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India's Christians Rise Up Against Hindu Extremist Persecution

mujhaidind

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Indian Christians from across denominations have formed a legal-aid agency, complete with a telephone hotline number, to respond to increasing attacks that have followed the rise of Hindu nationalists to national power.

The United Christian Forum for Human Rights was formed Jan. 19 "to coordinate both legal and advocacy assistance to the community, which has been traumatized in recent months by communal violence in several states," said John Dayal, a prominent Christian activist and spokesperson for the new group, in a statement to World Watch Monitor.

Harassment of India's Christians has increased since the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, or BJP, swept parliamentary elections in May 2014.

The new initiatives have been assembled ahead of U.S. President Barack Obama's visit to India. Asked whether the flurry of anti-Christian violence would figure on Obama's agenda, the new Forum Secretary Rev. Vijayesh Lal said, "We have to speak up for ourselves."

Four days before the U.S. President arrived, the Catholic Church urged the government "to uphold the secular character of India." This plea emerged from a meeting of India's top Catholic Church leadership.

The Catholic Bishops' Conference said that recent attacks on Christians—the clamour to turn India into a Hindu nation and attacks on churches and Christians in several parts of the country—have "shaken the faith in the secular fabric of the nation."

"The UCF has commissioned a 24-hour National Helpline, 1-800-208-4545, so that lawyers and experts can assist victims of violence, intimidation, coercion and illegal confinement by any criminal or political group," the organizers said in the statement.

"We have had more than 4,000 calls already. Most of them are out of eagerness to verify if it is working and also to express solidarity," said Tehmina Arora, a lawyer with the Alliance for Defending Freedom India.

But already, three serious cases of atrocities have been reported, Arora said. These include a dozen Christian families being ostracized near Kanyakumari, in the peninsular southern tip of India; Christians being prevented from building a church in western Gujarat state; and intimidation of Christians in eastern Bihar state.

"We are verifying these complaints and Christian lawyers in the area will be asked to help them," Arora said.

United Christian Forum coordinator A.C. Michael said the new forum will be "more of an action group." Christian networks such as the Evangelical Fellowship of India, the Christian Lawyers' Association and the Alliance for Defending Freedom India will be involved in providing timely legal support for needy Christians.

"Church leadership will not be involved in it," Michael said. "The Helpline and the Forum will be a watch group to monitor the developments affecting the community."

So far in 2015, at least one violent incident against Christians has been reported each week, according to speakoutagainsthate.org, a website that monitors violence and other attacks on Christian religious freedom.

In December, the National Human Rights Commission of India issued notices to five states—the north-central states of Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh, and the southern states of Kerala, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu—citing media reports of acts of violence and atrocities against Christians, according to The Times of India.

"These frequent attacks on the religious institutions of the minority community, if true, violate the fundamental right to freedom of religion and cause immense harm to the social fabric," a Commission statement said.

The Religious Liberty Commission of the Delhi-based Evangelical Fellowship of India recorded 31 incidents targeting Christians in December alone. The cases included physical violence, false accusations, disruption of church services or Christmas functions, hate campaigns and pressure to convert to Hinduism.

The attacks on minorities, including Christians, also led to a debate in the parliament on "rising communal incidents in the country," according to NDTV, a private news channel.

"2014 has been a ... traumatic year... A campaign based on hate ends the year in decisions based on hate," Dayal said at the launch of the new forum, alluding to the election campaign of the BJP and its victory.

In 2014, the EFI monitored at least 144 such cases, but said the actual number is likely to be much higher.

While Christians, churches and their institutions are being attacked in Delhi and various state capitals, cases in smaller cities and villages often go unreported, and victims have little help.

"The United Christian Forum has come together so that we are able to ensure that the voice of the persons in the villages ... reaches New Delhi," forum Chairman Michael William announced at the function.

"The United Christian Forum is about a collective response from our community," said Secretary Rev Vijayesh Lal. "What UCF stands for ... is that we care, that we are here, we are together and we are one body."

The BJP is widely seen as the political wing of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, an umbrella Hindu nationalist group which champions the concept of Hindutva, an ideology that envisions a Hindu India where minorities are allowed to exist, but in subordination to the majority.

