Hate victim Indian Catholic returns to work in US

A convenience store owner in Stuart in Florida, who is an Indian Catholic, is back at work after being stabbed in a recent hate crime attack.

Shinoy Maliackel was stabbed by a homeless man on April 19 at the Family Dollar Discount store he runs in Stuart after he came to the defence of a female co-worker who was being harassed.

The attack was caught on surveillance video. When the attacker was caught by deputies a few blocks away he admitted he did it because he doesn’t like Arabs.

However Maliackel is not Arab. He is from India and is a Catholic. Maliackel is glad to be back at work, and says he’s touched by all the support and well-wishes he’s received from people across US, expressing their concern and sorrow over the attack.

“I’m really happy. I was like, I was really overwhelmed by the support,” Maliackel said. He estimates 200-300 people have stopped by, sent cards or letters or messages on Facebook.

“I’m not really angry for what happened to me because that just makes my quality of life go down, if I get angry, mad, hate, those kind of things,” Maliackel said.

It took 12 stitches and 12 staples to close the wound and now Maliackel has a scar on his right arm.

Bangalore Archdiocese felicitates new Nuncio to India

Catholics in Bangalore are all set to accord a formal welcome to the Vatican Ambassador to India Arch-bishop Giambattista Diquattro May 4 on his first visit to the archdiocese of Bangalore.
Abp Diquattro is in Bengaluru to participate in the Standing Committee Meeting of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of India (CBCI) at St. John’s Medical College. He will also preside over the Golden Jubilee celebrations of the National Biblical, Catechetical and Liturgical Centre (NBCLC).

On this occasion the Archdiocese of Bangalore has arranged a Pontifical High Mass on May 4 at 6 p.m. at the Infant Jesus Shrine in Viveknagar, which will be presided over by the Apostolic Nuncio. The Cardinals and the Bishop-Members of the CBCI Standing Committee and a large number of Priests, Religious and Devotees of the Infant Jesus will participate in the Mass and the felicitation to be held afterwards.

Indian government accused of attacking tribal identity 

Student protests continue in the eastern Indian Jharkhand state after the government renamed a college after a Hindu nationalist, a move church activists say was done to dismantle the identity of indigenous people.

The government move was “totally unacceptable and we condemn it,” said Bishop Vincent Barwa of Simdega, chairman of the Indian bishops’ office for tribal people.

The protest began after the government, run by the pro-Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), re-named the state’s pre-mier Ranchi College to Doctor Shyama Prasad Mukherjee University on April 17.

Mukherjee (1901–1953) was a Hindu who founded the nationalist Bharatiya Jana Sangh in 1951. Mukherjee is considered an ideologue of the pro-Hindu nationalist movement that was a precursor to the BJP.

With BJP in power in New Delhi and most states in northern India, Hindu groups have become emboldened and stepped up their action to establish a Hindu hegemony, ignoring the cultures and well being of tribal and Dalit people among them, their leaders allege.

Bp Barwa said people from elsewhere may not fully grasp the ramifications of the decision and consequences for the life and identify of the state’s tribal communities. The move pushes Hindu hegemony on people, “as they did not even consider changing the name to one of several tribal heroes who sacrificed their lives to protect indigenous land and identity,” said the bishop, who comes from the Oraon tribe.

BJP pushes anti-conversion law in Jharkhand

The ruling pro-Hindu party in eastern India’s majority-tribal Jharkhand state has pushed for an anti-conversion law that church leaders fear will be used to intensify the harass-ment of local Christians.

The two-day state-level executive meeting of the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP), that concluded May 1 in Palamu, adopted a resolution proposing a law to end religious conver-sion activities in the state.

“The resolution asks the state government to formulate a law that will make all conversions done through allurement or force illegal and punishable,” J.B. Dubit, the state’s BJP spokesperson, told ucanews.com May 2.

The BJP and other Hindu groups maintain that Christian missionaries’ service in the fields of education and health are a cover to attract poor tribal and Dalit people in the villages. “We are not against religious conversion per se, but it is not acceptable to take advantage of someone’s poverty, or other such issues, by coercing them to switch religions,” Dubit said. However, he did not identify any specific religious groups or provide data to support such claims.

Kerala’s Catholic group clarifies its position with Communists

The lay group Catholic Congress has dismissed media reports that it has supported the move of some factions of pro-Christian Kerala Congress party to join the state’s ruling communist alliance of Left Democratic Front.

