Delhi archdiocese to launch prayer campaign for nation

The Archdiocese of Delhi will launch a prayer and fast campaign for India and its leaders as the country gets closer to general elections.

“We are witnessing a turbulent political atmosphere which poses a threat to the democratic principles enshrined in our Constitution and the secular fabric of our nation,” says a letter from Archbishop Anil Couto of Delhi addressed to all parish priests and religious institutions in the archdiocese.

The letter dated May 8 is to be read during Masses throughout the archdiocese on Sunday, May 13.

Archbishop Couto says praying for the country and it political leaders all the time has been a “hallowed pra-ctice” of the archdiocese. It is all the more necessary “when we approach the General Elections,” the prelate adds.

The current coalition government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi of the Bharatiya Janata Party will complete its five-year term in May 2019. “As we look forward towards 2019 when we will have a new government let us begin a prayer campaign for our country from May 13, the anniversary of the Apparition of the Blessed Mother,” the archbishop appeals to his people. He wants them to consecrate themselves and the country to the Immaculate Heart of Mary. The campaign comprises observing a day fast and conducting an hour of adoration on every Friday for a year. The letter urges the faithful to forgo one meal on Fridays and offer penance and sacrifices for “our spiritual renewal and that of our nation.” The archbishop has also prepared a prayer for the nation to be recited during the adoration.

Theologians stress to address challenges of religious nationalism

Members of Indian Theological Association (ITA) say the ‘one religion, one culture, one language’ mantra of the religious nationalism challenges India’s diversity and secular ethos.

Some 70 theologians dis-cussed the theme “challenges of religious nationalism in India today” at their annual meeting and analyzed the complexity of the present Indian reality from various angles in the context of the current political scenario.

Through various papers presented during the April 26-29 gathering in Bangalore, they discussed the threat religious nationalism has posed to the secular and democratic foundations of the country.

Besides challenging the diversity of cultures, religions, languages and ethnic groups, the religious nationalism also threatens the existence of millions, who are systematically marginalized and deprived of their basic dignity.

The present political and social scenario of hatred, mistrust and violence compels every Indian “to reinvent and rejuvenate” the resources and claims of invincible Indian identity which has fostered, through the centuries, the unity and integrity of India, the papers said.

While searching together adequate theological response to the threat of religious nationalism, the theologians urged Christians to actively join the social mainstream to engage with others fighting the destructive trend.

They stressed the need to safeguard the fundamental rights ensured by the Constitution of the India, which is the ‘referral’ for the people of India to defend their secular and democratic rights.

Indian govt accused of ignoring religious violence

The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom has accused the Indian government of doing little to prevent violence against religious minorities and socially poor Dalit people.

The commission’s latest report, released on April 25, said the government run by the pro-Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has not addressed the problem of sectarian violence despite government statistics showing that sectarian violence has increased sharply over the past two years.

It categorized India in its Tier 2 countries along with Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Cuba, Egypt, Indonesia, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Laos, Malaysia and Turkey.

Tier 2 countries are those with at least one of the elements of the “systematic, on-going and egregious” standard in a set of criteria the commission uses to gauge violations of religious freedom.

Ten countries including Pakistan are in the worst category.

The report noted that at least 10 Indians were lynched by Hindu groups in the name of cow protection.

“In 2017, religious freedom conditions continued a downward trend in India. India’s history as a multicultural and multi-religious society remained threatened by an increasing exclusionary conception of national identity based on religion,” the report said.

Hindu nationalist groups working to turn India into a Hindu-only nation stepped up their actions through violence, intimidation and harassment against non-Hindus and Hindu Dalit people. Both public and private actors pursued this effort, the report said.

About one third of state governments enforced “anti-conversion and/or anti-cow slaughter laws against non-Hindus, and mobs engaged in violence against Muslims or Dalits whose families have been engaged in the dairy, leather or beef trades for generations, and against Christians for proselytizing,” stated the report.

Even government records, presented on Feb. 6 in parliament, show increased sectarian violence. In 2017, 111 persons were killed and at least 2,384 injured in 822 communal clashes across the country.

In 2016, 86 persons were killed and 2,321 injured in 703 incidents. In 2015, there were 751 incidents.

India’s indigenous people rally for religion

Thousands of indigenous people marched through the streets of Gumla town in India’s Jharkhand State demanding recognition of their traditional religions.

The rally of about 10,000 people on April 24 aimed to put pressure on the eastern state’s government run by the pro-Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which considers indigenous people as Hindus and refuses to give official status to the animist Sarna religions.

Church leaders and acti-vists working for indigenous people said the rally succeeded in bringing together indigenous people of diverse groups and religions.

The government is counting Sarna followers as Hindus as part of a political game, said Father Cyprian Kullu, vicar general of Gumla Diocese, which supported the rally.

“It is certainly a positive move because this was the first time in the region that indigenous people of all religions have come on a single platform and demanded their rights,” Father Kullu told ucanews.com.

Pentecostal pastors abused in a Tamil Nadu Hindu temple

Two Pentecostal Christian pastors were dragged into a Hindu temple, seated in the corridors and covered with ash on their faces. Sajan K.George, president of the Global Council of Indian Christians (GCIC), told AsiaNews that the violence took place on April 22nd in Kanyakumari district, Tamil Nadu. The GCIC, states its leader, “is embittered by the deplorable [gesture] of humiliation and repeated harass-ment against the faithful and places of worship.”

