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By: V Sundaram, IAS, Retd.
May 11, 2006
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Sita Ram Goel is an indomitable intellectual Kshatriya in the line of
great warriors like Parasurama, Bhishma, Drona, Arjuna and Karna in the
history of India that is not Bharath today. I am compelled to say that "it
is not Bharath" only for the reason that India today has been taken over
by the mafia of pseudo-secularists whose only aim is to destroy Hinduism
and Hindu culture or more precisely "Sanathana Dharma" at any cost. Sita
Ram Goel brings this out succinctly in this manner:
"Hindus from early 17th century Pundits of Tamilnadu to Arun Shourie in
the closing years of the 20th century have spent no end of ink and breath
to demolish the dogma of Christianity and denounce missionary methods. But
it has hardly made any difference to the arrogance of Christian
theologians and aggressiveness of Christian missionaries. This is because
the dogma was never meant for discussion. It is an axiom of logic that
which has not been proved cannot and need not be proved."
"High-sounding theological blah blah notwithstanding, the fact remains
that the dogma is no more than a subterfuge for forging and wielding an
organizational weapon for mounting unprovoked aggression against other
people. It is high time for Hindus to dismiss the dogma of Christianity
with the contempt it deserves and pay attention to the Christian
missionary apparatus planted in their midst. The sole aim of this
apparatus is to ruin Hindu society and culture and take over the Hindu
homeland. It goes on devising strategies for every situation, favorable
and un favorable. It trains and employs a large number of intellectual
criminals ready to prostitute their talents in the service of their pay
masters, and adept at dressing up dark designs in high-sounding language.
The fact that every design is advertised as a theology in the Indian
context and every criminal euphemized as an Indian theologian, should not
hoodwink Hindus about the real intention of this gangster game. Hindus are
committing a grave mistake in regarding the encounter between Hinduism and
Christianity as a dialogue between two religions. Christianity has never
been a religion; its long history tells us that it has always been a
predatory imperialism "par excellence". The encounter, therefore, should
be viewed as a battle between totally opposed and mutually exclusive ways
of thought and behavior".
History of Hindu-Christian encounters in our country falls into five
distinct phases. In all of them, Christian missionaries stuck to their
basic dogma of One True God and the Only Saviour which Hindus should
accept or be made to accept. But they kept on changing their methods and
strategy and theological verbiage based on changing circumstances from
time to time.
In the first phase it opened with the coming of the Portuguese pirates in
the 16th century, more particularly the Patron Saint of those pirates,
Francis Xavier. The methods of Portuguese Christianity in Goa and other
parts of India were cruel. Hindus were helpless against the barrage of
atrocities let loose against them by the Portuguese. Fortunately for the
Hindus of India, this phase did not last long. The Portuguese lost their
power everywhere in India excepting in Goa and some other small pockets.
The second phase began with the consolidation of the British conquest
after the final defeat of the Marathas in 1818. In this phase, the British
Government in India did not allow Christian missions to use physical
methods. But missionary language continued to be as crude as ever. This
phase ended with the rise of Reform Movements, particularly the clarion
call given by Maharishi Dayananda of the Arya Samaj in the Punjab and
Swami Vivekananda in Bengal in the latter half of the 19th century.
Christianity suffered a serious set back in this phase.
The third phase started with the entry of Mahatma Gandhi into the Indian
national scene in 1917 and his slogan of "Sarva-Dharma-Sambhava".
Christian missions were thrown on the defensive by Mahatma Gandhi and they
were forced to change their language. Sita Ram Goel notes this change with
biting sarcasm: "The foulmouthed miscreants became sweet-tongued vipers.
Now they were out to share their spiritual riches with the Hindus,
reminding us of a beggar in dirty rags promising to donate his wardrobe to
wealthy persons". This phase ended with the Tambaram Conference of the
International Missionary Council (IMC) in 1938 which decided to
reformulate Christian Theology in the Indian context.
