Christian women express outrage over spraying disinfectant on workers

A national body of women belonging to various Christian denominations has expressed shock and outrage over the spraying of disinfectant on migrant laborers.

“Even as the whole country is battling an intense and grueling confrontation with the Corona crisis, we the members of want to express our deep shock and horror at the treatment being meted out to hapless migrant workers who were today,” says a March 30 statement from the Indian Christian Women’s Movement.

Footage on the same day showed a group of migrant workers sitting on a street in Bareilly, a district in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh, as health officials in protective suits used hosepipes to douse them in disinfectant, prompting anger on social media.

Coronavirus: Indian Church urged to care for stranded migrants

Catholic bishops of Ranchi, eastern India, have appealed their fellow prelates to reach out to millions of migrant laborers stranded in the country by the 21-day national lockdown.

“These are difficult times and even as we live in lockdown and make every attempt to keep ourselves safe, thousands of migrants are stuck where they are, not knowing where to go or have hit the road with their families and children without transport, monetary means or alimentary provisions,” says the March 28 appeal from Jesuit Archbishop Felix Toppo of Ranchi and Auxiliary Bishop Theodore Mascarenhas.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at 8 pm on March 24 ordered the nationwide lockdown from the midnight of that day as way to prevent spread of the Covid-19. It limits the movement of the country’s 1.37 billion people for 21 days.

The lockdown was preceded by a 14-hour voluntary public curfew on March 22.

Archbishop Felix Toppo The lockdown has caught millions of migrants and daily wagers off guard, leaving them no time to return home. Hundreds of thousands of them are now seen stranded at bus or railway stations or walking to their villages hundreds of kilometers away.

The bishops of Ranchi, who made the appeal a day after Pope Francis conducted “Urbi et Orbi” (to the city [of Rome] and to the world), the most solemn prayer in the Catholic Church.

Catholic religious urged to reach out to lockdown-affected

India’s more than 115,000 Catholic religious men and women have been urged to reach out to the poor affected by a 21-day national lockdown to contain the spread of the coronavirus pandemic.

“We need to move fast. This is an emergency,” says Father Joe Mannath, national secretary of the Conference of Religious India (CRI), the association of the major superiors.

In a March 29 letter to the heads of more than 550 congregations for men and women serving India, the Salesian priest says they should not wait for “perfect or easier” way to help hundreds of thousands poor migrant laborers stranded by the lockdown at various parts of the country.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced the lockdown at 8 pm on March 24, just four hours before it was imposed all over the country, taking millions of migrant workers off guard.

Father Joe Mannath says the migrant workers, who now struggle to get back to their home states, urgently require provide shelter and food.

“God waits for our response. He is suffering in our suffering brothers and sisters,” says the CRI official’s letter that lists of a set of “dos” and “don’ts” for the religious to follow to protect from the highly contagious virus.

As on March 29, the coronavirus affected a total of 1,024 people across India. A federal Home Ministry statement said the epidemic has also claimed 27 lives so far.

HC Supports 2 % Reservation For Dalit Christians In Gurukul School Admissions

Stating that a mere conversion of a scheduled caste man from Hindu religion to Christian religion will not make him a Brahmin or a millionaire and hence it is unfair to deny him the reservation facility.

Telangana high court has appreciated the state of Telangana for creating 2 per cent reservations to such converts in social welfare Gurukul school admissions.

The bench of chief justice Raghavendra Singh Chauhan and justice A Abhishek Reddy was hearing a public interest plea filed by P Srinivas of Hyderabad who challenged the notification earmarking 2 per cent reservations for Dalit Christians issued by the social welfare department seeking applications for admissions into 5th Class.

The bench pointed out that the purpose of reservations was to uplift those who were weak and deprived. The petitioner’s counsel Harinath argued that once an SC person converts to Christianity, they cannot be granted a reservation.

Brushing aside this contention, the bench said that the state and the society should never try to keep a person backwards. By conversion, only the nomenclature of the person changes, but not his backwardness, poverty etc. The central philosophy of the reservations is to attend to the more oppressed and backwards, the bench said.

If the State of Telangana decides to be more liberal and provides some space for the converts, there is nothing wrong in it, the bench said. You have to look at the purpose. The state wants to uplift those who were suppressed for thousands of years whose conversion to Christianity will not make them forward, the CJ said. We cannot let these oppressed sections lag behind, he said and posted the case to four weeks. The state’s special counsel Sanjeev Kumar said that these reservations are provided in only social welfare Gurukul schools. The bench told the state counsel to file his counter on these issues.

