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The nuns kept in custody |
Two Catholic nuns were arrested on 25 July 2025 at
Durg railway station for allegedly trafficking tribal women from Narayanpur in
Chhattisgarh to Agra in UP. Today’s newspapers in Kerala have expressed their contempt
of the act more vehemently than I had expected. It seems secularism has hope
yet in this country.
For those who are not aware of the
incident, two nuns were arrested because some criminals of a depraved
organisation called Bajrang Dal in Chhattisgarh chose to conclude that the nuns
were committing the crime of human-trafficking. Since that charge wouldn’t
stick, because the women confessed that they were going voluntarily to take up
jobs with the help of the nuns in order to raise their families from miserable
poverty in a country that claims to be a $5-tillion-economy, another charge was
fabricated that the nuns had indulged in religious conversion.
Now let us look at certain facts.
Though I keep questioning the Christian
churches for ideological reasons, I confess that I am what I am today largely
because of the Catholic church. I was educated mostly in their schools and
college. I earned my livelihood too for most part of my life working in
Catholic institutions. I may have a personal grudge against the Church, but I
will never accuse them of exploiting anyone. On the contrary, I know that they
do immense service especially in the areas of education and healthcare.
Christianity has done more service to India in these areas than India’s
political parties and political organisations.
Christianity was instrumental in
introducing modern education in India. The missionaries set up schools and
colleges that provided quality education among marginalised people including
Dalits and women. Mission schools provided both formal and vocational training
to lower-caste communities and helped them achieve social mobility and
inclusion outside caste barriers. Today Christians run over 54,000 educational
institutions in India, educating more than 6 crore students across religions,
castes, and economic backgrounds. 72% of recognised minority schools in India
are Christian-affiliated.
Similar is the contribution of
Christians in the area of healthcare. Networks like the Christian Medical
Association of India (CMAI) and the Catholic Health Association of India (CHAI)
have long served India’s poorest, working classes across rural, tribal, and
remote regions to address diseases like leprosy, tuberculosis, malaria, and HIV/AIDS.
After Modi came to power in
2014, anti-conversion laws have been enacted in over ten states and targeted Christian
missionaries particularly in the tribal and other backward areas. There are
hundreds of anti-Christian attacks taking place every year since 2014. Modi has
done whatever in his power to destroy Christian organisations and institutions
in India – like restricting or shuttering NGOs and blocking foreign fundings.
I have only stated some facts above.
Now, highly opinionated as I am
accused to be, let me ask two questions:
1. Why should any government
prevent good works that help build up a better country?
2. If the missionaries are
indeed converting people to Christianity, then why isn’t the Christian
population in India increasing?
I have a lot more to say in this
regard. I choose to leave the rest to Indians who still possess individual and free thinking
capacity.
Finally, if anyone wants to change their
religion, who is the government to stop it?
If your devotees leave your religion, there is
something wrong with your religion. Check that.
Yes. "If your devotees leave you, there is something wrong with your religion. Whether you use the euphemisms like Sanataa Dharma, Vasudaivakutumbakam or even pretensions to being the Viswaguru. Because this religion has come to be exclusionsry, in its Hindutva Avatar of hate and venom. Of course, other religions too have their share of Ambiguities... But not engaging themselves in State-Sponsored Terrorism.
ReplyDeleteReligion being a human creation will have limitations. But Modi has made a god out of his religion's limitations. Venom, as you said.
DeleteHari Om
ReplyDeleteIt's Hindutva acting like the Spanish Inquisition...Such terrifying irony. YAM xx
"We become like our enemies."
DeleteIf your devotees leave your religion, there is something wrong with your religion. Check that.
ReplyDeleteI endorse this statement. If we want any religion to flourish, humanity should govern it, not oppression.
Precisely
DeleteI can believe that the nuns were helping the women to make a better life. I can see why others might call that trafficking. I have my own issues with Christianity, so it was nice to see the religion doing good for people. I'm all for freedom of religion. Believe what you want. Those that try to hold on to their religion so tight tend to be compensating for something.
ReplyDeleteReligion should be left to individuals as their personal affair. Politics ruin it, however, because it's easy to manipulate people with its help.
Delete