The group is alleged to have organised protests with the Bajrang Dal and Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP), blamed for organising violence against Muslims and Christians in India.
Press Release
WASHINGTON, D.C. — A coalition of human rights organisations have filed a complaint with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), as well as the attorney generals of Texas and Mississippi, calling for an investigation into the Global Hindu Heritage Foundation (GHHF), a Texas-based Hindu far-right group.
The foundation attracted significant press attention in December 2022 when it hosted a fundraiser in Frisco, Texas, allegedly to help pay for the demolition of churches in India. Having further investigated GHHF’s activities since this disturbing event, coalition attorneys have discovered that the organisation has also used US dollars to fund; the closure of Muslim businesses in India; the promotion of anti-Muslim and anti-Christian conspiracy theories; the promotion of prominent anti-Muslim Indian politicians in the US; and the forcible conversion of Muslims and Christians in India.
The group is alleged to have organised protests with the Bajrang Dal and Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP), blamed for organising violence against Muslims and Christians in India.
It also maintains ties with the Bharatiya Janata Party, India’s ruling party.
The complaint lodged in response to these findings — filed by a coalition of human rights groups and interfaith organisations, including the Indian American Muslim Council, Hindus for Human Rights, the Council on American Islamic Relations DFW Chapter, the North American Manipur Tribal Association, the Ambedkarite Buddhist Association of Texas, and World Without Genocide — argues that GHHF activities should preclude it from receiving tax-exempt status. Its activities fall well outside the scope of those governing charitable or religious institutions, and GHHF should, therefore cease to receive the benefits afforded to these groups.
“The IRS and US government must not, in any way, assist an overt hate group in its mission of funding anti-Muslim and anti-Christian campaigns in India. The activities of GHHF clearly violate existing laws governing non-profit groups and its tax-exempt status helps it to further hate abroad. GHHF’s tax-exempt status should be immediately revoked,” said IAMC Executive Director Rasheed Ahmed.
According to Georgetown University’s Bridge Initiative, GHHF has collaborated with cow vigilante groups in India, groups that attack and kill Muslims who they believe are transporting cattle or beef. They have also orchestrated a number of aggressive letter-writing campaigns urging various Indian states to ban Muslim prayer, close Muslim businesses, prevent the hiring of Christians, and prevent Muslims from entering Hindu temples.
In 2022, the group successfully urged temple officials and local police in Andhra Pradesh state to expel Muslim vendors from the area surrounding the temple. As a result of their activities, 13 shops belonging to Muslims were closed. Recent GHHF blog posts also recount letters the group has sent to Indian police officials, urging them to remove Muslim vendors from other areas. Similarly, in 2020, the group petitioned to have an Andhra Pradesh hospital inquire into the religious faiths of all their employees so that they could remove all Christian nurses.
GHHF leadership has also disseminated vitriolic texts demonising Muslims and Christians. The organisation has described “Islam as ‘the enemy of the humanity’ incompatible with ‘democracy and humanity,’ the ‘root of terrorism,’ and alleges that the Qur’an promotes ‘violence, terror, torture, beheading, and killing.’” Similarly, the group posted an article on its website describing Jesus as “vicious, detestable, despicable, angry, wrathful, hateful, and a killer.”
GHHF has publicly advocated that “India should declare itself to be a Hindu rashtra (state),” meaning a nation where other religions are considered second-class citizens. Overseas schools funded by GHHF have promoted the work of some of the most virulent Hindu nationalist ideologues, including V.D. Savarkar, who encouraged the use of sexual violence against Muslim women.
The GHHF website reveals that the group heavily promotes anti-Muslim conspiracy theories, like “love jihad,” in India and the Indian-American diaspora alike. The term has been used by Hindu groups in India to police, incite, and commit violence against Muslim men in interfaith relationships. In one recent blog post from August 2023, GHHF stated:
“Global Hindu Heritage Foundation is trying to educate Hindu girls about Love Jihad where Muslim boys trap the Hindu girls, marry them, convert them, force them to accept their customs, abuse them, rape them, allow them to be gangraped, and torture them and even kill them… It is very, very, common for Muslim men to lie, lie and lie.”
GHHF has also organised multiple US tours for Dr. Subramanian Swamy, a senior Indian political leader known for his anti-Muslim rhetoric.
“They’ve been described as a hate group because they foment violence and support the demolition of churches. This type of nationalist ideology does damage to everybody else,” said Mustafaa Carroll, interim executive director for the Council on American-Islamic Relations’ D-FW chapter.
“The allegations against the Global Hindu Heritage Foundation are deeply troubling from a human rights perspective. At Hindus for Human Rights, we believe in the dignity and equality of all individuals, regardless of their faith. The activities attributed to GHHF, if true, are in stark violation of these principles. We stand with IAMC in calling for an IRS investigation to determine GHHF’s compliance with the legal standards required of charitable organisations,” said HFHR Executive Director Sunita Vishwanath.
“GHHF’s toxic presence is not confined to its activities in India. They are also spreading hate speech directed at Muslims and Christians in the US, among the Indian-American diaspora,” said IAMC president Mohammad Jawad. “This organisation should not be embraced in our communities nor encouraged to pursue its activities through US tax incentives. It is imperative that the US government act quickly to revoke the tax-exempt status of GHHF.”
“The hateful rhetoric against Christians displayed by the Global Hindu Heritage Foundation on their website, as reported in the Dallas Morning News on December 13, 2022 following a fundraiser in Frisco to raise money to demolish churches in India, is anathema to the values of the American and the Indian constitution. The North American Manipur Tribal Association, a non-profit that was formed in Texas when the founders’ Indian families’ homes and churches were burned by a violent mob in the city of Imphal in Manipur in northeast India, stands against hate and rhetoric which can drive normal people to hateful actions against their fellow human beings,” said NAMTA President Florence Lowe.