Andhra Pradesh to give 5,000 rupees to places of worship

Amravati, April 22, 2020: Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister YS Jagan Mohan Reddy, on April 20 announced that all places of worship in the state would be given 5,000-rupee assistance.

He made this announcement during a video conference with the District Collectors and Muslim religious leaders on the measures being taken to contain COVID-19. He thanked the religious leaders for accepting his request to urge the community to offer prayers at homes during the holy month of Ramadan.

Reddy said despite the financial constraints — loss of 1.5 billion rupee revenue a day — due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the lockdown, the government would provide 5,000 to every mosque, covered during Ramadan last year.

The mosques not covered last year, and churches and temples would also be provided with the aid.

The chief minister said his government belonged to all sections of people and had been implementing schemes for the welfare of people irrespective of religion, caste and region.

He said despite the financial issues the government had given Rs 1,000 to each family and providing ration thrice a month.

Jesuit school in Mumbai housing migrant workers stranded by COVID-19 lockdown

When India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi declared a lockdown to prevent the spread of the COVID-19 coronavirus on March 24, he gave the country just four hours’ notice.

This was disastrous for India’s millions of migrant workers, who often leave their villages for jobs in the country’s large cities. These jobs are usually as day laborers, where wages are low, and savings non-existent. Suddenly, people were stranded far from home, unable to travel, and with little or no money to survive.

In Mumbai, the Jesuit St. Stanislaus school has opened a migrant relief camp for 100 men; in the Catholic school’s Arrupe Hall, 25 women are housed.

“St. Stanislaus High School decided to take a step forward in making available its premises to house outstation workers during the lockdown, realizing that many had lost not only jobs but were also not able to remain in their housing, for various reasons,” explained Jesuit Father Frazer Mascarenhas, the manager of the facility.

Bom Jesus rector alleges neglect of historic basilica

One of India’s most historic churches is suffering from “sheer negligence” by the country’s main cultural protection body, according to its rector.

The Basilica of Bom Jesus in Goa was consecrated in 1605 and houses the remains of St. Francis Xavier.

Jesuit Father Patricio Fernandes says the “colossal negligence, incompetence and inefficiency” of the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) – a government body charged with the protection, preservation and conservation of nation-al monuments – has led to considerable damage to the church building and could lead to further deterioration.

The priest’s remarks came in a letter to the head of the Goa Circle of the ASI.

“The ASI’s indifference towards the Basilica – considered of religious and tourist importance all over the world for several centuries – has been most shocking and unacceptable,” Fernandes writes.

Goa – then a Portuguese colony – was annexed by India in 1961, and over 25 percent of the population is Christian – compared to the national rate of 2.3%. Goa is considered the heart of Latin Rite Catholicism in India, and UNESCO named the churches and convents of Goa a World Heritage Site.

”Architect Of Guwahati Archdiocese” Dies

Church leaders in Assam on April 21 mourned the death of Father Varghese Kizhakkevelil, who had played a key role in nurturing Guwahati archdiocese and other dioceses in the northeastern Indian state. “The Archdiocese of Guwahati is what it is because of him,” Archbishop Thomas Menamparampil, the archdiocese’s first prelate, told Matters India mourning the death of his former vicar general.

Bishop Mar Mathew Anikuzhikattil passed away

Most Rev. Mar Mathew Anikuzhikattil (78) Bishop Emeritus of Idukki Syro Malabar diocese passed away on Friday, 1 May 2020 at 1.38 am at Medical Mission Hospital, Kolenchery, Ernakulam district, Kerala. He had been under treatment for aged-related ailments for the last few years. The funeral details are awaited.

He was appointed as the first bishop of the diocese of Idukki. He was ordained Bishop on 2 March 2003. He was retired from the pastoral governance of the diocese of Idukki at the age of 75 on 12 January, 2018.

Covid-19: Religious leaders to hold joint-prayer in Kerala

Leaders of various religions in Kerala on April 29 appealed their people to observe a joint-prayer day to pray for Covid-19 patients, deceased, health-care workers and administrators amid the pandemic out-break.

They have suggested May 3, the day a nationwide lock-down is scheduled to end after 40 days, to observe the prayer program.

The leaders say Kerala’s efforts to prevent Covid-19 have become a model for the rest of the world. Unity of public irrespective of religious or caste discrimination is necessary in the battle against the virus.

Hence, the religious leaders decided to observe a joint-prayer day.

Hindu leaders expected at the prayer day observation are Kozhikode Advaithashramam founder Swami Chidananda Puri, Swami Sadbhavananda from Thrissur Sreeramakrishna Math, Sivagiri math general secretary Swami Sandrananda, and Thrissur Thekkemadom head Vasudevananda Brahmanandabhoothi.

Muslims will be represented by Panakkad Sayed Hyderali Shihab Thangal, Kanthapuram AP Aboobacker Musliyar, Hussain Madavoor, and Thiruvananthapuram Palayam Imam V P Suhaib Moulavi.
Leaders of all prominent Christian denominations will also attend the prayer.

Covid-19 Positive Nun Accepts “God’s Will”

A Catholic nun, who was tested Covid 19 positive, spends her time in prayer and meditation at the government quarantine center in Delhi.“I accept God’s will. I am not afraid of death if that is what God wants,” the Sisters of Destitute nun, whose identity cannot be disclosed legally, told Sister Celine, a council member of the congregation’s Santidham province based in Ghaziabad, Uttar Pradesh.

Sister Celine, who is in touch with the quarantined nun, told Matters India on April 29 that her companion was tested positive for coronavirus infection on April 28. She now stays at a government-managed quarantine center at Delhi’s Narela area.

Earlier, Archbishop Kuriakose Bharanikulangara of Faridabad urged his people to pray in a special for the infected nun. The convent where the nun lived comes under the Syro-Malabar diocese. All parishes have conducted special prayers and adoration to obtain God’s grace to deal with corona pandemic.

According to Sister Celine, the infected nun was afraid and panicky when a government ambulance came suddenly on April 28 to pick her from their convent in Jahangirpuri, a slum area in Delhi’s northern region.

“But now she has been well settled and mentally prepared to face whatever comes ahead,” said Sister Celine and added that the quarantined nun has a separate room at center.

Mob Disrupts Christian NGO’s Food Distribution In Uttar Pradesh

Some unidentified people on April 17 disrupted a Christian NGO’s distribution of food kits among those affected by the nationwide lockdown in western Uttar Pradesh.

“We were distributing provision for about 3,000 families in Electronic City in the Sector 62 of Noida when a mob disrupted our work. Seeing the crowd the police asked us to wind up and we complied,” said Indian Missionary Society Father Joson John Tharakan, director of the Board for Research Education and Development (BREAD).

The Noida-based NGO is managed by the Delhi province of the Indian Missionary Society. It supports some 40,000 school children in six states with education and meals.

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