As the nation’s largest and oldest education and civil rights organization serving Hindus living in the United States, the Hindu American Foundation looks forward to working constructively with the incoming Trump-Vance administration on issues of concern to our community, whether those are domestic issues or protecting the rights of Hindus abroad in places where there are in a minority. 

As a new government is formed to lead our country, we share a few aspirations in the form of sacred verses from our Hindu Dharmas:

svasti prajābhyaḥ paripālayantāṁ nyāyena mārgeṇa mahīṁ mahīṣāḥ |

gobrāhmaṇebhyaḥ śubham astu nityaṁ lokāḥ samastāḥ sukhino bhavantu || Mangalamantra

svastyastu viśvasya khalaḥ prasīdatāṁ dhyāyantu bhūtāni śivaṁ mitho dhiyā |

manaś ca bhadraṁ bhajatād adhokṣaje āveśyatāṁ no matir apy ahaitukī || Bhāgavata 5.18.9

“May all citizens live well. May the leaders of countries care for their people through the path of reason and logic. May we always ensure the welfare of the animals who nourish our bodies, and of the wise people who nourish our minds and hearts. In so doing, may all the different groups of people living here attain happiness and contentment.”

“May there be goodness throughout the multiverse. May all jealous people become calm. May all peoples focus their intelligence on each other’s welfare. May our minds experience peace through meditation on that which is beyond human understanding. In this way, may our intellects be fully absorbed in harmonious joy without any selfish motive.”

Hindu American policy and issue priorities for 2025

For the incoming administration and elected officials across the nation, the following are the Hindu American Foundation’s policy and issue priorities:

HATE CRIMES & TEMPLE ATTACKS / DISMISSIVE LAW ENFORCEMENT Hindu temples in California and New York have been desecrated with anti-Hindu rhetoric including “Hindus go back.” Hindus displaying visible markings of their faith as well as Hindu temples have also been targeted for robberies of gold and other precious metals. Despite being victims, Hindus have faced repeated incidents of state and federal law enforcement ignoring and dismissing clear, unambiguous crimes against Hindus and Hindu houses of worship. Vandalisms and robberies are frequently mischaracterized as “political speech” or “inter-communal issues”, with law enforcement declining to investigate as hate crimes unless publicly pressured.

ACCUSATIONS OF DUAL LOYALTY Hindu Americans are increasingly accused of dual loyalty and being foreign agents of Indian Prime Minister Modi, the BJP, and/or the Government of India. India is the spiritual homeland of Hindus, and as such, Hindu Americans support strong US-India ties. Yet Hindu American support of policies that promote a strong US-India relationship has been weaponized as supposed proof that Hindu Americans are beholden to a foreign government. Similarly, Hindu Americans, particularly Hindu Americans engaged in the political process — including donors, candidates, elected officials, and appointees — are regularly held to double standards and smeared as Hindu nationalists “guilty” of supporting Modi’s policies and/or “failing” to denounce him. “Hindu nationalism” or “Hindutva,” terms encompassing complex positions in India’s domestic democratic politics, are intentionally oversimplified and weaponized to demonize and marginalize Hindu Americans.

‘TRANSNATIONAL REPRESSION’ LEGISLATION / FOREIGN POLICY CONFLATION Following the death of Hardeep Singh Nijjar and foiled assassination attempt on Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, pro-Khalistan sympathizers and even some Progressive advocacy organizations have perpetuated a narrative that Hindu Americans and Indian American immigrants are agents of transnational repression (TNR), purportedly endangering the lives of other religious minority communities. Both state and federal legislation has been introduced under the premise of curbing transnational repression. An unintended consequence of these bills, however, is that they would legally proscribe the work of advocacy groups raising awareness about terroristic movements, such as the Khalistan movement, by labeling such efforts as “harassment.” These bills also state that transnational repression would be defined as “improper labeling of dissidents as terrorist threats” which really is a non-subtle attempt to normalize terroristic threats that pro-Khalistan actors routinely make, including, for example, warnings to not fly Air India flights on specific dates. The Hindu American community has always engaged peacefully, but these bills are being weaponized to paint major Hindu American organizations as “foreign agents” carrying out transnational repression on US soil. 

GREEN CARD BACKLOG & IMMIGRATION REFORM Close to 250,000 Indian Americans are waiting for family sponsored green cards. Due to country caps, high-skilled workers from India, many of whom are Hindu, wait decades for a green card, compared to equally-qualified workers from other nations. Hindu Americans also value family reunion and support TFVA legislation creating a new nonimmigrant visa that allows family members to visit temporarily for important occasions without the lengthy 2+ year wait for a tourist visa. These immigration issues need to be addressed along with comprehensive immigration reform.

CASTE LEGISLATION & POLICIES Caste policies are among the most misguided and excessive DEI initiatives emerging on college campuses and at the state and local levels. These policies deny Hindu and Indian Americans equal protection under the law, codify divisive, false, negative stereotypes about them, and import divisive Indian caste politics and conflate them with South Asian Americans. Caste as a form of ancestry and national origin is already covered under existing law. Hindu Americans’ opposition to caste policies pushes back against the denial of equal protection and inaccurate misrepresentation which contributes to bullying of their children and institutionalized stereotypes against their communities.

The Hindu American Foundation (HAF) is a strictly non-partisan 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization. HAF neither supports nor opposes candidates for elected office. The issues we work on transcend all politics, and HAF considers it a duty to work with all individuals and institutions who are committed to securing the rights and dignity of Hindu Americans now and for generations to come.