Christians in Haryana, India Hit with Beatings, Official Opposition, Discrimination
By Jeremy Reynalds, Senior Correspondent, ASSIST News Service (jeremyreynalds@gmail.com)
NEW DELHI, INDIA (ANS. MARCH 31) A rash of
anti-Christian attacks this month has hit Haryana state in northern
India, where a new chief minister spoke against Christians and 45 were
severely beaten at a burial service.
According to a story by Morning Star News, a mob of more than 700
Hindu extremists on March 6 assaulted the 45 Christians as they began
burial rites for an elderly Christian woman at a cemetery in Faridabad.
“The Christians were beaten very severely as the mob targeted the
Christians individually,” Rev. Virendar Kumar of Bethenia Church told
Morning Star News.
He added, “Each and every Christian was being beaten up by 10-12
people from the mob. Around 35-plus Christians are hospitalized in
different hospitals in Faridabad. Some are seriously injured.”
The Christians were forced to flee, taking the body of the deceased with them.
Morning Star News reported the alleged attackers said the Christian
burial ground was too close to their village, Pali, a half kilometer
away, so they would not allow Christians to bury their dead there.
The local administration had assigned the graveyard to the
Christians, and Christian churches in Faridabad have all necessary
permissions and papers for it.
“This was the third plot allotted for the cemetery purposes to the
Christian community in Faridabad after the old one got filled,” said
Pastor Sunil Salvation, president of the Faridabad Pastors Fellowship
and secretary of the Faridabad Cemetery Committee.
A plot was first allotted to Christians in 2008 near Budhana
village outside Faridabad, but strong opposition from villagers in
Budhana compelled authorities to allocate another space, called Sector
8, next to Hindu and Muslim cemeteries.
“Trouble arose related to the Sector 8 cemetery as well, as someone claimed it was his personal land,” Salvation said.
Morning Star News said he added, “We went to the administration,
and finally this present cemetery was allotted to the Christians in
2013. We were told by the Joint Commissioner to go ahead with the
burials, and that the local administration would build a boundary wall
later.”
Two burials have already been conducted in this cemetery.
“We were given police protection for both the previous burials that
we conducted, but March 6, being a holiday on account of the festival
of Holi (Hindu festival of colors), we decided not to bother the police
and perform the burial ourselves,” Salvation said.
Christians reached the cemetery at 11 a.m., Kumar said, and soon a
small mob began following them, which quickly grew. As threats
increased, some of the Christians began leaving.
“Only those who escaped early escaped the beating,” said Kumar. “I
was one of them. It was a mostly young crowd, but because of color on
their faces due to the festival, we cannot identify them.”
Salvation, who said he lost a new motorcycle in the attack, said
the attackers beat Christians with the tools they had brought for
digging.
“We were beaten mercilessly,” Morning Star News reported Salvation said.
He added, “The ambulance in which we were carrying the body was
also broken; the glass windows were shattered. The spade with which we
were digging the ground was taken up by someone in the mob, and he swung
it at the ambulance driver with full force. Thankfully the driver
ducked, and the spade did not hit him. If it had, the driver would not
have survived.”
Other cars and motorcycles belonging to Christians were also
damaged as a result of the attack. A car belonging to Mahavir Singh was
destroyed.
Kumar said the Hindu cemetery is in the middle of Pali village, and
the Christian burial ground is 1 kilometer away on government-allotted
land.
“How can this happen in a country where law and order is supposed to prevail?” Kumar asked.
Salvation added that an illegal Hindu temple has been built next to the cemetery.
The village head of Pali was also present with the mob when the Christians were beaten, they said.
The Christians later returned with the body, this time with two
police vehicles for protection, but the mob blocked them from burying
it.
“Even with the police, we were not able to bury our dead in our
allotted cemetery,” Salvation said. “She (the village head) stopped us
again. So we left and somehow buried the dead in the old cemetery, which
is already full.”
The next day a First Information Report (FIR) was filed in the
local police station, naming only the village head, as the rest were
unidentified.
Morning Star News said there have been no arrests so far. Christian
leaders led by Rev. S.P. David, president of the Faridabad Cemetery
committee, submitted an application to the commissioner of police and
the district magistrate.
The district collector has asked Christians to seek police protection before each burial.
“We do not feel bad that we were beaten up but are sad that the community is being targeted in this way,” Salvation said.
Rev. Vijayesh Lal of the Evangelical Fellowship of India's
Religious Liberty Commission said Haryana has not been a hot spot for
anti-Christian action until the past few months.
“Things have changed in the last few months, and now more than ever
the minority Christian community in Haryana is being victimized by hate
crimes,” Lal said. “We are concerned and urge the chief minister, Mr.
Khattar, to intervene in the situation to restore the confidence of the
community.”
Chief Minister Defends Desecration
Following the desecration of a church building under construction
in Kaimri village, Hissar District, the newly elected chief minister of
Haryana, Manohar Lal Khattar, on March 16 defended the attack and
accused the pastor of fraudulent conversion.
Morning Star News said Rev. Subhash Chand of the Believers Church
returned to Kaimri after a trip to a nearby city on March 13 to find
Hindu extremist groups had replaced the church's cross with an idol of
Hanuman and installed a flag of the Hindu extremist umbrella group
Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) depicting Ram, a Hindu deity.
