09.30.08

Church attacked in Bihar: Thursday, 25 September 2008

Posted in Inter Religous Harmony Council, NEWS FROM INDIA, THE SANGAM FOUNDATION at 9:26 am by YUDHISTRA

Jamsethpur: St Mary’s Church was attacked by activists belonging to the Sangh Parivar at Bistpur in Jamsethpur of Bihar on 25 September 2008.

The miscreants broke the altar, the chalice and the musical instruments. They also damaged some articles kept inside the church. Stones were also pelted at a statue placed in a glass enclosure outside.

Bishop Shillic Stooph condemned the attack and sought security for the Christian community and their properties in the area.

Church Burned, Christians Attacked in Manipur

Posted in Inter Religous Harmony Council, NEWS FROM INDIA at 9:23 am by YUDHISTRA

Sunday, 23 November 2003
Christian leaders in the northeastern state of Manipur held an emergency meeting on April 22 to discuss the attack on a church in Thoubal district on April 19.
During the four-hour meeting, delegates formed a fact-finding committee to look into the attack on the Believer’s Church. They also decided to form Inter-Church Peace Council and agreed to contact the Manipur State Minorities Commission to discuss the plight of Christians.
Believer’s Church, situated on the outskirts of Lamding village in the Hindu-dominant Tentha Lamkhai area, was completely destroyed and four Christians were injured in the attack. The church had already been attacked twice and a local court had ordered the police to provide security while reconstruction took place. The villagers asked members of the Believer’s Church to abandon the premises or “face the consequences”.
Mohammed Kamaruddin, personal assistant to the Superintendent of Police in Thoubal district, said though the court had ordered the local police to take action, “We do not know if the security was provided.” “We have arranged for security but only as a patrol,” said Mangal Jao Singh, another member of the superintendent’s staff. “We have not deployed policemen (permanently) at the church.”
Rev S Prim Vaiphei, Pastor of the Believer’s Church, said, “A mob of 200 Hindus overpowered (the patrol) and succeeded in launching an attack.” “The mob, carrying dangerous weapons like axes, sickles, pickets, sticks and torches, set fire to our church and violently attacked our church members belonging to the Meitei tribe in Lamding village, about 35 km southeast of the capital city of Imphal,” he said.
“Mr. Romol, a local believer, was severely injured and had to be hospitalised,” Vaiphei added. “But he is out of danger now.” Three other church members S Tombi, O Tiken, and L Thoiba received minor injuries and were given basic first-aid.
In a letter to the Fire Brigade Department of Thoubal district, the Believer’s Church claimed the loss due to arson and physical destruction of the church was about Rs 4,45,000 ($10,350).
The church building, which was still under construction, had a worship hall, kitchen and parsonage. Kitchen items, personal belongings and construction equipment stored at the building were damaged in the attack. The police arrested three suspects, identified as Nahakpam Inao, Khumanthem Gojao and Laishram Ibomcha.
The attack was the third on the Believer’s Church since the beginning of the year. On 8 March, about 20 people attacked the church and dismantled its boundary wall. “On 11 April, more than 100 people tried to destroy the church,” said Vaiphei. “They used filthy and derogatory words, asking us to vacate the place. However, the police came and prevented them from desecrating the church.”
On 23 November 2004, a crowd of Hindus demolished the church while construction was underway. Following the attack, the Deputy Commissioner (DC) called for a meeting between members of the church and the Hindu community. Seeing that the Hindus strongly opposed the construction of the church, the DC imposed Section 144 of the Criminal Procedure Code and prohibited all persons from entering the building.
This led the church to file a civil suit. The court then passed an injunction order, directing local authorities to provide a security guard for the church to ensure its peaceful construction.
The issue of attacks on minority Christians was raised during the March session of the State Assembly. The Chief Minister said he would take steps to end the violence.

Courtesy: AICC

09.29.08

CONVERSION

Posted in Inter Religous Harmony Council, NEWS FROM INDIA at 2:05 pm by YUDHISTRA

While I am against all conversions and want people to either retain their religion or to become agnostic/atheist, I must say that these missionaries are giving a lot of help to poor people to lure them for conversions. So, Hindus/Sikhs have to counter them by helping poor Hindus and Sikhs. I appeal to the RSS, Vishwa Hindu Parishad, Akali Dal, Bajrang Dal etc. to ensure that there are no poor left amongst Hindus and Sikhs. We should contribute money and also serve with our physical strength the poor, the ill and the downtrodden Hindus and Sikhs. Then no Hindu and no Sikh would get converted. We must develop a motto “Service before Self” and let us begin in our own Home i.e. by helping the poor, the ill and the downtrodden amongst Hindus and Sikhs. I also appeal to Islamic Fundamentalists to shun violence and not indulge in terrorism but in its place, spends the funds meant for bombs etc. on the welfare of the poor, the ill and the downtrodden Muslims. Let Charity begin at Home. Let us help our poor co-religionists so that they do not convert. Can we do it?

Satbir Singh Bedi

Bajrang Dal blames pastor in AP for Karnataka violence

Posted in Inter Religous Harmony Council, NEWS FROM INDIA, THE SANGAM FOUNDATION at 8:17 am by YUDHISTRA

Bajrang Dal blames pastor in AP for Karnataka violence

Hyderabad: Bajrang Dal has blamed a pastor in Andhra Pardesh for the violence in Karnataka. They say the pastor is responsible for causing Hindu fury on Christians in Karnataka.

