Author: Varsha Bhosle
Publication: Rediff on Net
Date: May 5, 2003
URL: http://www.rediff.com/news/2003/may/05varsha.htm
On Thursday, May 1, The Washington
Times published something on Christian conversions occurring in Jammu &
Kashmir -- "something" because the thing wasn't an opinion piece, nor a
report (datelined New Delhi, the content made obvious that the writer hadn't
ventured into the jihad-struck state), and was stuck in the 'Culture' section
of the newspaper, even while containing extraordinary political assertions
such as: "Last month, 24 Hindus, including women and children, were killed
in Kashmir, supposedly at the hands of Muslim militants. While most of
the violence has been perpetrated by Hindus and Muslims on each other,
the rise of Christianity could add another dimension."
"Supposedly"? The last time someone
doubted the origins of the perpetrators of the Nadimarg massacre was on
April 5 -- a non-resident pinko effort for Pakistan's Daily Times: "In
a dastardly act, 'unidentified gunmen' massacred 24 Kashmiri Pandits...
The pattern is all too familiar and is reminiscent of the massacre of 35
Sikhs at Chattisinghpora by 'unidentified gunmen' when India had promptly
accused Pakistan sponsored 'foreign militants'... This raises doubts about
the credibility of the assertions of the Indian State."
The writer, some Akhila Raman, is
a "software consultant in California" and we can only hope that her suspicions
rest on inquiries in J&K and not just the effluence regularly emitted
by the Mishras and Bidwais. We must also trust that her experience in software
applications makes her eligible for authority in the application of martial
hardware thousands of miles away. Too, we must assume that the American
InfoTech industry affords its workers oodles of time to conduct impeccable
research on matters unrelated to their employment (when did you last put
in only 10 hours a day?). Even so, because we know exactly what to expect
from the pinko- Paki combine, we let that garbage slide past without wasting
time on rebuttals.
If that weren't enough, there's
the mind-boggling spin from the right-wing publications of America. Commenting
on Yashwant Sinha's statement on pre-emption post-Nadimarg massacre, Zahid
Hussain wrote in the April 17 Wall Street Journal: "Analysts say that the
type of ordinary violence that has characterized the conflict for years
probably won't provoke war."
"Ordinary violence"...? Nadimarg?
35 killed at Chattisinghpora? 15 villagers burnt alive in Salosi village?
13 Hindus shot dead in Mahore? Throats of 10 Gujjars slit in Rajouri? 20
Hindus killed in Qasim Nagar? 9 Amarnath pilgrims massacred? 34 killed
at Kaluchak? 8 killed in Kalakote? 10 shot in Raghunath Temple? Etc, etc,
etc, etc, ETC?? How many were killed in the super-hyper-extra-ordinary
attack on the USS Cole...? Seventeen...
But the WT is another matter; it
at least makes a semblance of being unbiased and is widely read in the
DC circuit. What prompted it to stet Janaki Bahadur Kremmer's assertion
that Kashmiri Hindus perpetrate/d violence against Muslims? Since when
did the Hindus of J&K gain this reputation? What was the last act of
violence by Hindus in J&K? How many Hindus are left in that state,
anyway?! Ms Kremmer, wife of Christopher Kremmer, the bureau chief of the
Sydney Morning Herald in New Delhi, really didn't need to toe the Australian
government's missionary line this far.
Nah, that's not farfetched; heed
the words of Australia's minister for industrial relations, Tony Abbott,
who gloated over an increasing 'Catholicisation' of the country's conservative
parties, with 13 of Prime Minister John Howard's frontbenchers having a
connection with the church. "These days, I gather, the strongest single
indicator of intention to vote for the Howard Government is regular church
attendance," said the "pulpit-thumping cabinet lieutenant." A political
lecturer at Monash University revealed, "The Government is now bankrolling
fundamentalist schools on the suburban fringes. This is giving them strategically
important votes among families who like the conservative message." (SMH,
August 16, 2002)
In June 2000, the Howard government
announced that the powerful Radio Australia shortwave transmitter in Darwin
would be leased for 10 years to the fundamentalist broadcasting group,
Christian Vision. The head of that network had made it clear that he'd
use the transmitter to air propaganda programmes to Indonesia, Malaysia,
China and India "to mobilise Christians in the region." (InterPress Service,
June 23, 2000)
In line with her government, Ms
Kremmer treats us to samples of the sterling services rendered by the Campus
Crusade for Christ in Kashmir ("They bring schoolbooks, medicines, self-help
programs and, most of all, opportunity") and the Hindutva blight -- "Christian
missionaries have had more to fear from right-wing Hindu groups from the
upper castes of society who are opposed to the conversions of lower-caste
Hindus and other disenfranchised groups..."