Patna Archbishop: Church cannot be silent in the face of discrimination

The Catholic archbishop of Patna has finally broken his silence, and in a pastoral letter to Catholics in Patna Arch-diocese has made it clear that the Church stands for the fundamental principles of the Constitution and a non-discriminatory and humane policy towards refugees.

Preparations are underway for a stand – in and candlelight demonstration in support of Constitutional values at Patna. United Christian Forum, a collective of leading churches is organizing the campaign to express the concern of the Christian community over what is seen as the attempts to erode the fundamental values of the Indian Constitution. The demonstration is scheduled for the evening of March 14.

Earlier this week, a pastoral letter from Catholic Archbishop William D’Souza was read out in most Catholic parishes.

The Archbishop, in the letter expressed his ‘concern over the current situation in the country,’ while recalling the ‘sterling role of the Church in nation building, and affirming the plural culture, identities, and constitutional values.

366 cases of hate, targeted violence against Christians in 2019

As many as 366 incidents of hate and targeted violence against Christians occurred in India in 2019, according to the Religious Liberty Commission (RLC), an initiative of the Evangelical Fellowship of India (EFI).

The report was released on March 13 in New Delhi.

A consummately organized hate campaign against India’s Muslim population, beginning mid-December 2019, and erupting in a pogrom in mid-February 2020 against them in their ghettos in the northeastern suburbs of the Indian capital city New Delhi, has not only delayed the analysis of the persecution of Christians in the year gone by but raised structural questions on the security of all religious minorities in the country, with questions for the Church and the Believers’ community, if they can ever think of a haven in their motherland where one group is so brutally targeted.

Bihar’s first Covid-19 patient to recover thanks Jesus

Anitha Vinod, the first person to recover from Covid-19 virus in Bihar, says her firm faith in Jesus and strict adherence to government guidelines has saved her from the deadly disease.

“I got scared when the first report came on March 22. But that did not shake my belief in God,” said the 45-year-old Protestant woman, who is now at her home in Digha, a western suburb in Patna, after being discharged on March 30 from a hospital in the state capital.

The native of Kerala, who married Vinod Venkatraman, a social worker from Tamil Nadu, said she read the Bible in the hospital to fight her loneliness and anxiety.

She and her husband, who is also a Bible teacher, had gone to Nepal on March 2 but had to return to Patna six days later to meet her elder son Vivin, who returned from Italy. “Vivin returned from Pisa via Rome and Delhi on March 5. He was kept under two-week home isolation until March 18. He also went through medical screening at Delhi and Rome airports,” Anitha told reporters.

Caritas India Sets Up A Task Force Against Coronavirus

Caritas India plans to set up an emergency task force to meet the corona virus epidemic spreading across the country. The social action wing of the Catholic bishops in India also plans to hold an emergency meeting at the national level to evaluate the situation and plan the next course of action, says its executive director Fr Paul Moonjely.

Caritas India is already involved in the corona virus emergency. “We are going to reach out to isolated communities and support them,” Fr Moonjely explained to asianews.it.

As part of its strategy, the Catholic charity’s public relations and communications manager Patrick Hansda issued an advisory for all the staff, partners and beneficiaries, urging them to follow prevention instructions to reduce the risk of contagion. Meanwhile, the outbreak continues to progress across the country. A 64-year-old man died in Mumbai on March 17, taking the number of corona virus-linked deaths in the country to three. The total number of infected people has reached 142, including the first positive case in West Bengal.

The government has stopped incoming travel from the European Union, Malaysia, Philippines and Afghanistan. As the questions over the lack of mass testing grows louder, the Indian Council of Medical Research said they are working on the inclusion of private laboratories in the testing process and considering the possibility of testing people who have no travel history, reports ndtv.com.

HENRY MARTYN INSTITUTE HONOURS JESUIT EDUCATIONIST, MUSLIM SCHOLAR

The Henry Martyn Institute in Hyderabad, a pioneering specialized institute of Islamic studies, has honoured a Jesuit educationalist and a Muslim scholar for their contribution to Muslim-Christian relations.

Church of South India Bishop Pushpa Lolita, vice-chairperson of Henry Martyn Institute, on March 18 conferred Doctor Litterarum on Jesuit Fr Thomas V Kunnunkal, the president of Islamic Studies Association of Delhi, and Akhtarul Wasey, professor emeritus, Islamic Studies and the president of Maulana Azad University, Jodhpur in Rajasthan.