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A new report says that violent attacks on the Christian minority in India are increasing at an alarming rate, as the emboldened members of groups close to the governing Hindu nationalist party seek to create a "Hindu nation." There's an anti-Christian attack every 40 hours, the report highlights.
The report by the All India Christian
Council says attacks against Christians increased by about 20 percent in 2016,
and physical violence against Christians was up by as much as 40 percent. A
fresh attack is being reported every 40 hours, it added.
The attacks involve physical beating,
vandalism and torching of churches, burning of Bibles, death threats, forcing
Christians to renounce their faith and convert to Hinduism, and disruption of
and attack on church services and prayer meetings.
The Indian government's treatment of
Compassion International has "caused serious concern within the U.S
Congress," said the letter addressed to India's Home Minister Rajnath
Singh.
The Indian government alleges that Compassion
was funding religious conversions.
Earlier this month, the Hindu Yuva Vahini, a
rightwing youth organization known for arson and violence on minorities, forced
police to stop a Christian prayer meeting in
the Dathauli area of Maharajganj district in Uttar Pradesh, which was being
attended by over 150 people and 11 American tourists. The group lodged a
complaint alleging it was aimed at conversions to Christianity.
Earlier this year, the Hindu Yuva Vahini
attacked the Full Gospel Church in Gorakhpur area in Uttar Pradesh, alleging
conversions.
The group was formed by a BJP leader, Yogi
Adityanath, who assumed office of Uttar Pradesh state's chief minister last
month after the victory of his party in that state.
A new report says that violent attacks on the Christian minority in India are increasing at an alarming rate, as the emboldened members of groups close to the governing Hindu nationalist party seek to create a "Hindu nation." There's an anti-Christian attack every 40 hours, the report highlights.
"The attacks have become severe and more
frequent. Incidents used to be confined to a few states. Now the violence has
spread to 23 states," the report notes, pointing out that the sharpest
rise has been recorded in the northern Uttar Pradesh state and the southern
state of Telangana.
In one case, Hindu
nationalists beat an evangelist with chains, stripped him and forced him to
drink urine, the report says. In another incident, a Christian cemetery was
desecrated and skeletons dug up and strewn across the graveyard, it adds.
Attacks on Christians have been on the rise
since the Hindu national Bharatiya Janata Party won the national election in
2014. The BJP believes in and propagates the Hindutva ideology, which envisions
an India where Hindus and the Hindu culture will dominate. The BJP is believed
to be the political wing of the chief Hindu nationalist group Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh.
Last month, more than 100 members of U.S.
Congress wrote a letter to India's interior minister, urging him to allow
U.S.-based Christian child sponsorship organization Compassion International to
continue its work in that country. The charity recently ended its programs in
India amid an ongoing crackdown by the BJP government on nonprofits that
receive foreign funds.
"We are writing because we believe the
Ministry of Home Affairs has issued an inter-bank circular preventing all
commercial banks in India from processing CI's wire transfers without prior
Ministry approval. As a result, Compassion is unable to process the funds it
needs to continue … to the detriment of the hundreds of thousands of children
Compassion serves in India. Many of our constituents, who have built emotional
attachments through years of building relationships with these kids, are
devastated by this wrenching cutoff," the letter continued.
In February, an evangelist, 47-year-old Dr.
Kusuma Anjeneya Swamy, reportedly fell into a coma not long after he was
harassed by Hindu nationalists for publicly distributing copies of the New
Testament in the southern city of Hyderabad. The group of men threatened to
burn him alive and questioned whether "Jesus will save you from the
flames."
Although there was no evidence of physical
violence, the evangelist apparently suffered a brain hemorrhage and slipped
into a coma hours after the incident.
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