Prayer
When
the body of Christ His Church is unite
in
prayer the Father He hears the
cries of His children and He feels our pain and sorrow,
so
lets in agreement pray for India for peace and for the violence
stop.
Report
23rd
October 2008
Distinguished
spiritual parents, Father Ray and Mom Dianne in Christ,
Warm Greetings to you in the Almighty Name of our Lord Jesus Christ,
Thank you for your online chatting last night, You suggested me to send
the latest info. regarding Orissa in India. In this connection, Iam
herewith sending this info. Pl.pray and encourage us.
Orissa: Christians afraid to return home
Christians living in relief camps in Orissa's volatile Kandhamal district,
where communal clashes since Aug 23 have claimed at least 35 lives and
rendered thousands homeless, are scared to return to their villages
although officials claim that violence is on the wane.Jibit Kumar Digal,
30, has spent over a month in a relief camp at Baliguda, some 350 km from
state capital Bhubaneswar, which houses more than 1,200 Christians.
Having seen Christians being killed and his house being burnt by an angry
mob, he is terrified of returning to his village Barikia.
"Villagers have threatened to kill me because I am a Christian. They
have said I will be welcome back only if I change my religion and become a
Hindu. I don't know what to do," said Jibit Kumar.
Kaliamani Digal, 45, echoes the concern. "Of the 200 families in our
village, only 45 are Christians. The Hindus have told us that we won't be
allowed to stay there unless we are ready to accept Hinduism. We are
scared to return home," he said.
Kaliamani has been living in the camp with his two daughters and two sons
and wife since Aug 29, when their house was set on fire by a mob.
At least 35 people have been killed in the violence that erupted after the
killing of Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) leader Swami Laxmanananda Saraswati
and four others at his Jalespata ashram on Aug 23.
Three men have been arrested and charged with the murders. Police officers
claimed they were trained by Maoist rebels.
Officials Wednesday said there have been no reports of fresh arson or
violence from any part of the district and Christians can return home and
be safe.
"We will provide adequate security to Christians if they return
home," a police officer said.
However, there is deep fear in the hearts of the nearly 20,000 people
living in relief camps in Kandhamal as well as in Bhubaneswar and Cuttack.
Many claim that they have been threatened by activists of the Hindu
organisations such as VHP and Bajrang Dal although leaders of these
organisations deny making any threats.
District authorities said they had received over a dozen complaints of
forced conversions to Hinduism. Victims claim the administration has not
taken action and in many villages people have put saffron flags at the top
of their houses to escape attacks by Hindu mobs.
"The administration is just remaining silent. If you want to live in
the village you have to become a Hindu and put a saffron flag atop of your
house," said Ashok Nayak, who has been living in a relief camp in
Bhubaneswar with his wife and two children.
"I don't want to go home. I want to spend my life here. I have
started looking for a job," he added.
Orissa is not new to communal violence between Hindus and Christians. On
Jan 22, 1999, Australian missionary Graham Staines and his two sons,
10-year-old Philip and six-year-old Timothy, were burnt alive by a Hindu
mob in their vehicle in Keonjhar district.
Yours spiritual son,
Rev.K.Chaitanya Kumar,
Unity India Coordinator,
Yours bond servant
in Jesus Christ,
"Winning and Discipling the India for the Lord"
Violence Spreads to
Five More States in India
September 23, 2008
A policeman was killed Tuesday, the body of another victim of Hindu
extremist violence was discovered and more houses and churches burned in
Orissa state’s Kandhamal district even as anti-Christian violence
spread to at least five more states across India over the weekend.
Christians and churches were targeted in Karnataka, Kerala, Madhya
Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh and Jharkhand as fallout from violence in Orissa
that began following the assassination of a Vishwa Hindu Parishad (World
Hindu Council or VHP) leader, Laxmanananda Saraswati, and four of his
disciples in Kandhamal district on August 23.
A mob of around 500 rioters today killed a policeman and burned down a
police station in Orissa’s Kandhamal district, where Hindu extremists
launched a spate of attacks three weeks ago blaming local Christians of
killing Saraswati and his disciples. Maoists have claimed responsibility
for the murders of the Hindu leaders.
“A large number of attackers armed with country-made guns and crude
weapons gunned down a constable and set ablaze the police station at
Gochapada early this morning,” Director General of Police Gopal Nanda
told The Indian Express. Gochapada is 36 kilometers (22 miles) from
Phulbani, the district headquarters of Kandhamal.
Police sources told the press that the mob was demanding release of a
man held by security personnel, but local residents felt the attack came
in retaliation for police firing into a crowd in Kurtamgarh in
Tumudibandh area, killing at least one person, on Saturday (Sept. 13).