Pastor Paravastu Suryanarayana Rao, in Andhra Pardesh, has gone underground, after violence broke out over the activities of the Church of Jesus Christ.

Hindu activists allege the church was involved in conversion and used excerpts from Rao’s book Satya Darshini, in pamphlets to spread its influence.

“We are an organisation that’s meant to protect the Hindu Community. And the entire Karnataka incident is happening because of this one person,” said Bajrang Dal’s Pratap.

However, Rao had claimed that portions of his book in Telugu were translated and used without his knowledge. But the Bajrang Dal is in no mood to listen as they say Rao had willfully misrepresented vedic verses in two of his books.

09.25.08

In the name of God

Posted in Inter Religous Harmony Council, NEWS FROM INDIA, Philantropic Council at 2:09 pm by YUDHISTRA

VIJAY SIMHA examines the consequences of lessons taught by men of religion, among the desperately poor in Orissa

WHEN THEY came for Narmada Digal, she wasn’t there. She had fled, five children and mother-inlaw in tow, to the safety of the jungles a kilometre away. So, they set about what she left behind. A framed picture of Jesus, a Bible in Oriya, utensils in the kitchen, some clothes, and linen. By the time Narmada tiptoed back, her home was gone. What was left was still hot from the ashes, and smoking. The neighbours came to commiserate. Narmada took a good look, stood erect, and pulled her sari over her head. She began to pray.

“Lord, forgive us our sins. Jesus, you are the only one. Save us from our misfortune. Free us, Lord.” The words are tumbling out. Narmada’s children have joined her. She is weeping as she pleads for deliverance. So is everybody else. It’s a simple bond that no human wrath can sever, a woman and her God. “I will die. But I won’t stop being a Christian,” Narmada says.

This is in the heart of Kandhamal, a district at the geographical centre of Orissa, ravaged by probably the worst fighting in India between Hindus and Christians. Kandhamal is young, constituted as recently as 1994. It has 2,515 villages spread over 7,649 sq km. The terrain is inaccessible, full of hills and narrow lanes crisscrossing the villages. There isn’t a single industrial unit here. There are no railway lines, and so no trains come here. Buses are rare. It’s so far behind that even the official website of Kandhamal says, “Overall, the district is ranked as a backward district in the state of Orissa .”

In this doleful land live close to eight lakh people. In terms of castes and tribes, the Kandha tribe constitute more than half the population of Kandhmal. The Panos, who are the dalits, form the next big chunk. The Kandha tribe is almost fully under the control of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), an 83-year-old socio-political organisation, which is the fountainhead of many Hindu outfits in India. The Panos are where the Christian community gets its numbers.

In terms of population, nearly a quarter of Kandhamal are Christians, the rest almost wholly Hindus. The percentage of Christians in Kandhamal — 25 percent — is astonishingly high compared to the 2.44 percent for the whole of Orissa. In percentage terms, Orissa has the third-largest concentration of Hindus in India (nearly 95 percent in the 2001 Census). Muslims are barely two percent.

The rise in the number of Christians in Kandhamal is offering radical Hindu outfits like the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) the perfect alibi to launch an aggressive anti- Christian movement. The movement has two aims: to reconvert Christians to Hinduism, and to stop the alleged slaughter of cows.

An 81-year-old RSS activist, Swami Lakshmananda Saraswati, was heading the VHP movement in Kandhamal. He operated largely from two ashrams 150 km from each other. He was a member of the VHP’s Kendriya Margadarshak Mandal, a powerful decisionmaking panel. On August 23, Saraswati was gunned down in one of the ashrams at night while celebrating Janmashtami. It was the tenth attempt at killing Saraswati, a figure disliked by the Christians, but revered by a band of fanatic Hindu male followers in his ashram.

Few know who killed Saraswati. But, there are some theories. The Orissa Government says the Maoists (who are trying to build a base in Kandhamal) killed him. The government claim is based on two statements purportedly released by the CPI (Maoist), taking responsibility for the murder. The second statement said: “We have decided to punish anti-people, fanatical leaders like Saraswati because of endless persecution of religious minorities in the country. There will be more such punishments if violence is continued against religious minorities in the country.” It is too pat for the Orissa Government. And, if true, the statements would mean that the Maoists have entered the religious conflicts of India.

A second theory is coming from the VHP. After Saraswati’s murder, VHP International President Ashok Singhal issued a statement saying, “Once again the cruel face of the Christian missionaries has been exposed. Swami Lakshmananda Saraswati was working for 45 years among the tribals by building hospitals, schools and hostels. He was neither a capitalist nor an anti-social. Because of his work, the tribals were awakened to our culture and religion, which was an obstacle only for the Christian missionaries.”

Christian bodies, on the other hand, have a third view. They say they have nothing to do with Saraswati’s murder and have sought an inquiry by the Central Government. The National Secretary of Public Affairs of the All India Christian Council, Dr Sam Paul, said, “The Christian community in India abhors violence, condemns all acts of terrorism, and opposes groups of people taking the law into their own hands. We have had major differences with Mr Saraswati, the deceased VHP leader. It was the hate campaigns of the Sangh Parivar [the RSS is often referred to in this fashion], which led to untold misery for Christians — including the unprecedented violence last Christmas in Orissa. But, we wish peace to everyone and urge everyone to follow the rule of law.”

