The Congress That Weeps for Gaza But Ignores Hindu Suffering

As Congress raises its voice in solemn solidarity with Gaza, it turns away from the cries of Hindus across the border—revealing not compassion without borders, but outrage with boundaries. In this tale of two tragedies, one is amplified, the other abandoned.

Paromita Das

New Delhi, 31st July: In politics, moral authority is not proclaimed—it is earned through consistency, courage, and clarity. In recent weeks, a disturbing pattern has once again resurfaced in Bharatiya public discourse: the Indian National Congress’s repeated tendency to express passionate outrage over international issues involving Muslim communities while maintaining an eerie silence on the systemic targeting of Hindus, especially in South Asia.

The debate was reignited after Sonia Gandhi’s strongly worded editorial in Dainik Jagran, where she condemned Israel’s actions in Gaza as “genocide” and decried the Bharatiya government’s “shameful silence.” This, followed by Priyanka Gandhi’s public appearance with a tote bag bearing the word “Palestine”—though merely symbolic—has become a lightning rod for criticism, not because support for the Palestinian cause is problematic in itself, but because it appears as part of a consistent pattern of selective humanitarianism.

A Tale of Two Tragedies: Gaza and Bangladesh

No one with a conscience would deny the severity of the crisis in Gaza. The human toll is staggering, and global attention is warranted. But humanitarian concern loses credibility when it is applied unevenly—especially by political leaders who claim to speak for Bharat’s moral conscience.

While Sonia Gandhi’s pen trembled with fury over the plight of Palestinians, not a word was spared for the escalating anti-Hindu violence in Bangladesh, a bordering country with deep historical, cultural, and civilizational ties to Bharat. Since the resignation of Sheikh Hasina in August 2024, Bangladesh has witnessed over 76 attacks on Hindus in just two months. Entire temples were razed, communities displaced, and at least 49 districts reported targeted violence against the minority Hindu population. And yet, not a whisper of concern from Bharat’s principal opposition party.

Why?

Selective Advocacy or Strategic Silence?

To many observers, this isn’t an accidental omission. It is part of a carefully calibrated political strategy—a form of tactical silence that caters to domestic vote bank politics rather than universal principles. Over the years, Congress leaders have spoken up about Gaza, the Rohingya, and even the Iranian hijab protests, but there’s been a deafening silence on issues like the persecution of Hindus in Pakistan and Bangladesh or even targeted killings within Bharat.

This trend is what critics term “selective outrage”—moral posturing that prioritizes certain victim groups over others based on their utility in electoral narratives. Such calculated advocacy is not merely hypocritical; it erodes Bharat’s moral credibility and damages the legitimacy of the Congress party’s claims to secularism.

The Erasure of Hindu Identity in Domestic Discourse

The problem isn’t just in international silence. It extends to domestic tragedies. When a terror attack in Pahalgam claimed the lives of Hindu pilgrims, Priyanka Gandhi referred to the victims merely as “Bharatiya,” deliberately avoiding any mention of their religious identity.

While unity is an admirable goal, critics argue that this rhetorical choice serves to obscure, not unite. The victims were targeted for being Hindu—acknowledging that isn’t divisive; denying it is. In trying to soften political implications, the Congress party appears to be sanitizing communal violence for the sake of political optics.

This trend has led many to ask: If the Congress party cannot acknowledge anti-Hindu violence openly, can it genuinely claim to represent the moral fabric of this country?

Secularism Must Not Be a One-Way Street

Congress has long positioned itself as the torchbearer of secular values, but its current posture often appears to reflect an uncomfortable truth: secularism in practice becomes silence on Hindu suffering and outrage only for minority causes that fit a specific narrative.

True secularism demands balance. It demands that all communities—whether Hindus in Bangladesh, Muslims in Gaza, or Christians in Nigeria—receive equal advocacy and protection. Anything less is not secularism; it’s selective partisanship cloaked in liberal morality.

Bharat’s foreign policy, built on the civilizational principle of Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam—“the world is one family”—demands more than convenient alliances or emotional theatrics. It demands moral clarity, especially from those aspiring to national leadership.

A Moral Failure in Leadership

Sonia Gandhi’s editorial may have been written with righteous intent, but its glaring omissions reflect a larger failure. For a leader who urges Bharat to reclaim its “moral compass,” the failure to acknowledge Hindu persecution, even in the face of verifiable human rights violations, speaks volumes.

And it’s not just about one editorial or one bag. It’s about a consistent pattern—a refusal to confront uncomfortable truths when they do not align with the party’s electoral calculus.

This moral selectivity does not go unnoticed by the public. Today’s voters are better informed, more globally aware, and less tolerant of half-truths. They see through the veneer of humanitarianism when it is wielded like a political weapon rather than applied as a universal value.

Bharat Needs Moral Clarity, Not Calculated Outrage

In a country as diverse as Bharat, political unity can only be achieved through moral honesty. That means standing up for the persecuted—regardless of who they are or what vote bank they represent.

The Congress party must ask itself a hard question: does it want to be a true moral voice in Bharatiya politics, or simply a partisan player in an increasingly cynical game? Until it finds the courage to call out injustice—whether it’s in Gaza, Pahalgam, or Bangladesh—its moral proclamations will continue to ring hollow.

In a democracy, moral leadership isn’t an accessory. It’s a responsibility. And Bharat deserves leaders who wear it with integrity, not convenience.

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