Murder in Orissa
While the body of another person was found and at least 14 houses were
burned on Sunday night (Sept. 14), a church and several houses were set
ablaze on the previous day.
The Statesman newspaper reported that at least nine houses of Makabali
village and five in Sanakbali village were torched in the Gunjibadi
area. Authorities found the body of Purander Naik, who had fled to a
relief camp where mainly Christians had taken refuge, in his village of
Nilungia.
“The decomposed body of Naik was found by police near the Ratingia dam
yesterday,” the newspaper reported yesterday. “Naik was at the G.
Udayagiri relief camp for over 10 days but had left for his village to
see the condition of his house and poultry. His family was at the relief
camp. Apparently he was killed during his visit to the village.”
The Press Trust of India reported that while nine houses were torched in
Toposi village, another house was burned in Dibadi village under the
Raikia police station in Kandhamal.
The Rev. Ashis Parida of the Evangelical Fellowship of India (EFI)
reported that more than 2,000 Hindu extremists set fire to a church
belonging to the Church of North India (CNI) denomination and several
houses of Christians in Kurtamgarh village on Saturday afternoon (Sept.
13). Kurtamgarh is about seven kilometers (four miles) from the ashram
(religious center) of Hindu leader Saraswati.
Compass received reports that a Hindu extremist mob on Friday (Sept. 12)
burned one church and a mission hostel in Mangapanga, Tumulibandh; three
churches in Mundabali, Badipankha; and one church in Baringia in
Phulbani. An estimated 40 houses were also destroyed on the same day by
the intolerant Hindus.
The next afternoon a large Hindu extremist mob descended on Kurtamgarh,
burning several houses and the CNI Church. Sources said the extremists
were targeting the village headman of the area, a Christian whose house
they destroyed.
A local source said that “while the mob was attacking the Christian
homes and churches, the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) forces took
notice of it and fired in the air to disperse the crowd. To their
surprise the mob retaliated with gunfire aimed at the CRPF, which
wounded two soldiers of the CRPF, one of whom was reported to be quite
serious and had to be taken to Behrampur for his medical treatment.”
The CRPF forces retaliated with gunfire of their own, killing one person
and injuring about 12. Early reports suggested that two people had died
in the CRPF firing, but only one body was said to be recovered by the
CRPF after the incident.
Krishan Kumar, district collector of Kandhamal, told media that on that
day, “At least 400-500 people, some of them carrying firearms,
attacked a man’s home and set it on fire at Kurtamgarh village.”
While the state government says 24 people, mainly Christian, have died
in the Orissa violence, the All India Christian Council (AICC)
maintained that 45 Christians were confirmed dead and five more were
still missing.
According news, 14 districts of Orissa witnessed violence with Kandhamal
as the epicenter. It reported at least 50,000 people from 300 villages
have been affected by the violence, with hundreds still hiding in
forests, and 4,000 houses and 115 churches burned or destroyed.
Death in Relief Camps
At least 20,000 people are in the 14 relief camps set up by the state
government in Kandhamal. Two elderly persons and two children are known
to have died in three of the relief camps.
The Statesman reported that while two ailing men, 75-year-old Sua Naik
from Budrungia village and 66-year-old Kasipatra Naik from Tatamaha
village, died at the Raikia relief camp, two children, one from the
Phulbani camp and the other from G. Udayagiri camp, died during the
week.
One of the children was reportedly a 10-year-old girl who had been
hiding in the forest since the violence began who died from disease
attained by being constantly on the run. The name of the girl was not
known, but she was said to be from Kotgarh.
The Statesman also reported that the chief secretary of Orissa state,
Ajit Tripathy, held a review meeting yesterday to discuss health and
sanitation measures at the relief camps.
Orissa is ruled by a coalition of a regional party, Biju Janata Dal, and
the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
Attacks in Karnataka
Attacks were reported also from the southern state of Karnataka, where
Hindu extremists ratcheted up hostilities after the state education
ministry served show-cause notices to over 2,000 Christian schools in
the state for staying shut on Aug. 29 to protest the violence against
Christians in Orissa.
On Sunday (Sept. 14), Hindu extremists attacked several churches in
Karnataka’s district of Dakshina Kannada, in Udupi and Chikmagalur, on
the pretext that Christians were engaging in “forcible” conversions
of Hindus to Christianity.
In Dakshina Kannada district, suspected extremists from the Bajrang Dal,
VHP’s youth wing, attacked the Adoration Monastery near the Milagres
Church on Falnir Road in Mangalore region.
“The 10-member group barged into the prayer hall and damaged the
tabernacle, where the holy Eucharist is kept,” reported the Times of
India. “They damaged windowpanes, furniture as well as the crucifix.
