NEW DELHI, Oct. 1, 2008

Attacks On Christians Worry India

Sikh Prime Minister Calls Recent Violence "Acts Of National Shame"

  • In this Sept. 7, 2008 file photo, a woman reacts during a session of gospel hymns at a public meeting to protest against the recent attacks against members of the Christian community in the east Indian state of Orissa in Mumbai, India.

    In this Sept. 7, 2008 file photo, a woman reacts during a session of gospel hymns at a public meeting to protest against the recent attacks against members of the Christian community in the east Indian state of Orissa in Mumbai, India.  (AP Photo/Gautam Singh, File)

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(AP)  Nearly a year of attacks on Christians have put India's leaders on edge, and the latest flare-up in violence drew an angry denunciation from the country's Sikh prime minister as "acts of national shame."

"We are a secular state. We are a multireligious, multicultural nation," Prime Minister Manmohan Singh told reporters during a stopover in France.

Hours later, Hindu mobs rampaged through villages in eastern India on Tuesday, attacking a Christian minister, damaging two churches and setting off Hindu-Christian clashes that killed at least one person.

It was just the latest in a string of attacks by Hindu hard-liners since December that have left dozens of people dead, dozens of churches destroyed and thousands of people homeless, many forced to live for days in thick forests until they could make their way to safety.

In a country where Christians are a tiny minority, the attacks reflect how large swaths of India - despite a highly educated urban elite and its increasing role as a global economic power - are riven by religious and cultural animosities and how those divides are woven into political power struggles.

"We are very much under threat," said New Delhi Archbishop Vincent M. Concessao, the president of India's National United Christian Forum.

Just over 80 percent of India's 1.1 billion people are Hindu, but the nation is officially secular, a fact often played up by government leaders.

They note that religious minorities, such as Christians, who account for 2.5 percent of the people, and Muslims, who make up 14 percent, often coexist peacefully with Hindus. Some have risen to the highest levels of business, government, military and entertainment.

But throughout India's history, religious clashes have erupted regularly. And while Hindu-Muslim violence is often the bloodiest, Christians have also faced the wrath of Hindu militants.

Much of the recent violence has been in the eastern coastal state of Orissa, which has long been a battleground over Christian conversions of low-caste Hindus and missionary work among the indigenous people known in India as "tribals."

Orissa state law forbids conversion without police approval, and Hindu hard-liners allege that Christian missionaries coerce or bribe people to convert.

The missionaries deny forcing anyone to convert. Conversion to Christianity offers a partial escape from the stigmas of the Hindu caste system, and some missionaries run medical clinics and schools that can be far better than state-run institutions.

When violence boils up in Orissa, it can be horrific. In 1999, an Australian missionary who ran a medical clinic was burned alive - along with his two children - by a Hindu mob.

The latest troubles began after the Aug. 24 slaying of a hard-line Hindu leader, Swami Laxmanananda Saraswati, who had become known for advocating the reconversion of Hindu villagers who convert to Christianity.

Police blamed atheistic Maoist extremists for the killing, but right-wing Hindu groups blamed Christians and set fire to a Christian orphanage. That has been followed by mob attacks on churches as well as shops and homes owned by Christians. At least 28 people have been killed.

Militants Hindus argue their country's true religion is being undermined by Christian missionaries they accuse of using bribery, pressure and even murder to gather more followers.

"Hindu culture is under attack," said Gauri Shankar Rath, a top official in the VHP, the umbrella organization of Hindu nationalist groups.

The local government's response to the violence after the Hindu priest's slaying was halfhearted, and weeks later attacks are still flaring up.

And the trouble has spread. Hindu mobs attacked more than 20 churches and prayer halls in the southern state of Karnataka on Sept. 14, injuring at least 34 people. There have also been attacks on Christians in the states of Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Madhya Pradesh.

Ramachandra Guha, a historian, sees the trouble - particularly in Karnataka - as a display of political strength by right-wing Hindus.

The violence there, he noted, began just months after the BJP, the Hindu nationalist party that is now India's main opposition group, rose to power in the state government.

"It's a flexing of muscles by the Hindu right-wing," Guha said. The BJP is in the mainstream, he said, but when it won power in Karnataka its followers "at the extreme end of the spectrum felt they could do what they want."

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by honestabe8 October 3, 2008 9:32 PM EDT
libs: well, i don''t know that i agree with you on that, but you did explain your position pretty well. i don''t know that satirists should not profit from satirizing, and that seems to be what you are asking maher to do, or rather not satirizing at all
Reply to this comment
by libluv2cnsor October 3, 2008 7:21 PM EDT
No, the essence of atheism is not to attack religion. However, atheists cannot logically fear retaliation from a being in which they do not believe. Given that, some of us like pointing out what we feel are absurdities in belief systems.


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Posted by honestabe8 at 08:38 AM : Oct 03, 2008
+ report abuse


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well from the contents of those posted from athiests, It would safe to say that those are not ''observations'' but pretty much like attacks.

I do not believe in religion but I believe in a higher being. That being said..I am just pointing out my observation about its "absurdities". Case in point. can you please explain to me the purpose of a known athiest Bill Maher''s new movie attacking religion. If athiests is to practice its ideology, the very first step is to step away from religion and not bask, ''hang-around'', profit, attack its absurdities. Kinda like showing ''we are better than that'' approach. SUCH A DISAPPOINTMENT!
Reply to this comment
by libluv2cnsor October 3, 2008 7:14 PM EDT
Really? Do you have evidence? Or just belief?


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Posted by Nancy_Naive at 06:09 AM : Oct 03, 2008
+ report abuse


*******

please before you say anything try , at least, to see the origin of the conversation.
Reply to this comment
by honestabe8 October 3, 2008 11:38 AM EDT
No, the essence of atheism is not to attack religion. However, atheists cannot logically fear retaliation from a being in which they do not believe. Given that, some of us like pointing out what we feel are absurdities in belief systems.
Reply to this comment
by jamster31 October 2, 2008 9:06 PM EDT
People are nuts. It''s so arrogant to impose your beliefs on someone else like they have no opinion of there own that may be right. I''ll say one thing about most athiests. They don''t go around killing others because they don''t believe them
Reply to this comment
by debbie734 October 2, 2008 7:46 PM EDT
Let''s look at it from a different light, shall we? No one talks about an 80 year old peace loving spiritual leader working against christian conversions who was murdered last month. He used to work for under privileged in India. His death is a great loss and is not being talked about.

http://satyabhashnam.blogspot.com/2008/09/vedanta-kesari-swami-laxmananda.html
Reply to this comment
by babooph October 2, 2008 10:31 AM EDT
When the US "crusades" it seems to validate others doing their own religous cleansing.
Reply to this comment
by October 2, 2008 4:37 AM EDT
Down with religion - make it go underground. Attack all religions the same. Then they can''t bother the rest of the thinking world. Power to the undeclared!
Reply to this comment

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