Hindus need to be cautious about what they post and claim as it can kill the credibility of real atrocities on Hindus.
Here is a good example of not checking facts when a video being circulated even by Rajiv Malhotra presently claims a young Hindu girl being forced to marry a 60-year-old Muslim man in Pakistan when in reality its a video of a younger Muslim woman from 2023 being forced to marry a 40-year-old Muslim man by her parents in Bangladesh which itself totally wrong but very common.
Yes, Hindu girls are routinely abducted, raped, married off, and converted which our site has documented but this video is not showing that but is of an oppressed Muslim woman.
Through social networks video sparked outrage because it shows the moment when a girl was forced to marry a 40-year-old man; However, she cried and she resisted while her parents forced her.
What happened?
Is about a Muslim ceremony in Bangladesh that was recorded on videobut which shows the girl’s resistance to signing the marriage contract that made her the wife of a 40-year-old man.
Faced with her inconsolable crying and without anyone intervening to help her, The girl was forced to marry as it is a common practice in Bangladesh.
In fact, This practice is even more evident among the most impoverished populations. According to Unicef, half of the country’s girls are married before they turn 15 and 60 percent become
Resistance to marry
In the recording you can see how the girl resists signing the marriage documentwhile both of her parents hold her and at the same time forcefully place the pen in her hand.
At one point, the little girl seems to faint from crying; However, her parents pick her up to force her to sign her contract again.
Child marriage
According to the latest UNICEF report, one in four women in South Asia married for the first time before turning 18.
In total, nearly 290 million children were married by their parents in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, and Pakistan.
This is the highest figure in the world in a society that sees girls as a burden and economic deterioration puts pressure on them to get rid of them, according to the latest UNICEF report.
But also “behind everything are some of the harmful gender norms that exist in the region: girls are not as valued as boys, so marrying a girl is considered the norm,” explained the UNICEF protection advisor. of childhood in South Asia, Amanda Bissex. Source >>>>>>>
Factual Info