Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Indian War on Minorities

This is a chronicle of the Small town’s fight of 1998 that turned to be a nation wide war in 2008. A story of a decade long strategy, that gained political alliance to steadily infiltrate against the sanctified. A War on the minorities, a war on Christians.

Christians the most peaceful and relatively powerless of the minorities constitute less than 3% of the Indian’s population. Yet amidst those creeds that authorized practices to suppress the weaker sects, the missionaries and churches (of 18th century) came to aid so to uplift their social and living conditions of the poorest of poor. Today most Orphanages, Old age homes, Leprosy- AIDS rehabilitation centers, Tsunami Relief works, home for the destitute women, stand to showcase those few of the many untold community services that every Indian Church undertakes every month of the calendar year. Most of the premier colleges in India are the ones set-up by the Christian missionaries. The education renovation in the otherwise traditionally amateurish 19th century multitude was quite a dream, until the Christian pioneers brought to the streets those schooling that were then only meant for the rich.

As Followers of Christ, they preached Peace – against violence, Propagated Welfare – against customarily rich biased society, Sheltered and comforted the emotionally Broken Hearted souls – Against some non-realistic trance sort of rites (rites that called every suffering a fate/destiny/Karma and refused to wipe away the tears of the deprived). That was the only Charge sheet against the speechless lambs of His Herd. Inspirational deeds that transformed lives is now deceitfully reworded as “forceful or fraudulent conversations” so to device a tactic to destruct the unarmed.

The Church Alters stand ruined. Bibles are charred to ashes. More than thousands brutally beaten up (nationwide). More than hundred stabbed/ killed (nationwide). One man Chopped to 75 pieces (Orissa). Nun’s and Christian women Raped. All this for practicing Christianity in a so called secular Country – India. Considering the catastrophe of the incidents, any other tribe would have backfired instantaneously in no time, at least so to defend its own rights. But, here at churches, I see sermons and prayers recited to forgive and love the paranoid fighters (Politically aggravated local gundas).
Reminds me of a Epilogue of Christ before Crucifixion. A time when The Pharisees accused Jesus for “misleading the nation” and when the soldiers mocked /spat on his sinless face for leisure. A moment when 7-9inch long iron nails where driven into his Wrists/ ankles and a time when he was nearing brutal crucifixion, he prayed out loud to the heavens
“Father forgive them; for they No not what they are doing” [Luk23]

Forgiveness and love, is for sure the only shield of Christian defense. This is a time to gather strength and show the world what is takes to be a follower of Christ.
“He forgave our iniquities; do we have the heart to forgive nation’s illicit rioters?”
“He loved us while we were still sinners; are we willing to love our adversaries”
“He died for us; do we have the courage to Live for him?”

Now is the time! The Time to show Christ still lives through the heart of his believers.


3 comments:

pandian chelliah said...

hi
how are u?
after the orissa attact on christians, i was interacting with a lot of guys from orissa. because if there is hatred there has to be a reason. this is what one of my friend asked me, and i ask that to u.said - if christian missionaries are here to help the destitute, why cant they simply come and help people. why do they convert them? if u look at hinduism, they have accepted christ and prophet mohammed, and buddha, and mahavir jain, and every other god and god equivalents. but they never insist in people changing their faiths. only when other religion people change the faith of the common man, that some people take arms to protect their faith. why is it necessary for christian missionaries to convert the downtrodden. i am not trying to suggest that that is indeed the case. i am just trying to understand, what could be a possible solution to every such violence. hope i have not hurt/or crossed my limit
regards
pandian

Evelyn7766 said...

Pandian,
First, apologize for this delayed response, for I did not view my blogspot until yesterday. But I sure was glad and happy to hear from you, especially after this long a time.

Years have passed by, times have changed and we both have individually grown so much in our own ways. But it surprises me that we, in 2008 are talking again about the same theme that we chewed over and over while at college. J As human's we are so very born with this religious identity that we tend to get fanatical and obsessed about it …..No matter what or how I decide to defend my faith, am sure we would repeat this controversy years down the lane, again….with that word, here is my standpoint:

1. If every hate has a reason and if all those reasons were rational, why are we witnessing so much of war and disharmony across the Globe? It could be that those augmented reasons can possibly be profanely egocentric.

2. A community service is a part of every religion and a compulsory obligation for both Muslims and Christians. Christians by large mingle both physical and emotional health, on their welfare missions. Now, do you think that we have possibility of a poor common man to get sparked up (in other words) draw inspiration from the personal emotional kindness shown towards him?
3. It makes me laugh out loud when I read "Hinduism has accepted Christ and prophet mohammed, and buddha, and mahavir jain, and every other god and god equivalents ". Have you disregarded the sporadic riots, Bombshells and bloodshed between Muslims and Hindu's in our very own country? Are you aware of that the current Srilankan Civil war hatched in 1956 (gained eminence in 1983) because of the ethnic riots between Sinhalese Buddhist majority and Hindu Tamil minority? Though Buddhism and Jainism was conceived in India, it gained acceptance only in our neighboring nations and not ours….Gutama and Mahavir were also prohibited as confuters of Hinduism, for they were against few Upanishads and Vedas
4. Had you been interacting with guys from Orrisa, you sure should have learnt that those who were termed as converts did so only because of their passion towards the concept of Christianity and not for any material gains. I'm more than confident on about this and we've also witnessed our local News channels airing this.

We sure do understand that India is primarily a Hindu nation but does that simply cannot justify fights in the name of God. This is as insane as the thought of expelling every non-Hindi speaking citizen from Maharashtra. Do you think we would be credited incentives in heaven, if we pile up headcounts in our accounts? My view from this side of the shore would be that, the majority rioters are fundamentally threatened with their own religion's decreasing identity in par with both the other two monitories (not just Christians).

This may not have given you a microscopic detail of our faith but I hope you atleast had a telescopic view of our thoughts…..
Regards,
Beulah
P.S: Am posting a copy of this mail on the comment reply column as well.

pandian chelliah said...

wow...its nice to actually get a beautiful, well thought out reply....
though i dont agree with all, and will mail u in detail, i thought, for the sake of completeness of the arguement on ur blog, let me requote u
"If every hate has a reason and if all those reasons were rational, why are we witnessing so much of war and disharmony across the Globe? It could be that those augmented reasons can possibly be profanely egocentric."
believe me, this is an amazing insight into human misery/pain/and suffering....
ofcourse what u say is not new, but it is profound...
and i can see, u have grown immeasurebly in the years that have passed by...
and that feels good...
best wishes
pandian