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By: Shachi Rairikar
May 23, 2006
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(The author is a Chartered Accountant working in a software company in
Indore, M.P., India and manage
www.indpride.com)
Pope’s condemnation of India is uninvited and ridiculous. Isn’t it
ironic that Pope, the head of the smallest independent nation in the
world, which is neither secular nor democratic and is governed by a
religious head elected by some cardinals, is advising religious freedom to
one of the largest secular democracies?
History is replete with violent bloodshed caused by the intolerant Church
and India, on the other hand, has from times immemorial been preaching and
practicing religious tolerance and peaceful coexistence. While, the
Vatican has time and again shown disrespect to other religions by
asserting that Christianity is the supreme and the only true path, India,
has believed in “Sarva Dharma Sambhava” or equal respect for all
religions. The followers of various religions have lived together in India
in peace and harmony for centuries. In a report UNESCO had pointed out
that out of 128 countries where Jews lived before Israel was created in
1948, only one, India, did not persecute them and allowed them to prosper
and practice Judaism in peace. While the Christians hounded them out of
their countries all over the world, the Hindus provided them shelter.
India is an independent country, with her own constitution, and
legislature and judiciary to implement and protect the constitution. The
people of India have complete faith in her systems and do not need to know
what is "unconstitutional (and) contrary to the highest ideals of
India's
founding fathers" from a foreigner. Her founding fathers had very clear
perception in all matters including religious freedom and conversions.
While they all were definitely and strongly in favor of religious freedom
but none approved proselytizing.
The father of the nation, Mahatma Gandhi, had time and again very heavily
criticized the activities of Christian missionaries and religious
conversions. He had once said, “If I had power and could legislate, I
should certainly stop all proselytizing.” The first Prime Minister of
India, Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru had made it clear that while conversion by an
individual out of deep conviction was unexceptionable, there was no room
for mass conversions of the kind indulged in by missionaries by inducement
and alienation. Even Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, the father of Indian constitution,
according to his own statement had while converting to Buddhism “taken
care” that his “conversion will not harm the tradition of the culture and
history of this land”. He regarded Christianity as foreign religion and
converting to Christianity as betraying his motherland.
India has never been averse to individuals converting to any religion by
choice based on one’s own judgment and the merits of comparative
religions, but conversions by allurement, temptation, threat, fraud,
force, coercion or any other unethical means are despised. In Mahatma
Gandhi’s views, “If a person, through fear, compulsion, starvation or for
material gain or consideration, goes over to another faith, it is misnomer
to call it conversion... Real conversion springs from the heart and at the
prompting of God, not a stranger.”
In fact, the anti-conversion law objected to by the Vatican is not against
conversion but against proselytizing and conversion by deceit, bribery or
other forms of coercion. It is a means to protect the fundamental right to
religious freedom rather than hinder it. It seems to be Pope’s ignorance
about this law that has provoked him to criticize it. If not, then Pope’s
worry only confirms the common perception that the missionaries are
indulging in conversion by unethical means.
Right to religious freedom is different from right to conversion. The Pope
seems to be confusing one with the other. Religious freedom implies that
one can talk about one"s religion and explain its tenets but nobody has
the right to resort to conversion. In 1977, the Supreme Court gave the
judgment that the right to propagate religion in article 25(1) gives to
each member of every religion the right to spread or disseminate the
tenets of his religion (say by advocacy or preaching), but it would not
include the right to convert another, because each man has the same
freedom of "conscience" guaranteed by that very provision in article
25(1).
The chequered history of Christian missionaries in India includes not only
conversion by unethical means but also fostering separatist, anti-national
movements in the name of the farcical liberation theology. The foreign
Churches have been instrumental in subverting national loyalties and
destroying cultural roots leading to secessionist movements. They have
acted as the tools of Western imperialism in the guise of religious
preaching and social work and have been a grave threat to the country’s
internal security. The Naga, Mizo and other tribal insurgencies in the
north-east have received inspiration from the Church.
The M.B. Niyogi Committee, which was formed during the tenure of Pt.
Jawaharlal Nehru, had, after a detailed study of the activities of
Christian missionaries and their foreign links, recommended an official
ban on religious conversions. The committee also found that “as conversion
muddles the converts’ sense of unity and solidarity with his society,
there is danger of his loyalty to his country and the state being
undermined”.
The track record of the Church all over the world reveals the real designs
behind conversion. The African experience as expressed by African Leader
Jomo Kenyatta says it all, “When the Europeans came, they had the Bible
and we had the land. They said that this is the book of God and asked us
to meditate. When we opened our eyes they had the land and we had the
Bible.” Seen in this context, the Pope’s alarm over obstructions in
“reaping harvest” can be well understood.
Whatever cases of isolated incidents of violence with the Christian
minorities have taken place in the recent past, are owing to disrespect
shown to indigenous beliefs and traditions by the missionaries. They have
left no stone unturned to malign the indigenous faiths often leading to
tension and disharmony in the society. They have hurt the sentiments of
the local population by using abusive epithets for Hindu Gods like “horrid
Kali, scandalous Shivlingam, ridiculous Ganapati and lecherous Krishna”.
Referring to the Christian missionaries Swami Vivekanand had said, “If all
India stands up, and takes all the mud that is at the bottom of the Indian
Ocean and throws it up against the Western countries, it will not be doing
an infinitesimal part of that which you are doing to us".
The Pope is highly concerned about the religious freedom in countries with
non-Christian majorities but why is same kind of concern not voiced about
the plight of minorities in Christian majority countries? What does he
have to say about the religious freedom in Russia where a temple of the
Hindu minority was razed? What about the Sikh and Muslim minorities of
France who are not allowed to wear head scarves and turbans as per their
religious traditions? What about the sentiments of the Muslim minority of
Denmark when Prophet’s cartoons are published? Is it that just as
Christianity is the only true path to salvation, the Christians are the
only privileged people entitled to enjoy religious freedom?
The Pope has no right to meddle in India’s internal affairs. Moreover, in
the gory backdrop of intolerant Christianity as revealed by Christian
history, the view Christianity holds regarding the followers of other
faiths, the activities of the Christian missionaries in non-Christian
majority countries and the attitude of Christian majority countries
towards their religious minorities, the Pope has no moral right to
advocate tolerance to the most tolerant and peace loving nation in the
world. Pope’s allegation against India seems to be akin to a chimney
calling the kettle black.
The Pope needs to put his house in order first before pointing fingers at
others. Moreover, India stands in no need of lessons or certificate on
religious tolerance from an intolerant foreign creed. After all, it is
only the tolerance of the Indians that has allowed the successive Popes to
visit India without rendering an apology for the worst and most inhuman
atrocities committed by the Church during the Portuguese Inquisition.
Shachi Rairikar
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