Faith dispute over Christian communities
By Sujoy Dhar
CALCUTTA - Leaders of India's minority Christians and right-wing Hindu
groups are sparring again, this time over the religious loyalty of the
sizeable indigenous communities in the eastern border state of West
Bengal.
Angered by charges of faith conversion, church leaders have rallied the
more than 30,000 Christian tribal people in the state who are traveling in
large numbers from their ancestral homes in distant villages to the big
cities to join protest marches. Tribal groups walked through the streets
of the state capital Calcutta late last month. They carried banners saying
the church was being wrongly accused of luring poor tribal people into
changing their faith. A big protest meeting of Christian tribals was due
in Calcutta Thursday. Similar gatherings have been held in Calcutta and
other parts of West Bengal in recent months.
The controversy was kicked off by media reports and claims by Hindu groups
that Christian tribals have begun returning to the Hindu fold. Television
channels in recent weeks showed such ''re-conversion'' ceremonies in the
rural pockets.
But Christian leaders have disputed this claim by a prominent Hindu
right-wing group affiliated to India's main ruling Bharatiya Janata Party
(BJP). According to Herod Mullick, general secretary of the Bangiya
Christiya Parishad, an umbrella body of Christians in east and northeast
India, ''the truth is that not a single true church-going Christian has
changed his religion.''
The Christian leaders are pitted against the Vishwa Hindu Parishad, better
known by the initials VHP, which translates as the World Hindu Council. A
well-known international Hindu organization that is close to Prime
Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee's BJP, the VHP's local leaders claim to have
reconverted 300 Christian tribals back to the Hindu faith.
The state's most widely read daily newspaper, Ananda Bazar Patrika, had
reported a few months ago that 250 tribals, most of them Christians, had
reconverted to Hinduism secretly in Bhatina village of Birbhum district in
south Bengal. Asit Bhattacharyya of the VHP claims this is true. ''Of the
250 tribals, 245 were converted Christians while five were tribals who
followed indigenous religion,'' he said. ''We are helping them to return
to their original religion after being misled into other religions.''
But Christian leader Mullick denied this. ''We went to the village and
found that not a single member of the 13 Christian families there had
reconverted,'' he asserted. ''We have extensively toured rural Bengal and
found all such claims of reconversion as fake. May be one or two
Christians who were yet to be baptised had returned to their old
religion.'' Mullick also denied the VHP's accusation that Christian
missionaries were offering inducements to poor tribals to change their
faith.
The bulk of the Christian tribals in West Bengal work on the farms of
better-off land owners. Surveys by non-governmental groups have reported
high levels of malnutrition among the tribals. Their original religion was
nature and animal worship.
''If we had been so eager about converting people, the total percentage of
Christians in India would not have been just 2.5 percent of the country's
1 billion population,'' Mullick said. According to the Christian leader,
the media reports were ''false propaganda to demoralize the tribal
Christians living elsewhere and create an anti-Christian feeling.''
The media reports do not seem to have worried the state's Left
government-ruling West Bengal for nearly a quarter century. State Chief
Minister Jyoti Basu said the government was not aware of this. ''We can
try to ensure that there are no forced conversions,'' Basu was quoted as
saying in media reports. However, Basu's Communist Party of India
(Marxist) and India's main opposition Congress party have hit out at the
BJP's radical Hindu partners for trying to fan religious violence in the
state.
Although local police officials too said they were not aware of
reconversion ceremonies, media reports spoke of unease among the tribal
communities. Media commentators warned of violence and likely attacks
against Christians. They referred to the ghastly torching of an Australian
Christian missionary and his two small sons, allegedly by Hindu fanatics
early last year, and the murder of another Christian priest later in the
year. Both incidents took place in the neighboring eastern coastal state
of Orissa. Over the past year, Christian leaders in India have appealed to
the Indian government for protection from the ''terror campaign'' that has
seen violent attacks against community members across north India. India's
Home Minister Lal Krishna Advani has admitted that there were more
incidents of communal violence against Christians in 1998 and 1999 than in
the half century of the country's independence from British colonial rule.
Those familiar with tribal lifestyles cautioned that the re-conversion
controversy could rupture the traditional harmony within the tribal
community. ''I have so far not heard of any re-conversion by force. But if
re-conversion exercises by deceit continue, it would lead to a fight among
the tribals who so far have lived in harmony,'' said tribal rights
activist Mahasweta Devi.
According to Devi, winner of the Ramon Magsaysay award (Asia's version of
the Nobel Prize) and famous Indian writer, the tribal communities in West
Bengal have traditionally taken part in all religious festivals. ''These
people are neither Hindu, nor Christian nor Muslim,'' she pointed out.