Such reports that appeared in a section of the media is “against the facts,” Catholic Congress president V.V. Augustine said in a May 2 press statement. If at all some leaders of the lay organization attended a recent meeting of Kerala Congress in Kanjirapally, “they did it in their personal capacity.

The Catholic Congress is not inclined to appreciate any political decisions that meeting might have taken,” the statement said. Media reports said prominent Kerala Congress leader and Catholic K.M. Mani may join LDF with the effort of his former associate Scaria Thomas, now a member of the CPM-led LDF.

Indian Theological Association completes 40 years

The members of Indian Theological Association (ITA) gathered at Montfort Spirituality Centre, Bangalore from April 26-29, for their annual meet cum seminar. This was also an occasion to celebrate the Ruby Jubilee of the Association, on the theme 40 years of Indian Theological Association: Milestones and Sign Posts. A new team of office bearers were elected for a term of three years. Dr Vincent Kundukulam was elected as the new President of ITA and Dr Kochurani Abraham as Vice President. Dr Raj Irudaya SJ is the new Secretary and Dr Joy Pulickan SDB is the Treasurer.

CSI Immanuel Church elevated to cathedral in Kochi 

The CSI Immanuel Church here, which completed 110 years of its existence, has been declared a cathedral of the Cochin diocese of the Church. CSI Cochin diocese bishop B N Fenn made the declaration regarding the elevation of the church at the third diocesan council of the diocese.

The decision was made considering the various spiritual and social activities carried out by the church, The New Indian Express reported.

Fr Gabriel Chiramel CMI, Padma Bhushan Award winner dies 

Gabriel Chiramel CMI, an Indian priest, and the award winner of  Padma Bhushan in 2007 by the Government of India for his contribution to education and literature dies, at the age of 102, on 11 May 2017 at Amala Institute of Medical Sciences campus where he was staying towards the later part of his life. The President, Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam presented Padma Bhushan to Fr Gabriel Chiramel CMI, at Rashtrapati Bhavan in New Delhi on March 23, 2007.

Father Uzhunnalil’s new video appears, pleads to get him released

Father Thomas Uzhunnalil, a Catholic priest abducted from an old people’s home in Yemen by the Islamic State last year, has made an emotional appeal to the Indian government to step up efforts for his release in a video posted by a Yemeni news website. The video, lasting less than two minutes, shows a frail-looking Uzhunnalil with a long white beard. A small piece of cardboard on his lap shows the numerals “15-4-2017”, suggesting the video was shot on April 15.

London Dalit Conference: discrimination is a “disgrace” for society

“Discrimination against any human being is a disgrace for society everywhere,” Fr Z Devasagayaraj, secretary of the Office for Dalits and backward classes of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of India (CBCI), told AsiaNews. The clergyman spoke on the sidelines of “‘Christian Responsibility to Dalits and Caste Discrimination’, a conference held in St George’s Cathedral, Southwark (London). In his view, “the whole world must condemn racism, xenophobia and apartheid. We cannot keep quiet when such practices occur somewhere in the world.”

The Christian Network against Caste Discrimination (CNACD) organised the two-day gathering, which began yesterday, with Card Peter Turkson, head of the Vatican Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, as the guest of honour.

Caste discrimination, especially against the Dalits, aka untouchables, remains a major problem in India, as well as within the Catholic Church. This is why the bishops launched an action plan for the first time last year to counter marginalisation and promote integration. Dalits represent a majority of India’s Catholics, 12 million out of 19.

“We must condemn the caste system and discriminatory practices in the workplace as well,” Fr Devasagayaraj said. “The caste problem is not just a problem in India, but it is widespread in South Asian countries, and where they (Dalits) emigrate.”

“We are sorry that these people still carry with them caste discrimination,” the clergyman added. For this reason, it is important to organise “international seminars on the issue, so that we can shed light on their discrimination in the country, but also in the Christian community.”

According to Mgr Sarat Chandra Nayak, bishop of Berhampur, “the problem is so pervasive that it is not possible to eradicate this evil without the collaboration of the international community. It is vitally important for international institutions to pay greater attention to this issue.” “Caste discrimination continues to be widespread and persistent,” he explained. In fact, “with globalisation, the problem has been exported and with it, the challenges to solve it. At present, it has become a global phenomenon.”

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