When Archbishop Dominic Lumon of Imphal ordains Father Gangmei Pheigathuaipou Daniel on December 30, the Jesuits will get their first priest from Rongmei, a major Naga tribe in the northeastern India. Archbishop Lumon will ordain Father Daniel in St Ignatius Church Bishnupur, a Jesuit parish in Manipur State. Father Daniel is the first priest from the Bishnupur parish that was established by the Jesuits 35 years ago.
Daily Archives: January 17, 2021
Indian nun listed 12 among world’s 100 most inspiring people
An Austrian magazine has listed a Catholic nun from India among 100 people, who influenced the world the most during the crises-ridden 2020.
The “OOOM” has placed Sister Lucy Kurien, founder director of the Pune-based Maher, 12th in the list, just above the Dalai Lama and Pope Francis.
The magazine says 2020 was a year no one ever expected. “The world today is different than it was 12 months ago. Which people have inspired, motivated and excited us most in this 2020 crisis? To whom do we owe leadership on the way to a better future? For the fifth time, OOOM presents the large ranking “OOOM 100: The World’s Most Inspiring People.”
“The OOOM editors and a prominent jury – including star designer Stefan Sagmeister, London’s Serpentine Galleries director Hans Ulrich Obrist, world-class geneticist Josef Penninger, gallery owner Thaddaeus Ropac and wallpaper manager Gilles Massé – contributed to the ranking. Every ranking is subjective. But it shows which people actually impressed us over the past year.”
The list is topped by Ugur Sahin, a German scientist and developer of the Covid-19 vaccine co-founder and CEO of BioNTech, who gave the world a new hope. His vaccine is a key component in the battle against a virus that has already claimed 1.7 million lives. The research he conducted with his wife Özlem Tureci has led to the most important medical development of our time. The second in the list is Kamala Harris, future Vice President of the United States, followed by Joe Biden, 46th President of the United States.
She said the Covid-19 lock-down was a challenging time for her organization. She said approximately 40 women, some with children, arrived at Maher seeking asylum as the lockdown began in India on March 25.
“We have to take care of four walls in this period — physical strength, emotional strength, mental strength and spiritual strength — to counter any exter-nal threat to our well-being,” the member of the Sisters of the Cross of Chavanod told.
Indian state criminalizes conversion for marriage
Madhya Pradesh State in central India has replaced its more than 50-year-old anti-conversion law with a new and more stringent one that can criminalize even conversion for marriage.
The law notified on Jan. 9 says any attempt to convert a person from one religion to another through misrepresentation, allurement, use of threat or force, undue influence, coercion or by marriage is a punishable offense.
Violators can be jailed for up to 10 years under the new law called the Madhya Pradesh Freedom of Religion Ordinance 2020. Those abetting or conspi-ring such conversions can also be punished.
The new law replaces the Madhya Pradesh Freedom of Religion act of 1968. However, it allows the reconversion of a person to one’s parental religion without violating the law’s provision.
Leaders of the state government-run by the pro-Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) hold that Hinduism is the parental religion of religious minorities in the country such as Christians and Muslims.
In effect, the law allows Hindu groups to convert Christians and Muslims to Hinduism. But those Hindus who convert to Islam or Christianity for marriage can be punished along with their spouses, who can be accused of abetting and conspiring the con-version.
“This law is one-sided and against fundamental rights guaranteed in the Indian constitution,” said Father Maria Stephan, public relations officer of the Catholic Church in Madhya Pradesh.
Police on alert after conversion claim in Indian state
Police in an Indian state have directed officers to keep a watch on prayer gatherings after five Christians were arrested on a charge of religious con-version. Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP), a hard-line Hindu group, handed the five Christians to police in Shahjahanpur district of Uttar Pradesh State, which is run by the pro-Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
“It is just an allegation from the fanatic groups and if they are sure about it, let them prove it. People are free to express their views in a democratic country,” Father Harold D’ Cunha, vicar general of Bareilly Diocese, told.
“As far as the Catholic Church is concerned, it does not promote or propagate religious conversion in the diocese as well as in the country.
“Occasionally, these groups blame us for conversions, but until now there is no record of any religious conversion where the Church is involved.”
He said the Church is engaged in many charitable works that can be construed as allurement to conversions, “but it is not true.”
S. Anand, superintendent of Shahjahanpur police, told the Press Trust of India that after the alleged religious conversion activities, officers have been asked to keep a watch on religious gatherings.
“We have directed concerned police officials to take strict action if anyone is found guilty of religious conversion activities,” he said.
