Feminist organisations divided the Hindu society in the name of women empowerment : Prof. Madhu Purnima Kishwar
Vaishvik Hindu Rashtra Mahotsav (2024) : Court Battles of Lawyers
Ramnath Devasthan, Goa – Only Hindus are taught to obey the law and not take the law into their hands. Police and advocates are taking advantage of this to deceive innocent Hindus. Feminist NGOs passed the laws they wanted under the guise of social service. The media, the judiciary, the bureaucracy have all become puppets of these so-called feminists. In the name of women’s empowerment, education for the poor, justice for scheduled castes/tribes, these feminist organisations created a divide in the Hindu society, said Madhu Purnima Kishwar (Editor of ‘Manushi’ magazine). She was speaking on feminists trying to break Hindu society by using laws, on the sixth day of the Vaishvik Hindu Rashtra Mahotsav.
🚨The I$lamic invaders who set their feet in India perpetrated unimaginable atrocities on Hindu women. They had thousands of women in their harams, sold women in Meena bazaars and did sex slavery on an industrial scale
🚨As a distress response of Hindus to such atrocities,… pic.twitter.com/j6wO4t4Yur
— Sanatan Prabhat (@SanatanPrabhat) June 29, 2024
Prof. Madhu Purnima Kishwar further said that these feminists hatched a conspiracy to defame Hindus by making false allegations. These people created a fake narrative and caused great harm to the Hindus of Jammu. It made it difficult for them to open their mouths. They instilled a sense of guilt among Hindus. Muslims took to the streets in support of terrorists like Burhan Wani, Dawood Ibrahim. On the contrary, the Hindu community did not come forward in support of the Hindu Saints even after they were acquitted of the rape charges.
Hinduism was defamed by creating fake narratives that women were oppressed in Hindu society and laws were passed by the courts in the name of remedying this injustice. These laws were necessary in Western countries, because the idea of witches etc. existed there. In Indian culture, the feminine is called divine power, Prof. Madhu Purnima Kishwar said.