Whatever the truth, the murder inflamed passions. Even those who do not support the RSS were disturbed by media reports that 30 people in masks and hoods had come to kill Saraswati, and that they hacked at his legs after shooting him. When the Orissa Government allowed Saraswati’s funeral procession to pass across 150km in Kandhamal, reason went out.

By August 25, hordes of Hindu militants were attacking Christian homes and places of worship in Kandhamal. The attacks were mainly at night. On September 1, the Orissa Government told the story in figures: 16 persons killed, 35 injured, 185 arrested; 558 houses and 17 places of worship burnt; 12,539 fed in 10 relief camps; 12 companies of paramilitary forces, 24 platoons of the Orissa State Armed Police, two sections of the Armed Police Reserve Force, and two teams of the Special Operation Group deployed.

The human story is worse. VHP International General Secretary Praveen Togadia, who trained to be an oncologist but who likes nothing better than to drive non-Hindus out of India, reached Kandhamal for Saraswati’s last rites (he was buried in a sitting position — the padmasana — in his Chakapada ashram, where he ran a school and hostel for boys). Togadia said a Christian sect had killed Saraswati. It was enough to trigger murderous assaults on Christians in Kandhamal and elsewhere in Orissa. Hundreds of Christian homes were set ablaze, a few pastors were slain, and warnings were issued asking them to return home as Hindus, or never.

IN SOME cases, the terror works. In the jungles off Sankarakhol village, one of the first targeted by the militant Hindus, a group of RSS whole-timers are reconverting 18 Christians to Hinduism. It’s a daytime ceremony. The RSS Mandal Mukhiya (head of the Mandal unit) Sudhir Pradhan, a slim bearded man, is in charge. There are 30 Hindus to make sure that the 18 Christians don’t change their mind.

Each of the Christians has brought a Bible, in Oriya, along. They have also brought a coconut each, and some incense sticks, red thread to tie around the wrist, and vermillion for their foreheads. The Christians first burn their Bibles in a small bonfire. They sit in a circle. In the middle are the coconuts, each one signifying a Christian, and the other paraphernalia. The God of the Hills is appeased first in a prayer.

Then, a Christian rises. He has a coconut in his hand. “I swear that I have become a Hindu today. After today, if I ever become a Christian again, may my dynasty perish,” he says. He breaks the coconut on a stone. The other Christians follow, each one making the same promise. Some murmur, some are loud. A Hindu priest begins to apply vermillion on the foreheads of the Christians-turned-Hindus. One of them protests, but it is too late. There’s a red streak on his forehead as well.

Sudhir Pradhan then takes over. Eyes closed, spine firm, and voice ominous. There is a deep and rhythmic chanting of Om followed by the Gayatri Mantra, a sacred chant of the Hindus. The slogans follow: “Bharat mata ki jai.” “Ganga mata ki jai.” “Gau mata ki jai.” “Sri Ramjanambhoomi ki jai.” They pause for a few moments and the Christians-becoming-Hindus kneel, placing their foreheads on the ground. There’s a final “Jai Shri Ram.” The first stage of reconversion from Christianity to Hinduism is over. The motivation for these Christians to reconvert is life. They want to live in Kandhamal, keep their houses and, maybe, get some regular work.

Months afterward, these Christian-turned- Hindus will be asked to attend a yagya — a Hindu ritual of sacrifice that involves the worship of deities, unity and charity. In the yagya, they will wear saffron clothes and a sacred thread, and get their heads shaved. They will offer a few goats and some rice as fee. They will be given Gau Mutra (cow urine) and Tulsi water to drink. They will take Hindu vows. Then, they will share the mutton and rice (cooked from their offerings) in a small feast. This completes their reconversion. From then on, they will have a Tulsi plant in their homes, have pictures of Hindu gods on their walls, and celebrate Hindu festivals. They will pray only to Hindu gods.

Pradhan is happy. He’s done his job for the day. He explains the difference between a Hindu and a Christian. “They (Christians) eat cows. We (Hindus) worship cows.” Therefore, “people who eat cows should be given the same treatment that they give the cows.” Pradhan says Togadia has laid down the policy. “He has already announced that there is no place for Christians. If Christians don’t become Hindus, they have to go. We don’t care where they go. They must leave Orissa,” he says.

BUTWHAT’S the point in killing and driving a people out, merely to nudge the percentage of Hindus from near 95 percent to 100 percent? Dr Krishan Kumar, the young District Magistrate of Kandhamal, thinks it’s actually about jobs, land, and only then religion. Kumar has studied medicine (hence the Dr prefix), and was given overnight charge of Kandhamal when the Hindu militants began attacking the Christians.

Kumar works out of a suite in the Circuit House at Phulbani, the district headquarters of Kandhamal. He has gone two days without sleep during the crisis. After Saraswati’s murder, he was told of the killing of a pastor in Raikia, an area in Kandhamal where the Christians outnumber the Hindus. He drove with a full company of the Rapid Action Force and a contingent of the Orissa State Disaster Management Agency. “It took me 11 hours for a journey that normally takes two hours. There were so many trees cut and laid across the road,” Kumar says.

