federal Party leaders, the National Association of the President of Indo-Canada Azad Kaushik said the body of the umbrella “strongly opposed” the bill as “would violate Hindu rights, Jains and the people Buddha for free and public practice their religion “.