Siliguri earthquake

Last night was interesting – you might have heard on the news of the earthquake which struck Sikkim, the state just above West Bengal, in the early evening. We were sitting having dinner when the house started to shake violently – a decision was very rapidly taken to sprint down the flight of stairs leading to our garden and we waited there for all signs or feelings of movement to stop. A few aftershocks came though they felt as nothing compared to the initial 6.8 quake. Our house suffered minor damage – bookshelves falling over, pictures etc. damaged and some things broken – we simply praise God that he kept us safe. Grace, Dan and Thania were pretty scared by it all – it was hair-raising, even for me! Things are not helped for the people badly affected because we have had heavy rains for the last 48 hours causing flooding (the river next to our house is about to overflow) and landslides on some roads.

The maps below show the epicentre and where Shiliguri is in relation to it. We were in the high shaking and moderate damage zone.

 

Posted in Umm

Please help Asia Bibi

The case of Asia Bibi in Pakistan is harrowing. A mother of 4 who has been imprisoned for many months on blasphemy charges. Voice of the Martyrs has launched an online petition calling for her release and dismissal of the death penalty. The petition takes a couple of minutes to fill in – please consider following the link below and completing the form.

http://www.callformercy.com/bg_CallForMercy_wdbm-20110721-callformercy_444.html

 

Leopard Attack

The BBC reports, with good photos, a leopard attack whcih took place near us on Tuesday of this week. The leopard was eventually shot but not until it had reportedly attacked six people. Life is not dull.

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Strike

At the moment where I live we have a two day strike going on. Strikes here are a little different to many experienced in the West – here if there is a strike life stops, roads are blocked, shops closed, you are likely to be stopped and turned back, or even attacked, if you try to travel by car (motorbikes, called “two-wheelers” in India, are ok).

The issue causing the strike is the desire of the Gorkha people to have their own homeland – a campaign which has been increasing in intensity for a few years now. Below is how the BBC reports this latest strike.

Fortunately I can easily get to LTCi to teach without having to run the gauntlet of any roadblocks. That said I would appreciate your prayers.

Persecution in India follow up

Last night I preached at a church in rural Leicestershire and mentioned current persecution in India. A few people spoke with me afterwards and shared their surprise at hearing such news – “do things like that really happen in India?” As a follow up to that and the post last week on persecution in India I am posting a couple of recent reports from the Compass Direct website giving specific incidents – honestly there is much more going on than this but I hope this might encourage you to pray. The reports originally were seen here and here.

Karnataka, India, June 7 (CDN) — State police on June 5 arrested Christians based on a false complaint by Hindu nationalists of forcible conversion in Doddamma Layout, Hulimavu village, Bangalore. The Global Council of Indian Christians (GCIC) reported that at around 10 a.m. police disrupted the worship of an Indian Pentecostal Church home fellowship and arrested Pastor Manjunath Venketappa Naik. Later that morning, officers returned to the house and took Naik’s wife to the Hulimavu police station, along with their minor children and six Christian women, for questioning. With GCIC intervention, the Christians were released the same day at around 2:30 p.m. without being charged.

 

 

Jharkhand – Hindu extremists in Karivadhi village, Garwah district of Jharkhand threatened three Christian families who had converted from Hinduism in the village, warning them to stop following Christ or be severely beaten. Pastor Arjun Karmagi, field coordinator of Gospel Echoing Missionary Society, told Compass that the extremists threatened to force the families of the Christians, Raghuvir Chowdhary, Purnima Devi and Mahendra Chowdhary, to the Ganges River in Banaras city to reconvert them back to Hinduism. The Christians fled the area and are now in hiding.

 

Jharkhand – Hindu extremists beat five Christian families for their faith in Christ on May 28 in Laherbanjari, Palamu district. The Evangelical Fellowship of India reported that a week earlier about 20 Hindu extremists had threatened Pastor Sanjay Choudary of the Gospel Echoing Missionary Society, warning him to stop leading worship meetings or be beaten. Christians filed a complaint, and police on May 28 visited the area. Immediately after the police left, the enraged extremists appeared and started beating the five Christian families, including the women. One woman, Mala Devi, suffered internal injuries and was hospitalized at Sadar Hospital. Another Christian woman, Kalavati Devi, was reportedly still missing. The Christians fled their houses and at press time were still in hiding.

 

Uttar Pradesh – Hindu extremists in Bhopura, Sahidabad on May 19 threatened Pastor Sanju Mahananda of the Believers Church, telling him to stop construction of his church building. A Believers Church representative told Compass that Pastor Mahananda was constructing a pastor’s residence/prayer hall when the extremists appeared and threatened to demolish it if he continued building. Christians stopped the construction work but filed a police complaint.

 

Chhattisgarh – Hindu extremists in Jangir, Champa district on May 20 attacked a Christian because of his faith. A source told Compass that the extremists had threatened a Christian convert from Hinduism who goes by a single name, Tarzan, on Feb. 20 for following Christ and singing gospel songs. They warned him to stop his Christian activity or face harm. Led by Jharu Ram Manohar, the extremists on May 20 attacked him for continuing to follow Christ, beating him, destroying his house and keeping him from using the village pond. The next day the extremists filed a police complaint against him for “misbehavior.” The Christian filed a counter-complaint against the extremists, but no action has been taken by the police at press time.