He explains why he thinks jobs are the first cause of war in Kandhamal. He says his administration has 1,000 cases of fake caste certificates to investigate. Apparently, many non-tribals, which in Kandhamal usually mean the dalits, have submitted fake certificates showing them as members of the Kandha tribe.

The certificates enable government employment in the reserved quota. This is possible because the law enables job reservation for the Scheduled Tribes (ST) even though they have converted to Christianity, while the Scheduled Castes (SC) are deprived of this quota if they convert to Christianity or another religion. This is a principal reason why the Dalit Christians are seeking reservations as well.

Government jobs are precious in Kandhamal, since there are barely any private outlets offering employment. So, the STs seethe with resentment against the SCs over jobs. Often, they fight. Since the STs are Hindus and the SCs form the bulk of the Christians, the battles can easily take a religious turn.

Then, there is land. “The tribals have been around forever. They are the original dwellers here. They never had to prove that they owned the land. I mean, why should they? In the early 1900s, the tribal land opened up. Pattas, a certificate indicating ownership of land, began to be given out. The tribes have a complex social structure. Within themselves, they had given land to neighbours for various reasons. When they had to prove ownership of land, they couldn’t. Others came in and the tribals couldn’t integrate with the market economy,” says Kumar. Loss of land could, therefore, be a cause for the fighting between the STs, who are Hindus, and the SCs, who are Christian.

A new dimension emerged in November 2007 when the Orissa Government said both the dalits and the tribals were part of one family, the Kui Samaj. Kui is the dialect spoken in Kandhamal, and the government intended to bring the dalits and the tribals on a common platform using language as glue. More importantly, it intended to give dalits job reservation and other social advantages that the tribes were given, even if they had converted to Christianity. The tribals objected strongly.

Into this mix enters religion. “Nobody fights over spirituality,” says Kumar. The war is over theology and the power that comes with organised religion. Kandhamal area has a history of 300 years of missionary work. Among the first Christians to work here were Catholics and Lutherans from Madhya Pradesh. These foreign missionaries set up schools and provided medical facilities. In those days, malaria was a major killer. The missionaries would go house to house, and help people recover from malaria and other diseases.

The core appeal of the Christian missionary is this: he helps the locals in distress when the authorities or the RSS are not around. Thus, the motivation for a Hindu to take to Christianity in the past may have been a better life. The Church provided access to better education and improved health. Some of the earliest recoveries from malaria may have helped create the myth of faith healing as well. The concept of miracle cures is a powerful attraction, and many Hindus who convert to Christianity in Kandhamal say they do so because a member of the family was healed when they began to pray to Jesus.

Money and work may be possible motivation as well. Narmada Digal, the woman who stood her ground in her razed home, is convinced. Narmada became a Christian in 1998, when her daughter Subhadra was healed. “She had a peculiar fever, which didn’t go even though I prayed to the Hindu gods. One day my husband told me about a pastor who said we should pray to Jesus. I did, and my daughter was cured. Why should I not be a Christian?” she asks.

Narmada’s husband Goverdhan Digal, who carried the pastor’s message, was employed with the local post office. He often had to take his daughter Subhadra for medical check-ups. One day, Goverdhan’s boss told him he had taken enough days off and had to report for work. Goverdhan had to take his daughter for another check-up. He told his boss that he would be by his daughter’s side. He lost his job. His travails soon reached the pastor’s ears. Damodar, the pastor, talked to Goverdhan about Jesus, the Bible and Christianity.

Goverdhan and his family converted to Christianity. They were given a Bible, and told that Jesus is the only God who gave his life for others. After six months, they were baptised. Narmada says Goverdhan was paid Rs 800 the first month, and Rs 2,000 for six months afterward. Stories like those of Goverdhan and Narmada have helped the Church to spread.

Today, there are around 1,500 churches and congregations in the 2,515 villages of Kandhamal. Between 500 and 750 churches are solid structures, made of marble, wood, cement and even glass. There are close to two lakh Christians in Kandhamal, a quarter of the population. The Catholic Church has a big presence. And among the Protestants, the most active denominations are the Baptists, the Pentecostals, the Church of North India, and the Church of South India.

TO A man like Swami Lakshmananda Saraswati, the rise of the Church would’ve been an insult. To his followers, Saraswati was the incarnation of Parashurama, the first warrior saint in Hindu mythology. Legend has it that Parashurama had killed the Haihaya-Kshatriyas, enemies of the Brahmins, on earth 21 times for their arrogance. Saraswati saw himself as the saint who would vanquish the Christians. Saraswati was a member of what are now called the Most Backward Castes. He was a government employee and quit his job in unpleasant circumstances. Apparently, there were some “irregularities” though the nature of the irregularity is not known precisely. There isn’t much on what he did afterward, except for unconfirmed reports of a police case for murder and criminal conspiracy.

Sometime in the 1960s, the RSS leadership summoned Saraswati. The RSS had begun to implement its plan of working in the most backward areas of India, unlike the Marxists who had begun to work in the industrial townships. The then RSS Orissa head Bhupendra Kumar Basu chose Kandhamal for Saraswati.

