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Proud Of Being The First Hindu-American To Run For President, Says Tulsi Gabbard; Slams Media For ‘Religious Bigotry’

Swarajya StaffJan 28, 2019, 02:21 PM | Updated 02:21 PM IST
Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard. (pic via Twitter)

Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard. (pic via Twitter)


Democratic party Congresswoman and presidential aspirant Tulsi Gabbard has expressed pride in her Hindu identity while coming down heavily against the alleged campaign seeking to malign her and those supporting her for their Hindu faith, accusing such detractors of ‘religious bigotry’, reports The New Indian Express.

Gabbard, who is the first Hindu representative in the United States (US) Congress, came out with the allegations in an op-ed written for the Religious New Services, calling out the media campaign against her camp as “profiling and targeting of Hindu Americans and ascribing to them motives without any basis".

The 37-year-old Congresswoman had declared her presidential bid on 11 January, becoming one of the first few big names to announce their intention to run for the highest office.

In her write up, Gabbard mentioned how she has been attacked with allegations of being a Hindu Nationalist.

"My meetings with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, India's democratically elected leader, have been highlighted as 'proof' of this and portrayed as somehow being out of the ordinary or somehow suspect, even though President (Barack) Obama, Secretary (Hillary) Clinton, President (Donald) Trump and many of my colleagues in Congress have met with and worked with him," Gabbard said.

The Congresswoman described pride in her unprecedented success as a Hindu politician in the US, stating, "I am proud to be the first Hindu-American to have been elected to Congress, and now, the first Hindu-American to run for president," the four-term Democratic lawmaker from Hawaii said.

She recalled how after being elected to the US House of representatives in 2012, she made the decision took her congressional oath by swearing on the Bhagavad Gita, describing it as the supreme Hindu scripture. She remarked how Krishna’s teachings in the book had supplied her with wisdom and spiritual solace.

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