From backlash against an Amazon show and Rihanna to a jailed comedian, India’s arts community fears Hindu hardliners can’t take a joke
- Intolerance is on the increase in India, and the arts community is feeling under threat from hardline Hindus
- The recent arrest and month-long imprisonment of a comedian after a complaint from a Hindu activist

A comedian jailed for a joke he did not tell, threats against theatre directors and a religious backlash to a blockbuster TV drama have left India’s arts community fearing a rising nationalist assault on free speech.
Artists, writers and satirists are facing criminal charges and warnings of violence for touching on religious issues, leaving performers to wonder whether India is being led away from its secular roots.
Comedian Munawar Faruqui was jailed for more than a month after he was hounded at a gig in the central city of Indore. A Hindu fringe group activist began accusing the 30-year-old of intending to insult Hindu gods just as he took the stage.

Faruqui, a Muslim, is known for hitting sensitive topics in his humour, including deadly religious riots in Gujarat state when Hindu nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi was chief minister there nearly two decades ago.