Mr. President,
It's really a great privilege to be here in this WHITE HOUSE, WASHINGTON Online Plateform.
As an admirer of President Trump and lover of America and the Americans, am really honoured to share the below subject here to be considered by America and World communities.
"Moral Leadership and Solidarity with Persecuted Communities"
President Donald J. Trump's words on January 20, 2025—
"In everything we do, my administration will be inspired by a strong pursuit of excellence and unrelenting success. We will not forget our country, we will not forget our Constitution, and we will not forget our God."
—stand as a powerful and universal inspiration for leaders across nations, faiths, and political traditions.
This vision of principled leadership, rooted in constitutionalism, moral clarity, and faith, resonates deeply with communities across the world who continue to face social, political, and religious persecution.
With deep admiration for President Trump, and with genuine respect and affection for America and the American people, we earnestly appeal for moral solidarity and humanitarian concern toward socially and politically persecuted and vulnerable communities—particularly the Christian Kukis, persecuted Christian communities in Nigeria, and other marginalized and downtrodden peoples across the world.
At a time when conscience-driven leadership is urgently needed, the voice and example of the United States can continue to serve as a beacon of hope, dignity, and justice for those who suffer in silence.
________________________
KUKIS PLEAD: Appeal for International Humanitarian and Political Attention to the Persecuted Christian Kuki People
________________________
The Minority Christian Kuki people have endured systematic persecution and profound hardships for over a century. Historically rooted in their ancestral homeland—identified as "Kuki Country" in G. A. Grierson's Linguistic Survey of India (1904)—the Kukis were dispossessed of their land and political continuity when colonial authorities arbitrarily trifurcated their territory across present-day India, Burma (Myanmar), and Bangladesh.
In furtherance of colonial subjugation, the Kuki people were administratively fragmented and reclassified under three imposed identities—Chin, Kuki, and Mizo—deliberately weakening their collective ethnic, political, and historical cohesion.
The resistance of the Kukis against British colonial domination, culminating in the Kuki Rising of 1917–1919—locally remembered as the Anglo-Kuki War—was met with severe punitive measures. Entire villages were destroyed, traditional governance structures dismantled, and the population subjected to forced displacement, economic deprivation, and long-term marginalization. The consequences of this colonial retribution continue to reverberate across generations.
For over a century, the Kukis across India, Myanmar, and Bangladesh have lived with the loss of their ancestral land, denial of fundamental rights, chronic insecurity, and an enduring state of social and political vulnerability. Their suffering remains largely unheard and unacknowledged in international forums.
This prolonged injustice urgently calls for international humanitarian and political attention. We respectfully appeal to the United Nations, the United States of America, the United Kingdom, and nations across Europe and Asia to recognize the historical wrongs inflicted upon the ethnic tribal Christian Kuki people and to extend moral, humanitarian, and diplomatic support toward safeguarding their dignity, rights, and future.
With regards,
Dr. TS Haokip
President,
World Kuki-Zo Intellectual Council (WKZIC)
@ 25 Jan. 2026
It's really a great privilege to be here in this WHITE HOUSE, WASHINGTON Online Plateform.
As an admirer of President Trump and lover of America and the Americans, am really honoured to share the below subject here to be considered by America and World communities.
"Moral Leadership and Solidarity with Persecuted Communities"
President Donald J. Trump's words on January 20, 2025—
"In everything we do, my administration will be inspired by a strong pursuit of excellence and unrelenting success. We will not forget our country, we will not forget our Constitution, and we will not forget our God."
—stand as a powerful and universal inspiration for leaders across nations, faiths, and political traditions.
This vision of principled leadership, rooted in constitutionalism, moral clarity, and faith, resonates deeply with communities across the world who continue to face social, political, and religious persecution.
With deep admiration for President Trump, and with genuine respect and affection for America and the American people, we earnestly appeal for moral solidarity and humanitarian concern toward socially and politically persecuted and vulnerable communities—particularly the Christian Kukis, persecuted Christian communities in Nigeria, and other marginalized and downtrodden peoples across the world.
At a time when conscience-driven leadership is urgently needed, the voice and example of the United States can continue to serve as a beacon of hope, dignity, and justice for those who suffer in silence.
________________________
KUKIS PLEAD: Appeal for International Humanitarian and Political Attention to the Persecuted Christian Kuki People
________________________
The Minority Christian Kuki people have endured systematic persecution and profound hardships for over a century. Historically rooted in their ancestral homeland—identified as "Kuki Country" in G. A. Grierson's Linguistic Survey of India (1904)—the Kukis were dispossessed of their land and political continuity when colonial authorities arbitrarily trifurcated their territory across present-day India, Burma (Myanmar), and Bangladesh.
In furtherance of colonial subjugation, the Kuki people were administratively fragmented and reclassified under three imposed identities—Chin, Kuki, and Mizo—deliberately weakening their collective ethnic, political, and historical cohesion.
The resistance of the Kukis against British colonial domination, culminating in the Kuki Rising of 1917–1919—locally remembered as the Anglo-Kuki War—was met with severe punitive measures. Entire villages were destroyed, traditional governance structures dismantled, and the population subjected to forced displacement, economic deprivation, and long-term marginalization. The consequences of this colonial retribution continue to reverberate across generations.
For over a century, the Kukis across India, Myanmar, and Bangladesh have lived with the loss of their ancestral land, denial of fundamental rights, chronic insecurity, and an enduring state of social and political vulnerability. Their suffering remains largely unheard and unacknowledged in international forums.
This prolonged injustice urgently calls for international humanitarian and political attention. We respectfully appeal to the United Nations, the United States of America, the United Kingdom, and nations across Europe and Asia to recognize the historical wrongs inflicted upon the ethnic tribal Christian Kuki people and to extend moral, humanitarian, and diplomatic support toward safeguarding their dignity, rights, and future.
With regards,
Dr. TS Haokip
President,
World Kuki-Zo Intellectual Council (WKZIC)
@ 25 Jan. 2026
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments not related to the topic will be removed immediately.