"We have to step up against any incident of discrimination against the community or any others community or religion. This is just the starting point," Congressman Dr Ami Bera, the senior most Indian-American lawmaker from California, said during a Congressional hearing.
Bera, the past co-Chair of Indian Caucus in the US House of Representatives, said that it is time that the community rise up to this challenge.
Addressing the Congressional hearing organised by South Asian Americans Leading Together (SAALT) in association with several other rights bodies and advocacy groups, Congresswoman Judy Chu said the communities should collectively "push back" against the rising tide of hate crimes.
In recent weeks, three Indian men and one Sikh were victim of hate crimes across the US, she said, alleging that the US President Donald Trump continued with his pre-election rhetoric that has worsened the atmosphere in the country.
"We have to be honest about the situation that we are dealing with today. We cannot allow racial identity and religion a dividing issue in this country. We need to stand firm. We need to defend the nation that we are part of," he said.
Indian-American Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi called for a joint effort to fight a common threat.
"We need to get to the root cause of what is going on. We may have come on different ships in the history of our country but we are on the same the boat now," he said.
As per a SAALT report 'Power, Pain, Potential,' which documents 207 incidents of hate violence and xenophobic political rhetoric aimed at South Asian, Muslim, Sikh, Hindu, Middle Eastern, and Arab communities, there is a 34 per cent increase in less than a third of the time covered in its 2014 report.
"This breaks down further into 140 incidents of hate violence and 67 instances of xenophobic political rhetoric of which 196 or an astounding 95 per cent were motivated by anti Muslim sentiment. Additionally, one in five instances of xenophobic political rhetoric we documented came from presidential nominee and now President-elect Trump," the report said.
(Reopens FGN 25)
Pramila Jayapal, the first-ever Indian-American women elected to the US House of Representatives, said people are coming together collectively across the US against hate crime.
Referring to the surge in hate-based incidents including in her own home State of Washington, Jayapal alleged that there is a series of discriminatory policies under the Trump Administration.
There is a direct connection between the hate crimes and the policies of the Trump administration, she said.
"It has to be a grass root movement as well. Our fight is long. This is the moment to remind ourselves that how strong this fight is. This is our country, we are here to stay," she said.
Noting that America's strength is defined by its diversity and respect for human being, not by its military might, Californian Congressman Mark Takano said the people cannot forget the fundamental core values of the US.
Congresswoman Grace Meng, who represents parts of Queens in New York, which has a sizeable Indian American community, said that these communities have been the target of hate crimes.
"The road ahead will be very tough, politically," Meng said.
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