Home Opinion Minnesota’s Hinduphobia resolution: A grassroots advocacy deserves recognition

Minnesota’s Hinduphobia resolution: A grassroots advocacy deserves recognition

Minnesota Senate Resolution SF4115, introduced with support from Hindu advocates and CoHNA’s Minnesota chapter, seeks to formally recognize and condemn Hinduphobia while reaffirming the state’s commitment to religious freedom and mutual respect

Minnesota Senate Resolution SF4115, introduced with support from Hindu advocates and CoHNA’s Minnesota chapter, seeks to formally recognize and condemn Hinduphobia while reaffirming the state’s commitment to religious freedom and mutual respect
Minnesota Senate Resolution SF4115, introduced with support from Hindu advocates and CoHNA’s Minnesota chapter, seeks to formally recognize and condemn Hinduphobia while reaffirming the state’s commitment to religious freedom and mutual respect

Dedicated Minnesota Hindus bring SF4115 to the State Senate

The introduction of Minnesota Senate Resolution SF4115[1], condemning Hinduphobia and anti-Hindu bigotry, marks an important milestone for Hindu Americans, not only in Minnesota but across the United States. It also reflects a broader shift toward recognizing Hinduphobia as a legitimate civil rights concern in American public life. The resolution calls upon the Minnesota Senate to reaffirm the state’s commitment to religious freedom, inclusion, and mutual respect.

When adopted, SF4115 would formally acknowledge a concern that many Hindu Americans have increasingly experienced. But that has rarely been addressed in public policy discussions in Minnesota: the persistence of anti-Hindu prejudice and misrepresentation.

Across North America, incidents involving temple vandalism, harassment, and negative stereotyping of Hindu traditions have raised growing concern within the Hindu community. A recent and widely discussed example of Hinduphobia is Harvard University’s use of distorted imagery of Hindu deities in promotional material for a Sanskrit course, which many Hindus found deeply offensive[2]. Hinduphobia in other institutions was discussed earlier[3].

Recognizing Hinduphobia through legislative action is not about seeking special treatment. Rather, it is about ensuring that Hindu Americans, like all communities, are afforded the same dignity, protection, and fair representation within public discourse.

Yet legislative initiatives rarely emerge spontaneously. Behind every resolution lies sustained effort, often carried out quietly by individuals who invest time and credibility in educating policymakers and building understanding.

The Minnesota team’s work

The groundwork that led to the introduction of SF4115 was undertaken by a team of Hindu advocates associated with the Minnesota chapter of the Coalition of Hindus of North America (CoHNA), working in close consultation with the national CoHNA team.

For several weeks, members of the Minnesota team worked diligently but steadily behind the scenes to bring the resolution to the stage where it could be introduced in the State Senate.

Their efforts included:

  • Drafting the initial language of the resolution
  • Consulting legal experts to review and strengthen the wording
  • Working with legislative staff to ensure the language met procedural requirements
  • Educating lawmakers about Hinduphobia and incidents affecting Hindu communities
  • Refining the final text before presenting it to the sponsoring senator

This type of work is rarely visible to the public. Legislative advocacy requires patient engagement, careful drafting, and multiple rounds of consultation before a proposal can formally enter the legislative process. Attention to detail, consistent communication, and the ability to navigate political sensitivities while seeking bipartisan understanding are essential to such efforts.

The Minnesota team deserves genuine pride in this accomplishment. Their work reflects a growing recognition among Hindu Americans that civic participation and policy engagement are essential to ensuring that their community’s concerns are heard and understood.

Visibility and collaboration

Once the resolution appeared on the legislative calendar on March 4, 2026, and began to be tracked by interested organizations, news of it circulated more widely. Hindu advocacy organizations, including the Hindu American Foundation (HAF), shared the development on social media, and global media outlets began reporting on the initiative.[4][5][6]

Public awareness of Hinduphobia is important, and national organizations play a valuable role in bringing visibility to such issues.