From all accounts, Saraswati was a driven man. He pursued his Christian foes with all his energy. By 1969, he had begun his ashram in Chakapada, where he is now buried. The ashram has between 300 and 400 students. All of them are Hindus and trained to be fulltime RSS activists. Saraswati also enlisted volunteers for the renovation of several small and dilapidated temples. And, to thwart the Christians, he worked on the lifestyle of the tribals.

He began to hold satsangs, an assembly of people with the guru who listen to and talk about issues and the truth. Saraswati began to talk of the alcoholic ways of the tribals and started a campaign against beef. His followers say he helped restore healthy lifestyles among the tribals. Coincidentally, the Christians were doing exactly that among their followers.

By 1988, Saraswati opened another ashram, for girls, at Jalesapata (where he would be killed), 150 km from his first ashram. This became controversial and questions were asked of the ethics of a man teaching young women in a residential school. By then, Saraswati had simplified his work into reconverting tribals who became Christians, and protecting cows.

In December 2007, major clashes erupted between Hindus and the Christians when Saraswati ordered his followers to demolish an arch that the Christians had erected on government land in front of a church. The Christians said it was for Christmas and they would take the arch down in a day or two. Saraswati didn’t wait. After his men pulled the arch down, Saraswati drove down to see it. He passed by a village where the Christians outnumbered the Hindus.

Some Christians in the village stopped Saraswati’s car and pulled him out. Stones were also pelted at him. One of Saraswati’s assistants called friends in the VHP and told them “Babaji ko maar diya (they’ve got Babaji)”. Saraswati’s men set upon the Christians on a scale similar to that of the current attacks.

AFTER THE December riots, Saraswati gave an interview, probably his last, to the RSS publication Organiser. He said, “With their numbers increasing, Christians forcefully took away Hindu girls and forced the neo-converts to eat beef.” He said the Christians “threw the mortal remains of cows on temples”. Saraswati said that the Christian missionaries were “serving medicines claiming them to be the prasad of Jesus”. He said the “Church and Christians erect a small prayer house in the middle of a Hindu locality, close to a temple, and after a few years of missionary activity, transform the prayer house into a big church”.

Towards the end of the interview, Saraswati said foreign money was being pumped into churches in India to erect “insolent symbols of the church which offend the eye, the heart and the mind of Hindus”. He spoke of “towering Jesus Christ statues obstructing the skyline, towering steeples with a cross atop, which is visible from a long distance, new and big churches close to old and popular temples”. He called for a constitutional ban on conversion of Hindus to “Abrahamic faiths” and warned that “Christians in India must understand fast that they cannot be protected by the US State Department writing its annual vituperative anti- Hindu reports on religious freedom and human rights”. He added: “Christians can be protected only by the goodwill of the majority Hindus in whose midst they have to live.” These thoughts Saraswati drilled into the Kandha tribals.

The tribals of Orissa are a tough people. They gave Ashoka the Great the fight of his life. Ashoka invaded Kalinga in 261BC. There was no king to oppose him, but the tribals fought against him. Ashoka won the Kalinga War, but 110,000 people died in battle. Ashoka never fought again and took to Buddhism.

It is this lineage that Rupesh Kanhar, 19, comes from. Rupesh and his friends are part of an RSS war council meeting on August 28 in the jungles near Gopingiya village. He passed out of Saraswati’s ashram in Chakapada in 2006. He lives near the jungle and is a fierce member of the Kandha tribe. There are 15 people in the meeting including Rupesh’s friend Bhimraj. They are working out plans to attack Christians. The meeting concludes that they will not kill Christians, but scare them into leaving Kandhamal.

Rupesh recites the RSS prayer fluently. He hasn’t killed a Christian, but he has burned some houses down. In a few hours, Rupesh and his friends will prepare to attack. Some of them would have downed plenty of liquor by then. The group will assemble at 9 pm, about 200 of them. They will have axes, swords and machetes, and torches. They will tie red threads around their wrists, so tight in some cases that they leave red marks on the skin, and they will anoint each other’s foreheads with vermillion. They have colour codes for the headbands. If it’s an ST versus SC battle, the headband will be red. Tonight, it’s a Hindu versus Christian fight, so it will be a saffron headband.

Rupesh and his group will march until past midnight, scaring Christians and sending them rushing into the jungles at night. It’s a daily routine in Kandhamal, the Hindu militants shouting slogans and conducting torchlight marches. A conch is blown. It’s the signal to attack. The slogans come rushing: “Vande Mataram”, “Jai Shri Ram”, “Om, Shanti Om”, “Hindu Rakhiya, Momo Dikhya (Save Hindus, Save our Culture)”. When 200 people say them, even the deaf can hear.

BUT INTROSPECTION respects no ideology. Even the best efforts of the RSS and the VHP can’t stop a change of heart. Vijay Pradhan, 35, is hiding in Raikia. For eight years, Vijay Pradhan says, he was an active RSS worker. He worked with Saraswati and conducted several reconversions. He also trained many RSS workers in the art of reconverting Christians to Hinduism. “I taught people what I was taught. That I must serve the country by fighting the Muslim and Christian religions, which are foreign to us. Our culture had to be saved. Then, one day a young pastor told me about Jesus. I was surprised at his courage in accosting me, but I was curious. This man told me that I could have eternal life with Jesus,” says Pradhan.