The fourth phase commenced with the coming of independence on August 15,
1947. It proved a boon for Christianity. The Christian right to convert
Hindus was incorporated in the Constitution. Pundit Jawaharlal Nehru who
dominated the Indian political scene for 17 long years, promoted every
anti-Hindu ideology and movement behind the smokescreen of counterfeit
secularism. The congress regimes that followed continued to raise the
bogey of "Hindu Communalism" as the most frightening phenomenon. Christian
missionaries could now openly denounce as a Hindu communalist, and
chauvinist, even as a Hindu Nazi, any one who raised the slightest
objection to their means and methods. All sons of pseudo secularists
leaped forward to join the chorus. The missionaries came forward with
their new and revolutionary theologies and programmes of Fulfilment,
Indigenisation, Liberation and Dialogue in the Indian context backed up by
massive flow of funds from all parts of the globe for the glorious work of
proselytism in post-independent India. The missionary apparatus in India
multiplied fast and became pervasive in the years between 1947 and 1967.
The only jarring note from the point of view of Christian missionaries
during this period was K.M. Panikkar"s book "Asia and Western Dominance"
published from London in 1953, the NIYOGI COMMITTEE REPORT published by
the Congress Government of Madhya Pradesh in 1956, and Om Prakash Tyagi"s
Bill on "Freedom Of Religion" introduced in the Lok Sabha in December
1978.
The fifth phase, which is continuing now, started with the Hindu awakening
brought about by the mass conversion of Harijans to Islam at
Meenakshipuram in Tirunelveli District in Tamilnadu in 1981. It resulted
in renewed Muslim aggression in many ways and reached its head in
Pakistan-backed terrorism in Punjab and Kashmir in the late 1980s. The
Ramajanmaboomi Movement was the immediate result. It was aimed at
arresting Islamic aggression. Christianity or its missions were hardly
mentioned by the supporters of the Ramajanmaboomi Movement. Nevertheless,
it was Christian missions which showed the greatest concern at this new
and legitimate Hindu stir, and started crying "wolf". Christian media
power in the West raised a storm, shamelessly claiming ad nauseum that
Hindus were out to destroy the minorities in India and impose a Nazi
regime. This storm is still raging and no one knows when it will subside,
if at all.
With the birth of the new Indian Constitution in January 1950, things were
made quite smooth for the Christian missions in India. They surged forward
with renewed vigour and enthusiasm. National resistance to the phenomenon
of Christian missions which had been viewed as an imperialist incubus
during the days of struggle for freedom from British rule, broke down
after Indian independence when the very leaders who had frowned upon it
started speaking in their favor. Voices which still remained vocally
recalcitrant were sought to be silenced by being branded as obscurantist
voices of "Hindu communalism". Nehru gave a command performance in this
sphere by becoming a vocal champion of pseudo secularism. Nehruvian
Secularism had stolen a march under the smokescreen of Mahatma Gandhi"s "Sarva-Dharma-Sambava".
What became more favorable to Christian missionaries was the complete
collapse of Hindu resistance after 1947 which had been pretty strong
during the time of our struggle for freedom. Gandhiji"s totally visionary
if not imaginary slogan of "Sarva-Dharma-Sambava" also provided an
effective smokescreen for Christian missions in India to steal a march
against Hindu religion, society and culture.
In a letter to C.D. Deshmukh on June 22, 1952 Prime Minister Pundit
Jawaharlal Nehru said: "Nothing amazes me so much as the perversion of
well-known words and phrases in political and other controversies today. I
suppose every demagogue does it". Nehru was blissfully unaware of the fact
that he himself had become the most despicable demagogue in India's hoary
history by borrowing the word "secularism" from Western political parlance
by making it to mean the opposite of what it had meant in Europe in the
18th and 19th centuries. For him it became a glorious Fixed Deposit
Account for minority- vote-bank politics. "Secularism" in Europe
symbolized a humanist and rationalist revolt against the closed creed of
Christianity and stood for pluralism such as had characterized Hinduism
down the ages. But Pundit Nehru had perverted the word and turned it into
a shield for protecting every closed monotheistic creed prevailing in
India at the dawn of independence in 1947 ?Islam, Christianity and
Communism."
In 1955, a Bill came before India's Parliament which "if passed would have
seriously handicapped the work of Christian missionaries, because it
"provided for a strict system of regulating conversions". The issue
related to "conversions" brought about by force, fraud or material
inducement. But no less a person than the Prime Minister of India, Pundit
Nehru, came to the rescue of Christian missions and persuaded the
Parliament to throw out the Bill. Another Bill was introduced in
Parliament in 1960 for protecting Scheduled Castes and Tribes "from change
of religion forced on them on grounds other than religious convictions".
