The Sentinel-Record

Indian government withdraws appeal to hug cows

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NEW DELHI — India’s government on Friday withdrew its appeal to citizens to mark Valentine’s Day next week not as a celebratio­n of romance but as “Cow Hug Day” to better promote Hindu values.

The appeal had attracted widespread criticism from political rivals and on social media.

A terse statement issued by the government-run Animal Welfare Board of India said the appeal issued Wednesday “stands withdrawn.”

Nilanjan Mukhopadhy­ay, a political analyst, said the call to hug cows had been “absolutely crazy, defying logic.”

“The decision to withdraw the government appeal was to prevent the politics of Hindutva (Hindu nationalis­m) from being ridiculed in the face of severe criticism from all quarters,” he said.

Young, educated Indians typically spend Valentine’s Day crowding parks and restaurant­s, exchanging gifts and holding parties.

The Animal Welfare Board had said Wednesday that “hugging cows will bring emotional richness and increase individual and collective happiness.”

Devout Hindus, who worship cows as holy, say the Western holiday goes against traditiona­l Indian values.

In recent years, Hindu hard-liners have raided shops selling Valentine’s Day items, burned cards and gifts, and chased hand-holding couples out of restaurant­s and parks, insisting that the day promotes promiscuit­y. Hindu nationalis­t groups such as Shiv Sena and Bajrang Dal say such raids help reassert a Hindu identity.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government has been pushing a Hindu agenda, seeking the religion’s supremacy in a secular nation known for its diversity.

Hindus comprise nearly 80% of the nearly 1.4 billion people. Muslims account for 14%, while Christians, Sikhs, Buddhists and Jains account for most of the remaining 6%.

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