The one-time RSS worker says he was confused after this encounter. “I began searching for Jesus because I was intrigued by what I was told about him. On January 26, 1994, I challenged the creator. I asked why there are so many religions if there is one creator. I said whoever you are, I need to know you by name. I threatened that I would turn atheist if the Creator didn’t show himself. I couldn’t sleep at night. At 4.30 am, as I was getting ready for yoga, I saw a human-like figure. There was plenty of light. A voice said, ‘I am the one you are looking for,’” says Pradhan.

He says his thought process changed after this. He began spreading the gospel and going to church. “The RSS workers came to me and asked me why I had converted. They asked me how much money I was given. I used to ask people the same things. But I wasn’t paid. The RSS searched for me. I had to hide in the jungles. As long as there is trouble, I will hide,” he says.

Pradhan says only those who are called by Jesus are the true converts. “Only the attraction of God can make them that. Hindus become Christians, they are never made into Christians. The reconversions by the VHP and the RSS are false. They are conducting a political war in the name of God.”

The state is, of course, missing in all this. The law in Orissa states that religious conversions are allowed. However, people must seek the permission of the District Magistrate. The District Magistrate will enquire into it. If he is convinced that there is no bribe or threat involved, he permits the conversion. Officially, there are only two conversions shown in Kandhamal since 1961.

The retreat of the state is an accepted part of life in Kandhamal. People can tell you who the RSS pramukh is, or who the area pastor is. But they wouldn’t know the names of the Sarpanch, or the police head. Soon, they may not need the state. On the night of September 1, there were two meetings in the Raikia relief camp. The Inspector General of Police chaired a peace meeting with 21 officials and several Christian seniors. Then, a group of young Christian men met separately. They declared pride in two villages of Raikia: Gundhani and Gamandi. Christians mainly populate these villages. Yet, they have been untouched so far. Apparently, because the Christians there have put together a few home-made bombs and repulsed at least one attack by Hindu militants.

The young men said these villages were the pride of Christians and that they had shown the way. They said they needed to arm themselves so that they could fight the Hindu militants. Some pastors objected. They said Christianity doesn’t teach violence. They are not sure if they were heard. •

From Tehelka Magazine, Vol 5, Issue 36, Dated Sept 13, 2008

Booklet by convert fuels Mangalore unrest

Posted in Inter Religous Harmony Council, NEWS FROM INDIA at 5:53 am by YUDHISTRA

Booklet by convert fuels Mangalore unrest
Hindustan Times
BR Srikanth

The precipitating cause that led to the attacks on churches and prayer halls in this coastal hub and its adjoining districts was a controversial booklet written by a recent local convert to Christianity which made offensive references to Hindu gods comparing them adversely to ‘the one true god’ of the Christians.

Bajrang Dal sources claimed the booklet, called Satyadarshini (The Truth), written by one Lakshminarayan, had been distributed to parishioners of the New Life Fellowship Trust, part of the Pentecost Mission during the past three weekends. “I joined the worshippers at the church and collected a copy myself,” claimed Sharan Kumar, vice president of the Dakshina Kannada unit.

“No true believer in Jesus Christ would run down other religions,” said pastor Donald Menezes, who heads the local zone of 16 churches, insisting none of them had anything to do with the booklet. “I first learnt about it when some journalists showed it to me,” he told HT.

As this coastal hub, which saw a series of attacks by Hindu mobs on churches and prayer halls for the last three days, remained violence free for the first time on Tuesday, Home Minister V. S. Acharya, who visited the area, declared he would take action against the New Life Fellowship Trust.

“But the Bajrang Dal should not have taken the law into its own hands,” he said. “They could have brought the matter to the government’s notice. We have arrested 53 people for attacks on Christian places of worship.”

Acharya, however, also insisted that Christians were engaging in ‘conversions by deceit’ across the district, a charge Christians denied hotly. “Census figures show that the number of Christians in this district declined between 1992 and 2002,” he noted.

09.15.08

CROSS ROAD

Posted in Inter Religous Harmony Council, NEWS FROM INDIA at 10:09 am by YUDHISTRA

FOR THE 14 Christian families living around a pond in Vijaydongri, 15 km from the district headquarters, Jhabua, this is a busy time. At Ratlam, an 86-year-old church was gutted just a fortnight ago.

It’s 100 km away. But it’s at the back of everybody’s mind in Vijaydongri.

Jaimal Singh is a daily wage labourer who is back home for the sowing season from Gujarat. He has been tending his crop of corn, soyabean, dal and rice in his small terraced plots.

When he walks into church at Jhabua, ‘Jaimal’ becomes ‘Joseph’. In Vijaydongri, however, he is more his own man: a tribal first, a Christian second.

A statue of the Virgin Mary in a hut makes for a makeshift chapel for the faithful here. In Vijaydongri, four out of every 10 people are Christians.

Sisters Florence Minj and Teresa Tirki, who recently arrived from Raigarh, Chhattisgarh, lead the prayers here. After all, it can be expensive travelling to Jhabua for church when it costs Rs 10 one way by jeep.

Sisterhood of access “Something wrong?” Joseph had asked when he, along with some others, had come rushing from the fields. Someone, they had been told, was asking Sisters Florence and Teresa questions.

Strangers in these parts were never a matter of concern. But the incidents in Ratlam and Orissa are still fresh.

