United Nations Publishes KAILASA Report on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights in Transitional Justice Context
TL;DR
KAILASA's UN report provides leverage for indigenous communities seeking reparations and cultural autonomy through documented human rights violations and legal frameworks.
The report systematically details historical injustices against Hindu communities and proposes reparative measures through UN transitional justice mechanisms and indigenous-led initiatives.
This submission advocates for restoring dignity and equity to marginalized Hindu communities while promoting sustainable development and cultural preservation globally.
KAILASA documents over 70 assassination attempts and the loss of 56 Hindu nations in its comprehensive UN human rights report submission.
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The United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights has published the 29th report submitted by KAILASA, the Ancient Enlightened Sanatana Hindu Civilizational Nation, in response to the Special Rapporteur on truth, justice and reparation's call for inputs on economic, social, and cultural rights in the context of transitional justice. The comprehensive submission addresses the UN's key questions regarding how ESC rights intersect with transitional justice pillars including truth, justice, reparation, guarantees of non-recurrence, and memorialization processes.
The report documents extensive historical and ongoing injustices faced by Indigenous Hindu communities, including what it describes as the Hindu Holocaust, which allegedly resulted in the loss of 56 Hindu nations, over 500 million lives, and the destruction of thousands of temples and educational institutions throughout history. The submission traces colonial-era intensifications under British rule, specifically citing the Criminal Tribes Act of 1871 and the nationalization of Hindu temples as examples of systematic oppression. Post-colonial discrimination through state appropriation and cultural alienation mechanisms are also detailed in the document available at https://www.ohchr.org/sites/default/files/documents/issues/truth/cfi-escr-trans-just/subm-economic-social-cultural-cso-15-kailash-union.pdf.
A significant portion of the report focuses on the persecution case study involving KAILASA and its Sovereign, The Supreme Pontiff of Hinduism Bhagavan Nithyananda Paramashivam, spanning from 2010 to 2025. The documented allegations include over 70 assassination attempts, 250 sexual assaults, 120 false legal cases, and approximately $27 million in property destruction. The submission further describes economic warfare tactics, gender-based violence against women's institutions, and violations of indigenous rights under the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. The report emphasizes institutional bias, media disinformation campaigns, and the systematic dismantling of traditional knowledge systems as ongoing challenges.
KAILASA's submission advocates for a fundamental paradigm shift in transitional justice approaches, calling for the integration of Indigenous Hindu epistemologies to address root causes of violence and prevent recurrence. The report promotes indigenous-led initiatives for sustainable development, education, and human rights protection, emphasizing the need for people-centered approaches that integrate marginalized voices and gender perspectives. The organization advocates for global commitments to acknowledge past atrocities, restore equitable resource access, and empower Hindu communities through participatory methodologies that respect cultural autonomy.
This publication represents another milestone in KAILASA's ongoing engagement with United Nations mechanisms, reinforcing its stated mission to revive 10,000 indigenous Hindu traditions while contributing to the achievement of Sustainable Development Goals. The report's availability through the UN's official call for inputs portal at https://www.ohchr.org/en/calls-for-input/2025/call-inputs-economic-social-and-cultural-rights-context-transitional-justice provides broader accessibility to international human rights stakeholders and researchers examining transitional justice frameworks. Additional context about the submission can be found through KAILASA's organizational channels at https://kailaasa.org/featured/united-nations-publishes-kailasas-29th-report-on-economic-social-and-cultural-rights/.
Curated from 24-7 Press Release