It was also thrown out because of resistance from the ruling Congress
Party.
What is very striking is that the word "secularism" cannot be found
anywhere in Pundit Nehru"s pre-independence writings and utterances. Nor
was this word used by anyone in the Constituent Assembly Debates which
exist in cold print. There is irrefutable documentary evidence to show
that it was solely due to Nehru's dishonest demagogy that this word became
not only the most fashionable but also the most profitable political term
for every enemy of India"s age-old indigenous society and culture. There
is no doubt what so ever that he used the might of his office and the
Government of India to put down Hinduism and Hindu culture in India. The
first Prime Minister of independent India thus became the supreme leader
of a Muslim-Christian-Communist combine for forcing Hindus and Hinduism
first on the defensive and then on a run for shelter. Now on everything
which Hindus had held sacred for centuries, they could be questioned,
ridiculed, despised and insulted. At the same time, the darkest dogmas of
Islam and Christianity were placed not only beyond the pale of discussions
but also invested with divinity so that any one who asked inconvenient
questions about them invited the attention of draconian laws which were
made more and more punitive. To conclude in the apt words of Sita Ram Goel:
"It is, therefore, no exaggeration to say that Nehru, the "architect" of
modern India, was no more than a combined embodiment of all imperialist
ideologies which had flocked to this ancient land in the company of alien
invaders like Islam, Christianity, White Man"s Burden, and Communism".
In view of his known infatuation for things Islamic and passionate love
for Anglo-Saxon culture, Nehru became the greatest enemy of Hinduism in
post-independent India. This will be very clear from his own command to
Chief Ministers of all States in his circular letter dated October 17,
1952: "I have sometimes received complaints from Christian missions and
missionaries both foreign and Indian about the differential treatment
accorded to them in certain States. ??Our policy of religions neutrality
and protection of minorities must not be affected or sullied by
discriminatory treatment or harassment. While Christian missionaries have
sometimes behaved objectionably from the political point of view, they
have undoubtedly done great service to India in the social field and they
continue to give that service. .. ? We permit, by our Constitution, not
only freedom of conscience and belief but also proselytism. Personally I
do not like proselytism and it is rather opposed to the old Indian outlook
which is, in this matter, one of live and let live. But I do not want to
come in other people's ways provided they are not objectionable in some
other sense?.. I do not want anyone to come here who looks upon me as a
savage heathen, not that I mind being called a heathen or a pagan by
anybody? ?" Thus Nehru was an embodiment of every form of self-chosen
conceptual confusion in post-independent India in every sphere of national
life? be it the proselytism issue, or the Kashmir issue, or the language
issue, or the private vs. public sector issue, or the pros and cons of
support-Russia vs. support-America issue or the Tibetan issue or all other
vital national issues. The only thing that mattered to him was the
political survival of his family.
Now it can be asked as to what was the provocation for Nehru to send the
above letter to all the Chief Ministers in India giving his off-the-cuff
vague and confused remarks on the issue of conversion and proselytism. A
foot note to Nehru's above mentioned letter informs us that on October 15,
1952 , Rajkumari Amrit Kaur (who was a Punjabi Christian), drew Nehru's
attention to complaints of discriminatory treatment of Christian
missionaries in Bihar and Madhya Pradesh. If Nehru was interested in being
objective and neutral, he would have referred the matter to the Chief
Ministers of Bihar and Madhya Pradesh for enquiry and report before taking
up the matter himself. I cannot help imagining that he was functioning
like a proud coolie carrying the White Man's Burden on that occasion. I
cannot understand how an allegation from a Cabinet colleague who was a
known and powerful mouthpiece of Christian missions in India was
sufficient for Nehru to issue a reprimand to the Chief Ministers of all
the States within a week of his getting a note from Rajkumari Amrit Kaur.