Along with damaging and vandalizing the church building, the
assailants also stole a water cooler and other items, he alleged in his
First Information Report to police on March 14.
The report accuses 14 people under sections of the Indian Penal
Code for punishment for rioting, promoting enmity between groups,
destroying or damaging a place of worship with intent to insult the
religion of any class of persons, theft in a building, and criminal
intimidation.
Chief Minister Khattar of the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata
Party (BJP), which came to power in Oct. 2014, defended the
vandalization during a budget session of the Haryana assembly and
accused Chand of trying to convert Hindu boys by promising them brides.
Saying villagers were opposed to the “so-called church,” Morning
Star News said the chief minister told the assembly that a complaint has
been filed against Chand for allegedly assaulting a youth who ran away
from a prayer meeting because Chand had insulted Hindu gods.
“The youth was shunted out and beaten up when he opposed the priest's statement,” Khattar said.
Chand denied the accusations, saying the charge was frivolous.
On the same day (March 16), the Union Home Ministry asked the
Haryana government to send a report on desecration of the church and
action taken so far.
On March 17, Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed concern through
social media over the church desecration and an incident in West
Bengal, prompting police to arrest Anil Godara that day.
This led to widespread outrage by Hindu groups in the area. VHP
leader Ravinder Goyal and Bajran Dal leader Kapil Vats led mobs that
demanded the release of Godara and asked for the return of the Hanuman
idol the church had taken down.
The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) also issued notices to
the chief secretary and director general of police in Haryana, calling
for reports within two weeks.
Morning Star News said the NHRC has asked about the steps being
taken for the protection of religious places of minorities in the state.
Pastor Chand, meantime, has moved his family to the nearby city of Ambala for security reasons.
John Dayal, spokesperson of the United Christian Forum, told
Morning Star News that he was astounded by the chief minister's
comments.
“His government has showed its commitment to Hinduism by its recent
actions and comments on beef, making Gita (part of an epic tale in
Hindu scripture) a part of the curricula and such,” he said.
Dayal continued, “His justification of the actions of the violent
elements who oppose the church and attacked it undermines the rule of
law in the state.”
Khattar's comments also open vulnerable religious minorities to coercive action and violence by vigilante groups, he added.
“The chief minister has lowered the dignity of his office and betrayed the trust of people he is sworn to protect,” Dayal said.
This was not the first time that Chand had faced opposition.
Members of the Hindu extremist Bajrang Dal on Feb. 11 attempted to
destroy the church cross after objecting to construction of a church
building in the area. More than 20 people gathered at the site demanding
a halt to construction with chants and inappropriate language. Chand
had informed police.
Christian Loses Job
In the state's Rohtak District, a Christian identified only as
Mukesh lost his job after a mob publically targeted him over his faith.
On March 9 a mob gathered outside the small government hospital where Mukesh was working as a sweeper.
“The mob consisted of around 15-plus people and was stirred by Raj
Kumar Dhaka, a lab technician working in the same hospital,” Mukesh told
Morning Star News.
Mukesh said Dhaka, a local leader of the Hindu extremist Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), had called media to record the Hindus shouting
chants against him. Originally from Farmana Badshahpur village, Rohtak
District, Mukesh is a member of a church in nearby Kalanaur.
“They objected to me being a Christian and attending church in
Kalanaur,” he said. “I am attending the Uddhar Ka Jeevan Kalisia
(Eternal Life Church) since April 2012, when my wife was healed
miraculously as a result of prayers.”
The media questioned Mukesh, as did the crowd.
“I know most of them who were in the crowd - they are
good-for-nothing people who idle away their time, drink and fight; Dhaka
used them against me,” Mukesh said. “I do not evangelize at work, but
people know I am a Christian. There is no prayer being held at my house,
but I do attend church. This is a frame up.”
When Mukesh reported for work the next day, the medical officer in charge, Dr. Vikram Sagwan, asked to see him.
“Dr. Sagwan handed me a letter from the contractor which said that
they are not satisfied with my work, and just like that I was without a
job,” Morning Star News reported he said.
Mukesh said he has lost his salary of the equivalent of US$110 per month and has no means of income.
“I was not given any notice period, and neither were the charges
explained,” he told Morning Star News. “I have been terminated because I
am a Christian. I don't know what to do now. I have a family to
support.”
Pastor Summoned
Following the attack at the cemetery in Faridabad on March 6, Hindu
extremists belonging to Hindu nationalist groups attacked Bethenia
Church's service on March 8, said Pastor Kumar. He was later summoned to
a police station after an unidentified person claimed that the elderly
woman who died should have received a Hindu burial.
Morning Star News said the attackers beat church members,
threatened them with demands to leave the area and verbally abused them,
though no one was seriously injured. The Christians went to a
neighboring branch church and continued their worship there.
The 42-year-old Pastor Kumar was summoned to the police station
after a Hindu who had been attending his church filed a complaint
against him. The complainant, whom Kumar declined to name, was offended
at the Christian burial given to a relative of the pastor.
“My relative was a recent believer in Christ from the Hindu
background, and this church member was offended as to why we did not
perform the last rites according to Hindu rituals,” Kumar told Morning
Star News.
For more information about Morning Star News, visit www.morningstarnews.org
** You may publish this or any of our stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
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