Dayal said Christians live under pressure in India no matter who is at the helm of the government.

"It does not matter who the government is, which the government is," he said. "The non-state actors remain the same, the progress of the judicial criminal system remains the same."

The new Christian Forum and hotline have been assembled just as India hosts U.S. President Barack Obama. Asked whether the flurry of anti-Christian violence would figure into Obama's agenda, Lal said: "We have to speak up for ourselves."

Four days before the president arrived, the Catholic Church issued a statement urging the government "to uphold the secular character of India." This plea emerged from a meeting of India's top Catholic church leadership including the four Cardinals in the Indian Church.

The Catholic Bishops' Conference said that recent attacks on Christians, the clamour to turn India into a Hindu nation and attacks on churches and Christians in several parts of the country have "shaken the faith in the secular fabric of the nation."

Pramod Singh, president of the Christian Legal Association of India and part of the new United Christian Forum, said the idea of India, as "conceived by our founding fathers," is under threat.

He read the preamble to the Constitution before the audience: "We, the people of India, having solemnly resolved to constitute India into a sovereign socialist secular democratic republic, and to secure to all its citizens: justice, social, economic and political; liberty of thought, expression, belief, faith and worship; equality of status and of opportunity; and to promote among them all fraternity assuring the dignity of the individual and the unity and integrity of the Nation."

John Dayal said Christians should meet the challenge in prayer "on bended knees."

"But bended before God," he stressed. "Not bended before man and not bended before non-state actors or (the) state itself. India is our motherland, and we claim our rights as children of God and citizens of India with the Bible in one hand and the Constitution of India in the other."

India's Christians Rise Up Against Hindu Extremist Persecution
 
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Indian Catholics are calling for the closure of all Catholic schools on March 25 as a sign of protest against the recent surge in anti-Christian violence in the country.
“We demand the closure of schools of the Archdiocese of Mumbai March 25, to protest the attacks on Christian institutions,” said the statement from a group of Christian organizations that met on Sunday.

The Christian platform, which includes such groups as “Catholic Secular Forum,” “Maharashtra Christian Youth Forum,” “Association of Concerned Catholics,” and others, stated, “The Christian communities have been under attack since the Bharatiya Janata Party came to power.”

We have demanded that “the Catholic schools remain closed March 25 to send a strong message to the politicians,” the statement said.

The group is reacting in particular to the recent rape of a 71-year-old nun in West Bengal, as well as attacks on a Catholic church in Panvel and the assault on a group of Bible students in Jabalpur.

On March 21, three vandals on motorcycles threw stones at the statue of the patron saint of St. George Catholic church, shattering the glass case around it. Mumbai CCTV cameras caught the vandals on film, but they were wearing masks.

Also over the weekend, a group of marauders broke into the courtyard of the Cathedral of St. Peter and St. Paul in Jabalpur, where participants in a Bible convention were sleeping.

According to the local bishop of Jabalpur, Gerald Almeida, who organized the convention, a large group of brigands broke into the building at around one o’clock in the morning, “attacking the faithful and stealing their belongings.” After the beatings, the bishop said, “the attackers destroyed the door of the cathedral and some vehicles. The police arrived several hours later, only at 4:00 am, when it was all over,” he said.

The Global Council of Indian Christians (GCIC) condemned the new anti-Christian attacks. “These episodes reveal the fragile situation of religious freedom in our country,” said Sajan George, the president of the Council. “These right-wing groups carry out their reign of terror against the vulnerable Christian community.”

The Bombay Archdiocese has yet to make a decision regarding the call for school closings.

“There is no plan to stay shut as yet. We don’t want a knee jerk reaction and will wait for police to do their work, and also exams are on and we don’t want to inconvenience those students or give a holiday to the rest of the students without them understanding the reason,” said a spokesperson.

Meanwhile, demonstrators came out in droves for a protest rally in New Delhi late last week to mark the first 300 days in government for Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), a group with close ties to Hindu nationalists.

A report was circulated at the rally listing 168 incidents of anti-Christian violence and harassment since Modi took power, and 222 occasions of “hate speech and media campaigns” from Hindu fundamentalist groups.