There seems to have been absolutely no complaint regarding maltreatment of
Christian missions from the rest of the States. Nehru in his above
communication to all the Chief Ministers not only anticipated all possible
imaginary objections which he thought could be made against Christian
missions and missionary activities and also went out of his way to blunt
those self-created objections in his usual "IF" and "BUT" way. He wanted
the Hindus of India to switch over from the philosophy of "live and let
live" to the philosophy of "die and let live". This approach became the
corner-stone of the overarching umbrella of pseudo-secularism in India
brilliantly marketed by the Congress party after independence.
The bright sunshine in which Christian missions started basking after
August 15, 1947 can be best understood in the words of Plattner, who was a
Jesuit Missionary, in his book "The Catholic Church in India: Yesterday
and Today" published in 1964: "The Indian Church has reason to be glad
that the Constitution of the country guarantees her an atmosphere of
freedom and equality with other much stronger religious communities. Under
the protection of this guarantee she is able, ever since independence, not
only to carry on but to increase and develop her activity as never before
without serious hindrance or anxiety".
Thanks to the overt and covert support given by Pundit Jawaharlal Nehru
and his Government to all the activities of proselytism undertaken by many
Christian missions and missionaries in India, they were in a position to
smoothly tide over serious exposures relating to their anti-national and
nefarious character made during the 1950s. The first jolt they received
was from the publication of a book called "Asia and Western Dominance" in
1954 which was authored by K.M. Panikkar. His study was primarily aimed at
providing a survey of Western Imperialism in Asia from 1498 to 1945. He
said Christian missions came into the picture simply because they were
arrayed always and everywhere alongside Western gunboats, diplomatic
pressures, extra territorial rights and plain gangsterism. Contemporary
records consulted by him could not but cut to size the inflated images of
Christian heroes such as Francis Xavier and Matteo Ricci. They were found
to be not much more than minions employed by European Kings and Princes
scheming to carve out Empires in the East. Panikkar wrote clearly that
their methods of trying to convert Kings and commoners in Asia were
through force or fraud or conspiracy and thus morally questionable in
every instance. What hurt the Christian missionaries in India most was
Panikkar"s observation that ?the doctrine of the monopoly of truth and
revelation is alien to the Hindu and Buddhist mind and to them the claim
of any sect that it alone represented the truth and that the other shall
be condemned has always seemed unreasonable?. He thus knocked the bottom
out of the missionary enterprise founded on monotheism.
In January 1954 a question was raised in Parliament as to whether the
right to propagate religion was applicable only to Indian citizens or also
to foreigners residing in India, for example, the foreign missionaries. In
March 1954 the Supreme Court of India expressed its opinion that this
right was a fundamental one firmly established in the Constitution and
thus applied to every citizen and non-citizen alike who enjoyed the
protection of India's Laws. With this explanation the missionaries were
expressly authorized to spread the faith, thus fulfilling the task
entrusted to them by the Church. Spiritually and culturally, this was a
dark moment of collective national suicide for Bharath Mata.
After the publication of K.M. Panikkar"s book in 1953, the next
development which completely shook the missionaries all over India was the
appointment of a Committee to enquire into the activities of the Christian
Missionaries in Madhya Pradesh on April 16, 1954 by the Government of
Madhya Pradesh. It was headed by Dr. Bavani Shankar Niyogi, a former Chief
Justice of the Nagpur High Court. The Report of the Christian Missionary
Activities Enquiry Committee was published by the Government of Madhya
Pradesh (called Niyogi Committee Report) in 1956. The Niyogi Committee
Report completely exposed the fraudulent conversion activities of
Christian missions and missionaries in Madhya Pradesh in the years
immediately preceding and after independence.
For more than 40 years after independence, the powers that be, the
Congress Government at the Centre and in the States, the political
parties, the national press and the intellectual elite either protected
the Christian missions for one reason or the other or shied away from
studying and discussing publicly the exposures of the Niyogi Committee
Report of 1956 for fear of being accused of ?Hindu Communalism?, the
ultimate and strategically chosen swear word in the armory of Nehruvian
secularism and Communist anti-nationalism.
