
Russia
court declares Hindu book Bhagvad Gita legal
The court in the Siberian city of Tomsk today dismissed the state prosecutor's
stand that the "Bhagavad Gita as-it-is" be branded as an "extremist"
literature. The case had been going on in the Tomsk city court since
June 2011. The Government of India and the Indian embassy of Moscow as well took up the matter with the
Russian Government.
ISKCON expresses its gratitude towards the Government of India and
Russia, all the members of the Indian
Parliament along with the Indian External Affairs Minister S.M.Krishna,
Indian Ambassador to Russia Ajay Kumar Malhotra, and the Russian Ambassador
to India Alexander Kadakin. ISKCON would also like to thank the print and
electronic media, people of India and its devotees worldwide for
their enthusiastic and continuous support during this trial.
A Russian court has
dismissed a call to ban an edition of the Hindu holy book Bhagvad Gita, in a
case that triggered protests in India.
Prosecutors in the Siberian city of
Tomsk
wanted the edition to be ruled "extremist". That would put it in the same
category as Hitler's Mein Kampf.
The Russian foreign ministry said it was the commentary on the text, not the
text itself, that was under scrutiny.
The edition - Bhagvad Gita As It Is - is used by the
Hare Krishna movement.
A lawyer representing the movement in
Tomsk, Alexander Shakhov, welcomed the judge's decision, saying
it "shows that Russia really is
becoming a democratic society".
The controversial commentary on the text was written by A C Bhaktivedanta
Swami Prabhupada, the founder of the movement, whose full title is the
International Society for Krishna Consciousness.
Hare Krishna followers in
Russia
saw the case as part of efforts by the Russian Orthodox Church to restrict
their activities.
India
voices concern
The trial began in June and had been due to conclude
on 19 December, but it was delayed until 28 December at the request of the
Russian ombudsman for human rights.
But neither the ombudsman Vladimir Lukin nor his Tomsk colleague Nelli Krechetova was present
in court for Wednesday's ruling.
On Tuesday India's
Foreign Minister, SM Krishna, complained to the Russian Ambassador to India, Alexander Kadakin, about the Tomsk prosecution.
Mr Krishna said Indians had reacted very
negatively to the alleged infringement of Hindu rights in
Russia.
The Bhagvad Gita, one of the most popular texts for Hindus, takes the form
of a conversation between the god Krishna
and prince Arjuna. Earlier this month Indian MPs demanded the government
protect Hindu rights in
Russia, shouting: "We will not tolerate an
insult to Lord Krishna."
Ambassador Kadakin, quoted by the AP news agency,
distanced himself from the
Tomsk
prosecutors, saying "any holy scripture, whether it is the Koran, Bhagvad
Gita, the Bible, Avesta or Torah cannot be brought into court". The Russian
translation of the book was at risk of being placed on the Federal List of
Extremist Materials, which bans more than 1,000 texts including Mein Kampf
and publications by the Jehovah's Witness and Scientology movements.
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