(Article written in 2009)
Do religious
conversions – especially the Missionary conversions to Christianity
– affect nationally unity? Do the loyalties of a citizen really
change after conversion to Christianity? These questions can be
answered only through experience only.
When
one looks at the first Christians who have entered India’s southern
state of Kerala in 1st
century AD, one finds it difficult to support this thesis. The
traditional Christians of Kerala – the Syrian Christians, the Mar
Thomites etc – have been like milk and sugar in our society. They
produced some of the best Christian leaders in the country, both
religious as well as secular.
However
when we look at what happened to countries like Indonesia we find
justification for this argument. The creation of East Timor as a
separate nation was the New Millennium gift of the United Nations to
the world. World thought that Pakistan and Israel will be the last
countries to be carved out on the basis of religion.
In
Israel’s case there was a justification. The Jews were the people
thrown out of their lands by the invading Romans some 2000 years ago.
They were a nation living in exile. After the II World War a home
land was carved out for this ‘wandering nation’ and Israel came
in to existence in April 1948 as the Father Land of Jews. In a way
that was the last country to be created exclusively on
religio-national grounds in the 20th
Century.
A few
months before that, another religio-national entity was created in
the name of Pakistan in 1947 August. Unlike Israel, the creation of
Pakistan was the greatest mischief of the Colonizers. While in
Israel’s case a nation was re-inventing its Father Land, whereas in
case of Pakistan, it was the creation of a religion-based national
identity. The disastrous consequences of this experiment have
convinced every political pundit in the world that Pakistan will be
the last such misadventure for the mankind.
But
they were shocked when they were told at the crack of the 21st
Century dawn that the Christians of East Timor, a chain of tiny
islands off Indonesian coast, are a separate nation and hence needed
a separate country. People of East Timor have been living there for
several centuries before Christianity came to their shores. Initially
it was merely a change of religion. But eventually it turned out to
be a change of national identity too. Creation of East Timor has
brought back the fears of many nations that religion continues to act
as a tool for imperialism.
Our
experience in the North East too is not very different. A region that
had such rich cultural integration with the rest of India that dates
back to the times of Maha Bharata today spawns loads of anti-national
and separatist movements. It is a well-known fact that secessionism
in the North East is a gift of local missionaries. For decades, the
Naga separatist movement was led by missionary leaders like Reverend
Phizo. The Baptist Church was accused by the Marxist Chief Minister
of Tripura Sri Manik Sarkar of being the main sponsor of separatist
TNLF terrorism in that state. The nexus between the Church and
separatists in the North East is an open secret.
However,
whether it is East Timor or Nagaland, ethnic identities are always
played up to justify the struggles. That East Timorians are
ethnically different from the rest of the Indonesians and that Nagas
are a different race become justification for the Church support for
these movements.
This
brings us to the crucial question that whether conversions can be
questioned merely on religio-political experience. Because what they
actually do is to snap the cultural identities first, thus making
ethno-political identity paramount. Whether it is Pakistanis or East
Timorians or various groups in the North East, what changed for them
was the snapping of their cultural bond with the rest of the people.
Once the cultural bond is destroyed no nation can protect its unity.
Religious
conversions that affected cultural identity of peoples had dangerous
consequences for nations. Very rarely that one would come across
Kerala-type experiences. Experience elsewhere is just the opposite.
Conversions world over meant not just change of religion, but change
of culture too.
Today
the South Korean Buddhists are up in arms against their Government
for promoting Christianity aggressively because they find
Christianity as destroying their homes and families. It may be
remembered that more than 50% of nearly 5 crore South Koreans have
‘no religion’. Yet they are angry with Christianity which has a
following of about 15% converts because the converted refuse to take
part in even the ancient traditional family rituals for ancestral
worship. They are angry not because their family members have changed
religion. For, conversion meant much more than mere change of mode of
worship. It cut at the root of their cultural identity. That is why
150,000 South Koreans took to streets last month protesting rising
conversions and increasing influence of Christianity.
Whether
it is the Buddhists of Malawi and South Korea, or the Muslims of
Indonesia or Hindus of India and Nepal or the non-religious rulers of
China – all have same concern, that conversions are much more than
mere change of religion.
It is
this growing opposition to conversion in various parts of the world,
especially the eastern world that is forcing the Church leadership to
sit up and change tactics. They increasingly talk about human rights,
freedom of religion etc. They try to stress that the missionary
activity of conversion is perfectly in line with the December 1948
charter of Universal Declaration of Human Rights of the United
Nations, Article 18 of which declared freedom to ‘change’ and to
‘manifest’ one’s religion or belief in ‘teaching, practice,
worship and observance’ as a universal fundamental right.
