Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 29. Chapters: Hinduism in Belarus, Hinduism in England, Hinduism in France, Hinduism in Germany, Hinduism in Poland, Hinduism in Scotland, Hinduism in Switzerland, Hinduism in Wales, Hinduism in the Netherlands, Hinduism in the United Kingdom, Shambo, Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies, Hindu population in England & Wales, Hinduism in Russia, Hinduism in Hungary, Hindu Forum of Britain, Hinduism in the West, Gangotri, Hinduism in Serbia and Montenegro, Krishna Avanti Primary School, Hinduism in Belgium, Hinduism in Austria, Hinduism in Greece, Hinduism in Ukraine, Hinduism in Spain, Hinduism in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Hinduism in Cyprus, List of Hindu temples in Germany, Hinduism in Finland, Hinduism in Romania, Hinduism in Portugal, Hinduism in Slovakia, Hinduism in the Republic of Macedonia, Hinduism in Norway, Hinduism in Slovenia, Hinduism in Bulgaria, List of Hindu temples in Poland, Hinduism in Sweden, I-Foundation, Hinduism in Italy, The Light of Kailasa, Hinduism in Northern Ireland, Hinduism in Lithuania, National Hindu Students' Forum, Hinduism in Latvia, Hinduism in Gibraltar, Hinduism in Estonia, Hinduism in the Czech Republic, Hindu Sanskar Radio, Hindu Council UK. Excerpt: "Shambo" (c.2001 - 26 July 2007) was a black Friesian bull living in the Hindu Skanda Vale Temple near Llanpumsaint in Wales, who had been adopted by the local Hindu community as a sacred animal. He came to public attention in April 2007, when a routine skin test for bovine tuberculosis (Mycobacterium bovis) tested positive, indicating he may have been in contact with the bacterium that causes the disease. As a result, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) said the bull should be killed. Skanda Vale disputed this and campaigned for a reprieve, expressing their belief that the sanctity of all life is the cornerstone of Hinduis...