 

 

Uttar Pradesh, India, May 20 (CDN) — On May 8 in Baskeria, Sonbhadra district, Hindu extremists from the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh threatened to beat a pastor if he conducts future worship meetings in the area. The Evangelical Fellowship of India (EFI) reported that Hindu extremists stopped Pastor B. Vijaya Kumar, his wife and daughter as they were going back home after leading a prayer meeting in a Christian’s home. The extremists rushed them and started questioning the pastor about his visit and activities, according to EFI. Pastor Kumar told them that he was doing social work and teaching about the gospel to the Christians. During the questioning, some of the extremists told each other they would beat the pastor when they found him alone. After the extremists had detained the Christians for three hours, police arrived and questioned him. Officers told him to leave the area immediately, and that if anything happened to him and his family, they would not be responsible. Local dailies have published false reports alleging Pastor Kumar converted people to Christianity by offering monetary benefits, according to EFI.

 

Madhya Pradesh – Police arrested Shivraj Maravi on May 4 after Hindu extremists filed a complaint against him of forceful conversion in Khirpani, Dindori district. The Evangelical Fellowship of India (EFI) reported that the extremists stopped Maravi, of Kalyan Nandas Church, from renovating his small house because they opposed his faith in Christ; Christians sometimes hold Sunday services in his home. On April 14, area Hindu extremists had stopped Maravi as he began the renovations. The Christian submitted a police complaint, but no First Information Report was registered. On May 4, as Maravi again tried to work on the house, the extremists stopped him and filed a complaint against him. Police initially arrested him under Section 151 of India’s penal code, a preventative section officers can use if they suspect someone is about to commit a crime, but later he was charged with forcible conversion under the state’s “anti-conversion” act, ironically called the Madhya Pradesh Freedom of Religion Act, and jailed. Maravi was released on bail on May 6. He submitted a letter of complaint to the district collector, but at press time the office had begun no inquiry. Meantime, Maravi told EFI he has also stopped construction work due to fear of an extremist attack.

 

Maharashtra – Hindu extremists in Manglidhar on May 2 stopped construction of a church building in Manglidhar district and imposed a boycott on Christians. A source who requested anonymity reported that C. Venganna made his plot of land available for a worship place, but when Christians began building, the Hindu extremists forcibly halted them and told them to construct their church building in a jungle far from the village. The Christians submitted a police complaint in Abhona Thana, but police told them to get permission from the village head. The village head refused to help them. In the ensuing boycott, the Hindu extremists prohibited the Christians’ vehicles from carrying vegetables to market, the means of livelihood for most of them. The extremists ordered the Christians to leave the village and warned them that they would not allow their children to attend the local school. At press time the Christians were seeking help from Christian leaders.

 

Kerala – Muslim radicals attacked two Christians as they showed Christian films outdoors on April 30 in Kakkunadu. The All India Christian Council reported that the extremists beat Pastor Prakash and Josh Prakash, and then police took both Christians into custody and questioned them until 3:30 a.m. Neither party filed a police complaint. The Muslim extremists threatened the Christians with violence if they showed more films. Last year on July 4 in Muvattupuzha, Kottayam district, Muslim radicals cut off the hand of a Christian professor at Newman College, Thodupuzha, whom they accused of blasphemy.

Thanks

Just wanted to let you know that my father is now doing well and recovering quickly from his heart by pass operation. This afternoon he will be coming home from the hospital. After over six weeks in hospital a new phase starts now for him. Many, many thanks for all of your prayers and words of encouragement through this time.

Richard

Persecution in India

The article below is taken from the WEA (World Evangelical Alliance) website and gives a general overview of persecution facing Christians in India. I receive updates each day outlining persecution against Christians in India, pastors beaten, churches attacked and the like. I would encourage you to take a few minutes each day to pray for your brothers and sisters around the world who are facing persecution, your prayers are invaluable to them.

May 19, 2011

The politics of Hindu nationalism, which fuelled Christian persecution for over a decade in India, seems to be losing ground. With this comes the hope that India will never witness an incident like the massive flurry of attacks in Kandhamal district of eastern Orissa state in 2008 which killed around 100 Christians and displaced over 50,000 people. This wish is expected to come true, but the absence of mass violence may not ensure the safety of the Christian minority.

Since India did not see any incident of “mass violence” on Christians in the last three years, the issue of Christian persecution is increasingly being seen by the media as a passé. For example, the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom recently put India on its watch-list on account of the country’s failure to bring to justice the accused in the Kandhamal violence and a few similar incidents in which the Muslim and Sikh minorities were the victims. But this found little mention in the Indian or international mainstream media.

The notion of communal peace, seen as absence of mass violence, is misleading. The frequency of attacks on Christians, which remains as high as it has been for the last 13 years in India, is an equally determining factor.

