Category Archives: From The States

North-Eastern India’s oldest church caught in factional feud

The oldest church in northeastern India has been entangled in a factional feud for more than eight months.
On June 4, the Christ Church in Guwahati, the commercial capital of Assam state, witnessed unruly scenes when one group shut the doors obstructing another group from the church building.
Video clips circulated on social media showed two women arguing with others while blocking them from the church.
Samuel Sangma, former secretary of the church and leader of a function, described the incident as “unprece-dented” and “most reprehensible.”

Catholic bishop airs community concerns in north India

A bishop in India’s national capital New Delhi has appealed for the safety and security of the Christian com-munity and its places of worship after two incidents of attacks on Catholic priests in the northern state of Haryana.
The June 5 letter referred to two separate incidents. On June 4, Father Joseph Amalraj was manhandled by a mob of 20-25 people after Sunday Mass at St. Joseph Vaz Catholic Mi-ssion Church in Kherki Daula village in Gurugram, formerly Gurgaon.

Manipur: Jesuit lawyer suggests three-fold legal aid to victims

Jesuit lawyer Father Santhanam Arokiasamy on May 16 proposed a three-fold legal assistance to the victims of the recent violence in the northeastern Indian state of Manipur.
Father Arokiasamy, who is the convener of the National Lawyers Forum of Priests and Religious (NLFRP), made the proposals in a letter addressed to the chief justice of India and the chairman of the National Legal Services Authority (NALSA).

Knanaya priest denies permission, couple garlands before closed church

A Catholic couple exchanged marriage vows and garlanded each other in front of a closed church after the groom’s priest defied a court order and refused to issue a mandatory certificate. Had the Kottayam Knanaya archdiocese granted Justin John permission to marry Vijimol Shaji, he would have become the first member of the endogamous and closed community to retain his church membership after marrying outside the sect.

Faith comforts family of Indian Catholic killed by stray bullet in Sudan

An Indian Catholic killed by a stray bullet in Sudan in front of his wife and daughter on April 15 is finally home, with his remains returned to the southern Indian state of Kerala May 19 and laid to rest the next day.
Albert Augustine, a former Indian soldier who had been working in private security for a Sudanese company, was killed when he opened a window in his Khartoum apartment.

121 churches of 15 denominations destroyed in Manipur violence

As normalcy has limped back to Manipur, Churches have taken stock of the damages they have suffered during the four-day mayhem that ravaged the northeastern Indian state.
According to a list publi-shed by the Churachandpur District Christian Goodwill Church, as many as 121 churches and buildings belonging to 15 denominations were torched or destroyed in the ethnic violence that began on May 3 across Manipur.
The violence has claimed more than 70 lives and wounded 200 people. According to an official record, some 30,000 people have been displaced.
According to Archbishop Dominic Lumon of Imphal, the head of the Catholic Church in Manipur, about 45,000 people now live in relief camps in the valley and the hills. Around 13,800 are in Imphal west, around 11,800 in Imphal East, around 4,500 in Bishnupur, 5,500 in Churachandpur, around 7,000 people in Kangpokpi district.
Christianity, with several denominations, is the second most followed religion in Manipur, according to 2011 census data of India.

Survivors of Manipur violence recount bloodcurdling stories

On May 2, a day before Manipur went up in flames, T. Khupminthang, took shelter in the house of his employer, a Meitei, along with his son and three others.
The five Kuki tribals were residents of Churachandpur district, but worked in Imphal, capital of the northeastern Indian state.
Two of them did not survive the violence that lasted until May 6. A Meitei mob killed them.
On May 3, Khupminthang and others decided to seek shelter at an Army Camp. As they were ready to leave, hundreds of Meitei people descended on the house with sticks and iron rods. The five fled upstairs but were overpowered.
The mob then took them to a room and asked for their identification cards. Some in the mob shouted they were looking for the “Kukis.” On realizing one of their captives was a member of the Zou community, the mob said they pardoned him. Someone in the mob said Zous are part of the Kukis, the attackers’ mood changed.
The mob took three of them away while T Khupminthang and another person were hidden by their employer for an hour. T. Khupminthang later said he heard the cries of one of the captives. T. Khuplunthang and the other person went to the Singzamei army camp.
The mob that took the three tortured them and left them for dead on an Imphal street. Their attackers had taken the videos of the attack and posted them online. The police presumed the three dead and took their bodies to the morgue of a hospital in Imphal.
While two of them had died already, Khuplunthang’s son regained conscious and requested a nurse for her phone to call his mother in Churachandpur. He begged her to rescue him.

Protect humans from wild animals: Cardinal Alencherry pleads

Cardinal George Alencherry, head of the Syro-Malabar Church has termed as “a shame” the increasing cases of wild animals killing humans in the southern Indian state of Kerala.
“Incidents of wild animals entering villages and killing and injuring humans are on the rise,” laments the cardinal’s May 19 press statement that cited wild buffalos killing three people on May 18 at different places in the state.
A farmer Thomas Plavanakuzhili, a resident of Erumeli Kannamela area, was attacked by a wild buffalo when he was in his rubber plantation.
One Chackochan was attacked by another wild buffalo when he was sitting on the verandah of his house. Around the same time, Samuel Varghese, a resident of Kollam Anchal, was killed in a wild buffalo attack.
“Similar incidents are happening in many places. This is an absolute disgrace to a civilized society,” said the cardinal’s statement.
The prelate wants the government to take immediate steps to control wild animals that threaten humans and protect human life.
“The complacency of those responsible in this regard is objectionable. It is unjustifiable to deny humans the respect, and protection that is given to wild animals.”
The cardinal wants the government to make the necessary legislation instead of issuing regular statements announcing meager financial aid.
“Legal measures taken in other developed countries to protect wild animals and control the dangerous increase in their numbers should be a model for our country,” he added.