It may
be noted that a major lobbying by the Church groups was responsible
for inclusion of Right to Conversion as an individual right in the UN
charter of Universal Human Rights. There was very little
participation from the Eastern world in formulating this charter in
1948. What the Church actually wanted in the charter was much more
than what they finally got. Western Christian leaders, who were
actively involved in the drafting of the UN bill on Human Rights,
came out with a statement on ‘Human Rights and Religious Freedom’
in March 1947 in which they wanted freedom to propagate and ‘persuade
others’ to be a part of it.
This
whole debate needs to be put on a different track altogether now.
Confining issues relating to freedom of religion and conversion to
the 1948 UN charter is no longer feasible. The social and cultural
rights of communities have to be taken into account while deciding
about the rights of individuals. This is necessary because there is a
basic difference between the thought process of the East and the
West. The West tends to be more individualistic whereas the eastern
societies emphasise more on the collective rights of the people.
The
following comments of Mahatma Gandhi during the run up to the UN
charter reflect the thinking of the Indian and eastern civilizations.
“Begin with a Charter
of Duties of Man… and I promise the Rights will follow as spring
follows winter. I write from experience. As a young man I began life
by seeking to assert my Rights and I soon discovered that I had none
not even over my wife. So I began by discovering performing my duty
by my wife, my children, friends, companions and society and I find
today that I have greater Rights, perhaps than any living man I
know”. (Richard L. Johnson, Gandhi’s Experiments with Truth)
There is a need for the
Church leadership to think afresh on the issue of conversions,
especially in the light of growing resentment among the non-Christian
world. In fact it is necessary from the point of view of the internal
discourse of the Church also. Inter-denominational conversion or
proselytism has become a major irritant within Christianity too. In
fact the previous Pope had described the Latin American evangelists
as ‘rapacious beasts’ out to steal his flock.
More
recently the Pope advised Catholic missionaries operating in the
Orthodox Christian countries like erstwhile Soviet countries ‘not’
to be ‘aggressive’ in conversion activities. This stand was
necessitated by the strong opposition of the Russian Orthodox Church
to the Catholic expansionism. In fact when I met the Orthodox Church
officials in Moscow they made it clear that even the Pope is not
welcome to Russia since he brings with him the non-Orthodox version
of Christianity.
All these
irritants led the UN to declare an International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights in 1966 in which it was clarified that: “No
one shall be subject to coercion which would impair his freedom to
have or to adopt a religion or belief of his choice”.
Many
countries including India have introduced religious freedom in their
respective Constitutions in the light of the 1948 UN charter of Human
Rights. Indian Constitution states in Art. 25 (1) that: “Subject to
public order, morality and health and to the other provisions of this
Part, all persons are equally entitled to freedom of conscience and
the right freely to profess, practice and propagate religion.”
However
the experience made it clear that this provision needed more clarity,
especially when the missionaries insisted on unhindered right to
convert people. That is why the Supreme Court of India had to step in
and make it clear in 1977 in the famous Rev. Stainslaws case that:
‘what is freedom for one is freedom for the other in equal
measure. And then therefore there can be no such thing as a
fundamental right to convert one person to one’s own religion’
and ‘… right to propagate one’s religion does not grant the
right to convert another person to one’s own religion’.
The Church should call
for a serious internal discourse on the question of conversion.
Earlier discourses have lead to partial answers like inculturisation
etc which do not really address the concerns of the opponents of
conversion. What is needed is to dismantle the superstructure of
evangelical establishment and confine Church activity to presenting
God to the believers. Conversion may be restricted to bringing
believers closer to God rather than ‘Harvesting Souls’.
Conversion militates
against the core ethos of our nationhood as understood through the
true meaning of Secularism i.e. Sarva Panth Samaadar – equal
respect for all religions. Conversion implies superiority of certain
religions over others. It is nothing but ‘Religious Imperialism’.
Swami Vivekananda had ridiculed the Missionary claims of superiority
while Mahatma Gandhi unequivocally declared that he would prohibit
conversions if he had the power.
“Every nation considers
its own faith to be as good as that of any other. Certainly the great
faiths held by the people of India are adequate for her people. India
stands in no need of conversion from one faith to another”. These
words of Mahatma Gandi may sound harsh to many a missionary, but they
are true.
undivided indian muslims never supported overwhelmingly for the creation of a seperate homeland for muslims. faraizi community , wahabis, and ahle hadees groups who are against to idolworship of any form who follow saudi ideololgy of islam had even opposed creation of pakistan. even today ahlehadees people questions ??. it is few vested intrested people i.e. the erst while brahmins who later got converted to islam and brahmins (few) had plotted for power. so it is absolutely wrong to say that the whole community had any intrest in these.
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