Indian Christian groups, including the Evangelical Fellowship of India, the All India Christian Council, the Global Council of Indian Christians and the Catholic Secular Forum, continue to report on violent attacks on Christians on a regular basis. It’s not surprising that India is the only country which caused Compass Direct News, a US-based agency covering Christian persecution worldwide, to start a special “Briefs” column in addition to its regular “Flash” and “Feature” stories a few years ago, thanks to the high incidence of attacks. This column – with each “India Briefs” story carrying at least five incidents – is being run until today. In the last month of April, Compass Direct News released four “India Briefs” stories in addition to two “Flash” stories on India.
Statistics by Christian groups in India clearly indicate that there has been no let up in the systematic persecution of Christians ever since it began in 1998, the year the Right-wing Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) formed a coalition government at the federal level. The BJP’s emergence coincided with the arrival of Mrs. Sonia Gandhi, a Catholic and the wife of the late prime minister of India Rajiv Gandhi, in national politics. Her appointment as the chief of the Indian National Congress party led to the political targeting of Christians by the BJP and associated Hindu nationalist forces under the pretext of religious conversions.

From 2001 to 2004, at least 200 attacks on Christians were reported each year. There were around 165 anti-Christian attacks in 2005, and 130 in 2006. The following two years, 2007 and 2008, turned out to be the most violent years, vis-à-vis Christian persecution, since the Independence of India in 1947. During the Christmas week of 2007, at least four Christians were killed and 730 houses and 95 churches torched in Kandhamal, Orissa. A repeat of violence in Kandhamal killed over 100 people and burned 4,640 houses, 252 churches and 13 educational institutions in 2008. Apart from these major incidents, 2007 and 2008 each saw around 200 attacks in various parts of the country. The year 2009 witnessed more than 152 attacks, and 2010 saw at least 149. The actual number of incidents is likely to be much higher than reported, as not all cases are formally registered or come to light.

While it is good that the Indian voters are disapproving of the use of Hindu nationalism by political parties – as was evident in the defeat of the BJP in the last two general elections in 2004 and 2009 – it may not bring much respite to the minorities. For India’s Hindu nationalists are expedient enough to adjust their strategies to suit the political mood of the country while continuing to further their agenda at a different level. It is an open secret that while there are a number of Hindu nationalist groups, some having separate legal entities and others informal groupings, they all are linked to the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), the leader of the movement and the ideological mentor of the BJP.

The Hindu nationalists may not let their activities become a political issue now, but they will continue to spew hate against Christians, alleging that they are converting Hindus to Christianity by inducement and coercion.

There is talk about Hindu nationalists using a moderate form of their ideology, but one essential characteristic of Hindutva, a Hindu nationalist ideology, that has remained non-negotiable for them over the years, is that non-Hindu minorities, particularly Christians and Muslims, cannot be accepted as true Indians unless they become “Hindu.”

The Hindutva ideology was articulated at a time when independence from British rule was foreseeable during the early 20th century. It was inspired by several Hindu reform movements that were birthed during the second half of the 19th century to counter “Western superiority and supremacy” that was being used to justify colonialism. At the heart of the Hindutva dream was a “nation,” as it existed before the “Muslim invasion” by Central Asian powers in the 12th century followed by the “Christian invasion” from Britain in the 18th century.

According to the RSS founder Keshav Baliram Hedgewar, anyone who calls himself a Hindu is a Hindu; anyone whose father is a Hindu is a Hindu; and anyone the RSS calls a Hindu is a Hindu. And the RSS says even Christians are Hindu but they do not “behave” like one, and cannot do so because their religion originated in a foreign land.

Subjected to this ideology, many Indians – especially sections of the people in the states where the BJP and other groups have built a strong support base, such as Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Orissa, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh – see minorities as “outsiders” and approve of violence as a means to oppose “conversions.”
The Hindutva ideology is still being propagated in many parts of the country, especially by pragmatic Hindu nationalist workers. But some of them have lost hope that the Hindu nation can be a reality if they use democratic ways. They have turned more extremists and are waging a war against the minorities with underground terrorist activities. Investigation agencies have arrested and are prosecuting several extremist Hindu nationalists for exploding bombs targeting minorities, mainly Muslims. Those facing terrorism charges have reportedly been behind anti-Christian violence as well.

It is difficult to anticipate how the recent development of Right-wing Hindu terrorism will play out in the future, but it seems almost certain that pragmatic Hindu nationalists will remain as active as, if not more than, they have been in the past – though in a fashion that does not attract too much attention. This will mean more attacks but less coverage by the mainstream media, which tends to look at the magnitude of an attack and fails to see it as part of a trend.

The best way to counter this new Hindu nationalist strategy is to streamline the reporting of Christian persecution and highlight statistics periodically. This may require compilation of incidents by one Christian agency which can diligently verify reports of attacks using high standards of professional, ethical reporting.

Dad Update

Just a quick update on my dad.

Dad had his operation on Friday, it went well although the doctors were only able to do a double by pass not the triple they had originally wanted to do. Dad’s recovery is slow as he is very poorly and is still in the intensive care unit of the hospital.

Thanks for your prayers – they have been a wonderful encouragement and support to my family. I will try to ,et you know of any progress through the week.

Grace, peace and love to you.