Mihir,
Congratulations for the achievements you have made for HAF.
I am glad to see you becoming pluralist a little by little, it is good to see you expand your boundaries, and this is good improvement and I pray you become a genuine pluralist.
On the lighter note, you have been wearing the same Kurta and Chappals since 2004 when I introduced you to the Dallas Hindu Community in the Shanti-Shanti Progam. I will buy you a new suit, next time I am in India.
Mike Ghouse
Hindus Celebrate a Decade of Advocacy on Capitol Hill
Washington, D.C. (June 6, 2013) -- A Hindu monk offered the opening
prayer for the House of Representatives and the birth sesquicentennial
of Swami Vivekananda, considered Hinduism's first ambassador to the
West, was marked in the Congressional record Tuesday morning. These two
historical firsts led up to a gala celebration attended by over 300 as
the Hindu American Foundation (HAF) marked its tenth year of advocacy on
Capitol Hill. A parade of Senate and House leaders took turns at the
podium of the ornate Caucus Room of the House Cannon Building and lauded
the Foundation's accomplishments over the years.
"The dividends of a decade of investments in education, advocacy,
and tireless interactions with every level of our nation's government
were on display throughout HAF's full day of events," said Mihir
Meghani, M.D., Co-Founder and member of the HAF Board of Directors. "A
Hindu prayer given on the floor of the House, and the words of Swami
Vivekananda offered by Congressman Ami Bera (D-CA) inspired a remarkable
day and will carry us into the next decade of tireless work."
For the tenth consecutive year, over fifty delegates representing HAF fanned out in teams
Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard (D-HI) addressing the guests at HAF's 10 Anniversary gala
visiting dozens of congressional offices on the Senate and House
sides of the U.S. Capitol on June 4. Delegates asked legislative leaders
in direct meetings to begin a congressional letter to Secretary of
State John Kerry, calling on the incoming Nawaz Sharif government of
Pakistan to take concrete steps to ease the continuing tragedy of
religious persecution and violence faced by Hindus, Shia and Ahmadiyya
Muslims, and Christians there. They also called for the House Foreign
Affairs and Senate Foreign Relations Committees to host congressional
hearings on the retaliatory violence faced by Hindus and Buddhists in
Bangladesh in the wake of recent verdicts against Islamist leaders
implicated for their roles in the 1971 genocide during Pakistan's
partition. Delegates covered domestic issues as well, articulating
uniquely Hindu perspectives on the pending immigration legislation.
At noon, HAF delegates gathered in the gallery of the House of
Representatives within the rotunda of the U.S. Capitol. On a joint
invitation of Congressman Ed Royce (R-CA) and Congresswoman Tulsi
Gabbard (D-HI), Satguru Bodhinatha Veylanswami, spiritual head of
Kauai's Hindu Monastery and Publisher of the Hinduism Today magazine,
offered a Hindu invocation to open the day's House proceedings.
"The tragic Boston marathon bombings, still vivid in all our minds,
implore us to advocate the humanity of a nonviolent approach in all of
life's dimensions. Hindu scripture declares, without equivocation, that
the highest of high ideals is to never knowingly harm anyone," said
Bodhinatha, becoming the first Hindu sannyasin, or monk, to offer the
opening prayer for Congress. Chairman Royce, of the House Foreign
Affairs Committee, took to the House floor after the invocation to thank
Bodhinatha, while acknowledging HAF's decade of advocacy and work on
the Hill.
HAF Board, Staff, and Executive Council with Satguru Bodhinatha Veylanswami and Arumuganathaswami of Kuai Hindu Monastery
As the gala reception got under way, Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL)
accepted HAF's Friend of the Community award while affirming his
commitment to ensuring that the FBI mandate a separate category for the
tracking of data for hate crimes committed against Hindus - a position
long advocated by HAF. Congressman Joe Crowley (D-NY), Democratic
co-chair of the Congressional Caucus on India and Indian Americans,
similarly was awarded for his work on pushing for the anti-Hindu hate
crime data category on the House side. Congressman Ami Bera (D-CA)
accepted the third HAF Friend of the Community Award for his commitment
to promoting promoting pluralism and inter-religious dialogue, and
Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard (D-HI), the first Hindu American elected to
Congress, was recognized for her history-making win.
"Our government leaders are hearing from Hindu Americans in a
sustained, consistent way for the last decade, and the results are
showing," said Suhag Shukla, Esq., HAF's Executive Director and Legal
Counsel. "Our commitment to the community is to continue these efforts,
expand them, and usher in a new generation of Hindu American leaders
making a difference in political engagement."
Courtesy of South Asia Mall
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