By Fiona Melton
Crisis Magazine
December 5, 2025
On January 16, 2019, 130 acres of rural North Carolina land near Raleigh were purchased by Carolina Murugan Temple (CMT). A month prior, their plans to build the largest Hindu statue in North America were approved by the county. Under construction now, CMT plans to build a 155-foot-tall statue, which will sit on a 35-foot pedestal. It will be taller than the Statue of Liberty, which stands at 151 feet, not including the pedestal. This new development is a continuation of the Hindu acculturation in North Carolina; in October of 2022, the Sri Venkateswara Temple in Cary unveiled its 87-foot Tower of Unity and Prosperity at a ceremony attended by then North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper.
Along with new temples and 190-foot idols, tracts of land in rural North Carolina areas are also being bought up by Indian companies with the intention of building Hindu communities. One such company, Sustaino LLC., has purchased nearly 400 acres of land across the state. One of their current projects, Vedic Village, is set to include an on-site yoga studio and Hindu temple. The structure of the community is all self-contained, essentially a commune in nature. While their website claims, for legal reasons, that they do not restrict residency based on race or beliefs, the very nature of the community says otherwise.
Further down south, in Texas, a similar development has faced significant criticism. The Meadow, formerly known as EPIC City, is a 402-acre site on the outskirts of Josephine, Texas. Similar to the Hindu-centric Vedic Village, The Meadow's community plans include homes, a mosque, a religious school, a senior living center, as well as retail spaces. While the inner workings of The Meadow are not as commune-esque as those of proposed Hindu communities, the objective is the same in both cases: to create an isolated community in which these anti-Christian religions can thrive and grow.
The pushback in Texas has been strong-from locals who opposed the development at a town meeting all the way up to Governor Greg Abbott launching investigations into Community Capital Partners, the backer of the development. There appears to be little to no backlash at this increasing Hindu colonization in North Carolina, perhaps due to a lack of press coverage on these developments, although some have spoken out about the new idol statue that is in the works.
The locals who are pushing back against a Muslim city in Texas are getting raked over the coals for "Islamophobia." Some reports denounce North Carolinian pushback to the 190-foot-tall statue of the false god Murugan as "Hinduphobic." Are the rejection of false religions and the fear of the colonization of rural America irrational, as the suffix "phobia" suggests? No. Rather, it is the rational response to growing demonic influence in American culture. We see the atrocitiesbeing committed in the United Kingdom by Muslim majority migrant groups; we do not want that here.
John Adams said in a letter to the Massachusetts militia, "Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious People. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other." The moral framework upon which America was founded, upon which the Constitution rests, is that of Christianity. Our system of government is incapable of functioning without this framework, as we see so clearly in the current collapse of our country in response to the growth of secular humanism. Muslims will inevitably submit to Sharia, not the Constitution or Bill of Rights. The polytheistic pagan worship of Hinduism is so contrary to a Christian understanding of the human person and the Western philosophical tradition upon which our nation was founded that it can in no way be compatible with our system of law.
To give credit where credit is due, I respect the audacity of these groups and religious organizations for taking the initiative to build communities for their followers. They at least know the truth that to expand and grow as a faith, they must join together; their strength is in their numbers. While Muslims and Hindus continue to build isolated communities, mosques, temples, and more, the leaders of American Catholics are preoccupied with climate change and synodality. Attacks on the Tridentine Mass, such as those in the Diocese of Charlotte, serve only to further isolate faithful Catholics and prevent the growth of parish communities.
While our backs are turned in our preoccupation with hand-wringing about the virtues of ecumenism, enemies of the Faith are busy taking over. The internal persecution of traditional Catholics is currently weakening the global church-and it will only continue to do so. Ecumenism without conversion is an empty gesture; it does as much good as giving cash to a drug addict.
American Catholics and Christians must firmly oppose the ideological takeover of our country, whether from secular humanists, Muslims, Hindus, or any other false belief system. We need to work together to strengthen our parish communities and work outward to effect real change in our neighborhoods. Christ said the world will know us by our love, not by our passivity. It is time the faithful start pushing back.
This article was originally published on Crisis Magazine.