This, despite the fact that no Hindu
group has ever protested against conversions of Muslims to any religion,
leave alone in Kashmir. This, despite the article being titled 'Mission
in Kashmir.' Not that this is the first instance of Ms Kremmer's missionary
zeal, either. Earlier gems include 'Hindus Turn Down Christian Quake Aid'
and 'Hindu Party Seeks to Ban Foreign Churches in India.'
For fun, let's take a look at Ms
Kremmer's blue-eyed choirboys. A CCC letter soliciting donations to make
prints of a film that the group exhibits during proselytising parties connects
the Staines triple murder with a natural disaster:
Very near is the spot where missionary
Graham Staines and his two young boys were burned to death in their car
by Hindu radicals. Just months later a huge cyclone struck this same area,
creating a massive storm surge that traveled inland for 40 miles. Tens
of thousands of people were killed and 500,000 people lost their homes.
God was at work.
As yet, we have not heard of a single
Christian who was killed. One island off the coast was totally destroyed,
except for one village -- a village of Christians. The believers ran into
the church for shelter and were spared. The Campus Crusade for Christ staff
lost the roofs off some of their homes, but all of their lives were spared.
Hindus were astounded that the churches
and homes of many Christians were spared... Some Hindu leaders, from the
area hit by the cyclone, were even quoted as saying, "This storm was God's
judgement on us for shedding innocent blood." These same Hindu leaders
then opened the area to JESUS film teams and allowed them to saturate parts
of the eastern coast with the gospel.
How was the film born? In 1997,
CCC staff in India, during a brainstorming session... No, it's better in
their own words:
"Hindu and Muslim young people are
so resistant to the gospel in 'traditional' forms. How can we get through
to them that there is a true God who loves them?" And then the idea hit.
India is a movie loving culture. In fact, it is estimated that Indians
spend more money per year on movies than Americans do. Within weeks of
the opening of Titanic, almost every student in India had seen the film.
So, the Crusade staff on one campus wondered, why not use Indian students'
interest in films, especially Titanic, to get them interested in Christ?
A full-color folder was designed, with a picture of the ship, a booklet
with the Titanic story linked to a clear gospel presentation, a booklet
with some facts about Jesus and the Bible, handouts on study tips and student
seminars organized by CCC staff, and a response slip.
Very spiritual, in'nit? Or how about
"hunger is more demanding than religion"; that fits, hanh?
Many "miracles" have been "documented"
by these missionaries in connection with the Jesus film. The one recounting
the "resurrection" of a girl from the Malto tribe of Bihar is *really*
worth a dekko here. The result of the hysteria: "hundreds of people who
were bound by the chains of Satan [ie, Hinduism] turned to the living Christ.
As a result, at least six churches were established."
Now, you might think that the "resurrection"
of the girl is a trumped up story (ie, presuming you are all there). But
consider this: If a tribal in the deep interiors, who has never seen even
the city jadugar perform magic tricks, is suddenly faced with a professional
conjurer from America, with all the Las Vegas bag of tricks at his command,
what would his reaction be? What if the conjurer said that the girl cut
into pieces inside the box would be put together only after a prayer to
Christ...?
Turns out, the CCC crusaders take
with them such conjurers on their interior journeys in India: "They use
illusions, sleight of hand, music, balloon sculpting and story telling,
comedy and audience participation as their method of presenting the Gospel
of Jesus Christ. Greg & Oonaugh Wood could be the answer to your program
needs... Our purpose is to assist interested groups of Christians in presenting
the Gospel to unbelievers and in affirming and strengthening the faith
of believers... In India they worked with India Campus Crusade for Christ.
In just over two weeks they performed 35 shows for over 20,000 people."
