Indians protest Valentine's Day

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa
Supporter of the Dukhtaran-e-Millat, or Daughters of the Community, burn Valentine's Day cards during a protest in Srinagar, India, Wednesday, Feb. 14, 2007. Supporters of the Islamic separatist women's group burnt Valentine's Day cards and posters Wednesday as they marched through the streets of Srinagar in the Indian portion of Kashmir. (AP Photo/ Mukhtar Khan)
Buy Sauk Valley Media Photos »

Wire Services NEW DELHI (AP) - It was hardly a Hallmark moment. As a Valentine's Day card smoldered, more than 100 members of the Hindu extremist group Shiv Sena chanted "Death to Valentine's Day" and "People who celebrate Valentine's Day should be pelted with shoes!" Valentine's Day has in the past two decades made strong inroads in India as the country has slowly opened itself up to the outside world - its economic boom bringing in not just foreign investment but also aspects of Western culture virtually unknown here a quarter century ago. Across the country, stores stock heart-shaped balloons and chocolates, restaurants offer Valentine's Day specials and young lovers find refuge from prying eyes in the parks. It's a state of affairs that enrages Hindu and Muslim hard-liners, who today vented just as they do every Valentine's Day - burning cards, holding rallies and even threatening to beat couples caught canoodling in public, a strict no-no for those who claim to defend traditional Indian values. "This is a conspiracy to misguide the young people of our country," said Jai Bhagwan Goel, chief of the Shiv Sena's north India branch. In his hand, a card with an image of a Victorian couple pictured in a tepid peck under a parasol went up in flames. "We have come to know that in America, even unmarried girls as young as 11 or 12 years have become mothers ... and every second man there is divorced," Goel told reporters after reducing several greeting cards to a small pile of ash. "This is their culture- it cannot be accepted here." Goel and his indignant followers left soon after when about 60 riot police stopped them from advancing on nearby restaurants offering Valentine's Day specials. For the day, the Hindu hard-liners found themselves, unusually, on the same side as Islamic separatist groups in Indian-controlled Kashmir, a predominantly Muslim region in the Himalayas. About 40 protesters, calling themselves the Forum Against Social Evil, marched on a popular restaurant area in Srinagar, the region's main city, calling on shop owners to refuse to serve couples and refrain from un-Islamic practices on Wednesday. "The government is promoting such obscenities," said Asiya Andrabi, the leader of Kashmir's only women's separatist group, Dukhtaran-e-Millat, before police ordered them away too. Kashmir's separatists want independence from predominantly Hindu India or a union with Muslim Pakistan, which controls the other part of the divided region. Weather intervened to stop Hindu extremists in the northern city of Lucknow from carrying out their threats to beat couples found kissing, hugging or even holding hands in public. With torrential rains pouring down, young lovers stayed out of the parks where they usually seek privacy. Still, even if some lovers stayed out of sight, they made their desires known, placing ads on special Valentine's Day pages in newspapers. "My heart is like a cabbage," declared a man named Manoj to some lucky lady. "Divided into two; the leaves are for others and the heart for you." © Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Previous Page|1|Next Page

Comments



Get Real Deals delivered right to your inbox!

Blogs

» The Sole Goal
The Sole Goal

Using the buddy system

The right running partner can turn a grueling process into a labor of love.
» Out Here
Out Here

Because my boss told me to

My first job was at an Arby's restaurant in Rockford. On my second day, my boss told me that one of my duties was making sure the Rockford Register Star was available in the dining room.

Reader Poll

The Republican field of presidential candidates is down to four. Which one do you favor?

Newt Gingrich
Ron Paul
Mitt Romney
Rick Santorum