The Guardian (USA)

Indian TV ad showing Hindu-Muslim couple pulled after rightwing backlash

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The advertisem­ent featured a Muslim man and his Hindu wife preparing for a Hindu-style baby shower. Its tagline read: “A beautiful confluence of two different religions, traditions and cultures.”

But on Tuesday, just days after the 45-second advertisem­ent aired, the Tanishq jewellery brand withdrew it from TV channels and its social media platforms following accusation­s from Hindu nationalis­ts, including members of Narendra Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata party.

Objectors said the advert promoted “love jihad”, a conspiracy theory of radical Hindu groups who accuse Muslim men of converting Hindu women by marriage.

The withdrawal of the advert drew sharp criticism from many in India who said the company was succumbing to rightwing extremists.

It also shed light on the country’s growing religious polarisati­on under the prime minister, Modi, whose party and supporters envision the country as a Hindu nation and who are accused by critics of normalisin­g anti-Muslim sentiment.

Tanishq said in a statement on Tuesday that the advert was meant to celebrate diversity but that it had decided to withdraw it due to the “divergent and severe reactions”. It said the decision was made keeping in mind the “wellbeing” of the company’s employees and partners. The jewellery brand is part of the Tata Group, one of the largest conglomera­tes in India.

It is not the first time an Indian brand has faced the ire of Hindu nationalis­ts. Last year an advert for a detergent powder faced criticism after it sought to promote its brand showing Hindu-Muslim harmony. It showed a Hindu girl saving her Muslim friend from getting smeared with coloured powder during the Hindu festival of Holi. The advert drew calls for a boycott and was accused of being “Hindu phobic”.

Shashi Tharoor, a politician in the opposition Congress party, posted the Tanishq advert to his Twitter account on Tuesday, saying: “Hindutva bigots have called for a boycott for highlighti­ng Hindu-Muslim unity through

this beautiful ad.” If the ad “irks them so much”, Tharoor wrote, “why don’t they boycott the longest surviving symbol of Hindu-Muslim unity – India?”

Critics of Modi say India’s tradition of diversity has come under attack since his Hindu nationalis­t BJP won power in 2014. The party denies the accusation.

An apparent mood of fear, anger and disenchant­ment is growing among Indian Muslims who say Modi and his party are slowly disenfranc­hising them, leaving the community reckoning with a future as second-class citizens. At the heart of this feeling are the policies and rhetoric of Modi’s party and some of its leaders who have publicly given hate speeches against Muslims.

India is a predominan­tly Hindu country, with Muslims making up about 14% of the country’s 1.4 billion people.

 ?? Photograph: Francis Mascarenha­s/Reuters ?? A Tanishq jewellery shop in Mumbai. The brand withdrew its mixed culture advert due to ‘severe reactions’.
Photograph: Francis Mascarenha­s/Reuters A Tanishq jewellery shop in Mumbai. The brand withdrew its mixed culture advert due to ‘severe reactions’.

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