A Civilisational Memory Project

Project
Hindukush

A civilisational memory project documenting Hindu
persecution, resistance, erasure and survival.

For 1,400 years, the story has been scattered across ruins, records, families, archives and silence. Project Hindukush exists to bring that memory home.

Truth needs witnesses. Memory needs builders.

The Institution

Why Project Hindukush Exists

A civilisation is not erased only through violence. It is also erased through silence.

For centuries, Hindu suffering has been documented in fragments — in old chronicles, temple ruins, family memories, survivor accounts, regional histories, legal records and modern reports.

Project Hindukush exists to gather those fragments into one serious public memory project.

Not noise.
Not outrage.
A record.

01

Memory

Recovering stories that were scattered, minimised or forgotten.

02

Evidence

Building records with sources, citations, timelines and context.

03

Dignity

Creating a serious public space for remembrance and truth.

The Evidence

Hindu Genocide Watch

A public documentation platform tracking historical and modern crimes against Hindus — including persecution, displacement, temple destruction, targeted violence, cultural erasure and civilisational attacks.

Visit Hindu Genocide Watch
Documentation Index
  • Incident records
  • Crime lists
  • Source-backed documentation
  • Reports and statistics
  • Modern persecution tracking
RecordsSourcesCitations

Hindu Genocide Memorial

The Memory

Hindu Genocide Memorial

A digital museum of remembrance for forgotten victims, destroyed communities, temples, towns, families and survivors. The memorial exists to give dignity, context and a permanent place in public memory to stories that were never properly mourned.

  • Digital memorial pages
  • Forgotten victims and communities
  • Destroyed temples and sacred spaces
  • Survivor memory
  • Museum-style remembrance
A people without memory can be erased twice — first in history, then in silence.
Support the Memorial

The Voice

Project Hindukush Media

Videos, documentaries, explainers, interviews and visual storytelling that transform research into public memory. The media arm will help bring forgotten histories to new audiences across platforms.

  • Short explainers
  • Documentary concepts
  • Interviews
  • Visual storytelling
  • Public education
Explore Media

Documentary

Coming Soon

Explainer Series

In Development

Archive Interviews

In Research

Why Funding Matters

The Silence Is the Scale

This work is too large for one person, one article or one archive.

1,400 Years

of persecution, survival and civilisational memory to document.

Scattered Records

across books, ruins, reports, oral histories, families and archives.

Forgotten Communities

whose stories were never recorded, mourned or publicly remembered.

One Memorial

to bring dignity, evidence and memory together.