“The Sisters are new to this place. Since they live alone, we got concerned,” they explain.

The Christians of Vijaydongri are not overtly religious. But the Sisters do matter.

They serve as conduits to a whole network of material support: schools, hostels and medical facilities in Jhabua and beyond. A note from them could mean a free bed and treatment at the missionary hospital 15-20 km away; a passport to good education at the nearest Don Bosco school; a loan of Rs 200-300 at minimum interest; and free tuition for their children before and after school.

“My son is in the fifth standard and even now he cannot write his name properly,” says Norbert, a villager. “That is why we are thankful to the two Sisters for teaching our children free of cost.

After all, isn’t education the way to becoming doctors and collectors?” Norbert says they have no issues with the Hindus. The last two years have been problem-free.

“The Sisters teach the Hindu children for free as well.” They wear the crucifix around their necks, and as in Joseph’s house, frame pictures of Jesus on their walls.

Culturally, it’s a happy mix. “There is not much difference between us,” Norbert insists.

“Take Bhagoria [the traditional tribal fair here]. We go there after a service in the church and the Hindus go there after they worship at a temple.

And then we celebrate together. Very often we also intermarry.

Which religion is adopted depends on which family is more powerful,” he says with a laugh. That’s a choice he didn’t have to make.

Both he and his wife Ann are Christians. But the family of Adiya, another tribal, s ‘mixed’: first, his father An Singh converted to Christianity.

Adiya, his three other brothers and their families followed him in his faith. An Singh’s brothers, however, are still Hindus.

Being Christian has made him change some of his ways, admits Joseph. “I have become more organised and have more or less given up drinking.

” But caste and dowry have been more difficult to shrug off. The prospective groom’s family has to shell out dowry here and the ‘going rate’ is Rs 1 lakh.

“Even the Fathers haven’t been able to break this tradition,” he cribs. “To pay, we borrow from our relatives and mostly from the moneylender who charges 50 per cent interest.

hen we cannot pay, we sell our land.” As with most village economies, economics – not faith – seems to have left its imprint in Vijaydongri.

All hands are needed when canals have to be dug out from the pond to ensure water supply to the crops. So the Christians here cluster around the pond not by design – or by insecurity.

After all, when you don’t have much to lose, what can you fear?.

09.12.08

Truth has no path

Posted in Cultural Council, Inter Religous Harmony Council, THE SANGAM FOUNDATION at 12:34 pm by YUDHISTRA

We have been told that all paths lead to Truth — you have your path as a Hindu, someone else has his path as a Christian and another as a Muslim, and they all meet at the same door — which is, when you look at it, so obviously absurd.

Truth has no path, and that is the beauty of truth; it is living. A dead thing has a path to it because it is static, but when you see that truth is something living, moving, which has no resting place, which is in no temple, mosque or church, which no religion, teacher, philosopher, nobody can lead you to — then you will also see that this living thing is what you actually are: your anger, brutality, violence , despair, the agony and sorrow you live in. In the understanding of all this is the truth, and you can understand it only if you know how to look at those things in your life. And you cannot look through an ideology, through a screen of words, through hopes and fears.

So you see that you cannot depend upon anybody…there is no guide, no teacher, no authority. There is only you — your relationship with others and with the world — there is nothing else. When you realise this, it either brings great despair, from which comes cynicism and bitterness, or, in facing the fact that you and nobody else are responsible for the world and for yourself, for what you think, what you feel, how you act, all self-pity goes. Normally we thrive on blaming others, which is a form of self-pity.

I am not formulating any philosophy or theological structure of ideas or concepts. All ideologies are utterly idiotic. What is important is to observe what is actually taking place in our daily life, inwardly and outwardly. If you observe very closely what is taking place and examine it, you will see that it is based on an intellectual conception, and the intellect is not the whole field of existence; it is a fragment, and a fragment cleverly put together, however ancient and traditional, is still a small part of existence whereas we have to deal with the totality of life.

And when we look at what is taking place in the world we begin to understand that there is no outer and inner process; there is only one unitary process, it is a whole, total movement, the inner movement expressing itself as the outer and the outer reacting again on the inner. To be able to look at this is all that is needed, because if we know how to look, then the whole thing becomes very clear, and to look needs no philosophy, no teacher. Nobody need tell you how to look. You just look. Can you then, seeing this whole picture…easily, spontaneously, transform yourself? That is the real issue. Is it possible to bring about a complete revolution in the psyche?

If I were foolish enough to give you a system and if you were foolish enough to follow it, you would merely be copying, imitating, conforming, accepting, and when you do that you have set up in yourself the authority of another and hence there is conflict between you and that authority. So you will lead a double life between the ideology of the system and the actuality of your daily existence. In trying to conform to the ideology, you suppress yourself — whereas what is actually true is not the ideology but what you are. If you try to study yourself according to another, you will always remain a second-hand human being.

Striking a balance: RICK LEVY

Posted in Cultural Council, Inter Religous Harmony Council, Philantropic Council at 12:15 pm by YUDHISTRA

Paramahansa Yogananda teaches that, in the ancient past, India had the optimal balance of inner and outer development: material riches and great spiritual wealth.

During the colonial period that balance eroded: wealth declined; there was great poverty and difficulty for many, while the spiritual wisdom was maintained and even thrived. During the same interval in the West, there was an aggressive explosion of technology and material wealth, with very little inner spiritual development to keep pace with it. As a result, the West began to suffer from moral, social and spiritual decline.