The Christian leader complains that at least 15 similar inci-dents have occurred in the southern State of Tamil Nadu in the last three months. All of them had Pentecostal Christians as their target. Specifically, the aggression suffered by the two pastors “was filmed by criminals, who then posted the images online. The video shows that the religious leaders being forced to cover themselves with the sacred ashes inside the Mutharamman temple in Sandhaivalai. Then they were insulted despite one of the two sang the Bharat Mata ki jai [song typical of the Indian tradition that celebrates India as Mother Earth, ed].”

Vandals deface St Stephen’s College chapel 

Vandals have defaced the door of the chapel inside Delhi University’s St Stephen’s College with a pro-Hindutva slogan that read, “Mandir yahin banega” (The temple will be constructed here).
Moreover, the cross outside the chapel was also defaced.

Sources said the graffiti on the door was first noticed by students on May 4 evening and the work began to get rid of the slogans the following day.

A St Stephen’s student who did not wish to be named, said, “Some students had already noticed the graffiti, but I noticed it when I was out for an early morning jog. After a while, I saw that the staff had started to re-move the slogans. All signs of the slogans were gone.”

The writing may have gone unnoticed for hours since regular classes have been suspended owing to the impending Delhi University examinations.

Goa church officials agree to give basilica for adoption

After initial opposition to a government plan to involve private companies in the maintenance of heritage sites in India, church officials in Goa have agreed to accept the scheme for the famous Basilica of Bom Jesus.

A meeting between church and state officials on May 7 resolved differences and the church has agreed to let a private firm take over the management of the 16th century Portuguese church, Minister for Archives Vijay Sardesai said.

The agreement came after it was “clearly understood that the scheme is not about taking over the monument but rather its preservation under international standards,” he said.

Church officials in the former Portuguese colony earlier express-ed their dismay when media reported a federal government plan to have private players manage ancient religious sites under its “Adopt a Heritage” tourism project announced last September.  The federal and Goa governments, both run by the pro-Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party, listed six heritage sites in Goa under the plan, including the Basilica of Bom Jesus that holds the remains of St Francis Xavier.

Church officials have accepted the plan “unanimously because it is beneficial to the monument,” said Father Loila Pereira, secretary to Archbishop Filipe Neri Ferrao of Goa.

Anger over adoption plan for ancient Goa religious sites

Church leaders in Goa are upset over a federal government plan to offer ancient religious sites to private companies for maintenance under its new “Adopt a Heritage” tourism project.

The project launched last September by the government, run by the pro-Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), plans to entrust heritage sites across India to private firms for the development of tourist amenities.

Six heritage sites in former Portuguese colony Goa, including the Basilica of Bom Jesus that holds the remains of St Francis Xavier, have been listed for adoption but the state government was not consulted, local media reported.

The state government, which is also run by the BJP, has been kept completely in the dark about the plan, state Archives Minister Vijai Sardesai said.

Sites in Old Goa, the 16th century Portuguese capital, are assets of the state, and the church has to be taken into confidence, he said.

Church leaders are equally upset after learning about the plan from the media.

“It pains me to know that our religious monuments are in danger of being privatized, reducing significantly their universal ownership,” said Father Victor Ferrao, professor of philosophy at Rachol Major Seminary.

Voices of laity ‘indispensable’ part of Church governance

The voices of ordinary Catholics are an “indispensable” part of Church governance while canon law should be updated to make it compulsory for parishes to have councils that consult the laity, according to an important theological body which helps establish official Catholic teaching.

“Synodality in the Life of the Church,” published by the International Theological Commission and released on its website on 3 May, has the approval of Pope Francis and aims to flesh out his vision of using Synods to address the major questions facing the Church.

One of the most important tasks for the Church, the commission’s document explains, is to consult the faithful as an integral part of what it calls a “Synodal Church” prepared to undertake a collective discernment.

“The participation of the lay faithful is essential,” the document states.

“They are the immense majority of the People of God and we have much to learn from their participation in the various expressions of the life and mission of church communities, of popular piety and of general pastoral care, as well as from their specific expertise in various fields of cultural and social life.”

It goes on: “This is why consulting them is indispensable in starting the processes of discernment within the framework of Synodal Structures. It is therefore necessary to overcome obstacles represented by a lack of formation and recognised forums in which the lay faithful can express themselves and act, and from a clerical mentality that risks keeping them at the margins of ecclesial life.”

Throughout his pontificate, Francis has placed a strong emphasis on the Synod of Bishops as tool of governance calling the world’s hierarchy to Rome to discuss marriage and family life in 2014 and 2015 while this October will see a gathering focussed on young people, faith and vocational discernment. Both Synods have included a wide-ranging consultation of lay Catholics beforehand.

Crosses on public buildings causing division in Bavaria

The announcement of the Minister President of Bavaria that crosses are to be displayed at the entrances of public buildings is causing upheaval in an already tense electoral context. “First win for Markus Söder” was the May 2 headline in the regional Bava-rian newspaper, Mittelbayerische.

“A poll shows that many Bavarians are pleased that crosses will be displayed. However, this will not be enough to gain a majority.”

In a few words, the paper summarizes the political implications of an announcement that is causing upheaval. On April 24, the Minister President of Bavaria, Markus Söder, mandated that a crucifix should be displayed at the entrance of every public building in the state from 1 June.

The Bavarian state government’s new requirement that all entrances to state buildings display a Christian cross was criticized by Cardinal Reinhard Marx, but welcomed by Bishop Rudolf Voderholzer.

The head of the German Bishops’ Conference has sharply criticized the premier of the southern German state of Bavaria for ordering Christian crosses to be hung in all state buildings.
The Austrian nuncio, Archbishop Peter Zurbriggen, has lambasted the German bishops who criticised.