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HINDU
SCHOOL POLICY DAMAGES COMMUNITY RELATIONS
(28 November 2007)
Britain's
first state-funded Hindu Primary school, set to open in Harrow,
north London, in September 2008, has outlined an admissions policy
the Hindu Council UK (HCUK) says may rule out applications from
the vast majority of British Hindu children in the area and could
possibly damage community relations. The policy requires applicants
to worship daily, regularly attend temple and be from vegetarian,
non-smoking, teetotal families. HCUK is also concerned the policy
may cause division within the local Hindu community.
The
Krishna-Avanti school is expected to be oversubscribed when it opens,
so it has set out an admissions policy document that defines practising
Hindus as those who follow a version of Hinduism requiring daily
practice of deity worship and prayer either in the temple or at
home; undertake weekly temple-related charity work; participate
fortnightly in temple programmes; accept and put into practice the
teachings of the Vedic scriptures, in particular the teachings of
the Bhagavad-Gita; and abstain from meat, fish, eggs, alcohol and
smoking.
The
admissions policy also allows for available places to be filled
by children from families 'broadly following' the tenets of Hinduism.
But even this requires them to attend a temple monthly, be vegetarian,
and attend a local temple for the festivals of Diwali, Janmasthami
and Ramnavmi.
Rather
than reflecting the mainstream, such definitions of practising Hindus
reflect the beliefs and practices of the International Society for
Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON) a new Hindu religious movement founded
in the 1960s. Perhaps better known as the Hare Krishnas, this particular
Hindu group is represented strongly on the Board of Directors of
the I-Foundation, the charitable organisation that will run the
Krishna-Avanti school. Ten places at the new school will be reserved
exclusively for children of families at Bhaktivedanta Manor, the
temple headquarters of ISKCON in Letchmore Heath, Hertfordshire.
Jay
Lakhani, HCUK's Director for education says: - "While HCUK
has no problem with the I-Foundation reserving a stated ten places
out of thirty at the school for children of families at Bhaktivedanta
Manor, we believe it is unfair to rule out other Hindus by imposing
on them the strict rules of one particular, minority Hindu group
in order for their children to attend. Because the Krishna-Avanti
school was offered state-funding and is being allowed to open as
a 'Hindu' rather than an 'ISKCON' school, that is what it should
be, a truly Hindu school that serves and reflects the wider Harrow
Hindu community with its kaleidoscopic Hindu diversity."
In
particular, says Mr Lakhani, the current admissions policy as it
stands would specifically rule out children from the following Hindu
families:
- Those
who do not take a strict devotional approach to Hinduism
- Arya
Samajist Hindus who do not believe in deity worship
-
Shaivites and Shaktas for whom temple attendance at only RamNavmi,
Janmasthami and Diwali celebrations would be too restrictive a
condition
- Those
who are not strict vegetarians and eat - as many Hindus do meat
(excluding beef), fish, eggs and egg by-products, or who occasionally
drink alcohol
Despite
believing that multi-faith rather than single faith schools would
be better for community integration and cohesion, HCUK originally
supported creation of the Krisha-Avanti school on the understanding
that it would be truly open to and reflect the diversity of the
wider Hindu community. As this openness now appears to be under
threat, the HCUK Executive has raised its concerns with the I-Foundation.
The I-Foundation has assured HCUK the policy will be discussed further
at a future meeting. However, no date has been set for this meeting
and it is not clear whether representations will be permitted from
local, non-ISKCON Hindus not connected with the I-Foundation.
ABOUT
THE HINDU COUNCIL UK
The
Hindu Council UK was the first and remains the largest national
network of Hindu temple bodies and cultural organisations co-ordinating
all different schools of Hindu theology within the UK. See www.hinducounciluk.org
ABOUT
ISKCON
ISKCON
was founded in 1966 by A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada who was
strongly influenced by a branch of monotheistic, revivalist Hinduism
known as Gaudiya Vaishnavism. ISKCON puts particular attention only
on the Bhagavad-Gita, part of the larger Mahabharata, and devotees
generally restrict themselves to worship of Krishna. Bhaktivedanta
Manor, donated to ISKCON by George Harrison of the pop group 'The
Beatles' is the temple headquarters of ISKCON in Letchmore Heath,
Hertfordshire.
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