Or how about this: "As head of Divine
Design Ministries, [Gospel illusionist Jerry] Burgess has combined evangelistic
preaching with illusions such as levitation, hidden coins and even 'nails'
through his arm as a means to spread the gospel... Burgess soon learned
how to meld his newfound skills as an illusionist with evangelism when
Campus Crusade for Christ speaker and illusionist Andre Cole performed
in Lexington in 1970. Burgess witnessed hundreds convert to Christianity
that night, leaving an indelible mark on his plans for life..." (Incidentally,
Burgess is a close friend of illusionist Lance Burton, who plays at the
Monte Carlo Hotel in Las Vegas.)
There's no fraud involved in that,
right? Those sophisticated, world-wise tribals, they would certainly see
through all the tricks and hence their conversion to Christianity would
be of "their own free will," hahahahahaha... Corr, spine ain't the only
bodily part that "liberals" lack.
However, there still remain some
Hindus who do have the brains to see through, as well as the spine to stand
up against, these transparent frauds. And so we have news like: "Recently
India Campus Crusade for Christ's mobile Film team was screening the JESUS
film to 200 people in Bhubaneswar. All of a sudden 7 people came with lathis
and started beating the team members and the viewers mercilessly and destroyed
the film and the equipment." (March 2001)
Am I sorry about that? Don't be
ridiculous! If Hindus, as a group, are going to be manipulated with the
aim of the decimation of Hinduism -- and there is no protection given by
the government -- such violence will naturally follow the brazen acts of
the missionaries. Why would I begin to believe in the ludicrous Gandhian
version of Ahimsa at this late stage? Besides, missionaries are encouraged
to continue proselytising, even though they might be tortured or killed.
A Southern Baptist study urges, "Persecution is Biblically and historically
normative for the emerging church; it cannot be avoided or eliminated...
To avoid persecution is to hamper the growth of the kingdom of God." (Mother
Jones, May-June 2002). Just like the Islamic fidayeens, n'est pas?
By the way, the CCC has a strategic
partnership with America's largest Protestant group, the Southern Baptists.
The aim is "to combine the excitement and energy of the world's largest
student movement with the church-planting expertise of the Southern Baptists'
missionaries." All these groups believe that the 10/40 Window, though a
region of historical and Biblical significance, is where humankind fell
victim to deception and rebelled against God. Not only does the Window
represent the cradle of civilisation, but it also serves as the Seat of
Satan. "In the thousands of years since the first deception in Eden, Satan
has continued to increase his stranglehold on the people living in this
region."
Whether the fundamental right to
practice and propagate religion includes the right to convert, has been
considered by the Supreme Court in the case of Rev Stanislaus vs Madhya
Pradesh, in which the constitutional validity of the conversion-prohibiting
laws enacted by MP and Orissa, was challenged. The court ruled: "What the
Article grants is not the right to convert another person to one's own
religion, but to transmit or spread one's religion by an exposition of
its tenets." M Rama Jois, former chief justice of the Punjab and Haryana
high court, says, "Organised conversion, whether by force or fraud or by
providing help or allurement to persons, taking undue advantage of their
poverty and ignorance, is anti- secular. Respect for all religions is the
essence of our secularism, whereas religious intolerance constitutes the
basis of planned conversion. Therefore, conversion cannot be a secular
activity."
Stop the Press: The Asian Age reports
this morning, "In follow up stories, while Greater Kashmir put the number
of Muslims who have converted to Christianity as 12,000, Urdu daily Al-Safa
News raised it to 20,000. It also published a photograph showing a jam-packed
City Church during a sermon... This, undoubtedly, is a new phenomenon in
Kashmir where not more than few families had changed their faith and converted
into Christianity during the past century.
"If not in every case, they have
used the social work for spreading the voice of Jesus Christ at many places.
For instance, activities underway at a sewing centre for the poor women
set up in a Srinagar locality a few years ago have raised many eyebrows
among the residents. According to them, the organisers would initially
avoid using the facility for religious purposes but, after some time, they
distributed a booklet titled Messiah based on the life and teaching of
Jesus Christ among the apprentices...
"Alarmed by the development, local
Muslim clergy and various social activists have decided to put their act
together and are busy in identifying the people and areas hit by the poverty
the most... As far the activities of Christian missionaries, it is surely
an exploitation of economic conditions and other social problems of the
local populations, complained a cleric... We'll try to rectify where we
have failed. At the same time, we would see that money power is not used
for conversion as that is illegal and unethical, he asserted."
LOL!! Now let's see an international
pinko campaign against the clerics as the one against the IDRF...