The Jesuit Missionary Plattner concluded in his book with pride: ?The
attitude of Nehru and his Government has inspired the Christians with
confidence in the Indian Constitution. Nehru has remained true to his
British upbringing?. It is not surprising that the Catholic Bishops"
Conference of India was quite optimistic when it declared in September
1960: "With the Indian Hierarchy well established and the recruitment of
the clergy fairly assured, it may be said that the Church has reached its
maturity and has achieved the first part of its missionary program. THE
TIME SEEMS TO HAVE COME TO FACE SQUARELY THE CHURCH"S NEXT AND MORE
FORMIDABLE DUTY: THE CONVERSION OF THE MASSES OF INDIA".
The non-communal, non-saffronized Islam-embracing and
Christianity-coveting Congress Government of Madhya Pradesh by a
notification dated April 16, 1954 appointed a Committee called "Christian
Missionary Activities Committee" which came to be called "The Niyogi
Committee". This committee was headed by Dr. Bhavani Shankar Niyogi,
retired Chief Justice of the Nagpur High Court. K.C. George, a Professor
in the Commerce College at Wardha, represented the Christian Community.
While notifying the appointment of this Committee, the Government of
Madhya Pradesh said in a press note: "Representations have been made to
Government from time to time that Christian Missionaries either forcibly
or through fraud and temptations of monetary and other gain convert
illiterate aboriginals and other backward people thereby offending the
feelings of non-Christians. It has further been represented that Missions
are utilized directly or indirectly for purposes of extra-religious
objectives. As agitation has been growing on either side, the State
Government consider it desirable in the public interest to have a thorough
inquiry made into the whole question through an impartial Committee".
What was the background behind the appointment of this Committee in 1954?
The Government of Madhya Pradesh was forced to take notice of the
agitation artificially worked up and fanned by the Christian Missionaries
at that time. They had become too powerful in Madhya Pradesh to be ignored
any longer. This will be clear from the observation of the Niyogi
Committee when it stated: "It must be noticed that about 30 different
Missions are working in Madhya Pradesh with varying number of centers in
each district. Almost the entire Madhya Pradesh is covered by Missionary
activities and there is hardly any district where a Mission of one
denomination or the other is not operating in some form or the other. More
than half of the people of Madhya Pradesh (57.4%) consist of members of
the Scheduled Caste, Scheduled Tribe and other Backward Classes and it is
amongst these that Missionary activities are mostly confined".
At the beginning most of the Christian Missions put up a sham show of
cooperation with the Niyogi Committee. But soon they discovered that the
Members of the Committee were not ignorant and illiterate aboriginals who
could be duped or hoodwinked or influenced through money and other known
methods of proselytism! It is not therefore surprising that all the
Catholic Missions subsequently withdrew their cooperation by filing a
statement of protest against the Niyogi Committee and also moved the
Nagpur High Court for issue of a Writ of Mandamus (Miscellaneous Petition
No.263 of 1955). This Petition was dismissed by the High Court on April
12, 1956.
When objections were raised by Christian Missions in regard to certain
questions listed in the questionnaire issued by the Niyogi Committee, the
High Court stated: "None of the questions represented either the views of
the Committee or any individual Member thereof, and their anxiety to have
information on various points raised in the questionnaire was due to their
desire to find out to what extent, if any, could any Missionary activity
be considered to infringe the limits of public order, morality and health
imposed by the Constitution".
The Niyogi Committee Report was published by the Government of Madhya
Pradesh in July 1956. This Committee presented the history of Christian
Missions with reference to the old Madhya Pradesh and merged States. Even
at that time there was a public agitation fomented by the Missionaries for
the creation of a new State in Jharkhand. Upon this request, the Niyogi
Committee said: "The separatist tendency that has gripped the mind of the
aboriginals under the influence of Lutheran and Roman Catholic Missions is
entirely due to the consistent policy pursued by the British Government
and the Missionaries. The final segregation of the aborigines in the
Census of 1931 from the main body of the Hindus considered along with the
recommendations of the Simon Commission which were incorporated in the
Government of India Act, 1935 apparently set the stage for the demand of a
separate State of Jharkhand on the lines of Pakistan".
The Niyogi Committee came to the following conclusions:
a) The aim of many of the Christian Missions is to resist the progress of
national unity.
b) Their aim is to emphasize the difference in the attitude toward the
principle of co-existence between India and America.
c) Their aim is to take advantage of the freedom accorded by the
Constitution of India to the propagation of religion and to create a
Christian Party in the name of Indian democracy on lines of the Muslim
League ultimately to make out a claim for a separate State, or at least to
create a "militant minority".