The great Masters of India foretold of a time when the East would regain its optimal balance through the accumulation of wealth and advances in technology, and the West would attain balance for the first time through inner spiritual development. That time is now.

Today, India is succeeding masterfully in technological and scientific prowess, and material well-being, consistent with its destiny. During the same period, the West was given two of India’s greatest teachers: Vivekananda and Yogananda.

Just as now in India there is a new generation of technologically savvy people and a burgeoning middle class, there is in the West a new generation of modern-day yogis ^ people accomplished in worldly ways who have a deep familiarity with eastern spirituality. As the East is rushing to imitate the West and the West is rushing to imitate the East, it is possible we could pass by one another, like two ships passing in the night without knowing it and without the benefit of exchange.

If we did stop to talk, the western yogi might say, “Don’t make the same mistakes that we made. We have the technology to solve our problems… but lacking the inner spiritual development required to guide us, we have wasted our technology, or worse, used it to create harm. We work too hard and too long so we can have nice homes, cars, clothing and travel, and we’ve paid a high price for it. We suffer from stress, depression and life-threatening diseases in record numbers. We are alienated from our loved ones, from one another, and from the natural world. We have lost our noble reasons for being. In your efforts to fulfil the western dream, don’t be too quick to move away from the teachings of the great spiritual masters of India. You will only have to come back around again to their wisdom, just like we in the West are doing now.”

Whether one starts from the East or the West, the basic fact of life remains the same: Yoga correctly teaches that the purpose of life is enlightenment, liberation, samadhi. Through the pragmatic eye of the westerner, Raja yoga provides the perfect path to enlightenment 50 per cent comes from right understanding and 50 per cent comes from right practice, including meditation. Right understanding is composed of wisdom, jnana and devotion, bhakti. The western yogi marvels at the wisdom provided by Patanjali and Shankara, and the devotion taught by Chaitanya and Ramakrishna.

The western yogi knows that the teachings of these great masters provide the optimal balance between inner and outer development. We wish to thank Mother India for this rich spiritual gift. Through it, we understand that technology and wealth without inner wisdom and devotion are nothing in and of themselves. The West should freely share its technological and scientific wisdom with the East in exchange for the East’s priceless religious teachings.

Dialogue of love and harmony

Posted in Cultural Council, Inter Religous Harmony Council at 12:07 pm by YUDHISTRA

It is said that when the student is ready the teacher will appear.

I was drawn to an attitude that has greatly contributed to the enrichment of Indian life: ‘respect for another person’s view of truth with hope and belief that he may be right’. This is best expressed in the Rigvedic hymn that says: “Ekam Sad Vipra Bahudha Vadanti”. That is, the Real is one, the learned speak of it variously.

Etymologically speaking, the word bahudha is derived from the word bahu and dha is suffixed to it to make it an adverb. `Bahu’ denotes many ways or parts or forms or directions. It is used to express manifoldness, much, and repeatedly. When the word is used with the root kri, it means to make manifold or multiply. Bahudha is also used as an expression of intermittent continuity in various time frames. It is used to express frequency, as in `time and again’. In the present work, the word Bahudha has been used to suggest an eternal reality or continuum, a dialogue of harmony, and peaceful living in society.

Pluralism could be the closet equivalent to Bahudha in the English language. Pluralism has been described in various ways in history, sociology and politics ^ cultural pluralism, political pluralism and pluralistic societies. Pluralism has also been seen in the context of the coexistence of nation state and ethnicity, equally, and identity issues.

The Bahudha approach recognises that there is a distinction between plural societies and pluralism. Pluralism is an inevitable ingredient of democratic societies. The role of religion, language and ethnicity is very significant in plural societies. Pluralism in this context is an imperative for both developed and developing societies.

Pluralist societies are necessarily multi-ethnic, multi-religious and multilingual. In such societies, there are various boundaries: racial, linguistic, religious and at times even ideological. The Bahudha approach does not believe in annexation of boundaries or assimilation of identities and propagation of a simplistic world view. It merely facilitates dialogue and thereby promotes understanding of the collective good. The realisation of one’s own identity may sustain boundaries and yet, at the same time, understanding of other identities may help formulate a public policy of harmony. The Bahudha approach is conscious of the fact that societies without boundaries are not possible…

As an agent of peace and happiness, it generates goodwill among people, and helps them to lead a life of spirituality and fulfilment. In recent years, we have seen how people like Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr have used it for achieving justice and freedom. Swami Vivekananda and Mother Teresa have been inspired by their religious faiths to serve the poor, the derelict and the discarded. It is religious faith which has driven the Dalai Lama to propagate the message of love and peace not only among his Tibetan people (including those living in exile in India) but also in distant lands.

Multiculturalism as practised in India is not atheistic in character but is a blending of religions. Mahatma Gandhi, a devout Hindu, highlighted this aspect of communitarian life in India when he had passages read from the holy books of all the major religions at his prayer meetings. Secularism in India establishes that the state shall be neutral in matters of religion. But multiculturalism goes beyond that ^ it demands the flowering of different faiths and belief patterns.

An extract from the writer’s `Bahudha and the post-9/11 world’.

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