The latest attacks on churches show that “the situation is turning from bad to worse,” said Cardinal Baselios Cleemis, who heads the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of India.

Many judge the rash of attacks to be a direct result of the tacit permission of the BJP government for anti-Christian violence.

Archbishop Cornelius Leo of Bhopal said that some “are becoming more brazen because no one takes action against them since the BJP is driving the central government. This is dangerous for our democratic values.”

“The Prime Minister said that there will be no religious intolerance or division,” he said, “but these elements feel emboldened to move forward from the fact that New Delhi does not deal with them severely.”
 
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Good, John Dayal is stirring the pot :D

Indian govt. should now do the following,

1. Conduct a Pan India survey and publish it about the land owned by Christian religious institutions and how many of them were gifted away. This should include all Health care and Educational institutions.

2. Conduct a survey about religious funding received right from 1947 and publish it.

3. Conduct a survey of the percentage of Non Christian staff in Christian institutions and publish it.

Then let the fun start. :coffee:
 
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Welcome back @mujhaidind long time no see
Thank you!


Good, John Dayal is stirring the pot :D

Indian govt. should now do the following,

1. Conduct a Pan India survey and publish it about the land owned by Christian religious institutions and how many of them were gifted away. This should include all Health care and Educational institutions.

2. Conduct a survey about religious funding received right from 1947 and publish it.

3. Conduct a survey of the percentage of Non Christian staff in Christian institutions and publish it.

Then let the fun start. :coffee:

Even Modi apologized to the Christians. Nobody can takey away the church land which was illegaly alloted to them by White Christians. Indian government abolished zamindaari system and redistributed the land among poor after independence. But they wouldn't do the same with the Church land.

PS: The GOI even controls WAQF board land. Why is it afraid to do the same to land owned by church?
 
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Thank you!

Even Modi apologized to the Christians. Nobody can takey away the church land which was illegaly alloted to them by White Christians. Indian government abolished zamindaari system and redistributed the land among poor after independence. But they wouldn't do the same with the Church land.

PS: The GOI even controls WAQF board land. Why is it afraid to do the same to land owned by church?

GOI does not control the WAQF board land you fool. The WAQF board control it :lol:

Give me a link that shows modi apologized to the christian, and for what ?
 
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The GOI does interfere in it. Many of our land have sold at throway rates to big coroporates.

You can consider this as an apology after his master Obama lectured him.
Finally, Modi breaks silence, says won’t allow religious intolerance - The Times of India

LOL. If your board has sold the land to corporates, why blame the govt. ? :cheesy: ........... blame the corrupt members of your board.

MOdi said that he will not allow ANY religious intolerance. That is what the PM of India is supposed to do. :lol: ........ it means no more tolerance to Christian and Muslim terrorism. No more tolerance to fake faith healing and foreign funding of missionaries :P

He has already put all of that in action. The MUSLIM rapist of the Kokata Nun was just arrested :D ........ see ? zero tolerance.
 
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MOdi said that he will not allow ANY religious intolerance. That is what the PM of India is supposed to do. :lol: ........ it means no more tolerance to Christian and Muslim terrorism. No more tolerance to fake faith healing and foreign funding of missionaries :P
Oh really? I still see foreign funded Christian missionaries luring poor slum dwellers to convert in mumbai.
 
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Good, John Dayal is stirring the pot :D

Indian govt. should now do the following,

1. Conduct a Pan India survey and publish it about the land owned by Christian religious institutions and how many of them were gifted away. This should include all Health care and Educational institutions.

2. Conduct a survey about religious funding received right from 1947 and publish it.

3. Conduct a survey of the percentage of Non Christian staff in Christian institutions and publish it.

Then let the fun start. :coffee:
And...

1. How many Hindus and Muslims have been converted to Christianity since 1947 by inducements. Refer to Project JOSHUA.

2. How much of ill gotten wealth which runs into hundreds of crores has been stashed away without declaring it and thus avoiding paying tax.

About Project Joshua

"A new mood of aggressive evangelism has been emanating from America. Well-funded, superbly networked, backed by the highest of the land, seized of its moral supremacy, it has India as one of its key targets", reveals VK Shashikumar in a disturbing exposé.

