اس جعلی ست گرو کی ویڈیوز اس فورم کے لبرلز اسے "سیکولر سادھو سنت" سمجھ کر فورم پر خوب شئیر کیا کرتے تھے۔ اس وقت بھی عرض کیا تھا کہ یہ جعلی سادھو اندر سے ایک بدبودار ہندتوی ہے۔ اور وہی ہوا جب اس نیم پڑھے لکھے شخص کا سامنا لندن میں ایل ایس ای کے طلباء سے ہوا تو اندر سے جہالت ابل ابل کر باہر آنے لگی۔ محض سوال اٹھانے پر لوگوں پر فتوے ٹھوکنے لگا۔ آپ بھی خبر پڑھئے اور اس جعلی سنت سے بچئے۔
Sadhguru Calls Muslim Student a 'Talibani', LSE Students' Union Terms It 'Islamophobic'
The spiritual guru claimed he used the word to describe an 'ardent student' and that it is commonly used in India to refer to someone who is 'over enthusiastic'.
05/APR/2019
New Delhi: The London School of Economics’s (LSE) students’ union said it was “deeply disappointed” with reports that spiritual guru Sadhguru called a Muslim student a “Talibani” after a talk that he delivered in the university.
Sadhguru, whose real name is Jaggi Vasudev, delivered a talk at an event titled ‘Youth and Truth: Unplug with Sadhguru’. Later, he had a discussion with Bilal Bin Saqib, a Muslim student, during which he called the latter a “Taliban” and a “Talibani”, according to reports. The LSESU said it views the comments as Islamophobic.
In a statement, it said:
The union reached out to Vasudev for a statement, in which he responded that he did not intend to “abuse or insult” Bilal Bin Saqib. He claimed that he was “joking” and used the word “Taliban” in its Arabic sense, to mean an ‘ardent student’.
Also Read: Why Hindutva Nationalists Need a Sadhguru
He claimed he did not have it in his heart to insult anybody, “especially this wonderful young man with so many aspirations and intentions for the world”.
The statement said:
Vasudev said if his comments “in anyway offended or insulted anybody, this was not the intent”. “I wish to anyway apologize to the London School of Economics and the Students Union, if it offended any of you in some way. My gratitude to the London School of Economics and the Students Union for having organised this event,” he said.
The LSESU retorted that it does not believe the comments were “mischievously edited”. It also said it had not come across reports of the word “Taliban” being used commonly in India to mean ‘over-enthusiastic’
The students’ union said “individuals who have many followers, hold power and status, and claim to promote tolerance, should be aware of and sensitive, to the political and extremist connotations attached to the word ‘Taliban’ in our current context”.
It said “casual Islamophobia” such as Vasudev’s comments “perpetuates the culture of misunderstanding and judgement”. “This is especially relevant given recent spates of terror against Muslims in Britain, New Zealand and around the world,” the union said.
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