In order to achieve the above objectives, the Niyogi Committee stated that
the Christian Missionaries in India had received an amount of Rs.29.27
crores from various Western countries from January 1950 to June 1954.
U.S.A. contributed an amount of Rs.20.68 Crores followed by U.K. which
contributed an amount of Rs.4.83 crores.
The Niyogi Committee concluded: "Bulk of this foreign money received
ostensibly for educational and medical institutions is spent on
proselytism. Most of the amount is utilized for creating a class of
professional proselytizers, both foreign and Indian. There is a great
disparity between the scales of salaries and allowances paid to foreign
Missionaries on the one hand and to their native mercenaries on the
other".
The Niyogi Committee also noted various methods of propagating
Christianity. Many Missionary publications attacked Hindu Idol Worship in
rather offensive terms.
The Niyogi Committee was very clear and unambiguous in its larger
perceptions. To quote the Niyogi Committee Report: "Evangelization in
India appears to be part of the uniform world policy to revive Christendom
for re-establishing Western supremacy and is not prompted by spiritual
motives. The objective is to disrupt the solidarity of the non-Christian
societies, and the mass conversion of a considerable number of Adiwasis
with this ulterior motive is fraught with danger to the security of the
State. The Christian Missions are making a deliberate and determined
attempt to alienate Indian Christian Community from their nation". It was
made clear by the Niyogi Committee that the Christian Missions worked in
such a way as to provide a clear proof that religion was being used for
political purposes. Evangelization was not a religious philosophy but a
force for politicization. The Church in India was not independent but was
accountable to those who paid for its upkeep. That is why the umbrella
concept of "Partnership in Obedience" covered the flow of foreign finances
to the Church and its Missions in India. Against the above background, the
Niyogi Committee made the following landmark recommendations:
a) Those Missionaries whose primary object is proselytism should be asked
to withdraw and the large influx of foreign Missionaries should be checked
and regulated.
b) The use of medical and other professional services as a direct means of
making conversions should be prohibited by law.
c) Attempts to convert by force or fraud or material inducements, or by
taking advantage of a person's inexperience or confidence or spiritual
weakness or thoughtlessness, or by penetrating into the religious
conscience of persons for the express purpose of consciously altering
their faith, should be absolutely prohibited.
d) The Constitution of India should be amended in order to rule out
propagation by foreigners and conversions by force, fraud and other
illicit means.
e) Legislative measures should be enacted for controlling conversions by
illegal means.
f) Rules relating to registration of Doctors, Nurses and other personnel
employed in hospitals, should be suitably amended to provide a condition
against evangelistic activities while rendering professional service.
g) Circulation of literature meant for religious propaganda without
approval of the State Government should be prohibited.
The Madhya Pradesh Government upon receiving pseudo secular directions
from the Government of India buried the Niyogi Committee Report in 1956
itself. However, the Niyogi Committee Report which was accompanied by two
volumes of documentation, raised a storm in Missionary circles in India
and abroad.
The only Indian leader apart from Guruji Golwarkar who welcomed the Niyogi
Committee Report in toto was Rajaji. Rajaji said: "You expect from me an
expression of my views on the specific question: What type of Missionary
workers are wanted in India, rather than on the question whether any
Missionary workers should come at all to India? I shall respectfully speak
my opinion on the latter point. I feel it is not really possible on the
ground of logic or on the evidence of miracles to hold that amongst the
religions known as Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam and Christianity, anyone is
nearer the truth than any other. You will permit me to object to the
exclusive claims for Truth made on behalf of anyone of these faiths. If
this my first point is granted, the only justification for Christian
Missionary work in India is proselytism. But is it good on the whole for
men and women to change from one religion to another? I think it is not
desirable to make any attempt at proselytism. I feel that such efforts
will only undermine the present faith of the people, which is good enough
for promoting right conduct in them and to deter them from sin. Such
Missionary attempts at proselytism tend to destroy family and social
harmony, which is not a good thing to do".
V Sundaram, IAS, Retd.
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