Churches in Pakistan province to get weapon licenses

A provincial government in southwest Pakistan plans to issue churches in the region with weapon licenses and has donated millions of rupees to a Methodist church to support victims and families of a suicide bombing that killed nine worshippers in December.

The Balochistan government notified all 41 churches in the provincial capital of Quetta on Jan. 24 to nominate security volunteers for special training under the Civil Defence Directorate.

The notices were issued following a meeting between the Implementation Minority Rights Forum (IMRF) and officials and police in Quetta last week.

“The Balochistan Home Department will issue weapon licenses in the name of the churches,” IMRF Chairman Samuel Pyara told ucanews.com.

“This will further enable a special force of volunteers to assist local police when services are held. We will form a committee to monitor these developments and settle the problems of those affected,” he said.

The Home and Tribal Affairs Department of the provincial government also granted 26.4 million rupees (US$239,000) to the Bethel Memorial Methodist Church of Quetta to compensate victims of the Dec. 17 bombing of the church.

The Federal Ministry for Religious Affairs and Interfaith Harmony announced earlier it would allocate 5 million rupees to assist with the repairs after a government delegation visited the building at the end of last year.

100 Christians sent to ‘re-education’ camps in China

More than 100 Christians have been sent to “re-education” camps in China’s north-western Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in the past few months, World Watch Monitor has learned.

In these camps, also known as “study centres” or “mind-transformation centres”, they are taught how to be loyal to the communist ideology.

Most of those detained are from the Uyghur ethnic minority group and have a Muslim background. In recent years the Uyghurs they have been the prime targets of the government’s “anti-terror” campaign, aimed at cracking down on both separatist groups and militant Islamists. But those who have converted to Christianity have also been caught up in the crackdown.

A source told World Watch Monitor that members of his church were sent to such a camp without knowing when they would come back. Some stayed there for a month, others for half a year or even longer, the source said. Christian families were torn apart as one or both parents were taken for “re-education”.

One woman, married to a leader of a community with many Christians from a Muslim background, told World Watch Monitor: “I don’t know where my husband is right now, but I believe that God still uses him in prisons or camps. Sometimes I am worried that he doesn’t have enough clothes to keep warm in the prison.”

“I am afraid it will affect my children too,” said another woman whose husband has been taken for re-education and who now supports other women in her situation. “The teacher in the school is paying special attention to my children after the authorities told the school about my husband,” she added.

POLICE SHOOT MAN DURING SWORD ATTACK ON INDONESIAN CHURCH

Sleman: Police in Indonesia have shot a sword-wielding man who attacked a church congregation during Mass, injuring four people.

The reason for the attack Sunday morning in Sleman district in Yogyakarta province is not immediately clear.

Churches are a common target for Islamic militants in Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim nation. Video shows people in the church throwing books at the man as he lunges towards them with his sword.

Witnesses say the injured include a police officer who tried to subdue the attacker and a priest. The suspect has been hospitalized.

RUSSIA WITHOUT FUTURE IF IT FOLLOWS EUROPE’S EXAMPLE IN ISSUES OF RELIGION – DEPUTY SPEAKER TOLSTOY

Situations in which feelings of believers are insulted require special attention and cannot be ignored, State Duma Deputy Speaker Pyotr Tolstoy said.

“I want to caution against another danger: one cannot not take into account the opinion of people who are insulted by this or that action on faith,” Tolstoy said at a parliamentary hearing in the State Duma on January 25.

“Insults based on faith are unacceptable. It’s one of the worst sins, it’s one of the hardest situations, and our society now doesn’t now know a way out because neither the authorities nor society can understand how goto behave in such a situation,” he said.

“I am now talking not only about the conflict over the scandalous film ‘Matilda,’ but also about other situations to which we, unfortunately, have not found a clear answer today,” Tolstoy said.

The search for an answer “is also our common task, because without that it is impossible to broadcast our unique experience of the co-existence of different religions in one country, different ethnicities, people with different philosophies, who are working for the good of our common great Russia,” he said.

Nagaland Baptist Church asks Christians to refrain from practicing Yoga

The Chakhesang Baptist Church Council (CBCC), a constituent of the Nagaland Baptist Church Council, has urged every Christian believer to refrain from practising Yoga, in line with the appeal made by the Nagaland BCC few months ago.

