On 12 November 2025, members of the Hindu diaspora gathered at Times Square, New York City, to publicly register concern over remarks attributed to CJI B.R. Gavai regarding Bhagwan Vishnu and the restoration of a sacred idol. The gathering, peaceful and orderly, emphasized respect for sacred icons and sensitivity in public discourse by constitutional authorities. Participants framed the event not as confrontation but as a civic appeal for dignity, religious sensitivity, and cultural understanding.
Placards highlighting messages such as “Respect All Deities” and “Unity in Diversity” underscored the gathering’s ethos. Attendees included individuals identifying with Hindu, Buddhist, Jain, and Sikh traditions, reflecting a broad commitment to dharmic unity. Speakers stressed that reverence for Bhagwan Vishnu is inseparable from a wider South Asian heritage in which compassion, ahimsa, and seva guide community life and interfaith relations.
Participants articulated that the reported remarks felt dismissive of deeply held sentiments, particularly concerning the restoration and protection of sacred idolsa subject tied to heritage conservation and community identity. They urged that judicial and institutional language on matters of faith should be measured, precise, and cognizant of plural religious practices. The call was for linguistic care and ethical responsibility without impinging upon judicial independence.
The protest framed its concerns within the constitutional promises of equality, dignity, and freedom of belief. Voices from the diaspora advocated dialogue between civic institutions and faith communities to strengthen trust and ensure that policy and commentary about sacred sites and icons remain informed, respectful, and historically aware. The appeal consistently highlighted that such engagement protects both social harmony and institutional credibility.
Times Square, a globally recognizable venue, served as an intentional stage to communicate a message of cultural continuity and respectful dissent. Organizers and attendees described the action as an affirmation of pluralism: diverse paths within Hindu, Buddhist, Jain, and Sikh traditions can flourish when public discourse avoids caricature and acknowledges living traditions as part of shared civilizational knowledge.
Observers noted constructive interactions with passersby, including questions about the significance of idol restoration and the role of courts in cultural heritage. Such exchanges highlighted the educational dimension of the event, linking contemporary issues to broader themes of heritage preservation, diaspora identity, and transnational community engagement. The emphasis remained on empathetic communication rather than polarization.
The event’s core message was consistent: public institutions benefit from careful language around sacred topics, and communities are strengthened when dialogue centers on mutual respect, historical literacy, and constitutional values. Across dharmic traditions, participants underscored that devotion to sacred iconssuch as Bhagwan Vishnuembodies ethical commitments that encourage harmony, responsibility, and the peaceful resolution of disagreements.
In sum, the Times Square protest conveyed a principled request for sensitivity in references to sacred symbols and for inclusive consultation on matters of cultural heritage. By foregrounding dharmic unity and religious harmony, attendees modeled a civic posture that seeks to reduce friction, deepen understanding, and uphold the dignity of all traditions within a diverse, democratic public sphere.
Inspired by this post on Struggle for Hindu Existence.











