Author: Francois Gautier
Publication: Rediff on Net
Date: December 30, 2005
URL: http://in.rediff.com/news/2005/dec/30franc.htm
Francois Gautier writes to Dr John Dayal,
member, National Integration Council, in response to the letter he wrote Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh:
Dear John Dayal,
I am a Westerner and a born Christian. I was
mainly brought up in Catholic schools, my uncle Father Guy Gautier a gem of
a man, was the parish head of the beautiful Saint Jean de Montmartre church
in Paris. My father Jacques Gautier, a famous artist in France, and a truly
good person if there ever was one, was a fervent Catholic all his life, went
to church nearly every day and lived by his Christian values.
There are certain concepts in Christianity
I am proud of: Charity for others, the equality of social systems in many
Western countries, Christ's message of love and compassion.
Yet, when I read your letter to Prime Minister
Dr Manmohan Singh, apropos the inaugural meeting of the National Integration
Council, I was a little uneasy.
First, you seem to assume that you are speaking
for the entire Christian community in India. But I know many Christians in
this country, and they never voice the grievances you so loudly proclaim.
In fact, I have found that most Christians in India are not only happy to
live in this country of traditional tolerance, but that they are also different
from many Christians in the world: More multicultural and ecumenist in spirit,
maybe.
Then, you speak of the marginalised Dalits.
I agree that there are still unforgivable atrocities committed against Dalits,
although very often they are done by backward castes themselves. I remember
during the tsunami in Pondichery, how the Vanniars, an OBC caste, stopped
the Dalits from a coastal hamlet from crossing the Vanniars' part of the village
to bury their dead, as the Dalits' cremation ground had been submerged.
At the same time, my 30 years in India have
taught me that nowhere in the world has there been so much effort to rectify
a wrong -- from 1947 onwards. This resulted in a Dalit, the late K R Narayanan,
born in a poor village of Kerala, to be elected President of India, one of
the highest posts in this nation.
Has a black man ever been President of the
United States?
Reservations for Dalits have made it possible
for them to access education and jobs regardless of their merits -- and this
is a unique feature of India today.
You continue by saying that 'the agenda draftsmen
of papers for NIC seem to believe that forcible and fraudulent conversions
(to Christianity) are the main cause of civil unrest in tribal and other rural
areas'. And you retort that 'this is a malicious myth propagated by obscurantist
and fundamentalist -- and often violent -- political groups'. Meaning Hindu
groups, of course.
I have to disagree with you on two points.
One, I have seen with my own eyes how conversions
in India are not only highly unethical -- that is, using unethical means of
conversion -- but also that they threaten a whole way of life, erasing centuries
of tradition, customs, wisdom, teaching people to despise their own religion
and look Westwards to a culture which is alien to them, with disastrous results.
Look at what happened to countries like Hawaii,
or to the extraordinary Aztec culture in South America, after Portuguese and
Spanish missionaries took over.
Look how the biggest drug problems in India
are found in the Northeast, or how Third World countries which have been totally
Christianised have lost all moorings and bearing and are drifting away without
nationalism and self-pride.
Second, I think people like you show very
little gratitude to that Hindu ethos which has seeped into Indian Christian
consciousness. It is because of that Hindu ethos, which accepts that god may
manifest himself at different times in different names, that Christians were
welcomed in India in the first century. Indeed, the Syrian Christians of Kerala
constituted the first Christian community in the world.
It is because of this inbred tolerance in
Hinduism that Christianity and many other persecuted minorities in the world
flourished and practiced their religion in peace in India throughout the centuries.
But how do Christians thank the Hindus? When
the Jesuits arrived in India with Vasco de Gama, they committed terrible persecutions,
particularly in Goa, crucifying Brahmins, marrying local girls forcibly to
Portuguese soldiers, razing temples to build churches and splitting the Kerala
Christian community in two.
And today, people like you continue ranting
against Hindus and promoting unethical conversions, using the massive power
of the dollars donated by ignorant Westerners, who do not know that their
money is used to lure innocent tribals and Dalits, who still possess that
all encompassing acceptance of all gods, towards another religion.
Furthermore, you use false statistics, saying
for instance that nuns have been raped. You no doubt allude to the Jhabua
rape case, when courts have shown that these nuns were not raped by Hindus,
but by Christian tribals.
I know, I went there and interviewed these
innocent souls.
And who has been hijacking of the educational
system in India? Not the Hindus, as you accuse, but the Christians, who control
much of the higher education in India and by subtle and not so subtle means,
poison the minds of the students, teaching them to look down on their own
culture and look up to whatever is Western -- even if it has already failed
in the West.
In how many schools and hospitals in India
today, the Bible is read at the beginning of each day, each session? Would
you approve of the Bhagavad Gita, the Bible of 850 million Hindus being read
in Christian schools in the West to Christian students and nurses?
Finally, when you say: 'God bless you, you
Government, and God bless India', which god are you talking about? Is it Jesus
Christ? But the message of Christ was one of love, of respecting others' cultures
and creed -- not of utilising unethical means for converting people.
It is false to say that Jesus is the only
'true' god. As Hindus rightly believe, the Divine has manifested himself throughout
the ages under different names and identities, whether it is Christ, Buddha,
Krishna or Mohammad.
Let this be the motto of the National Integration
Council of India.