Declaring Yoga a spiritual discipline deeply rooted in Hinduism, the Nagaland Baptist Church Council had in August asked its associate Churches do not practise Yoga as it is not compatible with Christianity.

The CBCC reiterated its stand on anti-Christians ideologies recently and appealed to all concerned authorities not to impose yoga practises to Naga students to uphold the religious freedom envisaged in the Constitution.

This call was made during the 67th general council of CBCC held at CBCC Mission Centre, T.Chikri, Pfutsero hosted by Baptist Theological College (BTC) from January 19 to 20 under the theme “Knitted together in Christ.” Altogether 514 delegates repre-senting all the CBCC churches participated.

CBCC resolved to pray and fight against all exploitative and oppressive forces and ideologies that were found inimical and detrimental to Christian faith and practices.

Intolerance threat to peace in Garo Hills: Church

Growing intolerance and attacks on Christians in other parts of the country is a cause of concern for Church leaders here in Garo Hills.

“Church leaders here are apprehensive of the growing intolerance against Christians even as the current atmosphere in Garo Hills is peaceful and normal. People of different communities in Garo Hills have respected each other all these years,” Fr Theodore T.Sangma, Parish priest at the Sacred Heart Shrine in Lower Wadanang here told The Shillong Times.

Fr Theodore, who spared time for this correspondent in the middle of Soba, an annual conference of Catholics, also termed the trend of religious intolerance as “dangerous,” stating the fact that it has almost compelled people from the Christian community to be “subdued” and “affiliate with political parties.”

“It is unfortunate that people have been compelled to be lenient towards their religious faith and instead align themselves with political parties. This is a fallout of the growing levels of intole-rance against Christians in the country,” the parish priest said.

India asked to establish universities for Christians

India’s federal commission tasked with safeguarding religi-ous minorities has called for the establishment of government-funded universities primarily for Christians. But not all Christians support the proposal.

The National Commission for Minorities in its Jan. 13 annual report said such an initiative would be in keeping with the already existing state-funded Aligarh Muslim University and Jamia Millia Islamia University.

The commission sought a seven-year financial assistance program to establish new univer-sities for Christian communities, who already run their own edu-cational and health care facilities.

The commission said the government should collaborate with the Catholic Church in India, which runs some 400 colleges and 15,000 of 36,000 Christian-managed schools.

All-woman band smashes gender, caste stereotypes

An all-woman band is shattering stereotypes of gender and caste in a village in the eastern Indian State of Bihar, among the poorest and least developed in the country. The Sargam Mahila (woman) Band in Dhibra village near State capital Patna, was set up about two years ago by Sudha Varghese, who runs a charity for women. After about six months of practise, they were ready.

Initially, the 10-member band was ridiculed by their families and other villagers, but they refused to be deterred, said Sabita Devi, a member.

“People used to laugh at us, but why should women sit at home?” she asked. “These days, women are flying in planes – why can’t we be in a band?”

It wasn’t long before the drumming group caught the ears of the community, said Varghese who heads the charity Nari Gunjan. “These women are Mahadalits, the most margina-lized among the Dalits. For them to receive bookings for weddings and company functions, and to perform in front of people is a very big deal,” she told the Tho-mson Reuters Foundation.

The women used to work in the fields for daily wages, but making a living by playing music has provided them with “inde-pendence and dignity,” said Var-ghese, a Catholic nun who has worked with lower-caste Dalit women for several decades.

Drama on Rani Maria enthrals Nagpur

A dance drama on Blessed Rani Maria was the highlight of the feast of St Francis de Sales, the patron saint of the Arch-diocese of Nagpur. More than 2,000 people from the various parishes of the archdiocese attended the celebrations on January 24 along with Arch-bishop Abraham Viruthakulangara of Nagpur. The drama “Qurbani” (sacrifice) was prepared by Fathers M.L.James and Nitin Francis of Nav Chetna, Bhopal, capital of neighbouring State of Madhya Pradesh. About 200 children from five schools performed the dances while brothers from Pilar Niketan and Sisters from Alphonsa Sadan, Nagpur performed the drama.

The drama depicted the life of the Franciscan Clarist nun who was killed 28 years ago by a hired assassin near Indore, the commercial capital of Madhya Pradesh. The nun worked among poor landless agricultural labourers, which upset local landlords.

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