Police said the same group attempted to vandalize another prayer hall in
Kankanady, but were driven back.”
The daily added that Christians later gathered in large numbers in front
of the Milagres Hall to protest the attacks, which resulted in a
day-long stand off between the protestors, who reportedly hurled stones
at the police, with officers using batons in return. Several vehicles
were damaged in the tussle.
In Udupi district, three churches of the New Life Fellowship were
attacked by suspected Bajrang Dal extremists while Sunday prayers were
in progress, reported the daily. At least 15 Hindu extremists entered
its prayer hall, attacking worshippers and ransacking the hall during
the worship service. A music system and projector were damaged.
In Shiroor area, Hindu extremists attacked another prayer hall of the
New Life Fellowship, burning a vehicle and striking some members of the
congregation, including the pastor.
The daily reported another attack on a church in Mudur, near Kollur,
resulted in damaged materials. It added that police prevented yet
another such attack in prayer halls of the New Life Fellowship in Kaup
and Karkala areas.
In Chikmagalur district, extremists attacked three churches and the
house of a new convert. “In one incident, 15 activists came in a
vehicle and barged into Harvest India church in Makkikoppa near Jayapura
in Koppa Taluka [Block] in the morning and assaulted a parishioner and
the Protestant pastor,” the daily reported. “They broke the window
panes and the plastic chairs.”
On Sunday night (Sept. 14), a mob attacked a prayer hall in the Padavu
Pre-University College on the Mangalore-Udupi Road.
Yesterday morning, Hindu extremists attacked a shop in Kalladka village
and the St. Ann’s Friary Grotto near Canara College, about 25
kilometers (almost 16 miles) from Mangalore, in two separate incidents.
A Christian prayer hall in Chickballapur district, about 50 kilometers
(31 miles) from Bangalore, also was attacked.
Some Christians reportedly retaliated by targeting policemen in
different parts of Dakshina Kannada district. At least four policemen
were injured, with one reportedly stabbed yesterday.
According to Indo-Asian News Service (IANS), police arrested about 100
people, almost all Christians, for staging allegedly violent protests.
Hindu extremists also attacked churches in Belthangady, Moodabidri,
Koloor, Kodaikal, Hemanagatta, Kadur and Puttur, Kundapur and Balehanoor.
All together 18 churches and prayer halls in and around Mangalore and in
Udipi and Chikmaglur districts were attacked on Sunday (Sept. 14).
Police reportedly had arrested seven Bajrang Dal members by Sunday
night. Schools and shops remained shut in Mangalore yesterday in
protest, and vehicles were kept off the roads. Christians continued to
protest, and in some places police had to fire tear gas shells to
maintain order. A curfew was imposed in Mangalore as well.
But that did not stop Hindu extremists from throwing stones at a church
in Mangalore yesterday morning, in spite of an order the previous day
banning assembly of more than five people for three days. Chief Minister
B.S. Yeddyurappa stoked fires by stating, “There is no room for
forcible conversion in democracy. No one should indulge in it.”
Asked what action he was going to take against the Bajrang Dal during a
press conference yesterday evening, the chief minister said only,
“Whoever was involved in this act will be arrested very soon.”
But he was quick to blame church groups, saying “No one has the right
to insult any other religion. As we know some community called ‘New
Life’ is converting people, we have asked the bishop to support us in
this regard. But as per the bishop, New Life is not under his control
and the bishop is not the in charge of this community.”
There was little to suggest the involvement of New Life Fellowship
churches in forced conversion. NDTV 24X7, a national television news
channel reported that “so far there seems to be little evidence that
New Life is carrying out forcible conversions.”
A team from the National Commission for Minorities (NCM) will reportedly
make an on-the-spot assessment of attacks on churches and prayer halls
in different parts of Karnataka and submit its report to the federal
government. Members will visit churches damaged in attacks in Dakshina
Kannada, Udupi and Chikmagalur districts, as well as Mangalore.
Bajrang Dal representatives unabashedly admitted to the violence that
was carried out on Sunday (Sept. 14), telling NDTV 24X7 that they are
targeting evangelical groups in and around Mangalore.
Violence in Other States
In the northern state of Uttar Pradesh, Bajrang Dal extremists on Sunday
(Sept. 14) attacked two pastors in Kanpur district, accusing them of
beating their supporters, reported IANS.
Govindnagar police station inspector N.K. Singh told IANS that the
pastor of the New India Church of God, Jitendra Singh, approached
officers late Sunday night and submitted a written complaint against Ram
Babu Bajpai, a local leader of the Bajrang Dal.