This could be the plot of a fevered thriller. A jingoistic president, multi-million dollar corporations, high technology, a grand if furtive mission, networks spanning the globe, and biblical invocations.

Only it's real. And its got India in its crosshair.

Religious expansionism has not witnessed this scale, scope, and state resources in a long time. Detailed investigations by Tehelka reveal that American evangelical agencies have established in India an enormous, well-coordinated and strategised religious conversion plan.

The operation was launched in the early 1990s but really came into its own after George W Bush Jr, an avowed born-again Christian, became president of the United States in 2001. Since then, aggressive evangelists have found pro-active support from the new administration in their efforts to convert some sections of Indian society to Christianity.

At the heart of this complex and sophisticated operation is a simple strategy-convert locals and then give them the know-how and (slush) money to plant their own churches and multiply.


More here...Tehelka - The People's Paper

So India's Christians rising up against Hindu 'extremist persecution' need to be shown the mirror. This is hypocrisy at its worst! :tdown:


 
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India in 2015 is likeGermany in 1932. It's just the beginning. The Christians in India have not seen anything yet. Wait for more to come.
 
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Indian Catholics are calling for the closure of all Catholic schools on March 25 as a sign of protest against the recent surge in anti-Christian violence in the country.
“We demand the closure of schools of the Archdiocese of Mumbai March 25, to protest the attacks on Christian institutions,” said the statement from a group of Christian organizations that met on Sunday.

The Christian platform, which includes such groups as “Catholic Secular Forum,” “Maharashtra Christian Youth Forum,” “Association of Concerned Catholics,” and others, stated, “The Christian communities have been under attack since the Bharatiya Janata Party came to power.”

We have demanded that “the Catholic schools remain closed March 25 to send a strong message to the politicians,” the statement said.

The group is reacting in particular to the recent rape of a 71-year-old nun in West Bengal, as well as attacks on a Catholic church in Panvel and the assault on a group of Bible students in Jabalpur.

On March 21, three vandals on motorcycles threw stones at the statue of the patron saint of St. George Catholic church, shattering the glass case around it. Mumbai CCTV cameras caught the vandals on film, but they were wearing masks.

Also over the weekend, a group of marauders broke into the courtyard of the Cathedral of St. Peter and St. Paul in Jabalpur, where participants in a Bible convention were sleeping.

According to the local bishop of Jabalpur, Gerald Almeida, who organized the convention, a large group of brigands broke into the building at around one o’clock in the morning, “attacking the faithful and stealing their belongings.” After the beatings, the bishop said, “the attackers destroyed the door of the cathedral and some vehicles. The police arrived several hours later, only at 4:00 am, when it was all over,” he said.

The Global Council of Indian Christians (GCIC) condemned the new anti-Christian attacks. “These episodes reveal the fragile situation of religious freedom in our country,” said Sajan George, the president of the Council. “These right-wing groups carry out their reign of terror against the vulnerable Christian community.”

The Bombay Archdiocese has yet to make a decision regarding the call for school closings.

“There is no plan to stay shut as yet. We don’t want a knee jerk reaction and will wait for police to do their work, and also exams are on and we don’t want to inconvenience those students or give a holiday to the rest of the students without them understanding the reason,” said a spokesperson.

Meanwhile, demonstrators came out in droves for a protest rally in New Delhi late last week to mark the first 300 days in government for Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), a group with close ties to Hindu nationalists.

A report was circulated at the rally listing 168 incidents of anti-Christian violence and harassment since Modi took power, and 222 occasions of “hate speech and media campaigns” from Hindu fundamentalist groups.

The latest attacks on churches show that “the situation is turning from bad to worse,” said Cardinal Baselios Cleemis, who heads the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of India.

Many judge the rash of attacks to be a direct result of the tacit permission of the BJP government for anti-Christian violence.

Archbishop Cornelius Leo of Bhopal said that some “are becoming more brazen because no one takes action against them since the BJP is driving the central government. This is dangerous for our democratic values.”

“The Prime Minister said that there will be no religious intolerance or division,” he said, “but these elements feel emboldened to move forward from the fact that New Delhi does not deal with them severely.”

So were these schools closed down yesterday or most school administrations were sensible and did not listen to these bozos?
 
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