From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org
Politics influence attacks on Christians in India
From
NewsDesk <NewsDesk@UMCOM.UMC.ORG>
Date
15 Mar 1999 10:17:00
March 15, 1999 News media contact: Linda Bloom*(212) 870-3803*New York
10-21-71B{137}
By United Methodist News Service
Politics is one of several forces driving the increased attacks on
Christians in India, according to an Indian-born United Methodist Church
executive.
The attacks came to international attention in January, when an Australian
missionary and his two sons were burned to death while they were sleeping
inside their car.
The resurgence of the National Congress Party in recent mid-term elections
poses a threat to the dominant Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party,
said Sarla Lall, a 20-year veteran of the United Methodist Board of Global
Ministries, in an interview.
The Congress Party is led by Sonia Ghandi, daughter-in-law of the late
Indira Ghandi and widow of Prime Minister Rajiv Ghandi, who was assassinated
in 1991. She is an Italian-born Roman Catholic. Most of India's 21 million
to 22 million Christians are Catholic, Lall noted.
Although India has had non-Hindu presidents in the past, "there is a big
fear to have a Catholic prime minister," explained Lall, who most recently
visited India in February. "You undermine her by saying that Christians are
out to convert us and she's a leader."
Christians make up only 2.3 percent of India's 960 million or so people, but
they have become more visible in the past 10 to 15 years. The visibility
comes both in the manner of evangelism - a focus on prayer meetings and
public religious forums rather than the "witnessing through service" long
practiced by mainline denominations - and the growing presence of
Pentecostal, fundamentalist and other Christian organizations.
"You have all kinds of groups who have been operating saying India has got
to be Christianized," Lall said.
And it is Indians themselves, not foreigners, who are doing the
evangelizing. "The Christian presence is being felt in ways that India had
not seen before," she added.
"Christians, though very small in number, have had a great influence in
education and in health," Lall said. While the government has improved the
state-run health system, "the Christian institutions are still the flagship
institutions when it comes to education."
Regardless of influence or increased visibility, there are no "forced
conversions" to Christianity, as some Hindu nationalists have claimed,
according to the Rev. James Massey, a clergy member of the Church of North
India. Formed in 1970, the Church of North India is a union of six
denominations, including the British and Australian conferences of the
Methodist Church.
Massey, who spoke in New York on Feb. 25, is honorary general secretary of
the Dalit Solidarity Peoples, an interfaith movement supporting the Indians
formerly labeled as "untouchables" in the Hindu caste system. Dalits compose
about 95 percent of the Church of North India and up to 90 percent of the
Methodist Church of India.
"These so-called majority Hindu rightist groups say Christians are forcing
conversions among the Dalits and tribal people," Massey said. That, he
added, is just an excuse for what he considers to be planned, strategic
attacks on Dalits and other Christians by Hindus. Behind the recent
violence, he believes, is the fear of upper-caste Indians that Christians
are eroding their power base by educating the masses about their rights.
Lall, whose grandfather served as a Methodist minister in villages outside
Delhi, pointed out that attacks on Christians have always occurred in India,
usually as sporadic incidents in remote areas. But over the past year, there
have been dozens of attacks on Christian churches, schools and individuals,
according to news reports. More than half occurred in the state of Gujarat,
controlled by the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party.
The National Council of Churches in India has blamed the attacks on the
Sangh Parivar, a network of Hindu nationalist groups that includes the
Bharatiya Janata Party. Lall added that while local and state governments
may not be orchestrating the attacks, "they have to look away in order for
these things to happen." She believes the government wants "to, in a way,
suppress the Christians," which is easy because "Christians don't fight
back."
However, the outcry after the death of Australian missionary Graham Staines
has spurred the Indian government into action. On Jan. 24, police arrested
47 people who are part of a militant Hindu youth group and charged them with
setting the fire that killed Staines and his sons. In a Jan. 30 address to
the nation, Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee strongly condemned recent
attacks on Christian places of worship, The New York Times reported, and
called the killings "a blot on our collective consciousness."
Lall predicted the attacks on Christians would dwindle in the light of such
developments. She said the Methodist Church in India had not been affected
by the violence, except for one incident in which threats were made at a
church in Hissar.
# # #
______________
United Methodist News Service
http://www.umc.org/umns/
newsdesk@umcom.umc.org
(615)742-5472
Browse month . . .
Browse month (sort by Source) . . .
Advanced Search & Browse . . .
WFN Home