Pastor Singh said Bajpai, along with a large number of his supporters,
attacked him in the church compound in the presence of his wife, Helena
Singh, and fellow pastor Anil Gilbert.
Both sides filed complaints.
According to the complaint by the Hindu extremists, “The Bajrang Dal
has alleged that the church was involved in converting Hindus to
Christianity by offering them money, and the pastors attacked them when
its activists opposed the practice,” IANS added.
In the north-central state of Madhya Pradesh, at 1:30 p.m. today five
unidentified people carrying air guns shot a guard of the Caramel
Convent in Banduha village (under the Ghatia police station) in Ujjain
district, Madhya Pradesh state. Father Anand Muttungal of the Catholic
Bishops’ Conference of Madhya Pradesh state reported that Amar
Singh’s injuries were not fatal.
Fr. Muttungal said that the culprits asked Singh to call the nuns, and
when he told them they were away the assailants beat and shot him.
Hindu extremists in Madhya Pradesh also burned the 80-year-old Masihi
Mandir church of the CNI denomination in Chhawni (Cantonment) area of
Indore city at 10:30 p.m. on Saturday (Sept. 13), reported EFI.
“The fire was spotted by a few onlookers, who managed to extinguish it
quickly,” EFI reported. “The doors, windows and other wooden
material were burned.”
In the southern state of Kerala, on Sunday night (Sept. 14) Hindu
extremists attacked the Jaya Mata Convent School, a Christian
kindergarten that doubled as a church in Kottakkani area in Kasargode
district under the Catholic diocese of Teleicherry, reported the Times
of India.
The Hindu extremists launched the attack to protest conversions.
“On Monday morning, we saw the glass panes of a box containing the
figure of Mother Mary, as well as window panes of the school,
smashed,” Vicar Antony Punnoor told the daily. “It seemed someone
had hurled stones.”
The Kerala state interior minister, Kodiyeri Balakrishnan, told the
daily that the incident would be investigated.
“Cops would also examine if the attack had any link with such
incidents in Karnataka,” he reportedly said. “No one will be allowed
to create communal riots in the state.”
In the western state of Jharkhand, Hindu villagers attacked Christians
of a Believers’ Church and pressured them to “reconvert” to
Hinduism in Talatad village (under Patratu police station) in Hazaribagh
district on Sunday (Sept. 14), reported the Christian Legal Association.
Pastor Cyril Tamgaria and 18 others were worshiping in the house of
Badhi Oraon when Hindu extremists surrounded the house. They beat them,
took them forcibly to a temple in a nearby jungle and asked them to
“return” to their old faith. Local Christians reported the incident
to police, however, and officers freed the Christians.
The Rev. Dr. Babu Joseph, spokesperson of the Catholic Church in India,
said in a statement that the Christian community in India has been
conducting itself in a peaceful manner throughout the ordeals, and
“even under extreme provocation it has exercised restraint.”
“It is not to be construed as weakness,” he said, “but a
preferred option based on sound principles of civilized living.”
Joseph added that the community continued to render its services to all
sectors of society without discrimination.
“Nevertheless, baseless allegations of fraudulent conversion have long
been hurled at it by certain vested interests whose chief agenda seems
to be social polarization on the lines of religious beliefs,” he said.
“We, as responsible citizens of India, will not succumb to their
divisive tactics, but continue to work, in the spirit of Christ our
master, for the unity, integrity and progress of the nation."
LET US PRAY FOR PEACE
Collectedby :
+JOHN SD RAJU,
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Dear Pastor Ray,
Yes, we
have just conducted a big rally in Eluru city in which
the faithful from all the Churches and many of our
sympathisers have participated in the RALLY. We have conducted
a 5 Kilometre rally and met the District Joint Collector
& Additional District Magistrate ( District
Collector is not available ) and submitted a REPRESENTATION
condemning the distruction and killings of Christians. He has
pomised us to farward to the State Government with his
recommendation and promised us to protect all the Churches
within his jurisdiction ( West Godavary District ). The Piests
and faithful from Roman Catholic Church, India christian
Mission Church ( Anglican ), Church of South India, Lutheran
Church, Salvation Army, Baptist Church, Pentecostals and all
other independent Churches have actively participated.
I will send you the news paper
clippings tomorrow ( as the news will be covered in the tomorrows
news papers ).
Let us
pray for COMFORT for the effected christians and Let us pray
for the activists of RSS and Bhajarang Dal ( the hindu
extremist groups ) for their conversion to Chiristianity so
that they have to proclaim JESUS for the new generations (
Like Saul to Paul ).
I hope that the Lord will do a
miracle in this occasion.
yours beloved in Christ,
+JOHN SD RAJU
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