At the same time, legislative initiatives of this nature typically originate from sustained local engagement. Recognizing the contributions of those who undertake the initial groundwork strengthens the broader Hindu advocacy ecosystem.

Acknowledging this effort is not about competition among organizations. Rather, it reinforces an essential principle of effective advocacy: local initiative and national visibility should complement one another in advancing shared goals.

Why Minnesota matters

Minnesota is not traditionally viewed as a major center of Hindu political advocacy, which makes this resolution particularly significant. The state has a diverse and civically engaged population, a respected legislative tradition, and growing immigrant communities that are increasingly participating in public life.

When a Midwestern state like Minnesota formally acknowledges Hinduphobia, it sends a powerful signal that the issue is not confined to coastal states or large metropolitan areas. Instead, it reflects a broader national recognition that Hindu Americans, like all communities, deserve protection from discrimination and fair representation in public discourse.

Minnesota’s initiative may therefore serve as an important precedent, encouraging similar efforts in other state legislatures across the country.

A lesson from the Bhagavad Gita

The work of the Minnesota team also reflects a timeless teaching from the Bhagavad Gita.

In Chapter 2, Verse 47, Lord Krishna advises:

You have the right to perform your duty, but not to the fruits of your actions.”

This principle of Karma Yoga emphasizes dedication to duty without attachment to recognition or immediate results.

The Minnesota team’s efforts embody that spirit. Their work was carried out quietly and responsibly, motivated not by publicity but by the belief that their community’s concerns deserved thoughtful consideration within the democratic process.

A sign of growing Hindu civic engagement

For many years, Hinduphobia was rarely acknowledged in American public policy discussions. That situation is gradually changing as Hindu Americans become more engaged in civic life—educating policymakers, building relationships with elected officials, and advocating for fair representation of their traditions.

The introduction of SF4115 reflects this growing confidence and participation.

The Minnesota team’s work deserves recognition, not simply as a matter of credit, but as an example of what committed civic engagement can achieve.

Guided by the spirit of the Gita’s teaching, the Minnesota team will continue its advocacy with dedication and humility. They invite all Minnesota Hindus- and others who value fairness and mutual respect—to join in constructive civic engagement to ensure dignity and equal respect for Hindu Americans. Such civic participation is essential if Hindu voices are to be fairly represented in America’s democratic institutions.

Note:
1. Text in Blue points to additional data on the topic.
2. The views expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily represent or reflect the views of PGurus.

Reference:

[1] SF 4115 Status in the Senate – 94th Legislature (2025 – 2026) – Minnesota Legislature

[2] Grotesque imagery, Sanskrit, and Harvard’s academic hypocrisyMar 04, 2026, PGurus.com

[3] Hinduphobia on US campuses: A rising concern for the global HindusporaMay 17, 2025, PGurus.com

[4] Minnesota lawmakers condemn Hhinduphobia and anti-Hindu bigotry in new law – Everything you need to knowMar 10, 2026, ToI

[5] New Minnesota bill condemns HinduphobiaMar 9, 2026, New India Abroad

[6] Minnesota Lawmakers Introduce Resolution Condemning Hinduphobia and Anti-Hindu Bigotry – INDIA New England News

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Vijendra Agarwal, born in village Kota (Saharanpur, U.P), left India in 1973 after Ph.D. (Physics) from IIT Roorkee. He is currently a member of project GNARUS, a syndicated service and writers collective. He and his wife co-founded a US-based NGO, Vidya Gyan, to serve rural India toward better education and health of children, especially empowerment of girls. Vidya Gyan is a calling to give back to rural communities and keeping connected to his roots which gave him so much more. His passion for writing includes the interface of policy, politics, and people, and social/cultural activities promoting community engagement.

Formerly, a researcher in Italy, Japan, and France, he has widely travelled and came to the US in 1978. He was a faculty and academic administrator in several different universities in PA, TX, NJ, MN, WI, and NY, and an Executive Fellow in the White House S&T Policy during the Clinton administration.
Vijendra Agarwal

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